First show ever with no HLAH?
First show ever with no HLAH?
Perhaps in a really long time if you don't count CRC or KROQ events.
Meh, I saw the setlist. Nothing special played just all the heavy stuff stripped out. If I would have paid big money to see this I would have been disappointed. I hope this isn't what the Vegas shows will be like.
Program & ticket. On both of the set lists I saw, I didn't see "All The Love in the World."
I took this photo of a paper setlist someone was holding right after the show, though a few of the songs are in the wrong order in addition to All the Love being included. I don't know if this was an early draft different from what the band used onstage?
Some great photos from this on the Brooklyn Vegan blog
http://www.brooklynvegan.com/archive..._nails_17.html
Fuck. I'll never be as good as the photogs from BV. Totally jelly.
What's really amazing is how fast he edited his shots and uploaded them.
I shot NIN at Mountain Oasis over a week ago but haven't even gotten my photos up yet. But also I didn't have a deadline, and I have a different day job.
And another photographer at tonight's gig thinks the BV guy left after three songs.
Oh man, I can only hope that ATLITW gets played in LA. I'll be pissed if it's only a Texas thing.
Here's a blog about it where for some bizarre reason the blogger reckons the guitarist is Robert Fripp from King Crimson??
http://www.austinbloggylimits.com/20...or-acl-tv.html
So wait...is THIS the accurate setlist? Because if so....fuck me, that's about the best set list I could have asked for given what's being played on the current tour. It's all of the HM tracks that I wanted to hear and didn't, plus two of my favorite Fragile tracks and In This Twilight. So eager to see what makes the cut for the broadcast. Was there any news at the studio in regard to the potential air date?
What an amazing show! I waited all day in the standby line which eventually grew to 100+ people. I was up at the very front and not a single person was 'officially' let in as all tickets had been claimed. The few of us that got in had the ACL volunteers looking out for us and snuck us in when a few people left after the first few songs. I finally got into the show during Came Back Haunted and was surprised to see a few more empty seats.
The screenprint sold out in 40 minutes and was limited to 250.
1. When mentioning a live NIN show, the word "Meh" should never be used.
2. I was there. It was a setlist appropriate for the venue, which is why I believe some of the "heavy stuff" may have been avoided.
3. I've been to enough NIN shows (though never a festival unfortunately) to know that the crowd on the floor--where I was--spread out for my movement during The Wretched. The group of obviously wealthy (donors) middle-agers (I am nearly middle-aged, so I can judge) next to me practically feared for their lives when Survivalism got going. Can you imagine if something like Wish had been played? A funny daydream...
4. Why would Vegas be different from the rest of the non-festival shows on this tour? This isn't a smart-ass answer, but a legitimate question. Is there a reason--other than they added a second night?
5. I saw them in STL on this tour, only a month after HM came out...and I didn't know the album that well. With two kids, I don't have the kind of free time to give albums like this their proper attention. After seeing the show, which was heavy on the HM stuff, I listened to the album with more vigor. His sound is evolving, maturing, and he's obviously A. so confident that his new stuff is THAT good that his fans will embrace it B. "over" the self-loathing, bratty-but-nihilistic music he put out in his twenties and thirties. Don't get me wrong--I still like it, but I've matured too. C. a capitalist who realizes that this is the "old-fashioned" way of selling new albums.
I would bet, after reading some interviews, that the correct answer is D. All of the above for #5.
All I wanted was an experience unlike ANY other NIN experience I've had--and I left satisfied, sweaty, and grateful.
Last edited by BRH129; 11-05-2013 at 01:18 PM. Reason: grammar "different than" to "different from"
Full Tension production? Or more like a festival date?
It was netiher Frydek. Just the standard ACL backdrop and use of typical stage lights. So a tradeoff--intimacy unlike any other show but we lose all the crazy production. And that was ok by me.
As BRH129 said, I went in hoping for a completely unique NIN experience and I got exactly that. So I am grateful. I loved hearing all of the new stuff. Opening with "All Time Low" was incredible and getting to hear "Satellite" live made me swoon with excitement. The highlight for me personally was "Big Comedown" tho. So much energy and...tension...heh. Plus the backing singers really shined in that song.
Bring on the arena show in San Antonio tonight!!!
Neither. Review and pictures from ACL's site. http://acltv.com/2013/11/05/nine-inc...-expectations/
also, the "venue" in this case includes TV, which is a different audience than at a regular NIN concert or a festival. i'm sure plenty of people watch ACL just to be introduced to music they don't know about. and there's no ticket price or huge time commitment, so if someone watching doesn't like it, it's not a big deal.
the las vegas shows are supposed to not have the full tour visuals because of constraints of the venue. i don't think there's any reason to think the las vegas shows will be so close to this one. ACL is ACL - it's not just a small venue.
btw, love that you edited your post to change "different than" to "different from".
I don't see how broadcasting the show 6-9 months from now is going to benefit the promotion of the album. By that time, the album will be dead anyway. they should air the damn thing this month
because I am a sucker for posters/lithos etc, anyone have a pic of it? Not that I want it... just want to see.
I agree that being yoked to a TV network schedule in the 21st century makes no sense at all.
If I were them, I'd put the whole thing online next week. The venn diagram of PBS viewers and motivated NIN fans probably has minimal overlap in 2013, so I don't think it would harm their broadcast audience all that much.
not saying i wouldn't want to see the concert online right now, but there is some value* to keeping interest up over a longer time. an album release and tour already have promotional power. maybe someone will not really be paying attention now, but in a few months, they might see the show and think, "oh yeah. i've been meaning to check out what NIN has been up to."
it's good for us big fans, too. there's a lot to talk about now with the touring and all. in 4 months (in the US), there might be much less to talk about, and it'll be good to have a reason to get excited again.
* there's such a thing as non-monetary value, btw. (note not specifically directed at JPH.)