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Live review: KROQ’s Weenie Roast y Fiesta

Live review: KROQ's Weenie Roast y Fiesta

Coldplay, Incubus, Soundgarden and more define a rock aesthetic.

What exactly does a rock

band need — and in what quantity — to distinguish itself in today’s exuberantly eclectic pop landscape?

Live review: KROQ's Weenie Roast y Fiesta

Along with branded beach balls and remembrances of

Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys, that question seemed to fill the air Saturday at Irvine’s Verizon Wireless Amphitheater,

where KROQ-FM (106.7) presented its annual Weenie Roast y Fiesta. The daylong concert — headlined by Coldplay, with

performances by Incubus, the Offspring and an unannounced Soundgarden, among others — offered several successful takes on

defining a pop aesthetic, but little consensus on the matter.

Still, the Weenie Roast’s variety suggested something

more promising: that in “a Black Eyed Peas world,” as one KROQ DJ put it, rockers are thinking hard about how to specialize

their music. A big crowd response, when it occurred, seemed almost secondary to the effort involved.

The sole

international act on a main stage dominated by Southern Californians, Coldplay matched that geographical distinction with a

show far more elaborate than any other band’s. Last week, the English group played a sold-out three-night stand at the

Hollywood Bowl, and to Irvine it brought a slightly pared version of that high-tech production, complete with lasers,

pyrotechnics and heart-shaped confetti. And that was all during the first two songs.

Cutting-edge though they may have been, Coldplay’s theatrics amounted to old-fashioned showbiz razzmatazz, a physical

embodiment of the widescreen sentiment in the band’s material.

“You use your heart as a weapon, and it hurts like

heaven,” frontman Chris Martin sang in “Hurts Like Heaven” from last year’s “Mylo Xyloto”; other songs pondered faith, war

and the power of music itself over arrangements that embellished rock guitars with sampled strings and rave-style

synths.

Martin and his bandmates knew Weenie Roast’s pumped-up audience differed somewhat from their own, so they

skipped a handful of folky numbers and “Princess of China,” an R&B-accented collaboration with Rihanna. But Coldplay

didn’t disavow its essential tenderness: Near the end of the band’s hourlong set, Martin paid tribute to Yauch, who died

Friday, with a hushed piano-ballad rendition of the Beastie Boys’ “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to

Party).”

Incubus was similarly expansive, delivering philosophical hard-rock songs whose dense, multipartite

structures kept revealing fresh details: a funk-derived bass line, for instance, or harsh electronic squiggles by the band’s

DJ, Chris Kilmore. Yet singer Brandon Boyd’s spiritual-dude vibe almost reached the level of self-parody, as when he tied

his long hair in a bun and picked up a pair of mallets for an aimless drum solo.

Tom DeLonge of Blink-182 faced the

same threat with his histrionic emo-punk project, Angels & Airwaves. And though Silversun Pickups exuded an appealingly

low-key attitude, the group’s music seemed overwhelmed by Brian Aubert’s neo-shoegaze guitar.

Two veterans of West

Coast punk — Pennywise and the Offspring — fared better with a less-is-more approach, blazing through speedy, tightly

constructed songs about phony authority and suburban ennui. “You want a slow one?” Pennywise guitarist Fletcher Dragge asked

at one point. Then he answered himself in a fashion that can’t be quoted here before offering a breakneck take on “Fight for

Your Right,” one tougher but no less affectionate than Coldplay’s.

PHOTOS: KROQ’s Weenie Roast y Fiesta 2012

As Weenie Roast’s surprise guests,

Soundgarden had perhaps the evening’s easiest job: Simply showing up onstage Saturday was enough to warrant huge cheers. Yet

these reunited grunge survivors played with a lumbering intensity that demonstrated the continued usefulness of rock’s

component parts.

In “Spoonman,” guitarist Kim Thayil and bassist Ben Shepherd intertwined menacing lead lines, while

drummer Matt Cameron drove “Jesus Christ Pose” with a muscular precision. And singer Chris Cornell flexed his

still-impressive yowl throughout the band’s set, most memorably in “Slaves & Bulldozers,” in which he incorporated a few

lines from “In My Time of Dying,” the gospel traditional once covered by Soundgarden’s forebears in Led

Zeppelin.

Like a negative image of Coldplay’s Day-Glo pop, Soundgarden’s heavy, blues-based semi-metal had a solid

sense of itself and its strength. It didn’t do anything more than it needed to, and that was plenty.

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