Smashing Pumpkins, Metric
Toyota Center
July 17, 2K18
Itโs a bit surprising when Billy Corgan walks down the stage, guitar slung over his shoulders, and kicks off a headlining set with โDisarm.โ Itโs a beautiful song, one of the best in the Smashing Pumpkins catalog, but you expect an arena show to kick off with something a little more bombastic. But it works, largely because Corgan sells it well and itโs unexpected, tipping his hand that the show isnโt afraid to play with conventions.
Eleven songs in, as an incredible performance of โEyeโ comes to a close, things are feeling pretty great. The show has been a mix of loving revisionist history and rock star posturing, but itโs working. Corgan is having fun on stageโhe neither stalks nor slinks, but rather moves like someone who got up on a pair of stilts and isnโt sure he made the right decision but is still having a good timeโand the band sounds tight, and if you had any hesitation about a D’arcy Wretzky-free reunion those doubts are, at the very least, far from your mind.
But then comes a ten-song stretch where the pace of the show becomes glacial, and even though you know the hits are coming if you can just remain strong, you start to question what youโre doing with your life. The problem isnโt that the songs are badโin a vacuum, I would say that almost every song performed was good to greatโitโs just that the show is so self-indulgent without giving the audience something to hold on to that for many in the audience the show became something of a chore. People played on their phones, others went for drinks and never returned, and at least one was deep asleep during the climax of the performance.
It made me wonder just who this show was built for. Itโs certainly not for casual fans, because with an almost three-hour runtime there are long, long stretches where theyโre not going to hear anything they know from the radio. Is it for the hardcore devotees? Maybe, but if youโre a longtime obsessive of the group, odds are youโd much rather see them in a smaller venue playing deeper cuts. So if not either of those groups, then who?
The answer is obvious: Billy Corgan. With The Shiny and Oh So Bright tour, Corgan has marshaled everything he had leftโa Smashing Pumpkins โreunionโโto get into arenas again so he can live out his dreams of rock stardom. And for 45 minutes itโs magical. It just works. And then another 20 minutes pass and itโs still pretty good. But eventually the slowness mounts and the charm wears off.
Itโs a show that doesnโt have a goal thematically other than to make the creative force behind it happy. Itโs not unlike what happened with Kanye Westโs Saint Pablo tourโCorgan and West are both Illinois nativesโwhere a great idea was stretched too far. If youโre more than just a radio fan, itโs worth a ticketโyouโre for sure going to get your moneyโs worthโbut if youโve ever thought, โIโd kill to see a three-hour Smashing Pumpkins show,โ well, be careful what you wish for.

So, How Was The Opener?: Metric gave it their all over the course of their 45-minute set, and itโs a shame that the crowd didnโt have more to give back. I feel like maybe things would have gone better for the band had they moved โGold Guns Girlsโ to the end of their set; it was the highlight of their performance and the closest thing to a straight rock song they performed. Once it was over, it felt like they lost most of the crowd until โHelp Iโm Alive,โ and even then the crowd was more quiet than not.
Personal Bias: I am neither a casual Smashing Pumpkins fan nor am I an obsessive. I like them enough to keep tabs on their activities, but I still havenโt listened to their new single. Iโm very sad Iโll never hear โMouth of Babesโ or โCherryโ live.
The Crowd: My plus one said someone in front of us was looking at nude women on their phone, but I canโt confirm that was a thing. A lot of people started looking for their seats around the third song of the set, which was pretty weird.
Overheard in the Crowd: โOh, they didnโt even open up both sides of the food vending. Thatโs so sad.โ
Random Notebook Dump: In a fun bit of things coming full circle, as I left a show from a tour subject to industry chatter about slow ticket sales, one of the ushers at the Toyota Center handed me a flyer for another show here in town with two free tickets to said show stapled to it. If tonight taught me anything, this is a smart strategy, because boredom will drive folks to the bar.
This article appears in Jan 1 โ Dec 31, 2018.

