A Def Leppard Fan Site.
TUE 18th Aug 2009 -- New Orleans Arena, New Orleans, LA, USA USA. |

SETLIST - SHOW 28


00 - Sparkle Lounge Video,
00 - Pyromania Album Intro,
01 - Rock! Rock! (Till You Drop),
02 - Rocket,
03 - Animal,
04 - Too Late For Love,
05 - Nine Lives,
06 - Love Bites,
07 - Rick Savage Bass Solo,
08 - Rock On,
09 - Two Steps Behind,
10 - Bringin' On The Heartbreak,
11 - Switch 625,
12 - Hysteria,
13 - Armageddon It,
14 - Photograph,
15 - Pour Some Sugar On Me,
16 - Rock Of Ages,

Encore
17 - Let's Get Rocked.

Show Info


a. Fan Recorded - none yet

a. Last Played - 17th Nov 2006

a. Venue Pic Link - View

a. Capacity/Attendance - 13,139/?.

a. Area Map - View

a. Support Act - Poison

a. Support Act - Cheap Trick
Fan Pics 2009. Fan Videos 2009.
Pic Galleries - 01 Video Links




Show Notes -- The first show here since November 2006 on the YEAH! tour. As seen in the pics and fan videos the video operators used the arenas own video wall that runs around the tired seating halfway up. Video projections used on the screens behind the band were beamed onto these screens throughout the show. Something introduced by U2 on their Elevation tour. Thanks to Lou for the review/pics.

Link -- 20 Pics By The Times-Picayune

SHARE -- FAN REVIEWS/PICS/INFO

Fan Review -- By

Feel free to add one at any time.

Fan Review -- By Lori (aka: Lou) New Orleans, LA USA August 18th 2009

Well, its been one hek of a road for my best friend and I. This New Orleans show marks our 41st show in 4 years.

Sheila, my friend, went to 3 other shows this year prior to this show. It was in the plans that I attend those, but due to the loss of my Mom. I could not see our guys but this one time this year. And, the last time til they tour again, hopefully in a couple of years. We needed to make it the best.

We bought the ILAA package, which by the way, was awesome. Helen, the host, really rocked out at the show too! I was quite pleased with the gifts as well.

Prior to the show, we went downtown, met the guys by the hotel and gave them a few thank you gifts. They were extremely friendly and so sweet! Sav even got off the bus for us.

On we went to the show, they rocked the house. We were front row, Phil's side.! On a few of the videos posted here, you can actually see Sheila and I. Right off, we noticed how the video was on the stage steps. It was really cool! The set list was pretty much as it has been in recent years, such as Switch 625, Two Steps Behind, Sugar, Rock of Ages, Bringing on the Heartbreak, Animal, Photograph etc. I was hoping for C'Mon C'Mon, instead we got Nine LIves. But, its Lep, and I can live with anything they do. They played their hits of course, including my fav Rock On! Sav's Solo was amazing to say the least! I highly recommend everyone who can to see this dynamic show to get out there and do so! Poison was also awesome with their intense heat from the pyros.

One other note, Joe has new shoes and mic stand, I guess they are to resemble the "sparkle", in Songs from the Sparkle Lounge! lol I loved them! Phil also had a sparkling guitar and mic stand too. Nice touch!

Media Review -- Cheap Trick, Poison and Def Leppard bring 80's night to the New Orleans Arena By Alison Fensterstock | 41 Show Pics

A commercial for tonight's triple bill of early 80's-vintage glam metal that ran in recent weeks on WKBU 95.7, New Orleans' classic-rock radio station, warned: "This show might cause you to wear tight, acid-washed jeans." And indeed, more than a few fans took the opportunity to sport their favorite neon, leggings, washed-out Aerosmith and Motley Crue concert tees and teased hairdos. No fewer than three male fans turned out in shaggy blonde wigs that could have been homages to any of the frontmen: Cheap Trick's Robin Zander, Poison's Bret Michaels or Def Leppard's Joe Elliott.

As many memories as the show generated for a crowd that appeared, on average, to be old enough to have seen all three monsters of rock the first time around, it was no nostalgia act.

Both Def Leppard and Cheap Trick have released new albums recently - Leppard's "Songs from the Sparkle Lounge" in April 2008 and Cheap Trick's "The Latest" in late July of this year. Poison's last studio album was in 2007, and singer Bret Michaels put out a solo effort - "Rock My World," a tie-in to his VH1 reality series "Rock of Love," in 2008.

Throughout a tightly run three-and-a-half-hour show, the energy barely flagged. If some of the electric bombast of the bands' first touring years seemed missing, it was replaced by a kind of self-assured ease, coming from consummate pros hanging out in their natural habitat: an arena stage.
By Alison Fensterstock @ The Times-Picayune 2009 - (See link for full review).

Media Review -- Underdogs Cheap Trick shine alongside monsters of rock By Alison Fensterstock

Cheap Trick's Rick Nielsen is famous for his largesse with picks. Most rock n'roll guitarists toss out a couple at every show for the fans to scramble for, but Nielsen is almost ridiculously magnanimous. His microphone stand is tricked out with dozens, held in a special rack for easy throwing access; probably every ticket-holder in the first ten rows at the New Orleans arena took one adorned with his signature checkerboard pattern home. As the band's forty-minute opening set drew to a close, he stepped it up, taking handfuls of picks from his guitar tech to fling out like confetti.

And in New Orleans, we know how to go after throws.

Most of theaudience at the Arena Tuesday night looked about the right age to remember all three bands fondly from high school, and if the performers were, say, archetypes from a good 80's high-school movie (R.I.P John Hughes), it'd be easy to pinpoint which one each would be. The astonishingly successful Def Leppard, with their intense history of triumph over adversity, would be the straight-A-earning, star-athlete workhorse whom everyone likes. Poison would be the pretty, popular one.

Cheap Trick - the critical and underground power-pop favorites who never achieved the full level of mainstream success that Poison and Def Leppard did - would be the weird, smart kid who sits in the back of the class. Case in point: they signaled the start of their set with a recording of clips of odd pop-cultural references to themselves, including one of "The Simpsons" character Apu singing their hit "Dream Police."

All three bands, each of whose biggest hits charted between twenty and thirty years ago, brought vintage appeal to the show. Devil-horn fist salutes were raised. Lighters flickered during the power ballads - Cheap Trick's "Flame," Poison's "Something to Believe In" and "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," and Def Leppard's "Two Steps Behind."

In defense of slickness, Def Leppard's pitch-perfect stage show was explosive. Although at points some guitar parts and backing vocals appeared to be coming from a backing track instead of the live musicians, the group's technique, star power and legendary blow-out-the walls energy proved why they remain one of the best-selling acts in rock history.

A video screen behind the band played an ongoing montage that at times featured exploding rockets, the Union Jack, circus freaks, undulating womens' torsos, flames and pictures of dead rock icons. Right before they opened with "Rock! Rock! ("Til You Drop"), starting a set that relied heavily on their world-dominating third and fourth albums "Pyromania" and "Hysteria," the screen blared the letters: "That Was Then: This is Now," followed by the logo of the new album, "Songs From the Sparkle Lounge."

A song from that album, "Nine Lives" (which features country singer Tim McGraw, and which they recently performed on the show "Dancing With The Stars") was perfectly up to their catalog's standards, which means it rocked pretty hard.

But when you see Def Leppard do "Photograph" and "Armageddon It," it's clear that 'then' sounds more than good, now.

After three and a half hours, after Def Leppard's closer "Pour Some Sugar on Me" and encore "Let's Get Rocked," big, bad, 80's rock nostalgia was even thicker in the air than the Roscolux fog. Rick Nielsen changed guitars eight times. Rikki Rockett put on at least four different hats. And Joe Elliott wore three different shirts. The three monsters of rock had done what arena rock should do - it does not make you think. It makes you form your fist into a devil's salute and pump it in the air.

If most of the fans in the 16,000-capacity Arena Tuesday night grew to love those bands as Reagan-era tenth-graders, they now almost surely have responsibilities and worries far beyond high school. In these lean times, if a ticket that starts at $23 can bring you back to days of big riffs, bigger hair, and excess, it's money well spent.
By Alison Fensterstock @ The Times-Picayune 2009 - (See link for full review).





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