Rollins Band
with Circle Jerks and US Bombs
The House of Blues, Orlando, FL
August 16, 2001
by Liza Hearon
![]() | |
| Jen Lato | |
| Circle Jerks |
Unfortunately, I missed most of opening act US Bombs due to a mix-up at the House of Blues box office. I did manage to hear their tribute to Joey Ramone. Playing "Blitzkrieg Bop" seems to be the choice tribute of the moment for many bands. I heard one more song, then their set was over. However, US Bombs appeared very engaging and energetic. Lord knows their singer has enough tattoos.
![]() |
| Jen Lato |
| Circle Jerks |
The Circle Jerks followed US Bombs. My companion felt more excited to see them than I, but I managed to enjoy the performance. The dreadlocked lead singer talked a lot about the days past in Black Flag. The set was all about the old school style, aggressive, power punk. My complaint? I thought all the songs sounded exactly the same: fast and loud with little or no change in structure or vocal style. Whatever, I'm in the minority. The big guys joyfully beat up on each other.
![]() | |
| Jen Lato | |
| Rollins Band |
After the first few bluesy type songs, the set ventured into more familiar territory with harder songs. Henry Rollins is definitely not someone I would want to meet in a dark alley somewhere. Starting out a few songs with, "Can you handle this?," some sort of force not of this world possessed him. He twists and gyrates and spits water all over the place and his eyes light up with maniacal intentions. I seriously felt like he would just leap off the stage at any time. When he sang "Animal," the man as Henry Rollins turned into a beast, growling and straining his voice to all ranges. My friend and I puzzled over the carpet placed on the stage (perhaps because he was barefoot?), but then we finally figured out that it was there so Rollins didn't electrocute himself during his wild antics. Whoa.
![]() |
| Jen Lato |
| Rollins Band |
Rollins Band performed quite a long set, and the intensity didn't drop one bit. Rollins admitted that much of it was new material, but I definitely didn't mind that, because I dug the new stuff a lot more than the old. It may not appease the tough guys as much as older material, but I think it's too brilliant to pass up. Rollins Band was an unforgettable experience, and I am looking forward to seeing what Henry Rollins has in store for us next. 







