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Chicago review
Heather Locklear, Marilyn Monroe, and Ava Sambora : 3 babes help
Chicago rock Jon Bon Jovi's Birthday What's your favorite adjective for greatness? Whatever you came up with isn't half as good as Bon Jovi was last night in Chicago, IL. Think I'm kidding? From the time I left the United Center last night at 11:45 PM, Chicago time, till we began writing this (3:00 PM Ohio time), I received 5 phone calls from Bon Jovi tour veterans (all folks who have seen Bon Jovi live in excess of 20 times), all of the conversations began with: Dave: Hello Caller: Oh my God, was that the best show of all time, or what? - OR - Tell me you were in Chicago last night? Dave: Yes. Yes, yes! Further consensus shows that the versions of KTF, Saturday Night, The Distance, RSOW, and Always were each the very best performance of these songs ever, in the history of the world. Doubters beware, proof follows... surprise as the sign said they opened at 5:00. The owner signalled us through the window and let us in. After we had ordered and were admiring the decor, we realized that the clocks were an hour behind our watches. Security was pretty loose and I didn't see them turn down any cameras of any type. At the merch booth they had 17 different T-shirts, 4 different posters, a sweatshirt, a tour book, panties, glow sticks, disposable cameras, binoculars, flashers, drumsticks, lithographs, 2 ball caps and CDs. The marketing machine is in high gear. In Chicago, they sell real alcohol as well as beer and folks were imbibing like prohibition was coming back tomorrow. We did a bit of people watching and talked with Michelle who we hadn't seen since standing in line for tickets to the later cancelled Moline show on Richie's birthday last tour. We saw Darcy but didn't get close enough to talk to her before she turned into a ninja and disappeared into thin air. We got to our seats before the Goos started their set and found we had a nice view from section 112 and the sound was amazing. Reznik and company played, hands down, the best set I have seen from them in the 6 shows we have witnessed. They were tight and precise with great crowd interaction. Early on they promised us a night we would remember and they should have bought lottery tickets because the prediction was dead on. I have finally pinned down who the Goo bassist reminds me of: Angus Young of AC/DC, the little dancing, strutting step the knee bouncing at the mic, the head flopping with hair over the face, pure Angus. Without spending too much time on it, they were quite simply great. I am not a Goo fan, but they put on a hell of a show last night and the crowd was definitely into them. Intermission: We got to know our very drunken neighbor who hadn't seen Bon Jovi live since 1986 and thought fan club membership should be free . Tony showed up to chat, having just arrived from seeing a small band at a club gig with some record industry folks. He was sitting 4th row center with his buddy Rob who is a professional photographer and had a photo pass for the pit for the first three songs. We could see Barb from our seats but didn't get a chance to talk to her. During SDIBSN she was dancing like there was no tomorrow. Excitement hit the arena before the lights even went down as Heather Locklear made her way to the soundboard where she would sit for a good portion of the concert. Tony let us know that Jon, Richie and Heather had attended a taping of a Dennis Miller comedy special the night before in Chicago. The lights went out, the curtains dropped, the fans screamed maniacally, Richie strode forward to begin the intro to Bounce and a juggernaut was unleashed. Hell hath no fury like a Sambora inspired. From the opening salvo, the concert was like a 5 man assault on the endurance of a rabid audience, energy was flowing back and forth like mercury in a teflon frying pan (don't try it at home folks, just trust me, lots of motion). The crowd was alive, giving back as good as they got and singing along in fine form. Hardly a moments pause was taken as the band ripped through the set. Richie in particular seemed on FIRE. He played like he was a strapping young lad, trying to land a record deal. Witnessing him play made me truly realize he is a legend in his own time. When the boys played KTF, they pulled out all the stops, the song was long with Jon giving the Jungle-mix a bunch of new twists, I think Richie grew a few extra fingers to use for the solos and the entire crowd has pumping their fists screaming by the end. As the song finished I knew the night was something special,I have seen and heard literally hundreds of versions of Faith and this one blew them all away, the raw emotion was simply HUGE. Throughout the night Richie seemed to throw in little extras, every solo was a new highlight and the Tone Gods had smiled down on Rich and Lumpy as the tone they achieved was an Entity unto itself, demanding that lesser beings bow down in homage to it's greatness. The soaring ambience of the RSOW solo would have made Vaughn, Clapton and Gilmour weep, had they the privilege to hear. I vote for doubling the ticket prices to allow Richie's twin muses to attend every show and provide inspiration as they did last night. I'm a cheap old bastard, but you can't put a price on greatness. As Heather watched from the soundboard for most of the show, Richie's daughter Ava had a much better seat. For the entire show except for the few songs where fans were in the pits at the sides of the stage, Ava played in the pit and onstage on Daddy's side were he could smile and wave at her as she played and danced the night away. The little princess seemed perfectly at home in her ear protection with enough energy for all of us as she danced virtually nonstop from beginning to end of the concert. When we first saw the little girl playing beside the stage, we didn't realize it was Ava, because the last public picture of the Hollywood dream couple's child was the tabloid snapped infant shot, and for some reason I figured she must still be a baby. But as the concert progressed, it was obvious form her interaction with Richie who she really was, and Jon confirmed her identity during his intro of Richie's rendition of I'll Be There For You. Jon and Richie pulled out a new bag of tricks for Sat. Night using a multi delay on the scat vocals Jon added at the break, it was another highlight in an evening of non-stop highlights. Chicago was a ton more appreciative of Dave's Piano solo than any of the other cities we have seen or heard this tour, and he played nearly twice as long as well, before starting RSOW to thunderous applause. Jon thanked the local radio station for playing Misunderstood a million times and announced that The Distance would be the next single here in the States. During the second song of the evening You Give Love a Bad Name, a fan from the front rows threw a pink envelope onstage and it slid all the way back to the drum riser where Jon keeps his towel, cup and talk-back mic. As the Boys began the 18th song of the main set, ISWID, Jon finally noticed the envelope and brought it forward to the mic as Hugh and Tico layed down the groove. He opened the envelope, removed the card and threw the envelope into the audience. He motioned Richie over as he read the outside and then the inside of the presumed birthday card. "Rich........ she says she looooooves me" said Jon as he tossed the card into the audience and the duo ripped in to the guitar part. With barely a breath Sleep ran into the new main set closer Born to be my Baby with the audience sing along and double stop ending. By the time Born to be my Baby was played the audience ws either in a fevered pitch or exhausted in equal parts,but the Jovis wouldn't be content to provide the standard 3-4 song encore, oh no my friends, a good time was to be had by all. With darkness in the arena a new Bounce logo was cast upon the video screens. But in a keystone cops routine, a few stagehands were trying to set up a big fake birthday cake via flash light and a blonde climbed inside. They looked like it was a secret surprise but 17 flash lights and a statuesque blonde were kinda obvious After the briefest intermission, Richie led Hugh, Dave and Tico back onstage in silver and gold sequined Top Hats and Tails and proceeded to launch into the Beatles "You Say It's Your Birthday" with all four singing in great harmony. After a full verse/chorus and an additional instrumental chorus Jon wandered onstage looking awed and embarrassed. He proceeded to the mic as though to begin the next song and completely missed a Marilyn Monroe look alike popping out of the big birthday cake. Richie pointed out the scene and Jon looked truly surprised. He wandered over to her and gave her his microphone, as hers wasn't working, and she gave him a kiss and said he was her favorite Jon (John), the band giggled as Jon blushed. Then the girl sang a JFK inspired Happy Birthday and gave Jon another kiss. Next Richie led the crowd in singing another verse of Happy Birthday and we were more than willing to oblige. Jon looked amazed at the volume of the masses and expressed his appreciation and hugged Richie before launching into the rest of the 7 (or 9) song encore. I had never seen the band do "Rock and Roll Music" in person and it is a fun addition, though I was amazed that a song from the do-bop era had three verses, most of the early teen pop was very short. Twist and Shout closed down the show and I'm sure many Chicago folks will be feeling their age today, but for a few magical hours last night Bon Jovi returned thousands of fans to their youth while celebrating his own advance in age. The boys didn't look or sound a day over 21, and Jon proclaimed he would be celebrating till 4:00 in a local bar. He deserves it, as his intro to Just Older says "like a fine wine, we just keep getting better all the time." If they ever play a better show, divine intervention would have to be involved. This was the longest Jovi show since the 96 Wembley affair, not counting this years stop and start Yokohama acoustic filming. 30 songs and 2 REAL encores. I see alot of folks calling it 2 encores if they bow in between songs then put the guitars back on and play another song (for my money the band has to leave the stage and come back out for it to count as a separate encore.) This is the stuff of which legends are born, I feel truly privileged to have witnessed this event and I'm sure 12 thousand plus other fans feel likewise. Bon Jovi may call New Jersey home, but over the past three tours I would take any Chicago show over any 2 Jersey shows, Chicago just plain ROCKS !! |
amen
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Sounds really cool.
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I have too many friends in Chicago to have missed this show!!! :cry:
Becky |
Becky don't be sad!
Think about who isn't going to any of the shows in this tour... :wink: |
*drools*
oh man... amazing review..i wish i were there! |
Quote:
You know what, Becky? I thought about you yesterday, knowing what a huge Jon fan you are, and knew you would have really, really loved this show. Especially since it was his birthday. You should try to come to the summer show...Jon said they'd be back in the summer. Rumor has it that it may be Richie's birthday, but we'll have to wait and see. |
I'd have to agree with the review. the show rocked! i had the time of my life! The sound of the show was great (it was just this loudness, it was...perfect!) and i thought the goo goo dolls sounded really great too, cause i've heard them live before, and they haven't sounded that good, but at the show, i thought they were really good! Does anyone know if they ARE having a show in the summer? I'm dying to see them again! i know jon said something at the end of the show about seeing us in the summer or something like that, but anyone know bout this? anyways, amazing show guys! and i'd have to agree...like a fine wine they just keep getting better all the time. heh, ya....
Juliet |
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