Hidden Track

The B List: 10 Halloween Setlists

Halloween has become one of the most anticipated holidays on the calendar for fans of the usual touring bands (not just for pervs like Neeko on the lookout for Halloween sluts). More and more bands these days uses the holiday evening to play creative sets, and last night was no exception. This week’s lazy edition of The B List brings you 10 hot-of-the-presses setlists from last night.


1. Black Crowes – United Palace Theater – NYC, NY
Word has it The Crowes had planned to do all Ramones tunes for their Halloween gig but Rich Robinson bagged the idea

Set: Give Peace A Chance, Space Captain, Black Moon Creeping, Darling Of The Underground Press, Sister Luck, Another Roadside Tragedy, Nonfiction (w/Patti Smith), Ain’t No Cane On The Brazos, Polly, Girl From A Pawnshop, Jealous Again, Soul Singing, Wiser Time, Thorn In My Pride

Encore: Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’?

2. The Police – Madison Square Garden – NYC, NY

Set: Message in a Bottle, Synchronicity II, Walking On the Moon, Voices Inside My Head > When the World Is Running Down You Make the Best of What’s Still Around, Don’t Stand So Close to Me, Driven to Tears, Hole In My Life, Truth Hits Everybody, Everything She Does is Magic, Wrapped Around Your Finger, De Do Do Do De Da Da Da, Invisible Sun, Walking In Your Footsteps, Can’t Stand Losing You, Roxanne

Encore 1: King of Pain, So Lonely, Every Breath You Take

Encore 2: Next To You

3. Phil and Friends – Nokia Theater – NYC NY [via thephilzone.com]

Set I: Shakedown Street> Loose Lucy, Jackie Tune, Candyman, Put A Spell On You> Jam > Ghost!> Casey Jones

Set II: Phil Reads, Jam > Cryptical > Jam > Boris The Spider > Caution, Voodoo Child, Cryptical > New Speedway > Sympathy For The Devil > Jam > I Know You Rider, Donor Rap

Encore: Werewolves of London

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MP3 Boot Camp: Wilco Throws Food

NYCTaper this week posted an amazing Wilco show from way back in February 1997, or about 24 band member changes ago. Wilco stopped by the [pre-Fillmore] Irving Plaza for a taping of HBO’s Reverb towards the end of the Being There tour. Check out track number 19 to hear the infamous “deli tray” incident.

  • Let’s start with a must-listen: The Rolling Stones stopped by Muddy Waters’ club in Chicago to play a show with him in 1981
  • Ted Nugent plays a number of his most classic songs, including Wang Dang Sweet Poontang, during this fun show from ’77
  • If you like early Talking Heads, you’ll love this bootleg
  • The Eagles’ new album may suck, but their old shit was awesome
  • Nazz shares his favorite songs about whiskey and Boston Douchebags
  • This week’s Music-hole megapost features shows from Supertramp, Lou Reed, Status Quo and many others
  • Bands That Jam has photos and mp3s from Umphrey’s McGee
  • Ickmusic has Jerry Garcia and John Kahn live from the big house

Finally, Blog Stoned just posted a Genesis soundboard from their recent European tour. We’re glad to see some crispy ‘boards making the rounds.

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Ryan Montbleau Band & Televised Baseball

The crowd cheered wildly as Ryan Montbleau sullenly sang a song about death from his new album, Patience on Friday. But the audience hadn’t misinterpreted it — the Red Sawx had just busted Game 3 of the World Series wide open.

All photos by Adam Kaufman


Music and sports came together this past weekend when the Ryan Montbleau Band shared the stage with the Red Sox during two special shows in Boston. As we told you last week, Montbleau’s gigs at The Paradise took place at exactly the same times as Games 3 and 4 of the World Series, which featured the Red Sox humiliating the suddenly ice-cold Colorado Rockies. Ryan’s manager, booking agent and promoter all advised him to cancel Sunday’s show, but we’re glad to report that the RMB avoided potential disaster when their fans rallied to make the weekend an overwhelming success. No Rally Monkey required.

Instead of ignoring the games, Montbleau embraced the circumstances and set up a huge screen next to the stage which showed the World Series to the audience. Luckily for the band, by the time Ryan & Company hit the stage on Saturday night, the Red Sox had already jumped out to a 6-0 lead, allowing everyone to focus on the music for the first set. Read on after the jump for much more…

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I Love Bad Music: The Two Sides of Randy

HT Contributor Eliot Glazer has tremendously terrible taste in music. But he makes everything sound so damn appealing, so we allow him this soapbox…

I had never been much of a Family Guy fan. I found the humor too easy and not silly enough to actually be smart. That is, until I witnessed this clip on the television. Apparently, the writers of Family Guy face the same non-existential crisis I do: Is Randy Newman retarded or brilliant?

BadMusic


I’m pretty sure he’s just schizophrenic, suffering from maintaining two separate personalities. There’s Randall, the husky-voiced composer who writes and performs melodically expansive ruminations that have always labeled him the self-effacing philosopher that can be found waxing intellectual in a nearby dark corner (see: You Can Leave Your Hat On, Political Science, and God’s Song).

Then there’s Randy, the middle-aged dude whose quirky, fun canon of kid-friendly work equate to your goofy uncle’s deepest belly laugh (see: Simon Smith And The Amazing Dancing Bear and every song from the Pixar soundtrack library…ever).

When the “Randy” from the Family Guy clip pronounces “first” as “foist” before literally narrating what his eyes see (“left foot, right foot…”), I’m led to believe that the guy has somehow cheated his way into the larger pantheon of American music. Because that’s exactly what he is: a legendary American musician who has been showered in awards and accolades throughout his entire career, and not without witnessing other coveted musicians paying their respects by covering his tunes. But is it a sham? Read on to find out more about the true Randy…

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Wednesday Intermezzo: Goodbye Nickel Creek

After nearly a year on the road, Nickel Creek’s farewell tour comes to a close on November 29th. If you haven’t had a chance to see them before they go their separate ways, be sure to check out NPR’s webcast of Friday night’s show live from the 9:30 club in Washington D.C. Although, we’d really prefer to instead say goodbye to Nickelback from the public consciousness, not the Creek.

Finally, the full song list for the upcoming Rock Band video game looks absolutely incredible. We can’t wait to drum along with Epic or to sing Mississippi Queen when the game comes out on November 20th. Thanksgiving fun.

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Overdosing on Halloween Eye-Candy

Dr. Neeko is back for Round II — before we begin, let’s point out that he loves his mother, his aunt, all his old lovers and Rue McClanahan…

When I was a kid, before I became a doctor of course, Halloween was all about the mad rush to stuff as much tooth-rotting, brain-zipping sugar as you could fit into an old pillowcase before the sun went down and you missed curfew. We usually made out pretty well. We knew which houses gave the full-sized candy bars, which houses turned off the porch light and pretended not to be home, and which houses you could get away with visiting multiple times.

Of course you got the occasional old lady who’d give out four pennies wrapped in Scotch Tape, or the big buzz-kill-do-gooder handing out pieces of fruit. Fruit? Handing out fruit on Halloween is like giving out cap-guns in a war zone. Handing out fruit on Halloween is like dispensing condoms at an Indigo Girls/Ani DiFranco double-bill. Handing out fruit on Halloween is like giving out handjobs at an orgy. But all in all, it was a good racket we had going back then…

HappyHalloween

Look, ma: These girls show up on Google Images under “Halloween sluts”


Then, sometime around college, Halloween took on a new meaning. It was still about candy, but a different kind of candy, an even sweeter candy, a candy for the eyes. In the same way that St. Patrick’s Day is a ‘free pass’ to start drinking at 9 am, Halloween is a ‘free pass’ for many women to dress slightly more revealing than a Mexican hooker in August. And I, for one, think that’s just great.

Now, you can’t appreciate this fine aspect of the holiday if you’re at the wrong location. Chances are, you’ll wait till the last minute to make plans, and you’ll end up sitting at home watching Heroes on the DVR, handing out your hard-earned candy to a bunch of ungrateful neighborhood brats. Not cool, man. So, in an effort to spare some of you hornball HT readers from that awful fate, I’ve decided to compile an in-depth review of the eye-candy potential for a handful of Halloween concerts around the country. Let me guide you in the right direction…let me help you realize the full potential this holiday has to offer. So read on for a full list of concerts and what you may expect in terms of post-show spank material…

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Live Downloads: Umphrey’s at the Nokia

Umphrey’s McGee was one of the first bands to sell official recordings of nearly every show they played when they introduced the UmLive program in 2003.

At first the Chicago-based sextet only sold discs at their merch table, but soon thereafter they started peddling downloads of most shows through disclogic.com. Disclogic went bust in 2006, so Umphrey’s partnered with LiveDownloads.com to sell their official recordings through a new website called Umlive.net. That history lesson-cum-introduction leads us to Umphrey’s McGee’s terrific show at the Nokia Theater from October 20th, which is our Live Downloads show of the week.

Photo by Adam Kaufman


During recent tours Umphrey’s has perfected the time-tested formula of sprinkling special guests, random covers and heady improvisations throughout two sets of well-written songs. The first set of Umphrey’s Saturday night show at the Nokia Theater in New York City featured the boys nailing some of their hardest compositions while also dropping two inventive song sequences that had never been played before. Andy’s Last Beer started with an intense buildup and ended with the band giving the young crowd a lesson on odd time signatures.

Bridgeless followed and quickly segued into a danceable jam that slyly slithered towards a rare cover of Jimi Hendrix’s Power To Love. Guitarist Brendan Bayliss’s voice sounded great throughout the evening, and he absolutely nailed Power to Love. Of course covering Hendrix is all about guitar tone, and UM’s other guitar player Jake Cinninger put on quite a clinic during his solo. Keyboardist Joel Cummins took control shortly after Cinninger’s solo and deftly led the band back through the end of Bridgeless. Read on after the jump for much more…

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