See more: Hack Using Front Phone Camera S How To See What You Really Look Like To Others You are watching: Sublime with rome and the offspring
Which is why legally, the band can’t be called Sublime thanks to the Nowell estate. “This is a bittersweet moment for us, this is our last song and our last time on this stage,” says Noodles before starting their last song, the best tribute to the worst woman: “Self Esteem.” The backdrop was changed from black-and-white skulls to a low-riding weed smoking skull and before you know it, Rome Ramirez, the Rome of Sublime with Rome was puffing his way to the stage… There will never be another Bradley Nowell, the lead singer of Sublime who died while the band was at the edge of fame. “What I like about Offspring is they have two different kinds of music their older stuff which is more extreme punk rock and their newer stuff is you know, popish and they also have some mellow songs and I just really like the wide diversity that they have…and I also like their lyrics…easy lyrics to mosh in,” the teenager told me while we waited for Sublime with Rome. It must feel good to look out onto an audience that has stayed with you for so long, now bringing their kids to your shows.Indeed, when a classic mosh pit erupted around “Staring at the Sun” I was pushed against Jim Kupsh and his thirteen year old son Ryan who before the set was over, handed his glasses to his dad to hold and joined the mosh pit, Jim taking photos of the occasion. At one point, whether in a poignant act of spontaneity or planned stagecraft, Holland gave a kiss on the cheek to Noodles mid-song. In a brief interlude between the pounding rhythms of Perada’s kit, Holland and Noodles opined on the loss of the Amphitheatre: “This is the last time we are going to see you here,” before launching into the rest of their blistering set. Not to mention The Offspring still has three out of four original members (Dexter Holland, lead guitarist Noodles and bassist Greg K.) with Pete Parada, former drummer of Face 2 Face completing the current line-up. It’s remarkable that one of the most influential bands in the nineties California punk renaissance can pick and choose between nine studio albums spanning about three decades when coming up with their setlist. The exhilarated set began with their 2008 hit “Go Far Kid”with lead singer Dexter Holland’s pure tenor voice still able to cut like a knife riding above the band’s defiantly optimistic sound. The one caveat being that Sublime with Rome includes only one original member of Sublime, the singular punk/reggae/ska fusion band that just about created a genre unto itself in California they played their last concert at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre before it got demolished – the show went like this: The Offspring went first, launching into an epic nineteen-song set with barely a breath in between. The Offspring, and Sublime with Rome will play the last show of summer on Sat, Sept 16, 2017.
Two genre-defining names will give a big punk-rock kiss-off season ending performance at Jones Beach.