Quote:
Originally Posted by AndyK
(Post 523647)
With Springsteen being the most well known exponent of it, not only does he change the written set list taped to the stage each night but he also regularly calls for a song that isn't on the set list mid-show (Band members have been known to say that once he's three songs into the show you might as well just tear up the set list as he'll play what he wants when he wantsto)
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Bruce's official website posts the handwritten setlists after the show; it's fun to see what he "audibled", although sometimes it's frustrating when you see that he switched out a song that you really wanted to hear. :doh: :lol: The end of the Magic tour was great, because the setlists were so varied then, besides a small core of of songs, you literally had no idea what to expect. I saw 2 shows a week apart that had 15 different songs between them (about half the show).
Quote:
Originally Posted by AndyK
(Post 523647)
Bruce even started taking spur of the moment requests from the audience during the last two tours.
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I loved/hated the sign requests. I hated them because, as time went on, some people got carried away with HUGE signs that they held up the entire show (instead of just the time when Bruce collected them), blocking everybody's view. :roll: But I loved it, because it was one of the most fun parts of the show, because you never knew what you were going to get. :-) The last tour, it started that at least one of the songs was an old cover (I got
Mony Mony twice :-) ), some that the band had never played before. It varied as to how truly "spontaneous" each one was (some songs had been sounchecked prior, or were actually on the setlist), but they played it that way (pretending to work out the chords, etc.), and the vast majority of the audience didn't know any different. It was a lot of fun, but I hope it's run its course.
I read that Elvis Costello did a thing where he had a big wheel on the stage with song titles on it, and members of the audience would get to come up and spin the wheel to pick which song was played.
What the Who are proposing is kind of cool, playing different types of shows on the same tour. The only thing I can see being an issue amongst fans is the idea that you didn't know beforehand what kind of show you were going to get. While the anticipation would be fun, I can see people complaining if they didn't get what they wanted, or saw the same show twice. I say this, because I remember last year when it first came out that Springsteen might be doing the full album shows. People (especially multi-show goers) voiced a preference for wanting to know in advance which album it would be. In fact, when they did announce the shows, in most cases
after the tickets had been sold, many people were upset that they didn't get the album they most wanted to hear, or the same album multiple times. (I saw
Born to Run twice, which was cool, but I would have liked to have seen a different album instead.)