Tuesday, July 9, 2024

X go out in style during farewell tour stop in Omaha

X, longtime Los Angeles punk stalwarts, may be disbanding at the end of their current tour, but they’re far from slowing down. The band showed this and more during their concert at the Waiting Room in Omaha on Sunday night. 

X, with all four original members—vocalist Exene Cervenka, bassist and vocalist John Doe, guitarist Billy Zoom, and drummer D.J. Bonebrake—played 22 songs, a feat that many much younger bands don’t even attempt. Through it all, the band put on a high-energy show, playing tracks from its forthcoming and final album, Smoke & Fiction, and kicking off the encore with a surprise.

Singer Jesse Ahern opened the show with his honest and earnest protest songs, connecting with the audience and even getting them to sing along at times. Then the crowd drew even closer to the stage for X, as they started the show with a trio of superb songs off Wild Gift, “Beyond and Back,” “In This House That I Call Home,” and “We’re Desperate,” before launching into the title track from their seminal debut album, Los Angeles.

X played four tracks from Smoke & Fiction, among them the title track and the aptly titled “Sweet Til the Bitter End,” which fit in seamlessly with their classic songs.

Doe, an everyman who has also dabbled in writing and acting (and could be considered a bit of a punk historian as well), introduced “The World’s a Mess: It’s My Kiss,” by saying that given the state of current events, the chorus had been stuck in his head. The song began the heart of the setlist, starting with “White Girl” and ending with “I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts,” which featured not only a sax solo by Zoom but also a turn on vibraphone by Bonebrake.

Photos by Christopher Windle 

The band played two more tracks from Los Angeles, “Your Phone’s Off the Hook, but You’re Not” and “Sugarlight,” and “Motel Room in My Bed” from Under the Big Black Sun, before closing out the main setlist with their cover of The Doors’ “Soul Kitchen” (also off Los Angeles).

For the encore, Doe returned to the stage with only Cervenka to do “something that we never do” during an X show. The pair performed the stunning “See How We Are,” which was even more powerful when stripped down to the duo’s vocal harmonies and guitar.

The rest of the band then took the stage to bring the show to an energetic conclusion with “Adult Books” from Wild Gift and “Water & Wine” off 2020’s Alphabetland.

After more than 45 years, it’s understandable that X want to leave recording and touring behind. But the Omaha show proved that the band will always be American treasures—and they’ll be missed.

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