06-21-2007, 05:31 AM
Roger Waters @ Oracle Arena 06/19/07
I'm still reeling from this one.
Our seats were high above the stage, a hanging speaker tower partially obstructing our view, but oh well. The backdrop was an immense photograph of a coffee table with a whisky bottle, a glass, an ashtray, some pills and an old phonograph/tuner. Minutes before the show was to start smoke began to rise from the cigarette butts in the ashtray. I turned to Dee Dee and said "neat effect". Then a hand reached in and changed the station on the radio.
"That's no backdrop!', I cried, "That's a space station!"
Actually it was a freakin' huge movie screen and not once was it ever blank.
Roger and the Bleeding Heart Band took the stage and launched into "In The Flesh" while marching hammers stomped across the screen and flashpots went off from above and below. A showcase of Pink Floyd 'hits' followed. A giant astronaut balloon hovered over the crowd during the intro to 'Perfect Sense' and the iconic pig made an appearance during the instrumental break of 'Sheep'.
The pig was covered with anti-Bush graffiti and anti-war slogans, 'Fear Builds Walls', 'All Religions Divide' and my favorite 'What an asshole! George W. Bush' written around the pigs anus.
Roger's obvious love of King George was declared in a lyric from the only new song they played 'Leaving Beirut'. It was even highlighted in the tour program:
"Oh George, Oh George,
That Texas education must have fucked you up,
When you were very small"
As the musicians left the stage for intermission a tiny dot was projected on the screen. Over the next 20 minutes the dot grew until it became recognizable as the Moon. Soon after a satellite appeared and the opening montage of sounds from 'Dark Side of the Moon' began to play. The smoke rolled in and the band played the album from start to finish.
The songs were played expertly and the vocalist for 'Great Gig in the Sky' was phenomenal. Throughout 'Eclipse' a satellite within a pyramid was lowered from the scaffolding. The satellite emitted a wall of lasers, revolving slowly and covering the crowd in waves of light. At one point a narrow white beam was focused on the pyramid, emerging from the other side as a rainbow, perfectly reproducing the DSotM album cover in glorious 3D.
As the last notes of 'Eclipse' faded away the crowd went nuts. A truly monumental event had just occurred. One that will cause future generations to wail and gnash their teeth when they understand what they missed.
The encore was the expected 'Another Brick in the Wall pt.2' and 'Comfortably Numb'. After DSotM it was kind of anti-climactic and I took the opportunity to go buy a program. I had decided not to buy any merchandise because it was all too damn expensive, but after seeing the show I needed something to look at for when the memory banks fail.
What a great month. The Arcade Fire, The Police and Roger Waters.
Now I can rest.
I'm still reeling from this one.
Our seats were high above the stage, a hanging speaker tower partially obstructing our view, but oh well. The backdrop was an immense photograph of a coffee table with a whisky bottle, a glass, an ashtray, some pills and an old phonograph/tuner. Minutes before the show was to start smoke began to rise from the cigarette butts in the ashtray. I turned to Dee Dee and said "neat effect". Then a hand reached in and changed the station on the radio.
"That's no backdrop!', I cried, "That's a space station!"
Actually it was a freakin' huge movie screen and not once was it ever blank.
Roger and the Bleeding Heart Band took the stage and launched into "In The Flesh" while marching hammers stomped across the screen and flashpots went off from above and below. A showcase of Pink Floyd 'hits' followed. A giant astronaut balloon hovered over the crowd during the intro to 'Perfect Sense' and the iconic pig made an appearance during the instrumental break of 'Sheep'.
The pig was covered with anti-Bush graffiti and anti-war slogans, 'Fear Builds Walls', 'All Religions Divide' and my favorite 'What an asshole! George W. Bush' written around the pigs anus.
Roger's obvious love of King George was declared in a lyric from the only new song they played 'Leaving Beirut'. It was even highlighted in the tour program:
"Oh George, Oh George,
That Texas education must have fucked you up,
When you were very small"
As the musicians left the stage for intermission a tiny dot was projected on the screen. Over the next 20 minutes the dot grew until it became recognizable as the Moon. Soon after a satellite appeared and the opening montage of sounds from 'Dark Side of the Moon' began to play. The smoke rolled in and the band played the album from start to finish.
The songs were played expertly and the vocalist for 'Great Gig in the Sky' was phenomenal. Throughout 'Eclipse' a satellite within a pyramid was lowered from the scaffolding. The satellite emitted a wall of lasers, revolving slowly and covering the crowd in waves of light. At one point a narrow white beam was focused on the pyramid, emerging from the other side as a rainbow, perfectly reproducing the DSotM album cover in glorious 3D.
As the last notes of 'Eclipse' faded away the crowd went nuts. A truly monumental event had just occurred. One that will cause future generations to wail and gnash their teeth when they understand what they missed.
The encore was the expected 'Another Brick in the Wall pt.2' and 'Comfortably Numb'. After DSotM it was kind of anti-climactic and I took the opportunity to go buy a program. I had decided not to buy any merchandise because it was all too damn expensive, but after seeing the show I needed something to look at for when the memory banks fail.
What a great month. The Arcade Fire, The Police and Roger Waters.
Now I can rest.