Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for X Japan - The Last Live (2001)
What is it with live shows being better than albums for some bands? Not that I would ever complain because this one is so awesome and beautiful! The power and emotion are to be checked out to believe. It's a true swan song show for the band, grand enough to make history.
X Japan is pretty much the Queen of Japan. And I mean the rock band Queen. X Japan is a band pretty much everyone in the country has adored, and the live shows can be considered an audio-visual treasure. So it was a sad day when the band announced their intention to call it quits. The band knew they had to end their journey in a proper bang, hence their concert at the Tokyo Dome on New Year's Eve 1997. It would be the final time many of 50,000 fans would see them live.
The smooth peaceful overture "Amethyst" fills the stadium, sending fans on a cheering frenzy once it begins. Soon the band members enter the stage as the noise from the crowd rises and the announcer introduces... X Japan! The band begins performing "Rusty Nail" as vocalist Toshi screams "LET'S GO!!!" in Japanese. Although this is still a heavy metal song, it has a similar vibe those J-pop rock antime themes. It's actually the first song I've heard from this band, mainly because of Dragonland's cover. "Week End" is a catchy song to get the crowd going. But then we have a tricky turn in "Scars" into mainstream electro-industrial rock. It's still a good energetic track though. The title opener of Dahlia blends heaviness with accessibility. If there wasn't any metal, it would've been more like an upbeat J-pop song, with the verses and chorus having that vibe. Then we have a quick two-minute "Drum Break" from Yoshiki. "Drain" is another more industrial track, and it actually rules! I enjoy the heavy groove despite being different from any of X Japan's albums before Dahlia. After that is a "Piano Solo" from Yoshiki to make up for not having the epic piano-led "Art of Life" in their setlist.
"Crucify My Love" is a short ballad, at least short compared to the other 3 ballads in Dahila that are each more than 7 minutes long. One such song being "Longing ~Togireta melody~" which is perhaps the greatest ballad by X Japan and one of the best ballads I've ever heard, and I'm speaking as someone who doesn't enjoy a lot of ballads. I can really feel how moving it is! And then we get back to the earlier heavy stuff with "Kurenai", still one of my favorite tracks from their debut Vanished Vision, with a total catchy headbanging chorus. The riffing and the soloing are some of the best from the band. I'm still amazed by their ability to go from a slow love ballad to a fast speed/power metal song. And that alone is enough to make that song a remarkable one, along with everything else within. And the fast speed doesn't end there, as we switch to the short swift "Orgasm". Well, the original song is short, perhaps their shortest non-interlude song. However, they've actually extended it into perhaps their longest track! Besides "Art of Life" of course. Yeah, this is the point where the tracks begin to get extended to over 10 minutes each, almost like prog-metal epics! But if you think that's impressive, get a load of Yoshiki's 14-minute drum solo. Amazing f***ing strength, just hitting those drums until he practically passes out. I sense some jealousy from Mike Portnoy of Dream Theater. While Yoshiki has some to rest, Toshi steps in to sing "Forever Love", another breathtaking ballad. In all honesty, if I was listening to ballads like that a few years before this review before restoring my interest in more melodic metal genres, I would've probably dozed off. And now I don't, I can just listen to them nice and awake.
It leads to the only short track in the second half, "Prologue", which is the intro to Blue Blood that originally has the subtitle "World Anthem". It sounds like a happy Maiden-infused march that's never a drag. It segues straight to the highlight of the entire concert, the band's own theme song, the catchy speedy "X". I'm sure the original song has planted the seed for international power metal bands like Stratovarius. The crowd really goes wild, participating as they should, with their "X" shouts and forming the "X" symbol. And as the music gets extended, it never drags. An absolute banger that never lets itself down! Amazing piano can be heard in "Endless Rain", proving that the band can make a tearjerking ballad without it coming out as cheesy sh*t. After that is another contender for one of the most beautiful power ballads ever, "Say Anything". I swear this can practically make a grown man like me cry. If you can translate the lyrics to English, you would know the tragic tale of a man's futile attempt at saving his relationship, "Say anything, you can dry my every tear". Now the thing is, the band didn't actually perform the song in this show. Really the only live thing to occur there is the audience singing along. The band was too busy handing out different gifts to the fans, as their way of saying "thank you" (or in Japanese, "Arigato"). At last we get to the aptly titled final single "The Last Song". Yoshiki begins playing his piano, and the rest of the performance is emotional history. Once it ends, the band members exit the stage one by one, and Yoshiki is the last to leave after playing the final notes. The true final song is the 10-minute ballad "Tears". It plays during a montage screening of the band over the years. And to end it all for real, an excerpt from "Unfinished" is heard, "Oh, I'm looking at you, can't control myself, nothing but pain for me." And that's the end. Happy New Year!
Fast forward to now, X Japan is back together and having been trying to make their 6th album for nearly two decades. Sadly, just a little over 4 months after their then-final show, Hide hung himself to death. It was widely believed to be suicide, but the band insisted that it was an accident. So that show was truly a heartbreaking farewell to Hide. RIP... Also, Heath passed away from colon cancer two years before this review, but he already completed his recordings for the upcoming album. RIP him too... Anyway, any fan of X Japan, metal, or music in general should encounter this live beauty. Perhaps one of, if not THE, greatest live show in Japan, and possibly the world!
Favorites: "Rusty Nail", "Week End", "Dahlia", "Longing ~Togireta melody~", "Kurenai", "Drum Solo", "X", "Endless Rain", "Curtain Call (Say Anything)", "The Last Song"
