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When Snapcase came up with Progression Through Unlearning for an album title, they couldn't have described their future development better. 'Less Is More' seems to be the motto of the band. A lot of the older fans don't share that opinion, and abandoned Snapcase for what they were. And newer fans? They would probably have to come from emo-core grounds. Like Time In Malta. As the word got out that TIM was gonna be the support act for Snapcase, a small buzz went around the Internet. From what I heard, the band had a good live status, and they lived up to it. Though I was not too fond of the singer's standard emo-core voice and his theatrical stage act, the band left a good impression. Nothing new on the musical side, but a solid show.
Snapcase were surprising on several points. These were not necessarily positive, nor their own fault. First there was the sound. If you weren't standing directly in front of the stage, all the lower tones sounded like they freaked out the PA system. That little defect annoyed everybody but the sound engineer. Secondly, the crowd stood there frozen. What happened? Two years ago, Snapcase would have easily gotten things moving. Especially with older songs, of which there were a lot. There were only three or four songs from the End Transmission album. The show itself hadn't changed a bit. Snapcase played tight and showed a great deal of dedication. Too bad they didn't get much back from the crowd.
http://www.kindamuzik.net/live/snapcase/time-in-malta-snapcase-bad-sound-bad-crowd-decent-show/2170/
Meer Snapcase op KindaMuzik: http://www.kindamuzik.net/artiest/snapcase
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