1988-05-24 Starwood Amphitheatre, Nashville, TN, USA: Difference between revisions

From DM Live - the Depeche Mode live encyclopedia for the masses
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
The one and only Nashville concert we ever played, was well received but had the lowest turnout of any show on the whole tour. I suppose this was the reason why it wasn't high on our agenda to return. It's not the local DM fans' fault, it's just that Nashville seems to have such a one-dimensional music scene.
The one and only Nashville concert we ever played, was well received but had the lowest turnout of any show on the whole tour. I suppose this was the reason why it wasn't high on our agenda to return. It's not the local DM fans' fault, it's just that Nashville seems to have such a one-dimensional music scene.
</blockquote>
Martin Gore echoes this statement when he giving an interview by the phone that was captured in Depeche Mode's '101' documentary:
<blockquote>
There's definitely certain areas where we suffer through a lack of radio support. We've just been to places like Nashville, for instance. In most places in the country, we're playing to sort of 10.000 to 15.000 people: in Nashville, we sort of get about 2000 people along - which we were quite please with in the end, because ticket sales weren't very good at all until the last day. And in that area it seems to nobody at all is playing our music: because of their background, that doesn't surprise us that much, but I think we know that there is an audience there. Wherever we get radio play, we do well.
</blockquote>
</blockquote>



Revision as of 18:44, 19 September 2017

Notes

Alan Wilder said in the Q&A on Shunt:

The one and only Nashville concert we ever played, was well received but had the lowest turnout of any show on the whole tour. I suppose this was the reason why it wasn't high on our agenda to return. It's not the local DM fans' fault, it's just that Nashville seems to have such a one-dimensional music scene.

Martin Gore echoes this statement when he giving an interview by the phone that was captured in Depeche Mode's '101' documentary:

There's definitely certain areas where we suffer through a lack of radio support. We've just been to places like Nashville, for instance. In most places in the country, we're playing to sort of 10.000 to 15.000 people: in Nashville, we sort of get about 2000 people along - which we were quite please with in the end, because ticket sales weren't very good at all until the last day. And in that area it seems to nobody at all is playing our music: because of their background, that doesn't surprise us that much, but I think we know that there is an audience there. Wherever we get radio play, we do well.

Andy Fletcher said in 2016:

Well, obviously we were quite concerned when we played Nashville, but it turned out to be great! It was a very strange audience. But that was a good concert. But I don't think it really changed our career.

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark was the support act.

Set list

  1. Pimpf
  2. Behind The Wheel
  3. Strangelove
  4. Sacred
  5. Something To Do
  6. Blasphemous Rumours
  7. Stripped
  8. Somebody (*)
  9. The Things You Said (*)
  10. Black Celebration
  11. Shake The Disease
  12. Nothing
  13. Pleasure, Little Treasure
  14. Master And Servant
  15. A Question Of Time
  16. Never Let Me Down Again
  17. A Question Of Lust (*)
  18. Just Can't Get Enough
  19. Everything Counts