The Who / David Johansen

Dec 10, 1982 (41 years ago)

Carrier Dome, Syracuse University     Syracuse, New York, United States

Band Line-up


Concert Details


Date:
Friday, December 10, 1982
Venue:
Carrier Dome, Syracuse University
Location:
Syracuse, New York, United States
Notes:

$15 tickets. The Who took the stage at 8:30pm.

Band Genres


Classic Rock 2 bands

Classic Rock:

Power Pop 2 bands

Power Pop:

Rock 2 bands

Rock:

Art Pop 1 band

Art Pop:

Art Rock 1 band

Art Rock:

Beat Music 1 band

Beat Music:

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Blues Rock:

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Freakbeat:

Garage Rock 1 band

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Glam Rock:

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Hard Rock:

Mod 1 band

Mod:

Pop Rock 1 band

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Psychedelic Pop:

Psychedelic Rock 1 band

Psychedelic Rock:

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Rock And Roll:

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Setlists


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Videos



Full concert audio - see Setlist with times in photos


  Added by Brucefan24
Credit: The Hellion92 - "The Who- Live in Syracuse 1982/12/10"


Sister Disco - Syracuse, NY


  Added by Brucefan24
Credit: The Who Vault - "The Who at The Carrier Dome, Syracuse, NY Dec 10, 1982"

Photos


The Who / David Johansen on Dec 10, 1982 [747-small]

  Uploaded by Brucefan24

The Who / David Johansen on Dec 10, 1982 [937-small]

  Uploaded by Brucefan24

The Who / David Johansen on Dec 10, 1982 [936-small]

  Uploaded by Brucefan24

 Mdono1
 Brucefan24
 Rob Dugand
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Brucefan24 Oct 17, 2023

Flashback: The Who has 'last big gig' at the Carrier Dome in 1982

Updated: Sep. 15, 2023, 9:26 p.m.
Published: Dec. 11, 2017, 2:32 p.m.

By Johnathan Croyle | [email protected]

A Post-Standard reporter was confronted by a music fan after leaving The Who concert at the Carrier Dome on Dec. 10, 1982.

"Big crowd," said the teenager. "Just write 'big crowd.' Put it in headlines. Big, huge crowd."

The veteran British rock band were on the final leg of what they called their farewell tour and the performance at the Dome was called their "last big gig."

The band's spokesman, Mason Buck, said the band was looking forward to the show, knowing it would be the last stadium show they would do in North America.

The concert was sold-out. The expected 45,000 fans would make it the biggest indoor rock audience in the history of the Northeast, and the biggest event in the short history of the Carrier Dome.

Tractor trailers had been rolling through Syracuse all week, hauling in all of the necessary sound, lighting and staging equipment, as well as a 120-person construction crew.

Lead singer Roger Daltrey would run in time to the music and guitarist Peter Townshend would play in his familiar windmill fashion on a 35-yard stage, bookended by two giant speaker towers.

The stage would be illuminated with 400 aircraft lights, 12 computerized lights that swivel in unison, and eight huge spotlights. A video screen over the stage would bring the concert closer to those in the far reaches of the Dome.

A reporter estimated that most of the crowd was in their late-30s, but many young fans were present. "The music gives you a feeling," said 13-year-old Else Siepecky, from Syracuse. "You get all rowdy, like during the food fights we have at lunch in school."

The Who took the stage at about 8:30 p.m., after a "short set" by David Johansen. Worries about the Dome's acoustics (it was described as "a cavernous pillow-topped acoustical Dante's Inferno") proved unfounded as the band "redeemed the arena during a hit-strewn aural assault that satisfied a generation or two of the veteran band's fans."

A review in the next day's Post-Standard by Steve O'Sullivan said the crowd "responded passionately" to the older songs, like "My Generation" and "I Can't Explain" which opened their performance, but "seemed unmoved and unfamiliar with the band's more recent songs." O'Sullivan said none of the band's panache had "been diminished even as the act nears its 20th year."

Lead singer Roger Daltrey voice was described as a "raucous bellow," and his moves while performing, O'Sullivan said, were "forceful and spontaneous and free of the over-rehearsed choreography that Mick Jagger minced through during his 1981 Dome performance." Peter Townshend's "long legs still cleave the air with trademark scissor-splits; his picking arm whirs full-circle through windmill arcs." Sadly, no guitars were smashed.

Over the next two hours, the band played such favorites as "Baba O'Riley," "Won't Get Fooled Again," "Pinball Wizard" and "Behind Blue Eyes." They closed the show with an encore, which featured a cover of the Beatles' hit, "Twist and Shout."

A Herald-Journal review summed the evening with: "Perfect. Remember, they're going out on top." The tour ended a week later in Toronto.

After a breakup in 1983, The Who reformed in 1989 for a reunion tour and are still active today.


Brucefan24 Apr 16, 2020

I did not take the video. It was pulled in from YouTube. Glad you enjoyed.

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