Palace Theatre, Albany, NY
review submisions to me at dws@netspace.org
or dws@gadiel.com
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 20:58:13 EDT
From: Gworm767@aol.com
Subject: Trey Albany Palace Review
I had been really excited since getting the news that the SPAC show had been
moved to the tiny Palace Theatre in Albany. Looking at the history of Trey
playing in the venue made me even more excited to head up to Albany on my way
to VT. Got to Albany (never been- cool city) kind of early and walked around
a bit. There was this "live at five" music thing out in the streets nearby
so I checked that out- pretty lame. The show had sold out quickly and there
were quite a few people wandering around outside looking for tickets.
Getting in wasn't too much of a process though. Tickets-by-Mail hooked me up
with some nice tickets on the aisle of the left orchestra, about ten rows
back. The whole venue was a classic theatre complete with a huge cloud of
dust, a strange smell, general darkness that took a while to get used to, and
a peeling roof and walls. Don't get me wrong though- its beautiful and the
acoustics are incredible. It also has a really cool marquee out front. I
found out later that this was the last show before they give the place an
overdue touch-up.
The Palace was really jammed and they did not care about the aisles on the
floor- so they became totally crammed- making my aisle seat not so great. I
tried to get my mind off the squishedness with what quickly proved to be a
great show. First of all, the lighting was amazing in such a small place- it
really took over the entire room! The sound was also really nice.
The first set opened up with a solid MLC-->Cayman Review. This brought some
energy into the crowd, but the MAJOR highlight of the first set was the Push
On-->Lively Up Yourself-->Windora Bug-->Push On. These were all really
awesome sets and it just sounded so cool. Push on faded down into a chill
jam that Lively and Windora came out of. Windora had a nice chill reggae
type jam with it that exploded into the thrilling conclusion to Push On. At
the end of that when Trey did band intros, he saved Tony for last and then
(perhaps because the show was near Tony's home city of Saratoga) Trey took a
"We're on Tony Tour AGAIN" sign out of the audience and held it up while the
rest of the band teased the 2001 theme. They could not have left the crowd
much more pumped up.
During set break, in addition to grabbing some more water, I set out on a
mission to find an empty seat so I would not have the aisle-cramming problem.
I chilled with some people up on the rail for a minute but then they made us
move. Then I saw Cyro Baptiste selling some of his CDs over on the left side
of the orchestra and went over to talk to him and he signed my ticket. I
ended up finding a nice seat in about the fifth row, just left of center.
The seat move made for a much roomier second set.
The second set started with "Night Speaks" which had a cool little jam- but
nothing like the one from the second night of Red Rocks. I was excited to
hear the rare "Sweet Dreams Melinda" and this one was much better than the
one from San Diego that I heard. It really sounded nice- and Trey's voice is
in much better shape than it was at Red Rocks. The "Last Tube" was the
monster that I had been waiting for. It went on and on and got so great that
Trey took off his guitar and started running laps around the entire stage.
Can't say enough about this song! The "Sultans" encore was nice, but good
luck following that "Last Tube." Trey also took a "Grippo tour" sign from
someone in the audience and put it next to "The Truth."
Cool show, cool venue- see you all on Saturday night in VERMONT!
Jimmy Macauley
Gworm767@aol.com
Date: Sat, 15 Jun 2002 13:13:23 EDT
From: Ajacks10@aol.com
Subject: Review Albany
I don't know if I have ever seen anyone have more fun than I did Thursday night at the Palace.
It was a toss up between "us and them"!
Chris Jackson
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