Cardiff Slayed!
Nearly 24 hours later, I am home and nearly recovered from the events of the previous night. Last night, I, along with my two sons, one of my future daughters in law and my stepson amassed in Cardiff to see Slayer at the Motorpoint Arena. This is supposed to be Slayer’s farewell tour and they brought a few friends with them to celebrate what might be the final time they play in Cardiff. However, first I’m going to show you boring family photos to show that I’m passing the metal tradition onto future generations.

Starting left and going clockwise: Me, my stepson Teal, my younger son Will, his fiancee Ela and my eldest Jake. A true metal family!
There was confusion on the day, my tickets said doors opened at 6, so we thought there was time to get a bite to eat before the show. One can’t headbang on an empty stomach! We went for a meal at a restaurant across the road called the Smoke Haus and with bellies full, returned to the arena. It turns out that my tickets were wrong, though it didn’t prevent us from getting in. The arena opened at 5:30 and the first band went on at six and as a result, we missed the first band. If the first band had been Testament, like I thought it would be, I wouldn’t have been a happy camper. While not fortunate, the first band was Obituary and while I would have liked to have seen them, I’m not as upset at missing them as I would have been if it had been Testament.
It did seem strange to me that Anthrax would have opened the festivities on the evening. Not long after, I knew it wasn’t the case. Anyhow, this being the sixth time seeing Anthrax, I must report that this wasn’t their best. Technically, they were all right. They played many of their best known songs, opening with “Caught in a Mosh” plus “Anti-Social” and Indians,” although like Bloodstock 2013, didn’t play anything from the “Spreading the Disease” album. Joey Belladonna was the good front man he usually is and Ela wanted to have his hair. Likewise, Scott Ian got the crowd going as well. Unfortunately, their set was marred by poor sound quality. Charlie’s drums seemed to overshadow everything else and this was the way all through the forty-five minutes they were on stage. Will was disappointed because he was really looking forward to them. My verdict: While I still headbanged away to Anthrax and enjoyed them, I would also agree that the sound engineer should be fired.
I have very little experience, practically none, of the next band up, Lamb of God. Views on them have been contradictory. Will doesn’t think much of them while Teal loves them. Observing Lamb of God from a neutral stance, they won me over by the time they had left the stage. I will be listening to more of them in the future. The only songs I remember were “Ghost Walking” and “Curse of the Blackened Sun.” While I won’t say that Randy Blythe is the best vocalist in the world, he’s not, he is brilliant at working the crowd and getting them going. Something he did with great effect in Cardiff. Furthermore, I was also impressed with lead guitarist Mark Morton. Lamb of God had better sound than Anthrax so I retracted my personal complaint that they should have been out first. Besides, they did a great job of getting the crowd worked up for the main event.

A good shot of bassist John Campbell with Mark Morton emerging from behind the amp to belt out a solo.
Everyone in the Motorpoint Arena knew that whatever else happened, this night belonged to Slayer. They were the band everyone was there to see and they let everyone know it. From their opening with the wall of flames to their hour and forty minutes of non stop thrash as only they can do to their grand finale, Slayer was on top form. I have to admit, their performance is still whirling around in my head. Maybe I should have waited a couple of days before posting but nah, I had to write about it now.
Some interesting highlights, some guy next to me shouted for them to play something they all knew right after they had played “Mandatory Suicide.” I thought all Slayer fans and even non ones knew that song. My eldest, Jake, risked his life going into a mosh pit. A Slayer mosh pit is not one for beginners! And this was the first time he had ever gone into one. I’m afraid Jake learned the hard way, coming away a little dazed after taking an elbow to the temple. Besides, he made the mistake of removing his shirt and hoodie before going in and ended up losing both of them.
In the mean time, Slayer continued to threaten to blow the roof of the arena as they manically went about the stage creating mayhem and history at the same time. Tom Araya’s vocals were spot on while Kerry King and Gary Holt traded solos back and forth all evening long. When asked after, Will put Holt on the same level as the late Jeff Hanneman. So between the showmanship, the thrash and the flames shooting through the air at the back of the stage, as well as the backdrop changing to a different Slayer album cover every few songs, there was a great deal of unpredictability on the evening and that evening ended way too soon. I did love them coming out to the encore with “South of Heaven.” The only disappointment was at the end. While they thoroughly and deservedly basked in the adulation of the audience, there was no mention of this being their farewell tour. Yes, they did praise the audience throughout but I thought they would have said something at the end. Just a minor point though, the rest was a great night of metal history.
Next post: Stevie Ray Vaughan- Soul to Soul
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This entry was posted on November 6, 2018 at 9:33 pm and is filed under 1980s, Concerts, Heavy Metal, Heavy Metal and the 1980s, Music, Rock, Uncategorized with tags Americans, anthrax, British, Cardiff, Classic Rock, concerts, hard rock, Heavy Metal, Heavy Rock, Lamb of God, Obituary, Slayer, Testament, The 1980s, Thrash Metal. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
24 Responses to “Cardiff Slayed!”
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November 6, 2018 at 9:42 pm
Hell yeah! \m/ \m/ We caught this tour in Toronto a few months ago. So awesome!
Shameless self-promotion: https://keepsmealive.wordpress.com/2018/05/30/2018-05-29-slayer-with-testament-behemoth-anthrax-and-lamb-of-god/
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November 6, 2018 at 10:27 pm
I remember reading it now and like I said, I did get tickets and see them in Cardiff in November. We both thought Slayer were brilliant!
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November 6, 2018 at 9:42 pm
Also, we had that Slayer onesie for our son! So much fun!
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November 6, 2018 at 10:26 pm
Oh yeah!
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November 6, 2018 at 10:17 pm
I thought Anthrax had normal sound. Don’t know if it was location or if I’m biased for drums lol
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November 6, 2018 at 10:25 pm
It could have been where I was but Lamb of God and Slayer sounded ok. Maybe it was my boys being critics.
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November 7, 2018 at 10:06 pm
I think I am just a sucker for drums 🙂
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November 8, 2018 at 9:59 pm
Why not?
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November 6, 2018 at 10:33 pm
Rocking the family at Slayer! Looks amazing.
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November 6, 2018 at 10:34 pm
Thanks, it was a rocking night!
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November 6, 2018 at 11:22 pm
Amazing! Looks and sounds like you had the best time… and the wee man showing his colours there!
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November 8, 2018 at 10:00 pm
Oh yes, you gotta start them young. It was a great night!
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November 6, 2018 at 11:54 pm
Brilliant stuff. So nice to make it a proper family event too.
What was the Motorpoint like as a venue?
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November 8, 2018 at 10:01 pm
Thanks. The Motorpoint is a decent size arena, the acoustics are pretty good, so yeah.
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November 7, 2018 at 2:09 pm
I went to this concert (although not in Cardiff). It was awesome!
I was mad that Testament did not play anything from their Piece of Mind album which is my favorite of theirs. And their set was too short.
And Joey totally messed up on “Indians” when they got to the War Dance! part – I was like…what? They totally killed the momentum in the mosh pit and the entire crowd. They were much better when I saw them 2 years ago. Scott Ian still had it though. I agree with your review of the sound.
Lamb of God is fantastic! I have seen them 3 times now. Although, I do prefer them in a smaller venue.
Anyone who does not know “Mandatory Suicide” is NOT a Slayer fan! Tom Araya and Kerry King still have got it. They were just as good this time as they were a couple years ago. Sadly, for my show, then ended the night 12 minutes early and did NOT do an encore. It really left the crowd a bit upset and people started fighting. They did not say farewell to us either.
All this being said, still stoked that I went.
\m/
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November 7, 2018 at 5:58 pm
Aw man that’s kind of sad. Maybe there was a tech difficulty or something but no encore and an early finish would upset a lot of crowds I’d imagine
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November 7, 2018 at 6:02 pm
I don’t know. No announcement was made. We all kept sitting there…just waiting…and then they turned on all the stage lights and that was all she wrote. We were all like WTF!! I will still always love Slayer, but damn….
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November 7, 2018 at 6:21 pm
That’s rough. I was at a Prince show once when the gap between set and encore was so long half the crowd had left. It was during his difficult stage and the show was a bit… hits-lite.
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November 7, 2018 at 7:04 pm
Oh dang… that sucks; especially when going to a show is not cheap!
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November 8, 2018 at 10:03 pm
Anthrax weren’t as good this time around but I have seen them five other times and they were much better. Slayer did do a encore this time although they didn’t at Bloodstock 2016. You’re spot on about Mandatory Suicide, it’s a must know for all Slayer fans. I would like to see Lamb of God and you may be onto something with the small venue.
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November 9, 2018 at 1:50 am
I am friends with the drummer from LoG. That is how I have known about hem before they got big. The small venue is perfect for them.
Yep, Anthrax was flat. They were on a side stage at a festival several years back. It was a small side setting and they killed it!
Saying they don’t know Mandatory Suicide is on par with saying they don’t know Hell Awaits or South of Heaven!
Who are you seeing next? I love your blog!
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November 10, 2018 at 10:58 pm
Thank you, I’m not sure when my next concert is but I hope you’ll stick around for my twice weekly posts on albums from the 1980s. I’ts very cool that you’re friends with the drummer of Lamb of God. Anthrax killed it both times I saw them at Bloodstock.
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November 12, 2018 at 1:43 pm
I will be reading 🙂
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November 12, 2018 at 7:45 pm
Thank you.
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