
Why My Chemical Romance is bigger than it's ever been
The tour, which stopped Saturday night at Dodger Stadium for the first of two concerts, doesn't finally manifest the long-anticipated reunion of one of emo's most influential bands; My Chem reconvened in 2019 and has been performing, pandemic-related delays aside, fairly consistently since then (including five nights at Inglewood's Kia Forum in 2022 and two headlining appearances at Las Vegas' When We Were Young festival).
Yet only now is the group visiting sold-out baseball parks – and without even the loss leader of new music to help drum up interest in its show.
Lead vocalist Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson
"Thank you for being here tonight," Gerard Way, My Chem's 48-year-old frontman, told the crowd of tens of thousands at Saturday's gig. "This is our first stadium tour, which is a wild thing to say." To mark the occasion, he pointed out, his younger brother Mikey was playing a bass guitar inscribed with the Dodgers' logo.
So how did this darkly witty, highly theatrical punk band reach a new peak so deep into its comeback? Certainly it's benefiting from an overall resurgence of rock after years dominated by pop and hip-hop; My Chem's Dodger Stadium run coincides this weekend with the return of the once-annual Warped Tour in Long Beach after a six-year dormancy.
Then again, Linkin Park – to name another rock group huge in the early 2000s – recently moved a planned Dodger Stadium date to Inglewood's much smaller Intuit Dome, presumably as a result of lower-than-expected ticket sales.
The endurance of My Chemical Romance, which formed in New Jersey before eventually relocating to Los Angeles, feels rooted more specifically in its obsession with comic books and in Gerard Way's frank lyrics about depression and his flexible portrayal of gender and sexuality.
Lead vocalist Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance holds up the microphone while performing during the opening night of the band's 'Long Live the Black Parade' tour. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson
Looking back now, it's clear the band's blend of drama and emotion – of world-building and bloodletting – set a crucial template for a generation or two of subsequent acts, from bands like Twenty One Pilots to rappers like the late Juice Wrld to a gloomy pop singer like Sombr, whose viral hit Back to Friend luxuriates in a kind of glamorous misery.
For much of its audience, My Chem's proudly sentimental music contains the stuff of identity – one reason thousands showed up to Dodger Stadium wearing elaborate outfits inspired by the band's detailed iconography.
In 2006, the quadruple-platinum Black Parade LP arrived as a concept album about a dying cancer patient; Way and his bandmates dressed in military garb that made them look like members of Satan's marching band.
Nearly two decades later, the wardrobe remained the same as the band muscled through the album's 14 tracks, though the narrative had transformed into a semi-coherent Trump-era satire of political authoritarianism: My Chemical Romance, in this telling a band from the fictional nation of Draag, was performing for the delectation of the country's vain and ruthless dictator, who sat stony-faced on a throne near the pitcher's mound flanked by a pair of soldiers.
Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance performs during the opening night of the band's 'Long Live the Black Parade' tour. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson
The theater of it all was fun – important (if a bit crude), you could even say, given how young much of the band's audience is and how carefully so many modern pop stars avoid taking political stands that could threaten to alienate some number of their fans.
After Welcome to the Black Parade , a bearded guy playing a government apparatchik handed out Dodger Dogs to the band and to the dictator; Way waited to find out whether the dictator approved of the hot dog before he decided he liked it too.
Yet what really mattered was how great the songs still are: the deranged rockabilly stomp of Teenagers , the Eastern European oom-pah of Mama , the eruption of Welcome to the Black Parade from fist-pumping glam-rock processional to breakneck thrash-punk tantrum.
Indeed, the better part of Saturday's show came after the complete Black Parade performance when My Chem – the Way brothers along with guitarists Frank Iero and Ray Toro, drummer Jarrod Alexander and keyboardist Jamie Muhoberac – reappeared sans costumes on a smaller secondary stage to "play some jams," as Gerard Way put it, from elsewhere in the band's catalog. (Its most recent studio album came out in 2010, though it's since issued a smattering of archived material.)
Bassist Mikey Way of My Chemical Romance is silhouetted in stage fog while performing in Seattle. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson
I'm Not Okay (I Promise) was blistering atomic pop, while Summertime thrummed with nervy energy; Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na) was as delightfully snotty as its title suggests.
The band reached back for what Way called his favorite My Chem song – Vampires Will Never Hurt You , from the group's 2002 debut – and performed, evidently for the first time, a chugging power ballad called War Beneath the Rain , which Way recalled cutting in a North Hollywood studio "before the band broke up" as My Chem tried to make a record that never came out.
The group closed, as it often does, with its old hit Helena , a bleak yet turbo-charged meditation on what the living owe the dead, and as he belted the chorus, Way dropped to his knees in an apparent mix of exhaustion, despair, gratitude – maybe a bit of befuddlement too. He was leaving no feeling unfelt. – Mikael Wood/Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service
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Rakyat Post
a day ago
- Rakyat Post
Meet Tracy Phillips, The Living-Dead Dancer In MCR's 'Helena'
Subscribe to our FREE Any My Chemical Romance fan will be able to remember the epic opening to 'Helena', one of the American rock band's most iconic music videos. The video starts off sombre, with mourners entering a church to attend a funeral for someone named Helena. In less than 20 seconds, the funeral attendees burst into dance as the Gerard belts out the first verse full of sorrow. All of this happens around one central piece of the video: the deceased Helena, who later comes to life and joins the dance in a macabre celebration. Since the video was released, Helena has become an icon to all MCR fans and the goth/emo scene in general. Her ballerina-inspired burial outfit, the haunting solo dance from her coffin and down the church aisle, all elevated MCR's Helena into one of emo music video history's most memorable visual narratives. The song explores themes of grief, loss, and the impact of death, particularly the regret and self-blame that MCR frontman Gerard Way felt for not being present for his late grandmother in her final year of life. And yes, the song is a heartfelt tribute to his grandmum Elena Lee Rush who is also nicknamed Helena. But who is the real Helena? Her name is Tracy Phillips, and she's much more than just a pretty ballet zombie. She is also an actress, dancer, and choreographer, which made her perfect for MCR's emotionally-charged music video. Outside of Helena, she has worked on a variety of film and television projects in capacities such as choreography and acting including in films like 500 Days of Summer, The Muppets, and Jackass Number Two, according to British rock, punk and heavy metal music magazine She also frequently performs and choreographs in the L.A. underground arts scene and has worked with innovative troupes like Talk about talent! Biographical details on Phillips are relatively scarce, save the fact that she is credited on Internet Movie Database (IMDb) simply as the actress playing Helena in the MCR music video. She is also credited as choreographer in goth rock band Evanescence's music video Call Me When You're Sober (2006) on the Internet Music Video Database (IMVDb). A Wade was a prominent figure in the American National Football League (NFL) and has been the head coach of teams like the Denver Broncos, Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills, and more. Fans of MCR are still enchanted by 'Helena' until today On social media, Tracy is still celebrated by fans at meet and greets, proving how big of an impact she made just by appearing in a music video that was released in 2005. Some even commented on her appearance as she seemingly did not age since she was first seen in the music video, and joked that she and Gerard Way are vampires due to their apparent youthfulness. Tracy is celebrated not just for her technical skill, but for the emotional depth and narrative quality she brings to every performance. Whether it's a music video, a film scene, or a live act, her work continues to captivate audiences through its elegance, intensity, and storytelling power. The odds of her coming to Malaysia are slim, but at least we'll get to be reminded of her whe MCR comes down to Malaysia next year. The iconic emo rock band is set to perform at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium on 31 April and 1 May. Tickets for both days sold out in mere hours, and the second day was added later due to overwhelming demand — Share your thoughts with us via TRP's . Get more stories like this to your inbox by signing up for our newsletter.


The Star
5 days ago
- The Star
Why My Chemical Romance is bigger than it's ever been
12 years after a breakup that didn't stick – and one year shy of the 20th anniversary of its biggest album – My Chemical Romance is on the road this summer playing 2006's The Black Parade from beginning to end. The tour, which stopped Saturday night at Dodger Stadium for the first of two concerts, doesn't finally manifest the long-anticipated reunion of one of emo's most influential bands; My Chem reconvened in 2019 and has been performing, pandemic-related delays aside, fairly consistently since then (including five nights at Inglewood's Kia Forum in 2022 and two headlining appearances at Las Vegas' When We Were Young festival). Yet only now is the group visiting sold-out baseball parks – and without even the loss leader of new music to help drum up interest in its show. Lead vocalist Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson "Thank you for being here tonight," Gerard Way, My Chem's 48-year-old frontman, told the crowd of tens of thousands at Saturday's gig. "This is our first stadium tour, which is a wild thing to say." To mark the occasion, he pointed out, his younger brother Mikey was playing a bass guitar inscribed with the Dodgers' logo. So how did this darkly witty, highly theatrical punk band reach a new peak so deep into its comeback? Certainly it's benefiting from an overall resurgence of rock after years dominated by pop and hip-hop; My Chem's Dodger Stadium run coincides this weekend with the return of the once-annual Warped Tour in Long Beach after a six-year dormancy. Then again, Linkin Park – to name another rock group huge in the early 2000s – recently moved a planned Dodger Stadium date to Inglewood's much smaller Intuit Dome, presumably as a result of lower-than-expected ticket sales. The endurance of My Chemical Romance, which formed in New Jersey before eventually relocating to Los Angeles, feels rooted more specifically in its obsession with comic books and in Gerard Way's frank lyrics about depression and his flexible portrayal of gender and sexuality. Lead vocalist Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance holds up the microphone while performing during the opening night of the band's 'Long Live the Black Parade' tour. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson Looking back now, it's clear the band's blend of drama and emotion – of world-building and bloodletting – set a crucial template for a generation or two of subsequent acts, from bands like Twenty One Pilots to rappers like the late Juice Wrld to a gloomy pop singer like Sombr, whose viral hit Back to Friend luxuriates in a kind of glamorous misery. For much of its audience, My Chem's proudly sentimental music contains the stuff of identity – one reason thousands showed up to Dodger Stadium wearing elaborate outfits inspired by the band's detailed iconography. In 2006, the quadruple-platinum Black Parade LP arrived as a concept album about a dying cancer patient; Way and his bandmates dressed in military garb that made them look like members of Satan's marching band. Nearly two decades later, the wardrobe remained the same as the band muscled through the album's 14 tracks, though the narrative had transformed into a semi-coherent Trump-era satire of political authoritarianism: My Chemical Romance, in this telling a band from the fictional nation of Draag, was performing for the delectation of the country's vain and ruthless dictator, who sat stony-faced on a throne near the pitcher's mound flanked by a pair of soldiers. Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance performs during the opening night of the band's 'Long Live the Black Parade' tour. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson The theater of it all was fun – important (if a bit crude), you could even say, given how young much of the band's audience is and how carefully so many modern pop stars avoid taking political stands that could threaten to alienate some number of their fans. After Welcome to the Black Parade , a bearded guy playing a government apparatchik handed out Dodger Dogs to the band and to the dictator; Way waited to find out whether the dictator approved of the hot dog before he decided he liked it too. Yet what really mattered was how great the songs still are: the deranged rockabilly stomp of Teenagers , the Eastern European oom-pah of Mama , the eruption of Welcome to the Black Parade from fist-pumping glam-rock processional to breakneck thrash-punk tantrum. Indeed, the better part of Saturday's show came after the complete Black Parade performance when My Chem – the Way brothers along with guitarists Frank Iero and Ray Toro, drummer Jarrod Alexander and keyboardist Jamie Muhoberac – reappeared sans costumes on a smaller secondary stage to "play some jams," as Gerard Way put it, from elsewhere in the band's catalog. (Its most recent studio album came out in 2010, though it's since issued a smattering of archived material.) Bassist Mikey Way of My Chemical Romance is silhouetted in stage fog while performing in Seattle. — AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson I'm Not Okay (I Promise) was blistering atomic pop, while Summertime thrummed with nervy energy; Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na) was as delightfully snotty as its title suggests. The band reached back for what Way called his favorite My Chem song – Vampires Will Never Hurt You , from the group's 2002 debut – and performed, evidently for the first time, a chugging power ballad called War Beneath the Rain , which Way recalled cutting in a North Hollywood studio "before the band broke up" as My Chem tried to make a record that never came out. The group closed, as it often does, with its old hit Helena , a bleak yet turbo-charged meditation on what the living owe the dead, and as he belted the chorus, Way dropped to his knees in an apparent mix of exhaustion, despair, gratitude – maybe a bit of befuddlement too. He was leaving no feeling unfelt. – Mikael Wood/Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service


New Straits Times
6 days ago
- New Straits Times
#SHOWBIZ: My Chemical Romance sells out 2nd day concert in just a few hours
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian fans of legendary US rock band My Chemical Romance have secured a historic two nights of concerts after tickets for a second Kuala Lumpur show sold out in just a few hours today. Initially, the band had announced a single performance on April 30, 2026 at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium, here, as part of their "Long Live The Black Parade" global tour. However, a stunning fan response saw the first night's tickets snapped up in a mere 90 minutes when they went on sale on July 11. This left thousands of fans disappointed and hoping for another chance. Their prayers were answered when a second date was announced for May 1, 2026. Tickets for this additional show went on sale today (Aug 1) and were completely sold out within a few hours. This remarkable achievement means MCR will now play to an expected total audience of 120,000 across both nights at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium. This phenomenal demand has made Kuala Lumpur the only Southeast Asian stop on the tour to host back-to-back shows. The two consecutive concerts also set a new record for the largest audience MCR has ever played to in the region. The promoter, Hello Universe, expressed their gratitude to the Malaysian fanbase for making this happen. In an Instagram post, they celebrated the milestone, saying, "We are officially sold out! Thank you, Malaysia. We made history together. See you in 2026!" The comments section was mostly filled with thrilled fans who had a smoother experience of obtaining the tickets online this time. "This time it's peaceful. Only thing is, I wanted to ask if there'll be a kiss cam, haha," wrote one netizen, while another added, "This is how it should be done, so scalpers can't do their crazy work." "Congratulations to those who got tickets and got access smoothly!" wrote one more. Another added, "Queue. Select seating and payment. So smooth. Uncle Gerard see you in May 2026!" The historic concerts will not only be a highlight of the Visit Malaysia Year 2026 campaign but will also be a first for the Bukit Jalil National Stadium, which has never before hosted two full-scale international concerts on consecutive nights. Besides Malaysia, MCR is scheduled to perform in South Korea, Thailand, the Philippines, Singapore, and Indonesia. The New Jersey rock outfit, which formed in 2001, was last in town for a concert back in December 2007, as part of their 'The Black Parade Tour'.