The Sheepdogs. ”I Don’t Know” - Remember their name… Opening for Kings of Leon in Canada if that tour ever pans out.
“Stuck in a Moment” for Amy Winehouse - Minneapolis, MN 7/23/11
Saturday night went down as one of the most incredible nights I’ve experienced in my 24 years of living.
Finally was able to catch a U2 show. The word “finally” has a couple meanings here. Original show was scheduled for June 27, 2010. Due to Bono’s back surgery, that was pushed to July 23, 2011. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t disappointed. However, I’d been waiting virtually all my life to catch these guys, so I could survive one more year. I vividly remember purchasing my first U2 record from Down in the Valley when I was 9, “Zooropa.” All other studio albums soon followed (even have three copies of Achtung Baby, no idea why or how that happened).
Words can’t really describe what saturday night was like. If you were there, you can relate. But damn was that intense! The rain started three songs in. I’m not talking light rain, I’m talking downpour for the next 2 hours. I only get that wet when I’m swimming or taking a shower. I can’t honestly say the show would have felt the same had that rain not been there. It electrified 60,000 people, and the 4 guys on stage. Everyone in that stadium basically let out a giant and simultaneous “fuck it” and got wet…. and louder. When I say everyone in the stadium, I mean everyone in the stadium; including the guys on stage. The energy level increased at an exponential rate. Incredible. Bono said it best after they finished singing Walk On; “Unbelievable. I can not get over this.”
Throughout the show, Bono went off on snippits of “Singing in the Rain,” “Can’t Stand the Rain,” “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head,” and “Purple Rain,” which was a great tribute to the local purple maniac. Another great moment during the show was an acoustic version of “Stuck in a Moment,” which Bono dedicated to Amy Winehouse who’s passing was announced earlier that day. I’m going to post a video of that shortly. Other highlights included the surprise performances of “The Fly” and “Zooropa” which haven’t been heard live on tour since the 1980’s. Just when the “cool” level was pegged at 10 and couldn’t go any higher, it did. Right as the band came out for the encore, the lightning started, which once again brought everything to a whole new level. This show was truly unforgettable. The rain mixed with the unstoppable fortitude of U2 made this show what it was. Can’t wait to see them again.
Setlist - U2 at TCF Bank Stadium 7/23/11
1. Even Better Than The Real Thing
2. The Fly
3. Mysterious Ways / Rain (snippet)
4. Until The End Of The World
5. I Will Follow
6. Get On Your Boots
7. I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For
8. Stand By Me
9. Stuck In A Moment (For Amy Winehouse)
10. Beautiful Day / Space Oddity (snippet)
11. Can’t Stand The Rain (snippet) / Elevation
12. Pride
13. Miss Sarajevo
14. Zooropa
15. City Of Blinding Lights / Singing In The Rain (snippet)
16. Vertigo
17. Miss You (snippet) / Crazy Tonight / Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head (snippet) / Discothèque (snippet) / Life During Wartime (snippet) / Psycho Killer (snippet)
18. Please (snippet) / Sunday Bloody Sunday
19. Scarlet
20. Walk On
Encore:
21. One / Purple Rain (snippet)
22. Hallelujah (snippet) / Purple Rain (snippet) / Where The Streets Have No Name / Singing In The Rain (snippet)
23. Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me
24. With Or Without You
25. Moment Of Surrender / Singing In The Rain (snippet)
“Lovers Eyes” - Mumford and Sons
Relatively new song, live at the P.C. Richard & Son Theater in NYC. April 13, 2011.
This guy must have taken a creative writing class in college. Gotta love his metaphors.
3rd MAW C-130 Pilot’s Description of Approach into Baghdad:
There I was at six thousand feet over central Iraq, two hundred eighty knots and we’re dropping faster than Paris Hilton’s panties. It’s a typical September evening in the Persian Gulf; hotter than a rectal thermometer and I’m sweating like a priest at a Cub Scout meeting. But that’s neither here nor there. The night is moonless over Baghdad tonight, and blacker than a Steven King novel.
But it’s 2006, folks, and I’m sporting the latest in night-combat
technology - namely, hand-me-down night vision goggles (NVGs) thrown out by the fighter boys. Additionally, my 1962 Lockheed C-130E Hercules is equipped with an obsolete, yet, semi-effective missile warning system (MWS). The MWS conveniently makes a nice soothing tone in your headset just before the missile explodes into your airplane. Who says you can’t polish a turd?
At any rate, the NVGs are illuminating Baghdad International Airport
like the Las Vegas Strip during a Mike Tyson fight. These NVGs are the cat’s ass. But I’ve digressed. The preferred method of approach tonight is the random shallow. This tactical maneuver allows the pilot to ingress the landing zone in an unpredictable manner, thus exploiting the supposedly secured perimeter of the airfield in an attempt to avoid enemy surface-to-air-missiles and small arms fire.
Personally, I wouldn’t bet my pink ass on that theory but the approach is fun as hell and that’s the real reason we fly it. We get a visual on the runway at three miles out, drop down to one thousand feet above the ground, still maintaining two hundred eighty knots.
Now the fun starts. It’s pilot appreciation time as I descend the mighty Herc to six hundred feet and smoothly, yet very deliberately, yank into a sixty degree left bank, turning the aircraft ninety degrees offset from runway heading. As soon as we roll out of the turn, I reverse turn to the right a full two hundred seventy degrees in order to roll out aligned with the runway. Some aeronautical genius coined this maneuver the “Ninety/Two-Seventy.” Chopping the power during the turn, I pull back on the yoke just to the point my nether regions start to sag, bleeding off energy in order to configure the pig for landing.
“Flaps Fifty!, landing Gear Down!, Before Landing Checklist!” I look
over at the copilot and he’s shaking like a cat shitting on a sheet of
ice. Looking further back at the navigator, and even through the Nags, I can clearly see the wet spot spreading around his crotch. Finally, I glance at my steely eyed flight engineer. His eyebrows rise in unison as a grin forms on his face. I can tell he’s thinking the same thing I am …. “Where do we find such fine young men?”
“Flaps One Hundred!” I bark at the shaking cat. Now it’s all aim-point and airspeed. Aviation 101, with the exception there are no lights, I’m on NVGs, it’s Baghdad, and now tracers are starting to crisscross the black sky. Naturally, and not at all surprisingly, I grease the Goodyear’s on brick-one of runway 33 left, bring the throttles to ground idle and then force the props to full reverse pitch. Tonight, the sound of freedom is my four Hamilton Standard propellers chewing through the thick, putrid, Baghdad air. The huge, one hundred thirty-thousand pound, lumbering whisper pig comes to a lurching stop in less than two thousand feet. Let’s see a Viper do that!
We exit the runway to a welcoming committee of government issued Army grunts. It’s time to download their beans and bullets and letters from their sweethearts, look for war booty, and of course, urinate on Saddam’s home. Walking down the crew entry steps with my lowest-bidder, Beretta 92F, 9 millimeter strapped smartly to my side, look around and thank God, not Allah, I’m an American and I’m on the winning team. Then I thank God I’m not in the Army.
Knowing once again I’ve cheated death, I ask myself, “What in the hell am I doing in this mess?” Is it Duty, Honor, and Country? You bet your ass. Or could it possibly be for the glory, the swag, and not to mention, chicks dig the Air Medal. There’s probably some truth there too. But now is not the time to derive the complexities of the superior, cerebral properties of the human portion of the
aviator-man-machine model. It is however, time to get out of this hole. Hey copilot, how’s ‘bout the ‘Before Starting Engines Checklist.”
Delta flight 1488 to PHL. Gotta love inflight wifi!
New single. Waaaay overproduced in my opinion. Hopefully the rest of the record will have some rawness to it.
Downtown Charlotte, NC. We were all over the place… Started out at Whiskey River, which is a bar owned by Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Driving up to the mountains for the weekend. Lots of golf. Home Tuesday.