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July 22nd, 2006 Setlist & Reviews
Concert Setlist
1) All Over You
2) Selling The Drama
3) Run Away
4) I Walk The Line [Johnny Cash]
5) Mirror Song
6) Lightning Crashes
7) Shit Towne
8) Lakini's Juice
9) The Dolphin's Cry
10) I Alone
11) Heaven
12) Sofia
13) They Stood Up For Love
14) Dance With You
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Review by "Godiva"
It was disappointing, but I hope Ed feels better by St. Loius. My husband and I made this trip to Hammond on the spur of the moment, and now we HAVE to make the free St. Louis show. Hopefully, he'll have time to rest by then. I don't see how they could get any rest between then and now, though! What a tight schedule.

The set was short because they came on two hours late. Ed reportedly had some voice problems and he went to the ER and got some good butt shots (his own words). He was obviously straining to sing, but the crowd helped him out (er... a little bit). I was as disappointed in the crowd as I was at the fact that I couldn't hear the band at their best... the crowd didn't seem to be very understanding or into helping Ed out a little... they sang "Dance with You" as their last song, worship-y style, and hardly anyone was into it, and Ed was obviously disappointed. People were actually leaving before the song was over... It was painful.

Anyway, it was still a decent show. The last time I saw Live was in the mid-90s and so I don't have much to compare the show to.... I can't complain because it was free!

If anyone that reads this talks to the band while on tour, tell the band I felt for them and that I sincerely hope they get some nice recuperation time soon!
Review by "livefan1999"
My family and I attended the Hammond concert. We had recently seen them perform at Vic's in Chicago and that show was the best I've seen for them. They were so energized and Ed did a fantastic job on vocals that night.

On the Hammond show, it was an interesting night to say the least. When we got there, the opening band, Crawpuppies, was playing. They play mostly in the Hammond area. While they obviously had some fans there, and they put out a genuine effort, they are definitely either a band young in performing years or suited more to playing bars and smaller venues. However, they put in their time during their scheduled set and then showed some true sportsmanship by hanging around at the promoter's request. Word was out that a problem has come up which was going to delay Live and that they needed to fill until Live could take the stage. They came back on and put their hearts into it, but, unfortunately, whoever was managing the sound board turned the volume up much louder than they should have. The volume was so high that people were leaving the area, complaining that they were actually having problems breathing or that their ears were about ready to give way. I spoke with a number of "regular" Live fans who were leaving and they said that they just couldn't take what appeared to be poor coordination of an event (at that point, no one knew Ed was having problems), and they would catch Live again at another show. They felt that since Live has never been known to be late, they might not even come on at all that night. So, a lot of those who might have supported Ed in singing along with him, diehard fans, had already left.

Most of the close to 15,000 fans that remained to hear Live play, had not ever heard them perform live. Many I spoke with had been fans of their recordings for a long time, but had never taken the chance to go see them perform on stage. Some were just people who knew that a big-name act was going to perform a free show, so they were there to enjoy. Unfortunately for them, and for Live, they would not get to see Ed at his best. Even with that being the case, most seemed to enjoy the performance. The reason people began leaving at the announcement that it was their last song was, in my opinion, more that people were just worn out after a confusing evening and a show which was supposed to be over by 10:00 p.m. and finished at about 11:15 p.m. Originally it was scheduled for Live to come on at 8:30 p.m., play to 10:00 p.m. and then there would be fireworks. They shot off the fireworks just before Live came on and everyone knew that as soon as Live was finished, the night was over. When Ed announced that last song and then Chad threw out the drumsticks as they were leaving, it was obvious that Ed was not going to be up to an encore, so everyone just picked up and left.

On the actual performance, no, it wasn't Ed's best and the band tried very hard to help him out with vocals and just a little extra effort on their instruments. Ed admitted up front that he was having problems and that he was going to have to "sing Johnny Cash style," maybe even "trying out for the baritone choir". He was really struggling at the beginning of the set. To sing and to even just stay focused. If you had seen them perform live before, you could tell how hard Ed was having to work to sing and to stay with it in general. He was going back and drinking more fluids than usual and his usual energy around the stage was very low-keyed. He was either wiped out by the two shots he had received or he was just totally exhausted from trying to sing when he probably should have been resting.

Everyone we went up with to the show and others in the audience overheard talking said they admired him for coming out and giving it his best. While he wasn't 100%, he still did an acceptable job. He was talking to the crowd more and joking a lot to try to keep everyone cheerful and involved. Me, I was impressed that he didn't just tell them he couldn't do it and I enjoyed all that he offered us. The rest of the guys in the band? They gave it their all with some longer than usual guitar solos, drum solo and even Patrick doing a good short solo. Patrick, Chad T and Adam K were all trying hard to fill in vocally.

I was also disappointed because all of those people didn't have a chance to see Live perform the way they usually do. Most often even better than they sound on CD in my opinion. I spoke to one young Indiana newspaper journalist who had been a Live fan since 1992 and this was his first concert seeing them live. He was rocking out during the performance, but I know he would have been even more impressed if he had seen Ed at his best. Same for those other thousands present.

My hat is off to all of them for giving it their all in a difficult situation. It impressed and touched me to see how concerned the other guys in the band were for Ed. You could tell they were very worried about him. You could also see how much Ed appreciated the extra effort those guys were putting out as he later introduced first "my brother, Adam ... my brother Chad (T) ... my brother Patrick ... and this is my brother Chad (G)". I was nervous the entire concert, thinking that Ed maybe shouldn't be out there. That he should be saving his voice. That he might hurt it even more by singing, even in a quieter, restrained fashion. But as a long-time fan, I was totally proud of his effort.
Review featured in The Times newspaper (published in Northwest Indiana)
Hammond police save fest's headliner
Ailing rocker treated just before Live hits stage

BY STEVE ZABROSKI (Times Correspondent)

Unusual measures by police and emergency room personnel got the headlining band Live on stage for its show Saturday night at the Festival of the Lakes.

Local favorites the Crawpuppies were just launching into their opening set at 7 p.m. when Live's road manager approached festival organizers with the news that frontman Ed Kowalczyk couldn't sing, and the show was off.

More than 10,000 music fans were already crowding into Wolf Lake Memorial Park, with more pouring in by the minute.

"A lot of people wondered what we were going to do," said Mayor Thomas McDermott Jr.

A quick call to St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare Centers alerted emergency room staff to an incoming celebrity, and Police Sgt. Pat Vicari and Cpl. Robert Taylor were dispatched to transport the ailing rocker from his hotel to the hospital.

While Crawpuppies fans got an unexpected extra hour of their band, Kowalczyk got a couple steroid shots and his band got a police escort to the festival main stage, where the crowd was now topping 15,000.

"It was a little scary for a while," Police Chief Brian Miller said. "We're just glad we were able to do it."

St. Margaret personnel bent over backward to help, McDermott said.

"Now it's 8:15, and they had a doctor and nurses waiting," he said. "The ER staff kicked butt -- they had him in and out in 45 minutes."

Helping the Live singer get his voice back was a special thrill for nurse Debbie Walsh, of Merrillville, in charge of the emergency room on Saturday night.

"Live is one of my all-time favorite bands," Walsh said, "I've loved that band forever."

After her shift ended at 10:30 p.m., she and a fellow nurse drove to the festival and were ushered up to the VIP area, as promised by McDermott, where Kowalczyk pulled her out of the crowd to dance with him onstage.

"It was such a thrill," Walsh said. "Ed autographed my scrubs. It was one of the coolest experiences I've ever had."

Overall, this has been the most law-abiding five-day festival yet, said Miller, with only three arrests -- two for disorderly conduct and one man caught breaking into a parked car -- as of Sunday afternoon.
Review by "Mercury46" of Chicago, Illinois
It was a little disappointing, but not a complete disaster either. For me, any energy that could have stayed until Live showed up was drained by the idiots who were actually BOOing at the Crawpuppies. No, they aren't a great band, but have a little respect. Hats off to the Crawpuppies for a first-class display in the face of all the morons in attendance.
Review by Brett
Me and my girlfriend were hanging out back of the stage by the tour buses hoping to get a glimpse of the guys. We started hearing some rumbling from the cops around there and knew something was up. We talked to a security guy and he said Ed was at the hospital but wouldn't say what for. Then the cops started clearing people away from a path by the buses and a cop car blocks off traffic on one side of the road outside and in pulls a cop car with lights flashing and out gets Ed from the backseat. He had a hat on and looked like an old man with how he was walking. Me and my girlfriend were like what the hell is wrong with him. Well needless to say his ass was sore from the steroid shots he got. LOL. I said go get em' Eddie and he gave me a thumbs up. I snapped a pic with my disposable camera and I've yet to get it developed to see how it turned out. The whole thing was pretty wild. Definitely the most interesting Live show I've been to outta 14 to say the least. Kudos to the people who were there who gave reviews about the show. Couldn't have written a better and more thorough review if I tried. And the newspaper story was pretty good also. I'll just say there is a huge difference between a free show and a ticketed show as far as the audience goes.
 
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