Auburn Hills
Setlist
(Listed after review)
Hi all. A frequent reader of this board, though an
infrequent contributor. Thought I'd share my Palace of Auburn Hills experience
with anyone interested.
Just arrived back home, after a 750 mile-round trip to see Neil in Auburn Hills
Thursday night. Still on that convert high...the Neil High that takes a day or
two to recover from (if one ever really wants to recover). The show was
magnificent.
We arrive in Auburn Hills around 3, check in, rest a bit, and then go out for a
nice dinner. We arrived at The Palace around 6:30. The parking lot was pretty
full even then. Mingle around inside, have a drink, and then head to our seats
(2 in 7th row, 2 in 14th). As we find out seats, my brother says, "You know,
this is cool and all...but I just don't have that excitement we get when we see
KISS" (We're both big KISS fans, having seen the band 16 times). I told him to
just give it time, and see. (what did he think after the show? Here's a direct
quote: "Holy sh**!! That guy is amazing!!")
Then the spotlights shine on Neil...
Of his three news songs, which he played eight songs into the show, I was very
impressed with two. "Home Before Dark" and "Pretty Amazing Grace" came off very
well in concert. "Don't Go There" didn't do a lot for me.
I'm a recent convert to what a great song "Crunchy Granola Suite" is, so it was
wonderful to hear it last night. A very powerful performance. Then comes "Done
to Soon", a song I absolutely love. Last night's version was flawless, so
powerful and moving. And to end the massive onslaught of three wonderful songs,
"Brooklyn Roads". Amazing, simply amazing. The video accompaniment was a
magnificent touch, and more than a few people in our row wiped away a tear
through it. This three-song onslaught was the highlight of the night for me.
Another favourite, "I Am, I Said", brought the packed house to their feet.
Neil's emotion brought the song to new levels. Personally, I like the original
album version of "IAIS" much better than some of Neil's live recordings of the
song, where he seems to over-sing the song. Last night the first verse somewhat
fit the over-sung version, while the second verse was much closer to the
original. Either way, the emotion of the song was wonderful.
"Forever in Blue Jeans" brought the crowd to near-delirious heights. I looked
around to the highest parts of the stadium, and it seemed as if not one person
was sitting, and everyone was clapping and singing.
And then there is "Sweet Caroline". We all know about that one. No matter how
many times it's played on tour, it seems to be that one song that everybody
wants to hear. At the end of the song Neil's battery died, so he called up a
tech to replace it. It took the tech almost two minutes to do so, and while he
was doing it sections of the crowd were chanting, "Neil! Neil!", or "We love
you, Neil!" As the tech was fumbling around Neil's back, Neil said, "I'm not
sure what he's doing back there, but I kinda' like it". That drew a roar of
laughter from the crowd.
In a surprise for me, "Song Sung Blue" didn't seem to be all that well-received.
The crowd was polite and all; but there was little crowd energy for that song.
And what a pre-encore show-ender "Hell Yeah" is! I had never heard the song in
its entirety until last night, and, WOW!! It works so well where it is at in the
setlist. The crowd went bananas, and Neil walked off into the adoring cheers and
screams of 20,000 of his closest friends in Michigan.
The 'encore three' ("Cracklin...", "America, "Brothers...") brought the house
down. Neil's last minute of "Brother Loves..." is the stuff legends are made of.
It's why, quite simply, the entertainment world is made up of two types of
people: those who are Neil Diamond, and those who are not.
The crowd, overall, was so cool. The age differential was amazing. We sat next
to a group of younger kids, probably ranging in age from 16 - 25 or so, and they
new EVERY WORD to almost every song! They worshipped the guy like he was a rock
god. I think that all comes from the fact the music industry today is so
vacuous, so shallow, that kids today see Neil Diamond, and know instantly they
are seeing something real, something true. The diversity of age of that crowd at
the Palace was inspiring, to be honest.
Don't look now, but a new generation has just discovered Neil Diamond.
Setlist
Holly Holy
Beautiful Noise
You Got To Me
Love On The Rocks
Play Me
Cherry, Cherry
Thank The Lord For The Night Time
Home Before Dark
Don't Go There
Pretty Amazing Grace
Crunchy Granola Suite
Done Too Soon
Brooklyn Roads
I Am...I Said
Solitary Man
Kentucky Woman
Forever In Blue Jeans
Sweet Caroline (3 reprises)
You Don't Bring Me Flowers
Song Sung Blue
I'm A Believer
Man Of God
Hell Yeah
(Encore)
Cracklin' Rosie
America
Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show