Welcome to Gavin Rossdale Net! We have been your #1 fan site for all things Gavin Rossdale since October 2002, bringing you the latest and greatest on the former front-man for the amazing bands Bush and Institute. Now launching his solo career with the album Wanderlust, Gavin has been a staple in the music industry for over 12 years as an award winning singer and songwriter. We feature an archive of photos, videos, fan art, lyrics, and blogs - plus all the latest news and information regarding Gavin and his career. Thanks for coming by GRN!

Archive for the ‘Live Performances’ Category

Gavin on “The Tonight Show”
June 6th, 2009 at 12:46 am

Gavin will be the musical guest on “The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien” on Tuesday, June 16th!

The show airs on the NBC network at 11:30pm - make sure to double check your TV listings for the exact air times in your area.

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Post Author: Jennifer
Posted in Live Performances | News | TV Alerts

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Great Pics of Gavin from Pet-a-Palooza
May 7th, 2009 at 6:31 am
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Post Author: Lynn
Posted in Live Performances

Rossdale puts on an energetic show
May 4th, 2009 at 11:04 am

Some critics, and fans, will never give Gavin Rossdale a fair hearing, feeling his first successful band, Bush, was, in that memorable 1996 Rolling Stone headline, “Nirvanawannabes.” Then, of course, he totally subverts the grunge stereotype by being something of a pretty boy, not to mention being happily married (since 2002) to No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani.

But if you just wandered into the Paradise off Commonwealth Avenue on Friday night, not knowing who was onstage, you’d have been blown away by one superbly incendiary rock show. Rossdale’s 95-minute set focused on his 2008 solo album, “WanderLust,” but also included plenty of Bush nuggets, and even a nod to his work with Institute, his first post-Bush project. Friday was the third date in this 31-city national tour, and while 500 fans were going bonkers all night, it was not sold out.

Rossdale, 43, a former semi-pro soccer player in his native England, and now still a dedicated tennis maven, produced one of the most kinetic performances we’ve seen in years, cavorting and bouncing across the stage like a man possessed, yet frequently establishing contact with front-row fans. By the end of the night the singer was so drenched in perspiration, his guitar was soaking wet.

Rossdale has acknowledged being influenced by Nirvana, and noted that he loves them because they were in turn influenced by The Pixies, a band he also admires. But in recent years, Rossdale has gone beyond grunge, adding techno rhythms and keyboard accents to his work. “WanderLust” was one of last year’s best CDs, skillfully utilizing that punk/metal mix that characterized grunge, yet infusing it with modern life via sizzling rhythms and the contrast of soaring keyboards. Rossdale’s raspy but sincere vocals still hit the mark, but his lyrics have become more linear, and thankfully less obscure. If the latest songs go a bit too much for the big-payoff choruses, it still makes for infectiously riveting rock.

Rossdale and his backing quartet opened with “Machinehead,” a blistering bit of grunginess from Bush’s 1994 debut, “Sixteen Stone” that had the singer pogoing from one end of the stage to the other. “Frontline,” from the last CD, was an abrupt blast into the present tense, its edgy guitars and sweeping synth lines offset by Josh Freese’s hammering drums, as Rossdale sang the chorus “don’t wait for love…”

The drums are an integral part of the new sound, creating a inescapable pulse in your head. Freese depends heavily on his snare, which is tuned high and without reverb or rattle, so that it sounds like he’s hitting a wood block. Freese is a monster drummer, and Friday’s show confirmed his importance to Rossdale’s sound. But it also would have been good to have the guitars a bit higher in the mix.

“Boombox” was a bit of a surprise, coming from that 2004-06 Institute period, with a more raw, metal sound.

“Can’t Stop the World,” from the last CD, might be the signature song of that album, a plaintive ballad that ramps up to pounding rock, as Rossdale vocally delivers an emotional tour de force. But “The Skin I’m In” might be almost as memorable, an easy-rolling ballad with Freese’s drumbeat giving it immediacy, and Rossdale belting out his best vocal.

Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide” was the lone cover song, performed with just guitarist Chris Traynor and Rossdale in acoustic setting, and it was a wonderful change of pace. Rossdale sang most of the tune while holding the hand of a woman in the front row, finishing with a heartwarming vocal sustain. That quiet moment was followed immediately by the thunderous “Everything Zen” from that multi-platinum Bush debut album.

A pulsating, agreeably ramshackle “People That We Love” closed the regular set, but Rossdale returned with four encore songs. “When Animals Attack” delivered metal thunder with syncopated rhythms, while the ballad “Love Remains the Same” prompted such an outbreak of embracing couples it seemed like a love-in. Rossdale did a solo “Glycerine” – another ‘94 Bush relic – with just his electric guitar and most of the crowd as accompaniment. The night ended with a pulverizing “Comedown,” with the singer zipping about the stage like a water bug.

Rossdale has found a compelling and invigorating post-grunge formula. If memory serves, grunge was never this much fun.

(via The Patriot Ledger)

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Post Author: Lynn
Posted in Articles | Live Performances

Lustin’ for Gavin (Review of Gavin’s Burton Cummings Theatre Show)
April 23rd, 2009 at 5:18 am

Just when we thought Gavin Rossdale had permanently swapped his guitar strap for a baby Snuggly, the former Bush man goes and shows us he’s still got a little fire in the ol’ belly.

The 43-year-old British rocker played his heart out at the Burton Cummings Theatre on Wednesday night. Sure, the crowd was sparse at 750. But after years of dealing with the unwanted Mr. Stefani moniker – a result of marrying Gwen Stefani and fathering her two sons shortly after his post-grunge band Bush split – Rossdale, simply dressed in blue jeans and a T-shirt, had something to prove.

And whatever that was, he seemed to have accomplished it.

While the doting daddy of two-year-old Kingston and eight-month-old Zuma focused mainly on his pop-rock solo debut WANDERlust, he exercised his other catalogue options – including at least one track from nearly every Bush album and even one (Bullet Proof Skin) from his short-lived band Institute’s only disc Distort Yourself. Oh, and there was also that rather impressive cover of Fleetwood Mac’s Landslide.

Obviously the Bush tunes went over best – and Rossdale snuck 1994 Sixteen Stone hit Machinehead into the setlist early on before hauling out other old favourites like ballad Glycerine and heavy-hitter Comedown for the encore.

In between, the raspy-voiced singer-guitarist carved an edge on WANDERlust’s softer offerings – notably This is Happiness and If You’re Not With Us You Are Against Us – and slowed things down for Forever May You Run and single Love Remains the Same (which has been heard on soundtracks galore, from film Nights in Rodanthe to last week’s episode of 90210).

And, always the gracious Brit, Rossdale was sure to thank his enthused audience numerous times.

“It’s good to see you again,” he said. “Thank you for coming out.”

Though would it really have killed him to further express his gratitude by smiling once in awhile? We swore we heard someone behind us wonder aloud, “Is he dead?” due to the pained zombie expression he held onto throughout his 90-minute set.

We guess that’s all part of maintaining the tortured grunge-singer image he built for himself as Bush’s frontman – and a frequently accused Kurt Cobain imitator – in the mid-1990s. And we’ll forgive him on the grounds that he’s barely aged since the band played to thousands of screaming teenagers at the Winnipeg Arena in 1997. It was hard not to still be mesmerized by the curly-haired heartthrob’s bedroom eyes and svelte tennis-player’s physique – we’re not gonna lie. No doubt the Great Gwen has great taste.

Aside from the occasional handshake and rockstar pose on either side of the stage, neither Rossdale nor the members of his four-piece band (who remain anonymous, since he didn’t introduce them) truly acknowledged the fans. And while we’d say that was our biggest criticism, it didn’t seem to matter much to all the still-devoted female AND male Bush-heads in the crowd, whose love for Rossdale clearly remains the same.

Setlist

The Trouble I’m In

Machinehead

Frontline

If You’re Not With Us You Are Against Us

Can’t Stop the World

Forever May You Run

Landslide (Fleetwood Mac cover)

Bullet Proof Skin

Everything Zen

This is Happiness

The People That We Love

Encore

The Chemicals Between Us

Love Remains the Same

Glycerine

Comedown

[via Winnipeg Sun]

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Post Author: Lynn
Posted in Articles | Live Performances | Public Events

Gavin Rossdale Live At The Showbox In Seattle
April 16th, 2009 at 6:10 am

Video of Gavin’s performance in Seattle at the Showbox. Clips include Machinehead, Forever May You Run, and Glycerine. [via BEACON-STREET.NET]

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Post Author: Lynn
Posted in Live Performances | Video Update

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