Don Henley
Arena @ Mohegan Sun Casino
Uncasville, CT
September 17, 2016
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source info:
Sennheiser ME-104's>Tascam DR-07 (16/44.1, 40hz bass rolloff)
>USB> PC> GoldWave v5.56> CDWaveEditor v1.96 (track split)> TLH> Flac (6)
Taper: Ringfedder
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Setlist:
01. intro
02. Seven Bridges Row
03. Dirty Laundry
04. That Old Flame
05. Sunset Grill
06. Witchy Woman
07. When I Stop Dreaming
08. One Of These Nights
09. New York Minute
10. Shangri-La
11. Best of My Love
12. I Don't Want to Hear Anymore
13. The End of Innocence
14. The Last Resort
15. Train in the Distance
16. Heart of the Matter
17. -band intro-
18. Everybody Wants to Rule the World
19. Boys of Summer
-Encore 1-
20. Life in the Fast Lane
21. Hotel California
-Encore 2-
22. Wasted Time
23. Desperado
The Band:
Don Henley - guitar, voc
Will Hollis - keyboards, voc
Steuart Smith - guitar
Michael Thompson - keyboards, accordian, voc
Erica Swindell - violin, voc
Lara Johnston - voc
Lily Elise - voc
Scott Crago - drums
Lance Morrison - bass
Chris Holt - guitar, harmonica, voc
Milo Deering - pedal steel & everything
George McMullen - trombone
Tom Evans - sax
Dave Trigg - trumpet
Trevor Neumann - trumpet
Charlie Peterson - trumpet
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Enjoy!
Henley soars like an Eagle during Mohegan Sun appearance
By John Nash, Sunday, September 18, 2016
UNCASVILLE - When the legendary 1970s musical group the Eagles went their separate ways in 1980, Don Henley proved he could make it on his own.
He’s just simply that talented.
The band’s 14-year hiatus gave Henley plenty of more songs, and outright hits, to bring to the table the next time he went on a solo tour around the world.
That time is now.
Mixing his own solo stuff in with the magical music of the Eagles, Henley shined during his appearance at the Mohegan Sun Arena before a sold-out crowd on Saturday night.
Backed by a seven-piece band, a five-piece horn section and three heavenly voiced back-up singers, Henley treated the audience to a journey through time - from many of the Eagles’ hits of the 1970s, to the highlights of his own solo career in the ’80s, to his most recent release, “Cass County.”
Collectively, none of them disappointed.
From the moment they took the stage, standing front and center to harmonize an a cappella version of the Eagles’ “Seven Bridges Road” to the very final note of “Desperado” some two hours later, Henley and Co. looked great and sounded even better.
If you wanted the Eagles? So much of the catalog to sing a long to: “Witchy Woman,” “One of These Nights,” “Best of My Love,” “Life in the Fast Lane”, “Wasted Time” and “Hotel California” were all there.
If you wanted Henley’s solo stuff? “The Boys of Summer,” “The Heart of the Matter,” “New York Minute,” “Sunset Grill,” and “Dirty Laundry were all there.
If you wanted a little bit of Tears for Fears? Well, the stage held 15 strong, who collectively slayed a cover of the band’s “Everybody Wants To Rule The World,” as well.
There were even four “Cass County” songs, a girls-only version of “I Don’t Want To Hear Anymore” and a crowd favorite “The Last Resort” - which came complete with a long story of how the song came to be from Henley.
The crowd from the get-go was very appreciative of Henley and his band’s efforts, even if most of the nearly 9,000 in attendance didn’t get out of their seats to dance until the first encore of two encores.
And while Henley should be commended as an artist for taking a stand against cell phone use at his concerts, a few overbearing Mohegan Sun Arena security people went over the top at times to stop people from not just filming, but even looking at their phones.
At least twice during the show, a trio of blue-clad security folk blocked the few of patrons (me included) by converging on a cell phone user, proving to be just as distracting - if not more so - than an actual concert-goer using a cell phone.
That, however, was peripheral fodder.
Nothing could take away from the music on this night, be it from the 1970s, 80s or 21st century.
Henley simply flew like an Eagle, giving Mohegan Sun one of its best shows of 2016.
https://mega.nz/#!hQB33YJY!lDyifVrrm...sNFFBi1VmKSFuI
Arena @ Mohegan Sun Casino
Uncasville, CT
September 17, 2016
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source info:
Sennheiser ME-104's>Tascam DR-07 (16/44.1, 40hz bass rolloff)
>USB> PC> GoldWave v5.56> CDWaveEditor v1.96 (track split)> TLH> Flac (6)
Taper: Ringfedder
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Setlist:
01. intro
02. Seven Bridges Row
03. Dirty Laundry
04. That Old Flame
05. Sunset Grill
06. Witchy Woman
07. When I Stop Dreaming
08. One Of These Nights
09. New York Minute
10. Shangri-La
11. Best of My Love
12. I Don't Want to Hear Anymore
13. The End of Innocence
14. The Last Resort
15. Train in the Distance
16. Heart of the Matter
17. -band intro-
18. Everybody Wants to Rule the World
19. Boys of Summer
-Encore 1-
20. Life in the Fast Lane
21. Hotel California
-Encore 2-
22. Wasted Time
23. Desperado
The Band:
Don Henley - guitar, voc
Will Hollis - keyboards, voc
Steuart Smith - guitar
Michael Thompson - keyboards, accordian, voc
Erica Swindell - violin, voc
Lara Johnston - voc
Lily Elise - voc
Scott Crago - drums
Lance Morrison - bass
Chris Holt - guitar, harmonica, voc
Milo Deering - pedal steel & everything
George McMullen - trombone
Tom Evans - sax
Dave Trigg - trumpet
Trevor Neumann - trumpet
Charlie Peterson - trumpet
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Enjoy!
Henley soars like an Eagle during Mohegan Sun appearance
By John Nash, Sunday, September 18, 2016
UNCASVILLE - When the legendary 1970s musical group the Eagles went their separate ways in 1980, Don Henley proved he could make it on his own.
He’s just simply that talented.
The band’s 14-year hiatus gave Henley plenty of more songs, and outright hits, to bring to the table the next time he went on a solo tour around the world.
That time is now.
Mixing his own solo stuff in with the magical music of the Eagles, Henley shined during his appearance at the Mohegan Sun Arena before a sold-out crowd on Saturday night.
Backed by a seven-piece band, a five-piece horn section and three heavenly voiced back-up singers, Henley treated the audience to a journey through time - from many of the Eagles’ hits of the 1970s, to the highlights of his own solo career in the ’80s, to his most recent release, “Cass County.”
Collectively, none of them disappointed.
From the moment they took the stage, standing front and center to harmonize an a cappella version of the Eagles’ “Seven Bridges Road” to the very final note of “Desperado” some two hours later, Henley and Co. looked great and sounded even better.
If you wanted the Eagles? So much of the catalog to sing a long to: “Witchy Woman,” “One of These Nights,” “Best of My Love,” “Life in the Fast Lane”, “Wasted Time” and “Hotel California” were all there.
If you wanted Henley’s solo stuff? “The Boys of Summer,” “The Heart of the Matter,” “New York Minute,” “Sunset Grill,” and “Dirty Laundry were all there.
If you wanted a little bit of Tears for Fears? Well, the stage held 15 strong, who collectively slayed a cover of the band’s “Everybody Wants To Rule The World,” as well.
There were even four “Cass County” songs, a girls-only version of “I Don’t Want To Hear Anymore” and a crowd favorite “The Last Resort” - which came complete with a long story of how the song came to be from Henley.
The crowd from the get-go was very appreciative of Henley and his band’s efforts, even if most of the nearly 9,000 in attendance didn’t get out of their seats to dance until the first encore of two encores.
And while Henley should be commended as an artist for taking a stand against cell phone use at his concerts, a few overbearing Mohegan Sun Arena security people went over the top at times to stop people from not just filming, but even looking at their phones.
At least twice during the show, a trio of blue-clad security folk blocked the few of patrons (me included) by converging on a cell phone user, proving to be just as distracting - if not more so - than an actual concert-goer using a cell phone.
That, however, was peripheral fodder.
Nothing could take away from the music on this night, be it from the 1970s, 80s or 21st century.
Henley simply flew like an Eagle, giving Mohegan Sun one of its best shows of 2016.
https://mega.nz/#!hQB33YJY!lDyifVrrm...sNFFBi1VmKSFuI