Commenter   Comment   Posted On   Date  
 Bob19067 The was WPST 97.5 Rocktoberfest Sugar Ray / L.F.O. / Duran Duran / Mandy Moore Apr 07, 2023
 Daniel Caramico DOES ANYONE HAVE THE SETLIST Will Joseph Cook / DBMK Apr 07, 2023
 MikeQuinlivan1981 The Setkist is correct, but for this particular concert, they played their normal set list backwards. Why? To keep things fresh. Anyways, same set, but opened with Maagehtah, and closed with One Big Holiday. My Morning Jacket / Andrew Bird Apr 06, 2023
 JJ The best concert I've ever been to. Emerson, Lake & Palmer Apr 06, 2023
 RickyRacer My 1st Concert - Was living in Reading, PA, was just 15 at time at the time and drove to Philly for show. The concert lived up to all the hype and was as thunderous / bombastic as their just released KISS ALIVE album. Been a huge fan ever since and have seen them many more times. The ticket was just $8.00 back in 1978, incredible value given minimum wage was just $2.65. Heck, I had to work 3 hours at my part time grocery store job to buy the ticket :-) KISS / The Rockets Apr 06, 2023
 LKWay https://whereseric.com/tour/1995-32/ 28 Apr 95 - Eric Clapton Set List: 01. Motherless Child 02. Malted Milk 03. Four Until Late 04. How Long 05. Kidman Blues 06. I’m Gonna Cut Your Head 07. Forty Four 08. Blues All Day Long (Blues Leave Me Alone) 09. Standing Around Crying 10. Hoochie Coochie Man 11. It Hurts Me Too 12. Blues Before Sunrise 13. Third Degree 14. Reconsider Baby 15. Sinner’s Prayer 16. Every Day I Have The Blues 17. Early In The Morning 18. Before You Accuse Me 19. Someday After A While 20. Tore Down 21. Have You Ever Loved A Woman 22. Got My Mojo Working 23. Five Long Years 24. Crossroads 25. Ain’t Nobody’s Business Eric Clapton / Clarence Gatemouth Brown Apr 06, 2023
 colineyezation Vein, Code Orange, and Knocked Loose all got cut because a thunderstorm delayed the gates open time. I heard they played a show in downtown Chicago that night instead.... Chicago Open Air 2019 Apr 06, 2023
 colineyezation POSTPONED SHOW - RESCHEDULED TO 10/27/22 Glassjaw Apr 06, 2023
 colineyezation POSTPONED SHOW - MADE UP 11/25 Paramore Apr 06, 2023
 loanna Mon premier concert solo et mon premier front row 🥺 pomme je t’aime épouse moi Pomme Apr 06, 2023
 loanna Trente en première partie <33 Tim Dup / Trente Apr 06, 2023
 loanna 2 semaines à m’en remettre ! C était incroyable 🥹 concert post mon covid avec Alex et Elisa !! j’ai discuté avec lui et il nous a signé son livre de partitions Tim Dup / Trente Apr 06, 2023
 Vincent LaBarca Concertarchives please change your records to Saratoga NY Springfield, Massachusetts, United States Apr 06, 2023
 Vincent LaBarca The 5/15/71 Allman Brothers concert at Skidmore College was in Saratoga NY not Springfield Massachusetts!!! Springfield, Massachusetts, United States Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan The Jesus & Mary Chain – Enmore Theatre, 2 April 2008. The Jesus & Mary Chain's initial incarnation was renowned for potent, yet anti-social and anti-performance live shows comprising a static, microphone hunched Jim Reid murmuring through an impenetrable wall of squalling feedback. Twenty years on, the band is omparatively clean-cut, although at least William Reid has the same hairstyle. Instead of the barrage of unhinged white guitar noise that mark the band's albums, the songs within were excavated from the feedback and placed on a poppy pedestal. The more accessible, and most audience friendly moments - already only thinly coated in the usual JAMC cacophony – were pared back to their delectably sweet 'honey' and 'candy' centres. Some darker moments arose, 'Reverence' was particularly fearsome, but the overall tone of the show was unexpectedly upbeat. The only really abrasive sounds, when the guitars were left leaning against amps as the band left the stage, were quickly turned off by dutiful roadies. Maybe there is so much present in the music-world’s tide to flow against in 2008 that a band doesn’t have to take such extremes to go against the grain. The intensity of the youthful attitude and energy present when these songs were first written would have obviously been distilled over time, yet when your legacy is one of such importance, then why not give the songs a chance to be heard and digested in a more palatable manner? Buried under all the mesmerising and muddled noise present on The Jesus & Mary Chain’s albums are some rather potent, cracking, catchy almost-pop songs. While time has peeled away some layers of distortion and squall, it hasn’t dented the essence and spirit of the music. Maybe the more mature and the feedback fans would have had an unfavourable comparison with The Jesus & Mary Chain but for us younger folk, tonight was a very big notch in the musical bedpost. The Jesus and Mary Chain / The Rakes Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan St Jerome’s Laneway Festival – Phillip Park, March 2, 2008 The annual music festival which grew out of a small Melbourne bar’s back lane, once again took over Circular Quay. Summer music festivals have grown bigger and better in recent years, and the Laneway Festival – the boutique music event of the season - is no exception, spreading its wings from Melbourne’s back lanes to this year encompass Brisbane, Adelaide and lastly, Sydney. The early afternoon bands played in hazy sun giving a cruisy Sunday markets feel to early proceedings. Little Red tried to snap us out of it with their bass and tom blasting set. Okkervil River filled Reiby Place with the equally devoted and curious. The band played a great bulk of their new album Stage Names, a record which has helped the world catch on to how important a group they really are. Will Sheff writhes fragilely through his potent lyrics up front while the border-line loon drummer Travis Nelsen keeps the rhythmic shackles barely a touch above shambolic as the outcast orchestra comprising the rest of the band spread their deep textured noise behind. They soundtrack a view of the world that strikes a fine middle ground between the extremes of overly-literal bookish and misanthropic melancholy while dwelling in neither. They end with a bit too sincere ‘we love you’ and the soaring grand splendour of the murderous ‘Westfall’. In late afternoon what can best be described as the ‘Canadian Bracket’ commenced in the Park Stage. First up were Stars with their sweet as maple shared male/female vocals and pleasant pop, chips off the old block of the brilliant beard-led musically mesmerising ensemble Broken Social Scene. Building on their side-show earlier in the week, this was announced to be the collective’s ‘farewell tour’. As such it was an all-hands on deck no holds barred menagerie of musical magnificence, with guest ‘Stars’ aplenty and Feist and brass-section injections in equal measures. Electro-lunatic Dan Deacon played in Bulletin Place, the only area suitably boundless for his hyped-up musical explosions. Deacon proved you just need a power point and some people for a party to break out and even commanded a back-street full of folks to serenade two lucky staff of a second floor restaurant above. While the North American talent reigned outdoors, inside the Basement the home grown talent flourished. Darren Hanlon roped in a string section and the dueting duties of the ever-talented Pikelet to help fill his musical boots as the trod the Basement stage. The emerging grandeur of Bridezilla also filled the room with bodies and sounds. This is part of the great appeal of the Laneway festival, something new, great or just plain different awaits around every corner. Whether it be a critically adored yet criminally underselling artist playing a few feet from your face in a back street, a sublime open-air set in a park from which our very settlement sprang or some local soon-to-be’s punching above their weight playing a venue they may not ever otherwise play – Laneway Festival is all about boundary-pushing music in unique settings. Playing as the sun set, Feist was just commanding. Despite only coyly making her way on stage with the aid of a hand-held lantern, she owned the night from her very first note. She was brimming with engaging energy and possessed such a commanding vocal presence she pretty much stopped the whole festival in its tracks. It was simply the right person at the exact right time. Throw in some stark silhouetted visuals as backdrop and the full effect of the lightshow kicking in and the set was bordering on transcendent, plus it had the community service aspect of teaching readers of The Brag how to count to four. Simultaneously singing in the lane was the Andy Capp-capped Owen Ainsworth-led Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, who seemed to be playing a word-of-mouth private party. There were sparklers shining and everybody singing along amidst the devoted crowd, a testament to the band’s self-made, slow burning success. So while most people were contemplating a trip to Whistler, New Zealand’s Brunettes opened with the utterly saccharine chant of B-A-B-Y – I should call you sugar. Their super sweet innocent pop was an utterly delicious end to the festival, except perhaps for diabetics. St Jerome's Laneway Festival Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan Broken Social Scene – Manning Bar, 28 February 2008 Canadian Collective Broken Social Scene brought a very special guest for their Sydney sideshow ahead of their return Laneway Festival appearance. The bleak rainy weather did nothing to dampen the enthusiasm nor the shimmering music as Broken Social Scene (BSS) took to the Manning Bar stage ahead of singing in the Lane on Sunday. Kevin Drew was quite the amiable host, entering the stage and making a topical comment about Fred Nile and giving each of the six band members a brief introduction as they took their positions. Just to make it that much more of a personal experience. Drew proclaimed tonight would be about the exchange of human energy, as the band rolled rather pleasantly into an instrumental interlude. With the venue sold out and packed to capacity, the crowd would give as good as they got in the energy transaction, particularly after the next words from Drew’s mouth “we have with us here, for just this one night of the whole tour, Feist!” By God, the whole room just rippled with anticipation and when she bounded out bangs’n’all and strapped on a big ole cherry red guitar and chugged out some riffs, the whole crowd lifted as one in rapturous applause. There had been grumbles of discontent on a few internet forums – people complaining on forums!! Surely not! - moaning about the stripped-back six-piece ‘Scene as compared to the 14-strong band that last toured all horns blazing. However, the sheer presence of one Leslie Feist sure made up for at least 1-2-3-4 of the missing members. She was truly magnetic, a rose between two bearded thorns, and delightfully fleshed out a number of tracks with her commanding vocal presence, most compellingly ‘7/4 (Shoreline)’ and ‘Almost Crimes’. That’s not to say the rest of BSS were overshadowed by any means. The six musicians all seemed to operate in their own little individual zones. There was barely any eye contact nor clandestine cues between them; the fantastically buoyant backing noise was all seemingly done by pure intuition and each one’s incredibly attuned musicianship. An unscheduled intermission of a few minutes as some technical glitches were rectified was the only lull as they kicked back in with the cantering brilliance of ‘Fire Eyed Boy’ and the joyous jolly romp of ‘Backed Out On The…’. There were also new songs aplenty including ‘There is Water in Hell’, which isn’t that far-fetched a concept considering the deluge going on outside. The goodbyes and band bow came all too soon, Drew intoning to us ‘keep cheering, don’t stop cheering’. We didn’t and they returned for another blast and a parting farewell of “this has been the best show of the tour – you were great so this was our gift to you”. Aww thanks, you weren’t too bad yourself. Broken Social Scene / Stars / Belles Will Ring Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan Iron Maiden - Acer Arena, 9 February 2008 Metal masters Iron Maiden land in Australia - in their own customised Boeing 747 no less - on their Somewhere Back in Time world tour.† Australia has endured a wait of 15 years to see Iron Maiden. The palpable tension and overflowing anticipation was broken with black-and-white war footage accompanied by Winston Churchill's famous "we will fight them on the beaches" call to arms sounding out across the Acer Arena. The curtain lifted and all hell broke loose. Almost taking Winnie's words literally, a four-strong battalion toting guitars stormed the stage in a wave of tight black pants, flailing follicles and scorchingly strummed strings backed by an incessant thudding of gun-shot strength drums. Bruce Dickinson then bounded forth and leapt to the front looking like a wharfie in a fishing vest, black rubber pants and beanie. Aces and devil-fisted arms were high. It was his first of many guises for the night, as he would re-emerge later personifying 'The Trooper' and the 'Ancient Mariner'. The stage and the set was based mostly around the Powerstage album, with a hieroglyph-covered antechamber complete with changeable backdrops, a maze of ramps and walkways and three personal stages up front, filled with what must be the most heavily foot-printed foldback wedges in music. A Vincent Price voice-over and a blistering barrage of fireballs forewarned the demon-summoning power of 'The Number of the Beast'. The show-stopping highpoint of the set came with the quinella of 'Run to the Hills' and 'Fear of the Dark'. The two songs were seemingly bigger than the band themselves, touching every last person in the vast arena and ensuring a booming word-for-word sing-along from the delirious crowd. This could easily have been enough, with the crowd worked up to the point of satiated climax, but the pummelling continued with 'Iron Maiden' featuring a brief cartoonishly-menacing appearance by their mascot Eddie. The band left the stage after a few more obligatory 'scream for me Sydney!'s, though the restless, frenzied and impassioned chanting and stomping meant you didn't have to be 'The Clairvoyant' to sense they would soon return. Heaven can wait but the crowd couldn't, and we were treated to another dose before the band pulled up a pew and graced us with some heartfelt pleasantries and platitudes and promised to return soon before leaving off with a rattling 'Hallowed Be Thy Name'. Kick-arse Lauren Harris / Behind Crimson Eyes / Iron Maiden Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan The National – City Recital Hall, January 22 2008 One could not conceive a bigger contrast then going from beers and betting on the greyhounds at the rissole to being led into the salubrious catacombs of the City Recital Hall for astonishing musical collective Clogs. Looking like the type of people that would be really proficient at fixing your computer but actually being more proficient at stirring your soul with the most wondrous music conjured from mostly classically based, but also some rather more whimsical, instruments that may need a botanist to name them. The National’s Dessner brothers ambled on to lend assistance on six and four strings in some of the more structured numbers, almost as if they were the musical straight men to the abounding and varied virtuosity around them. The National just come on, plug in and go about their business barely wasting a note the entire evening. They are just so utterly astute, committed and entirely drawn into their own songs. Most ending with a beautiful fragile raggedness that comes from sheer exasperation as each song takes on its own dynamic, evolving force and is seemingly experienced by the band, not merely performed. When various members of Clogs appear on-stage through the course of the set, it is like someone placing a food order ‘with all the trimmings’. It is as if every last possible strum, structure and tuning has been mined for even the slightest addition of musical lustre. The night ends in the only possible manner to do it justice – a standing ovation. The National / Clogs Apr 06, 2023
 Andy J Ryan Crowded House – Sydney Entertainment Centre, 5 November 2007 After a farewell to the world that is still talked about in revered tones more than a decade later, the Crowdies don’t dream its over. The Walls begin the evening with a jaunty blast of Gallic rock eked out from a plank-sized strip at the front of the stage. They sound like The Babyshambles could if they only dabbled in the occasional pint of Guinness instead of smack and supermodels. Augie March were nervously in awe of the occasion, making the best of their short set by playing “a good representation of what we’ve done over the years”. Some wolf-whistles and encouraging shouts from the audience in response to their opening song prompted the drummer to reveal “I’ve waited a long time for a man in a stadium to call out the name of my band” to which singer Glen hastily rebuked “well I’ve had to remind you a few times”. The band told of the touring weariness they had recently experienced from a month and a half of shows just completed in America, lamenting the ongoing tiredness meant ever-dwindling energy to write any new songs. Instead we were treated to a rollicking ‘This Train Will be Taking No Passengers’. When they finish with their poignant and prominent single ‘One Crowded Hour’ its not that much of a stretch to imagine them with a stadium to themselves not too far down the track. It was almost as if Crowded House farewelled the band and released their songs over to the people that November day on the Opera House forecourt back in ’96. While the band whole-heartedly presents many songs off their latest album “Time On Earth’, they are happy to share the singing with the audience when they dip into their greatly revered back catalogue of hits. After the crowd feverishly accompanies a call-and -response rendition of ‘World Where you Live’ Neil praises us with “you’re in the game now Sydney”. The greatest reason Crowded House are so well loved is their almost humble approachability. Nearly every between song break bought some jovial banter or horse play, whether it be mucking about with a pencil camera, attempting ballet moves, bird noises or an impromptu jam of disco hit ‘Born to be Alive’. A particularly hirsute Liam Finn was bought out for a couple of touching songs with his old man and guest guitarist Davey Lane was joyously grinning through the whole experience as if it was granted by the Make A Wish Foundation. While some of their newer material had a bit of a hard sell to a Monday night audience, the second half of the set veered more to the classics built into a wonderfully delirious conclusion. The set proper finished with a rousing ‘When You Come’ before paring back into ‘Distant Sun’. A quite unnecessary “On your feet Sydney” introduced the first encore whose quality is such I merely have to list them: ‘Locked Out’, Something So Strong’ and ‘Weather With You’. A brief respite and we were lulled into the brilliant Four Seasons in one day before the cracking ‘Italian Plastic’ was dedicated to the sorely missed Paul Hester. A spine tingling, hair raising finale saw the whole room plunged into darkness and a swaying volley of mobile phone screens illuminate the cavernous ‘Ent Cent’ like a mass of slow-dancing glow worms as the strains of ‘Better be Home Soon’ emanated from the stage. Unforgettably brilliant. Set List Private Universe World Where you Live Don’t Stop Now Fall at your Feet Whispers & Moans English Trees Heaven that I'm Making Love you till the Day I Die Silent House Don’t Dream it's Over Pour Le Monde Walked her Way Down When you Come Distant Sun ENCORE - Locked Out Something So Strong Weather with You ENCORE 2 - 4 Seasons Italian Plastic Better be Home Soon Crowded House / Augie March / The Walls Apr 06, 2023