20 Jan, 2024 07:39 PM4 mins to read

REVIEW

“It’s not often an earthquake is triggered by a rock band”, Dave Grohl proudly told a bursting-at-the-seams Mt Smart last night.

Foo Fighters - Figure 1
Photo New Zealand Herald

The Foo Fighters frontman was referring to the “seismic event” the band famously caused when they played in Auckland in 2011. But their efforts last night sure gave it a good go for a repeat.

Grohl uttered the line every local crowd wants to hear - “you were the loudest audience we’ve ever had.” And we lapped it up.

The Foo Fighters perform at Mt Smart Stadium in Auckland on Saturday 20 January 2024. Photo / Cameron Pitney

Two hours in and dripping in sweat, Grohl then asked us to scream at the top of our lungs. And if that didn’t do it, actor Jack Black storming on stage in a tie-dye t-shirt singing AC/DC’s Big Balls probably did.

Take that, previous earthquake measure.

The audience’s visceral reaction was one of delight. Black is in Auckland to film the new Minecraft movie along with Jason Momoa and Jennifer Coolidge and has previously toured with the Foos in his own band Tenacious D.

Jack Black made a surprise cameo at the Foo Fighters concert last night at Mt Smart Stadium. Photo / Supplied

Grohl set the terms of the night early on.

Foo Fighters - Figure 2
Photo New Zealand Herald

”Do you like rock and roll?” he asked the masses. “I got to test you. Test what kind of rock and roll you like.

”I think I kind of know what type of rock and roll you like.”

The Metallica riff Enter the Sandman gradually rose to a blaring jam everyone embraced instantly.

”We’re going to be here all f****** night so I got to make sure you like that kind of rock and roll.”

The nods to Grohl’s fellow rockers were aplenty - the “hey ho, let’s go” from The Ramones’ Blitzkrieg Bop was another cue for the audience to scream along.

Ever the showman, Grohl did his best to appeal to the locals, dedicating an acoustic instrumental piece to the “Blenheim miners who were trapped.” It’s not exactly clear if he meant Pike River.

Nevertheless, it was a good effort at making a connection. He’d already referenced almost every concert the Foo Fighters has played in NZ over their 28 years.

The weather gods smiled on the east Auckland stadium unlike the last time the Foos were here in 2018 - or this time last year during the would-be but ultimately ill-fated Elton John concert.

Foo Fighters - Figure 3
Photo New Zealand Herald

Fresh off a run of shows in Australia, the rockers, who formed nearly 30 years ago, are back for the first time without drummer Taylor Hawkins who died in 2022 in Colombia.

Their world tour in late 2022 was cancelled after Hawkins, age 50, died in his room at the Four Seasons Casa Medina in Bogota. He had multiple substances in his body at the time of death.

Last night the crowd gave a standing ovation for replacement Josh Freese - who has played for everyone from Nine Inch Nails to Guns N’ Roses - when Grohl broke his set to introduce him as “The person who made it possible for us to come out here and play tonight.”

He later dedicated a song to Hawkins, Aurora, which they’d written together.

The crowd was a congregation that spanned every living generation. Parents with kids. Boomers on a rocking date night. Gen Zs who would have been barely a twinkle in their parents’ eyes when the band’s first album came out in 1995.

Foo Fighters - Figure 4
Photo New Zealand Herald

An 8-year-old kid atop his dad’s shoulders held a sign reading “my mum thinks I’m at nanna’s tonight.” But looking around, nana could have joined the sneaky twosome.

We sat in prime seats just to the side of general admission. While everyone stood for the first hour, eventually some greyer than others tired and sat.

The 15-time Grammy-winning band released its latest album, But Here We Are - the 11th - in June last year. But it was all the classics that brought out the head-banging - Hero, The Pretender, Learn to Fly. But it wasn’t until the bitter end that the crowd-pumper Everlong came on.

Lord knows how many times the band have played them but every hit was delivered with sweaty passion. Along with US rockers The Breeders and punk five-piece Kiwi band Dick Move, the band will continue to attempt to recreate seismic events in Christchurch’s Orange Theory Stadium on Wednesday and Wellington’s Sky Stadium next Saturday.

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