*** Austin, TX 2 Fanviews Here 9/19/23 ***
Comments
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Very pleased to have travelled into Austin for both shows. Safe return home for all. Bring on ‘24.To quote the 10C from Newsletter #8: "Please understand we have a lot of members and it is very hard to please everybody. If you are one of those unhappy people...please call 1-900-IDN-TCAR."
"Me knowing the truth, I can not concur."
1996: Toronto - 1998: Chicago, Montreal, Barrie - 2000: Montreal, Toronto - 2002: Seattle X2 (Key Arena) - 2003: Cleveland, Buffalo, Toronto, Montreal, Seattle (Benaroya Hall) - 2004: Reading, Toledo, Grand Rapids - 2005: Kitchener, London, Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Quebec City - 2006: Toronto X2, Albany, Hartford, Grand Rapids, Cleveland - 2007: Chicago (Vic Theatre) - 2008: NYC X2, Hartford, Mansfield X2 - 2009: Toronto, Chicago X2, Seattle X2, Philadelphia X4 - 2010: Columbus, Noblesville, Cleveland, Buffalo, Hartford - 2011: Montreal, Toronto X2, Ottawa, Hamilton - 2012: Missoula - 2013: London, Chicago, Buffalo, Hartford - 2014: Detroit, Moline - 2015: NYC (Global Citizen Festival) - 2016: Greenville, Toronto X2, Chicago 1 - 2017: Brooklyn (RRHOF Induction) - 2018: Chicago 1, Boston 1 - 2022: Fresno, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto, NYC, Camden - 2023: St. Paul X2, Austin X2 - 2024: Vancouver X2, Portland, Sacramento, Missoula, Noblesville, Philadelphia X2, Baltimore - 2025: Hollywood X2, Atlanta 2, Nashville X2, Pittsburgh X20 -
I thought the show was amazing. Sure there are always songs I'd prefer vs others but I always enjoy the hell out of just being in the presence of this mind blowing band. Ed looked so grateful by the end and they deserve all the cheering. What an amazing run of shows. That Black solo is one of the most incredible things I've ever heard. I love unemployable and was in happy bliss when Ed started talking about employment and Chloe Crown..well it's just beautiful and I noticed Ed is going for the high notes this tour. He sounds incredible. How grateful I am to have just seen these last 2 shows.0
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Tacomatose said:
THIS was exactly what I needed from Austin 2 for so many reasons! A few rambling initial thoughts:
- TYAAM preset! To quote Rent, an Ed preset always means a wild night is now preordained!
- Love Wash as an opener, but having Black so early really set the tone. Mike was on absolute fire. Everyone was sitting, but he was soaring. Nothing better than having Mike in a mood.
- DOTC has come a long way since I first heard it at Ohana, and even since last year’s NYC. Haters gonna hate, but it was nice, tight and punchy.
- Speaking as a child of the 90s, I can confirm that Habit rocked hard.
- SOLAT rocked harder than it has any right to after 30+ years. And coming right after Chloe/Crown, it was like I was right back in college listening to the Singles soundtrack on repeat. It’s still hard to comprehend how good all that music was at all the same time.
- Ledbetter to finish has been very personal to me since losing my PJ +1 in 2018. As always, Phred - this is for you.
- Moody is a great sounding venue and it was a good, loud and happy crowd. A great end to the tour, and a great launching point for the (now confirmed by Ed!!) new album and tour to come next year. I hope to see you all on the road in 2024!
Minneapolis 1998 | Jones Beach I & II, Montreal, and Toronto 2000 | Buffalo, State College, Toronto, Montreal and Hershey 2003 | Boston I & II 2004 | Thunder Bay, Kitchener, London, Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto 2005 | Toronto I & II 2006 | The Vic and Lollapalooza 2007 | Calgary and Toronto 2009 | PJ20 I & II, Toronto I & II, Ottawa, Calgary and Edmonton 2011 | London, Chicago, Spokane, Calgary, Vancouver and Seattle 2013 | Ottawa and Toronto I & II 2016 | Chicago I & II 2018 | Ottawa, Hamilton and Toronto 2022 | Philadelphia I & II 20240 -
i
TYPJ!!!!!!!!!!My first time doing 4 in a row and first GA since 2014! Checked a bunch off of my list. See you next year.
p.s. Nice to meet so many of the Faithfull! Shout out to Wes, the gal from northern CAL, and the couple from NYC.
Post edited by marcusinaustin onHouston (09/05/92) - Austin (10/04/09) - Austin (10/05/14) - Austin (10/12/14) - Raleigh (04/20/16) - Oklahoma City (10/20/22) - Ft Worth (09/13/23) - Ft Worth (09/15/23) - Austin (09/18/23) - Austin (09/19/23) - Wrigley (08/29/24) - Wrigley (08/31/24)0 -
Mike McCready played a quick snippet / tribute to SRV during YL. It was not “tightrope” as some have claimed .It was a combo of riffs from two SRV songs “Couldn’t Stand the Weather “ into “Scuttle Buttin’”."This here's a REQUEST!"
EV intro to Chloe Dancer / Crown of Thorns
10/25/13 Hartford0 -
I kinda wanted to just skip this show... the sitting down... shorted setlists... the song choices from night 1? Not worth it.
And the first time I haven't been in GA since Hawai'i '06... BEHIND Boom.
Ugh.
What an idiot I was trying to be!
This show was so so so good! And I actually really enjoyed being back in 103 and seeing the show from an entirely new point of view!
First show in a 5 year hiatus, and it was a great way to be welcomed back. Encore? Didn't love it... I could hear RitFW again exactly never and be exactly zero sad about that... But YL to end was awesome and expected. First show I've been to where Even Flow wasn't played... that was freaking cool.
And I LOOOOVVEE DotC... freaking LOVE it. And I hate Gigaton b/c they released that song that seemingly has nearly nothing to do with the rest of the record. So I was stoked to hear DotC. AND I was stoked to hear Retrograde and feel like I need to re-listen.
Who You Are, 1/2 Full, and Wash were all firsts for me...
Glorified G,, Chloe Dancer/Crown... 2nd time...
My plane is landing now, but I am just BEYOND pleased.
2003-04-15: Raleigh, NC
2003-04-16: Charlotte, NC
2004-10-06: Asheville, NC
2006-05-30: Washington, DC
2006-08-29: Arnhem, The Netherlands
2006-12-02: Honolulu, Hawaii
2012-06-26: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2012-09-22: Atlanta, GA
2013-10-30: Charlotte, NC
2014-01-19: Gold Coast, Australia
2014-06-28: Stockholm, Sweden
2014-06-29: Oslo, Norway
2016-04-18: Hampton, VA
2016-04-20: Raleigh, NC
2016-04-21: Columbia, SC
2018-07-01: Prague, Czech Republic
2018-07-03: Krakow, Poland
2018-09-04: Boston, MA
2020-07-15: Budapest, Hungary
2020-07-17: Zurich, Switzerland
2023-09-19: Austin, TX
2025-05-11: Raleigh, NC
2025-05-13: Raleigh, NC0 -
Habit, Who You Are, Glorified G all in a row - outstanding0
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My first show since ACL 2009 and it was great. Main set was awesome, encore was a bit meh - way too many covers. Like others have said, I could never hear RITFW again and be happy. We were in FLR 1 and the view was actually good even for me who is 5'3". I wish we could've gone Monday night too but weeknights and babysitting issues prevented us from doing that. Hopefully they'll be back to Texas before they retire.0
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Amazing show was in Pit for both shows. Night one I thought better set list and flow but the energy from crowd and band far superior Night 2. Moody Center is awesome.Thank you to my friend from Atlanta who made the show so much fun. If you see this DM me. Safe travels. Paul0
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This is strictly my opinion- Night 1 setlist was much better. Night 2 was decent, but I enjoyed Night 1 more. I was in section 216, and you can't really see the band from that far. I don't believe there were many real fans in my section which didn't help. I am sure at least a few of you would agree but I think we will be ok without Daughter, Better Man, Alive, RITFW, Once, Why Go, Imagine. On the positive side, the band sounded great and looked relaxed and happy. Highlights- SOLAT, Crown of thorns, Sometimes, Who You Are and awesome versions of RVM and Black.0
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Had a great time at both shows. Best I’ve heard any band sound in that arena, Roger waters and dmb just didn’t come across as dialed in sound-wise.Preferred night 1 but probably because I was so worn out on night two.Curious if Ed forgot that they had done Imagine here before at ACL in 2014? Weird choice to me seeing as they have a lot of covers they could play that they chose one that they already played here.Anyway, had a lot of friends come visit, so thank PJ for giving us a reason to spend some quality time together again.I'm like an opening band for your mom.0
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Austin Review Part I (from Theskyiscrape.com)
The Preamble
I was fortunate enough to attend Austin Night 2. This was my first time flying to see Pearl Jam – I have done long drives and stayed with friends, but nothing that required airports and hotels. I had always brought friends and family to shows – outsiders I was inviting in for the experience. So after thirty years and thirty shows, this was my first Pearl Jam concert where I was on my own, and so my first time seeing Pearl Jam exclusively with the Pearl Jam community – the found family that springs up at these events and helps make them what they are.
I got my ticket through Jason Kerepesi, one of the co-hosts of the excellent State of Love and Trust podcast that inexplicably keeps having me on as a guest (first time meeting him in the flesh. A great guy – class act all the way). He had access to an extra ticket and invited me down to see the band and record a live podcast at the Wishlist Foundation pre-show party (check out their page - they do great work!). I had never been to one of their events. It was a great time, and a fun podcast (it’s online, you can listen here). I saw a truly spectacular collection of Pearl Jam t-shirts, and was a little alarmed at how many of these I had somehow owned and lost over the years. I had a self-deprecating laugh or two at our aging fan base, and was a little relieved to see the beginnings of a second generation of fandom. We met and interviewed some of the Wishlist Foundation organizers – Bryan Flood was seeing his 111th show. Laura Demartini, the founder of Wishlist, was seeing her 151st. I also met a gentleman who decided to follow the band on this mini tour, and had seen every show. A feat that exists entirely outside my realm of experience.
I have been in a bit of a live Pearl Jam drought - changes to Fanclub ticketing (which on balance were the right thing for the band to do) have made it harder for me to see them, and the inertia in my own life (small kids, a period of some financial instability) made it harder for me to justify traveling when I got shut out of local shows. Other than Camden last year I had not seen them since 2013. Two times in ten years is tough when the previous twenty years saw me seeing them two to four times every tour cycle (and just about every tour)
What I want out of a Pearl Jam show changes a bit, when I see them less often. I’m not as interested in collecting rarities. I’ve always been drawn to the live hits anyway, the songs that elicit the biggest crowd reactions. But after my time away, what I was really craving was the communal experience of seeing Pearl Jam - the shared mania, the explosive responses to the alpha tracks. If I had already gotten Corduroy or Small Town two times on a tour cycle I didn’t need it a third. But I hadn’t heard these songs in a decade and I craved them. I went to Austin not interested in the curatorial element of the live experience. I kind of wanted a greatest hits show. Austin 2 was not that, but it was an amazing concert, and made my previous expectations and desires completely irrelevant. Pearl Jam concerts are my church, and it just felt great to worship again, alongside my fellow believers. Okay – onto the actual show:
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The Actual Review
Starting with the last tour, Pearl Jam have opened with a 4-6 run of slower songs. Sitting down, gradually ratcheting up the intensity, until they kick into the more traditional show experience. I’m not sure if they benefit from the warmup, or if they just like how it helps the evening flow, but it works so well. The slow songs building off each other create a mood that lets you glide into the experience. It lets you linger in the space while drawing attention to smaller moments of artistry that can get overwhelmed between the adrenaline bombs of their more aggressive peers. By the end of these cycles a song that might have been a mid-show breather feels like a climax.
The night started with Wash, which also kicked off Camden. They sounded great, and Wash works well as an opener for this kind of structure. It’s moody, atmospheric, has a chorus you can sing along with, but unlike a Release or a Long Road it doesn’t demand an immediate emotional engagement. People can settle into the night at their own pace.
They followed up with Sometimes – not a favorite, and it might have been a momentum killer mid set but this early worked really well as table setting (and I interact with the song differently as part of an extended slow burn mini-set). As often happens, Eddie ratchets up the intensity in a cautious studio track, and this would be a really interesting song to see them rework live as a faster number. It plays that way – like a runaway thought someone is keeping sedated.
Lowlight helped release that tension, a deep exhale. Like Sometimes, not a favorite, but it sounded beautiful. These two songs back-to-back signaled it might be a night of deeper tracks, in the coded language any longtime fan uses to track the probable evolution of a setlist. Real ‘last night of the tour means something special’ vibes.
Black this early was a surprise. Sounded incredible, and worked really well early on, when Eddie’s voice is warmed up and fresh. It was in the moment, but Jason called it out as one of the best versions he’s ever heard, and I think Black may be his favorite song (so that’s saying something). I need to relive the boot, but it was amazing. Mike was on fire, but everyone was playing their hearts out.
Retrograde closed the opening set. This is (for me) one of the more minor songs on Gigaton (though still really good, as everything on Gigaton is). But Mike’s Sirens-esque expansive semi-acoustic writing shines in an arena setting, and it gives Retrograde a feeling of importance the studio performance wants to have and can’t quite get to.
Both times I’ve seen Retrograde, Eddie introduced it hoping for a big crowd reaction – calling for it, actually. This needs to stop. Those moments cannot be requested – they must be earned. Part of the problem may be that Eddie and the band had that live communal transformational experience in mind when they wrote/performed the outro, and are channeling that energy broadly, but the moment itself doesn’t really have the space for the audience roar he is looking for. It’s possible the ‘be the sound’ moment could work as a participatory space if he structures it that way but he’s looking for the reaction prior, and it’s not there…yet. If they keep playing Retrograde someday it will be, because that ending was huge – it could have closed a show the way it built and built, the way the arena became a wall of sound. Such a powerful moment. Over time the reaction Eddie wants will come of its own accord, though they’ve been in the habit of jettisoning newer songs before they have the time to embed themselves with the fans.
And we are off to the main set. Once sounded great, albeit in that slightly disconnected way modern performances of Once often do – the song is heavy, but it’s not angry anymore, and it’s such an odd track to experience as a moment of communal bonding. But Retrograde filled the arena with energy searching for a release, and Once provided it. There was an older, grandmotherly looking woman rocking the fuck out during Once (the whole night) and I hope I’m half as cool as she is in twenty years.
First time hearing Never Destination – really works well live. Briefly thought it was going to be Superblood Wolfmoon, and I was slightly disappointed when it wasn’t – only because after Dance that’s my favorite Gigaton song and I’ve yet to hear it.
Why Go was next, and it killed as it always does. What a monster of a live song. Remember then ten-year stretch where it was almost never played. Ridiculous. Jeff’s bass fills the room, the guitars are searing, and no one wants to go home.
Eddie talked a bit about the forthcoming album – I can’t recall when so I’ll mention it here. He spoke about how much they were pushed musically, and how proud he expected everyone to be of the results. From the little bits of information trickling out it seems like they were asked to write and create together in a room, for the first time in a long time, rather than serving as the backing band for whoever happened to write the song they were putting together. Seeing them live, you are instantly reminded of how locked into these guys are to each other, how everyone knows exactly what their role is, and how organically they each make space for the other to play it in a way that doesn’t always happen when they are slotting themselves into some one else’s creation. I am expecting great things from this record.
½ Full was next, which is always welcome – an underappreciated live track once you get over the vague disappointment that it isn’t Red Mosquito. One of those songs that is unequivocally better live.
Daughter had a nice tag I didn’t recognize. At this point it was clear that we were going to get a set of semi-rarities but to keep the crowd engaged each would be offset by one of the marquee live tracks. It was an expertly designed setlist in that way – something for the folks who saw them 7-10 times this tour but always bringing the whole arena back in so the energy never went down. It meant that songs like ½ Full (or some of what was to come) ended up getting much bigger reactions than they might have otherwise. There was always a reservoir of goodwill there to greet a more obscure choice. Plus when they sound great, if we’re honest, it almost doesn’t matter what they play.
Case in point – Unemployable. This is my least favorite track on Avocado, but it sounds much better live, (less shine to it) and the vibe in the arena welcomed everything with open arms, trusting the band to make it worth our while. And they did every time.
Dance of the Clairvoyants followed. I didn’t get this in Camden, and was really hoping for it tonight. It’s my favorite song on Gigaton, and quite possibly my favorite song of theirs since Yield. But man, what a weird moment in their catalog. Cool to see, and it’s fun, but it’s a song (they have plenty of these) that has a unique atmosphere and alchemy in the studio they can’t quite translate. Dance is a song that is meant to feel a little hermetic, defined by its clinical uncertainty, and live it just feels messy. Fun, but messy.
Speaking of – Habit was next, and Eddie forgot how to play it (which he was upfront abut right from the start – it was funny). He noodled around a little bit trying to remind himself, and they eventually made it through a sloppy but game version. Habit has one of my favorite outros, and it did feel muddled.
Who You Are was a complete surprise, and sounded great. It’s not exactly a sing along, but they did manage to make it feel communal and welcoming, like an invitation to thousands of people to be just a little imperfect together (a particularly apropos message after a messy Habit). This probably deserves to make an appearance more often than it does. Honestly you could open a show with it.
Glorified G crackled, and even though Austin is not Ft. Worth I still credit them for taking the swing and playing that song in Texas. Great moment – it’s a minor song, but they made it feel like the most important thing in the world.
Rearview Mirror closed out the main set, and it flew by (the whole experience). I would have guessed we were still 3-4 songs away from the end. One of the best live versions I’ve seen. It kept the usual intensity and didn’t get lose in the instrumental bridge like it sometimes does. Tight and focused while still riffing off the studio track.
Encore 1 kicked off with Imagine. Eddie requested everyone get their phones out, and it looked beautiful, but this is a bit of a try hard, and there are more interesting songs to express this sentiment. This was the low point of the show for me, but it was the kick off to the encore and in that slot where Eddie was re-establishing some familiar intimacy with the audience, so it was fine. We are gradually coming off pause.
Last Kiss was played for the folks in the back (I think they only ever get Last Kiss since Matt can play it on a mini-kit). And as always, it is a blast to sing along to in an arena.
We got a full Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns, and it was incredible. The high point of the night. They sounded SO good. The Wishlist founder told me this is her favorite Pearl Jam/Pearl Jam adjacent song, and I was glad she was here for it (although at 151 shows that’s statistically likely). I teared up a bit – the performance was just so immersive. There was a purity to the moment and performance even though there was no preamble or setup for it.
State of Love and Trust followed – good version. But Jeremy brought the house down. The second highlight of the night. Jeff’s bass just envelopes the space (it’s terrifying how good it sounded), and the crowd moments were super intense in the way only Jeremy can be. After my concert drought Jeremy, Alive, and Betterman were the three songs I really wanted to hear (from the classics).I got Alive in Camden but not the other two. I do not understand how Jeremy is not played at least as often as Black.
And here comes Betterman. During the outro (we got the end of ‘save it for later’) Eddie saw two banners from people who were at their 100 and 120th shows, respectively. He called them out, made a ‘can’t find a better fan’ joke, and was visibly moved by the continued dedication. Thirty-two years and a thousand shows in, and still nothing is taken for granted.
I guess at this point Alive is a set list standard, as it should be. Followed by Rocking in the Free World with some guests on tambourine (John Doe and the opening band, I think) and Yellow Ledbetter. It was a ‘predictable’ conclusion, but everything felt fresh and vital in the moment.
What an amazing night. Great crowd, great performances, a well crafted setlist that kept surprising without getting up its own ass. It was full of moments that kept ratcheting up energy and emotion that got released in a way that let the folks around feed off it and keep it going. Symbiotic and reciprocal, and no one went hungry.
Following the death of Mark Lanegan, almost all my favorite artists are retired, gone, or likely soon to be. For Pearl Jam to still be going strong, to have found a way to age gracefully without abandoning their core strengths, to still be able to go out there night after night and put on a show like this is just remarkable. I am blessed to be able to still have this in my life. What is maybe most shocking is that an experience like last night, while likely a tour highlight, is still not far removed from what I might have expected on any given night.
Earlier in the day, when I was talking to the fan who took three weeks off from work to follow them around, I wondered how someone manages to arrange their life to do this. I left Austin wondering why I don’t.
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^ thanks for this. Great write up, was fun to readI'm like an opening band for your mom.0
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RoleModelsinBlood31 said:^ thanks for this. Great write up, was fun to readFt. Laud 96, WPB I and II 98, WPB I and II 2000, San Sebastian, Spain 2000, WPB 03, Tampa 03, MSG I and II 03, Kissimmee 04, Atlantic City I and II 05, Mansfield I 08, Toronto 09, Noblesville 10, Alpine Valley I and II 11, Wrigley 13, Baltimore 13, Ft. Lauderdale 2016, Miami 2016, Wrigley 2 20160
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Awesome write up really great read well done :-) they played smile to the crowd in the back night one :-) pretty cool0
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RoleModelsinBlood31 said:Had a great time at both shows. Best I’ve heard any band sound in that arena, Roger waters and dmb just didn’t come across as dialed in sound-wise.Preferred night 1 but probably because I was so worn out on night two.Curious if Ed forgot that they had done Imagine here before at ACL in 2014? Weird choice to me seeing as they have a lot of covers they could play that they chose one that they already played here.Anyway, had a lot of friends come visit, so thank PJ for giving us a reason to spend some quality time together again.
Maybe Ed needs the PJ Stat Tracker app
Houston (09/05/92) - Austin (10/04/09) - Austin (10/05/14) - Austin (10/12/14) - Raleigh (04/20/16) - Oklahoma City (10/20/22) - Ft Worth (09/13/23) - Ft Worth (09/15/23) - Austin (09/18/23) - Austin (09/19/23) - Wrigley (08/29/24) - Wrigley (08/31/24)0 -
I enjoyed both nights and both setlists. I'm going to give the nod to Night 2. Admittedly, part of this could be due to the crowd in my immediate vicinity each night. There were some really boorish dickfaces near us on Night 1, and although it did not kill the vibe for me, it definitely made me work harder to keep from being annoyed. The folks near us on Night 2 were just lovely.
The thing that struck me most -- on both nights but especially night 2 -- is how well even some of the "non hit" songs sounded and were received. Glorified G absolutely slammed. Half Full was on fire. Who You Are ended up being this great, high-energy singalong. I probably wouldn't have requested any of those songs if given the chance, and they ended up being some of my favorite moments from the show.
SOLAT isn't anywhere near my top 20 or 30 favorite song and it completely killed. So, so great! Proof again that simply judging a setlist from afar, without actually having been in the building, is a fool's errand.
All that on top of the deeper "rarities" such as Crown of Thorns and Out of My Mind, plus the usual "hits" that can still make an entire arena levitate combined to create quite a night/couple of nights.everybody wants the most they can possibly get
for the least they could possibly do0 -
slightofjeff said:I enjoyed both nights and both setlists. I'm going to give the nod to Night 2. Admittedly, part of this could be due to the crowd in my immediate vicinity each night. There were some really boorish dickfaces near us on Night 1, and although it did not kill the vibe for me, it definitely made me work harder to keep from being annoyed. The folks near us on Night 2 were just lovely.
The thing that struck me most -- on both nights but especially night 2 -- is how well even some of the "non hit" songs sounded and were received. Glorified G absolutely slammed. Half Full was on fire. Who You Are ended up being this great, high-energy singalong. I probably wouldn't have requested any of those songs if given the chance, and they ended up being some of my favorite moments from the show.
SOLAT isn't anywhere near my top 20 or 30 favorite song and it completely killed. So, so great! Proof again that simply judging a setlist from afar, without actually having been in the building, is a fool's errand.
All that on top of the deeper "rarities" such as Crown of Thorns and Out of My Mind, plus the usual "hits" that can still make an entire arena levitate combined to create quite a night/couple of nights.0
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