Konkman, Thanks for chiming in. I got the pleasure to speak with a guy sitting in front of me who informed me that it was his first show as we were speaking before the start. I informed him that he was in for a real treat and to prepare to be hooked.
I can distinctly remember my first show and how I felt excited about seeing it because I had already listened to all his albums but I had no idea what I was in store for. Needless to say, the guy in front of me had a grin from ear to ear after the show. So cool to see an artist who has such a positive effect on his audience and in return an audience with such a great respect and appreciation of the artist. It is unlike any artist/audience relationship I have ever seen. It is truly something unique.
As far as the caliber of the show last night, it is probably the best one I have seen yet, even after the Beacon Theater show that I saw on Nov. 5th, you know, the new DVD. A must have BTW. While the guest apearences and the famous venue certainly made it an epic event and one to remember for the ages, the crowds enthusiasm and the intimacy of the venue coupled with the setlist and Joe just being spot on, not to mention Greg Koch, made this a show I will never forget.
Did I mention the meet and greet where I got my JBLP Studio signed and the after show at the tour busses and gear trailers hanging with Greg, Tal, The Bonaholics and the crew. (Shout out to Mike the guitar tech, thanks for the JB lick) I can die a happy man. I am lucky to be able to experience such a thing in this day and age. Seventy bucks for a ticket is a f'n steal if you ask me!
rdawsoniii wrote:Konkman wrote:He did play an amazing version of The ballad of John Henry at the denver show complete with him using a theremin for part of the solo. You won't be disappointed.
Great! Thank you!
"Don't need a helmet to get me through life, walk across the water, blame it on foolish pride"