This Bruce concert was different than any prior Bruce concert. First, it was a Broadway show, so no phones
allowed. Thus, no notes to revisit memories. What I do remember is being disappointed in the
very beginning. He actively stopped singalongs
and discouraged mid-song applause. What
kind of pretentious, lifeless event was this – against the very spirit of Springsteen?!
What it turned out to be was brilliant.The shift to quiet made it unbelievably intimate,
a performance he put on for you in his living room.Plus, when applause that did break out at the
end of each brief set, it was thunderous.Another thrilling surprise was how almost the whole show was new
material.During the preceding months, I’d
read Born To Run, the memoir the
perform was based on, took a road trip to Jersey to visit the sites, and met
with two separate groups of friends to discuss it – first, Ben Marzouk, Pierre
Dumong, Evan Davis, and Joe Kessler in DC; then, Jim Andrukonis, Steve Mull,
Ryan Mull, Cathy Faraj, Emily Trone, and Mike Trone in Crystal City.The book, trip, and discussions were all
great, but I thought they were it.He’d
read from the book, play a few songs, and be done.
What he actually did was include never-released passages,
flip songs in bold ways, and bring the house down.Most remarkable was his rendition of “Born in
the USA,” a song I’ve never liked…until that night.Seeing the concert on Netflix is not the same
as being in the theater, but based on media reports, it does come close…
“Run”: clearly a song about Hark, who now owns the land-speed record for buying and returning with a hot dog. Good for him.
Dave Grohl to the crowd: “Haven’t been to Richmond in a while. Let’s do a long one then.” HA. [Edit after the show: The length ended up being an issue. Hark had most of his energy drained hours earlier by news that our awesome surrogate was found medically ineligible. To his credit, he soldiered through, and everything ended up working out kid-wise. :)]
“Learn To Fly”!!! I’ve never heard it at a Foo Fighters show, and I get to hear it with Hark — it’s his song. (For the record, Hark sings it better than Dave — much better.)
Proud that I can call “Walk” from the opening chords.The fact that Hark was a fan of it beforehand
made me relisten to it and gain new appreciation.Tied for the best of the night so far!!!
“Rope.”As a song,
meh.The riffs are friggin’ great
though, so wooo “Rope.”Almost sounds like
jazz?!Whoa, Taylor Hawkins’ drumset
approaches the ceiling! Nice transition to...
“Sunday Rain,” the Paul McCartney song.Like the funk and the section where the
guitars and drums fade, giving a few seconds of just Hawkins vocals.He’s not a great vocalist, but that makes it
feel sincere.Even the lower-tier songs
feel strong!!
Dave: “Ladies and gentleman, hi.”“We just played ten songs and didn’t even say
anything.”Unprecedented.
“These Days”: I never appreciated this song!Such wistful lyrics and circular delivery.
“One of these days your heart will cease to beat...but that’s okay”!!!
“Let It Die”!!!!Dave:“This
is for the old school fans.We haven’t
played this live in years.”Gah, I know.
Hark says, “I like this one” without prompting = YES!
“All My Life”!!!!I
groaned at first because it was two hyper-intense ones right after one another,
but it WORKED.At the end: “Time to burn
this place down, m’f’ers.”InDEED!
Some “flying machines” song: meh.
“White Limo”: meh.
Dave promises a woman with a sign two picks if she’ll take
down the sign blocking the people in front of her.He “admires her persistence” though.I tell Hark, “Maybe we should would be
interested in surrogacy.”“Yes,” he
grins.
“Breakout”: wooo, There
Is Nothing Left To Lose.Cool
audience light show towards the end.
“Make It Right”: cool 70s vibe.Wears out its welcome though.Picture of some of blond 80s guy I should
clearly know.The tone-less loud-ness
continues.Gah.“I’m In Love With My Car” by Queen drummer Roger
Taylor inspired Taylor Hawkins to play guitar and sing.
“Skin and Bones”: much better/simpler.Accordion for the win!
Dave gives every band member their moment and every member
of the nosebleeds their moment.“Put the
lights on them.They don’t even have
lights?!”PERSONALIZATION, folks.Other musicians: LEARN FROM DAVE.
Dave: “I’m not going to have you have a bass solo because no
one like those. [Audience boos.]. Oh, you do like them?”
Hark: “His sister went to Virginia Center?”(HA, after Dave mentioned that his sister
went to VCU.)
“Monkey Wrench”!!!! I thought it would be a letdown, but
NOPE.
Comments to Hark: “He’s kind of phoning it in...I wonder if
he also gave people badges at his wedding.”
Hehe at the 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 finger comedy before the enore.
“Dirty Water”! Remains my favorite song on the new
album.Not an all-time classic, but
strong.
Mehhh at “La Dee Da.”Worst song they’re ever released?
“Wheels.” Aww, crowdfunded show at the National in Richmond
“one of the greatest live experiences of his life.”There was no space between the crowd and him
— how he likes it.
It was great to see Colony House and Mutemath with Tom
Swindell and Chris Hartten. We had
interesting conversations before the show, and they were enthusiastic about
songs throughout. It was cool to later find out that Kim Walker was there the same night!
The main issue with Mutemath was me. Objectively, I recognize that they were every
bit as good (or probably better) than Colony House. Exhaustion from the work week and a lukewarm
reaction to their albums prevented me from fully embracing them.
That said, I definitely appreciate certain moments, most of
which appear in the live blog below…
--- Paul Meany starts with a slick leap onto a ledge during
“War.”
--- Wow, it looks like every song will feature a full-screen
video backdrop. Nice.
--- I like the lowest-piano-key burp effect halfway through
“Stroll On.”
--- Awww, Tom at the start of “Used To”: “I love this song!”
--- For me, the permanent high pitch voice starts to grate.
It's kind of endearing when he squeaks words to the crowd between songs
though.
--- “Noticed”! I like how they didn't need any
backdrop. The song spoke for itself.
--- “Vitals” features a cool drum solo and ooh-ooh effect.
--- Hahahah at Tom’s fiftieth “you're going to publish the
review this weekend -- this weekend.” It
never works like that, Tom, but it’ll be a faster turnaround than usual! [UPDATE, considering this is now being posted on 8-23-19: *sike.*]
--- “Spotlight”!!! Killer hook and Meany lassoed a
giant spotlight on a ledge!
--- Tom points out that they're doing a cover of 21 Pilots' "Achilles Heel." Hahaha at his shimmy across the stage!
--- He goes out into the crowd during “Reset.” Lol at
his near handstand on a ledge. He walks on top of the crowd on top of a
rubber light-bulb mattress?!?!?!
--- “Typical”: a worthy finale.
My bias against falsetto, electronic music, and Friday
night shows prevented me from fully enjoying it. (5am wakeup calls catch
up with me no matter how good the band.) The visuals, choreography, and
sound quality were first-rate, though. Good choice, Tom.
It was great to see Colony House and Mutemath with Tom
Swindell and Chris Hartten. We had
interesting conversations before the show, and they were enthusiastic about
songs throughout. It was cool to find out later that Kim Walker was there the same night!
The main issue with Colony House opening was I felt like the
only one at the Fillmore who knew them.
This was understandable, considering they were the opener, and their
second, most recent album debuted at #76 on the Billboard chart. This was still frustrating because I really
liked both albums, and frontman Caleb Chapman did all he could to sell
them. Fortunately, little by little, he
won them over and made a strong case to headline next time.
--- “Was It Me” has a catchy rhythm and a clever way of
introducing band members. Breaking up
the intro fuels excitement for the song!
--- “You and I.” Love how Chapman wills the crowd into
it at the end. He’s got game.
--- “Lonely”!!! Insistent smoke for days. The
strongest song this set.
--- HA at the fake slam: “If it was a bigger bridal party,
he would've made it."
--- “Moving Forward”: solo acoustic. Strong, varied
voice into...surprise trio!! Tom: “That was great.” Chris: “The
best one so far.”
--- “Silhouettes”!!! Awesome fake out at the end.
Tom lol’s at my excitement at calling it right before it happened.
Give Colony House a night with more songs and committed
fans, and they will slay.
This Ed Sheeran concert was not the triumph the first one had been. I’d always prefer to get problems out of the way at the beginning, so it was disappointing that the low points of the show
came at the end. That said, there were
several outstanding moments, and I got to share them with Hark, so I’m glad I went.
--- “Eraser” and “The A Team” are a decent start.
--- Before the next song, his ode is way better than decent:
“You're facing front -- no one can see you.” We should swing with each other, dance, show flair, no reason to be self-conscious /
care. Great point!!!
--- “Don't.” I think I will. Close enough to rap that
I'm lovin’ in. After a beast of a day, rejuvenation!!!
--- “Dive.” Does the standard You're The Best Crowd
lie, but does it with such specificity, I'm convinced! He goes through
the best crowds on the tour: Dublin, then Buenos Aires, then Louisville, then
Chicago. Doesn't say D.C. is the best after, so I believe him. Well
done!!!
--- “Bloodstream.” The fiery swirl is so cool.
The visual/sonic build and then pull back at the end was incredible.
--- “Happier.” The “no one hurts you like I hurt you”
doesn’t apply, but the rest fits our relationship. I am happier with
Hark.
--- “Tenerife Sea.” Soft and meandering, so I see why
he rarely plays it, but it works for me. Low key contrast ftw.
--- I called “Galway Girl” from the opening note! Fun Irish
energy.
--- And now, a song Google doesn't even know. The low
point of the night by far.
--- “Photograph”!!!! Reinvention. Hark's voice
and arm the whole way. He sings, it builds, it sways. Whoa.
--- “Perfect” is his favorite song apparently. “I hope
I don't say that in the future.” Heh. Rhythmically and after all
that buildup, meh.
--- “Nancy Mulligan”!! Much better than “Galway Girl.”
--- “Thinking Out Loud.” I think people know this one.
--- Lackluster “Sing.”
--- Haaaaaa at him coming out in a Wizards jersey!!
--- Lackluster “Shape of You.”
--- “You Need Me, Man, I Don't Need You.” Too-high
expectations, jumbled vocals, and cheesy on-screen lyrics made it a big
disappointment. Guitar explosion halfway through was new and cool though.
The road to Coldplay was a rough one. The baby-related conversations Hark and I had
as we walked through Landover led to us getting literally lost on the streets.
The moment we arrived at Fedex Field, however, everything
became clear. Chris Martin knew exactly
what he was doing and how to make people happy.
I wish the songs had a little more weight (and I knew more of them), but
I appreciated the show for what it was: a light, bright escape from the rest of
the world.
--- “Yellow.” Giant
yellow visuals we didn't really see as we were finding our seats. No worries -- no chance this will be the last
big visual of the night…
--- Rainbow Para-Para-“Paradise”: First time I’ve ever been
given a color-changing wristband!! The
remix halfway through was awesome. Once
or twice through the straight melody, Chris Martin ran down the ramp, drums
amped up, and the guitars went into an electronic tailspin. By the time the confetti came out, that
somehow felt right too. Confetti on the
fourth song?! You've got us -- it works.
--- “Always in the Head” and “Magic” slow things down. It's chill, bro.
--- The speech!!!!
Outstanding specificity: detailing the tolls, lines, lots, and Stubhub
battles everyone had to go through to get to show. Shoutouts to DC, Virginia, and “Mary”land. The last time they played at FedEx Field was
2001, the 100th of what felt like 100 bands at (the Hark-approved) HFStival. Now they're headlining. A second after I compare him to a lighter
Dave Grohl, he mentions that Dave was at that HFStival joke trashing him!! The fact that they invite the audience to
fill in the song with appropriate blanks (Syria, their neighbor, The White
House) sends it to the stratosphere.
Bravo.
---- “Clocks”: Hahahah, Hark's quoting himself: “There's
Hark singing again.” He's a whole different
person. He doesn’t just sing; he beams for five straight minutes!
--- Wooo at the “let's all stop everything and jump” prompt
for “Midnight” / “Charlie Brown.” Tear
at the lackluster vocal.
--- “Hymn For The Weekend” has a catchier hook (“jumping so
high so high so high”), so the stagecraft means something. The fire, fireworks, and his leap mean more
because you can make out words.
--- “Fix You”!!!
Majestic build, strong story -- for me, best of the night.
--- A second, even bigger Hark explosion for “Viva La Vida”! (Hark later explained his reaction was simply
a tribute to Meagan O'Neill.)
--- “Adventure of a Lifetime” features literal multi-colored
balls, but a bland vocal, so no real bounce.
(Love that so many kids get to take the ball home though.)
--- “Don't Panic”: Garden State nostalgia!!
--- “Green Eyes”: excellent acoustic song I'd never heard
before. Hahahahah at the shameless, misguided, endearing substitution of
“Redskins” at the end.
--- Wish I knew “Something Just Like This” (featuring The
Chainsmokers) better. Catchy and
uplifting even for the first time!
--- Wooo at “A Sky Full of Stars.” Oh, more accurately, wheee. Hahaha at the
18th confetti.
--- Hahaha at more Redskin shamelessness: props involving
love of America and the Redskins. I like
how he circles back to HFStival and asks us to be kind to each other as we
leave. “He sounds like That Ellen Woman.” Agreed, Hark, agreed.
Roger Waters walked out under the biggest, brightest screen
I've seen at a show.This screen was one
of many reasons he was successful.Unlike Explosions In The Sky, his epic mood tracks kept your attention.
--- Thank God for CS's welcoming, knowledgeable dad. Verizon Center cold shoulder...meet...WARMTH.
:)
--- Awww at CS’s happiness when “Breathe” arrives. More jubilant recognition: “It's Time; it's
Time; it's Time.” Overlaying a visual of
live drumming with twisting clocks is so cool!!
--- “30,000 like minded people” have power.
--- Stunning “Great Gig in the Sky” vocal -- I had no clue
it was two women!!
--- “Welcome to the Machine” off Wish You Were Here. Hahahaha
at the cultists -- flashbacks to Trailer Satan...
--- CS’s dad asks if Hark is coming. “Time to go get a drink. You want anything?” Awwwww.
Politely declined, but he's the best.
--- “Picture That”: a short, subtle instrumental with no
political message...
--- “Wish You Were Here” includes the second best visual of
the night: two hands getting closer and closer before deteriorating.
--- CS wooo’s again with “Another Brick in the Wall.” CS’s dad: “They look awfully happy for
Guantanamo prisoners.” Love the use of
kid volunteers and opening their jumpsuits to reveal Resist shirts!!
--- Awesome, memory-sustaining intermission: REDEMPTION
INTERMISSION!!! Got to speak to AR's mom
for the first time ever! We agreed that it was good that he finally got a Rock-related
shirt. AR listened intently to my album
report and jumped in to point out that “Apples and Oranges” is a Pink Floyd
song. He also taught me something I'd
somehow never known: Setlist.Fm updates setlists during shows!! JS!!!
He answered my questions with genuine animation, saying he really wanted
to hear “Dogs” and “Pigs.” We both wanted to hear “Brain Damage” and “The
Trial”!
--- Ginormous building with smokestacks rises through the
center of the Verizon Center.
--- Killer smoky guitar solo during “Dogs.” CS's dad was
spot-on in telling me to wait for it.
Love his mid-song analysis: who does that?! :)
Omg, at the Testicular Trump pics?! The irony of the presentation is the crass,
one-note approach feels like something the subject of the song would do. “Money” continues the onslaught.
--- Nice sax solo sneaks in during “Us And Them.”
--- Lesson I wish Waters learned: The best way to deal with
a boor is to rise above him, not become him.
--- “Brain Damage”/“Eclipse”!!!! Such a satisfying change in
tone. JS got his song. Love the slow, circular crawl of the moon and
the steady rise of each band in the psychedelic pyramid. Best visual I've seen at a concert.
--- “So this is what it's like to be in Washington DC.” HA. JS
gets up. Heh, CS does the Resist arm
cross.
--- Um, the lead guitarist looks like Constantine Maroulis.
--- Another welcome change of pace after the political
onslaught: the light, lilting "Vera."
Whoa at the high note the woman hits at the end.
--- Hahahah at CS's dad: “Just wait. The next one is where everyone's gonna lose
it.” It's ironic given the next song’s
title and vibe: “Comfortably Numb.” Cool
callback to the deteriorating hands of “Wish You Were Here.” The hands gradually reanimate and clasp
together!!! Perfect ending.
Wilco, The White Stripes, Dispatch, Muse, The Shins, Guster, Jimmy Eat World, Bruce Springsteen, Foo Fighters, Ok Go, Foo Fighters, The New Rockers, Bruce Springsteen, Lifehouse, Nada Surf, Death Cab for Cutie, Modest Mouse, REM, Alkaline Trio, Alkaline Trio, Bruce Sprinsteen, Bruce Springsteen, Wilco, The Offspring, Jack Johnson, Foo Fighters, Counting Crows, Ben Folds, Weezer, Cake, Alkaline Trio, Rise Against, Coldplay, The Who, Smashing Pumpkins, AC/DC, Oasis, The Killers, Kings of Leon, Jimmy Eat World, Ben Kweller, Tokyo Police Club, Girl Talk, Modest Mouse, Flogging Molly, David Cook, Death Cab for Cutie, Kings of Leon, Sister Hazel, The Decemberists, Alkaline Trio, Bruce Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen, Tv on the Radio, Wilco, Bob Dylan, John Mellencamp, Willie Nelson, Blink 182, Weezer, Taking Back Sunday, Rise Against, Green Day, Jet, The Bravery, Blink 182, Weezer, Ben Folds, U2, Bruce Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen, The Get Up Kids, Bob Dylan, The Pixies, Weezer, Rock and Cole, Rise Against, Arctic Monkeys, Muse, Alkaline Trio, Spoon, Ben Folds, Nada Surf, Vampire Weekend, The Protomen, Phoenix, Weezer, Arcade Fire, Spoon, The Presidents of the United States of America, Live, Naughty by Nature, Everclear, Third Eye Blind, Billy Idol, Rock and Cole, Wilco's Jeff Tweedy, Gogol Bordello, Girl Talk, Jimmy Eat World, Bon Jovi, DJ Pauly D, Carbon Leaf, Dropkick Murphys, Girl Talk, The Strokes, Lupe Fiasco, Rise Against, Alkaline Trio, Jack's Mannequin, Guster, Wilco, Smashing Pumpkins, Givers, Ra Ra Riot, Wu Lyf, Foo Fighters, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Rock and Cole, O.A.R., The Black Keys, Bruce Springsteen, Nada Surf, Guster, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Radiohead, Wilco, Motley Crue, Kiss, Band of Horses, My Morning Jacket, Bruce Springsteen, Alabama Shakes, Nas, ZZ Top, Jack White, Nas, Skrillex, Dispatch, Passion Pit, Of Monsters and Men, Rock and Cole, Fun., Mumford and Sons, Elliott Yamin, Crystal Bowersox, Rockapella ft. Carmen Sandiego, Alkaline Trio, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Grizzly Bear, The XX, Bruno Mars, Beyonce, Guster, Ben Folds Five, BN Ladies, American Idol Season 12 Tour, Jimmy Eat World, Imagine Dragons, The Flaming Lips, Franz Ferdinand, Alkaline Trio, Alkaline Trio, Elton John, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Kanye West, Rock and Cole, Rebelution, Young The Giant, Bruce Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen, Alabama Shakes, Ben Folds, Queen ft. Adam Lambert, New Politics, Paramore, Fall Out Boy, Phillip Phillips, OAR, Arcade Fire, Jimmy Eat World, Foo Fighters, Zac Brown Band, Black Keys, Carrie Underwood, Metallica, Bruce Springsteen, Rihanna, Eminem, Taking Back Sunday, Ben Folds, Dave Matthews Band, Mumford and Sons, Kelly Clarkson, Foo Fighters, Rise Against, OAR, Christina Perri, Ed Sheeran, Stevie Wonder, Kendrick Lamar, Givers, Straight No Chaser, Melinda Doolittle, Muse, Bruce Springsteen, Wilco, Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains, Guns 'n Roses, Paul Simon, Panic! At the Disco, Weezer, Tony Bennett, Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Weird Al Yankovich, Bruce Springsteen, Adele, Jimmy Eat World, Green Day, Explosions in the Sky, Wilco, Rise Against, Dispatch, Jimmy Eat World, Incubus, Sister Hazel, Regina Spektor, Ben Folds, Roger Waters, Coldplay, Ed Sheeran, Colony House, Mutemath, Foo Fighters, Bruce Springsteen, Haley Reinhart, Dispatch, Franz Ferdinand,U2, Foo Fighters, Jimmy Eat World, Game of Thrones: Live Concert Experience, The Pixies, Weezer, Gary Clark Jr., Muse, Snow Patrol. Ben Platt, The Rolling Stones, Ra Ra Riot, Jimmy Eat World, Third Eye Blind, and The Mountain Goats, Sonic Castaways, Jeremy Eliot, Norah Jones, Mavis Staples, Katy Perry, Wilco, Nada Surf, Jazz Trotters, Foo Fighters, Guster, Rise Against, Sleater-Kinney, Wilco, The Eagles, Noah Kahan, Laughing Colors, Up All Night, Guster, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, Dave Tieff, Rage Against The Machine, Franz Ferdinand, Dispatch, O.A.R., The Killers, Broken Social Scene, 'Bruce Springsteen' at Paul Verbesey's 'Surprise' Party, Arcade Fire, Noah Kahan, The Struts, Spoon, Jimmy Eat World, Straight No Chaser, Van Morrison [Newmyer Flyer], Bruce Springsteen [Newmyer Flyer], Colony House, Bruce Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen, Lauryn Hill, Dispatch, Jason Isbell, OAR, Goo Goo Dolls, Death Cab for Cutie, The Postal Service, Hozier, John Legend, Wilco, Ben Platt, Joan Jett, Alanis Morissette, The Doors, David Bowie, Grateful Dead, Talking Heads, The Hives, Foo Fighters, Fitz and the Tantrums, O.A.R., Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam, Dinosaur Jr., The Flaming Lips, Weezer, Tonic, Violent Femmes, Girl Talk, Jimmy Eat World, Liz Phair, Dispatch, Rise Against, Bob Dylan, Laughing Colors, AC/DC, Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band. [Recaps still to come for Dashboard Confessional, Goo Dolls, and James Taylor.]
Upcoming Shows
Ian Tongi (Saturday, November 1, The Hamilton – DC). [There's literally never been a single entry on the Upcoming Shows list. If you have a good one in mind, lemme know.]