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Home arrow 2010 WALL TOUR arrow September 16th - AIR CANADA CENTRE, TORONTO, ON, CANADA
September 16th - AIR CANADA CENTRE, TORONTO, ON, CANADA Print E-mail
Air Canada Centre
Roger Waters - Toronto ticket 16 Sept 2010
Toronto, 16th September 2010

Capacity: 19,800
Concert starts: 8pm

Address of venue: 40 Bay Street, Suite 400, Toronto, Ontario M5J 2X2. MAP

Website: www.theaircanadacentre.com

 

COMMENTS

Roger's tour of The Wall has now kicked off, and stays in Canada for a second night at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.

The RogerWaters.com presales began starting Wednesday, May 5th. Starting May 3rd, American Express Cardmembers could get advance tickets, with seating available to Gold Card, Platinum Card and Centurion members. US fans could also get early access to tickets via iTunes beginning Thursday, May 6th, by purchasing the 1982 film The Wall from iTunes by April 26th. For both the American Express and iTunes presales, please note that the presale offers were available in select markets and ticket quantities were limited.

General sale tickets went on sale on Monday, May 10, via Ticketmaster.ca, Ticketmaster.com and LiveNation.com. The public sale also saw a limited number of VIP packages made available for each show on the tour. Use of our links to Ticketmaster gives much needed assistance with site hosting costs without any additional cost to yourself - and we appreciate it!

Our thanks to Scott Moyer for the second of the ticket scans, shown to the right. Click it to see the ticket in more detail, as it has the venue as the background!

SET LIST - highlight the following with your mouse to read...
FIRST HALF: In the Flesh, The Thin Ice, Another Brick in the Wall Part 1, The Happiest Days of our Lives, Another Brick in the Wall Part 2, Mother, Goodbye Blue Sky, Empty Spaces, What Shall We Do Now, Young Lust, One of My Turns, Don't Leave Me Now, Another Brick in the Wall Part 3, The Last Few Bricks, Goodbye Cruel World
SECOND HALF:
Hey You, Is There Anybody Out There?, Nobody Home, Vera, Bring the Boys Back Home, Comfortably Numb, The Show Must Go On, In The Flesh, Run Like Hell, Waiting for the Worms, Stop, The Trial, Outside the Wall.

WARNING - SPOILERS AHEAD!

Do not read on if you don't want surprises to be spoilt, regarding what the band played, and what happened as the night unfolded!

Night two of the tour, and the Air Canada Centre in Toronto was just as buzzing as the opening night. Early comments are that the show was just as good as Wednesday's concert, and possibly slightly better! If you went - let us know what you thought of the show!

CONCERT REVIEW and PICTURES by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Simon Wimpenny

I haven't written a review about either of the two shows yet, to be honest after the first show i was totally speechless and lost for words!! I didn't even know where on earth to begin. Then lasts nights show being even better than the first blew me away even more!!

It's obvious from watching two shows so far that this show WILL change as the tour goes along, Roger's known for this and even last night there were a few differences in the production of it.

Toronto, 16th September 2010 Toronto, 16th September 2010

The first night Michael and I spotted a homeless guy with a shopping cart in the venue, a security guy was following him and ushering him out of the venue, or at least we thought he was!! I don't really want to give any spoilers away on here yet.

I will probably start typing a few reviews after seeing the three Chicago shows and being able to get my head round the whole production! I will say this though, if you haven't got a ticket and you miss this show then your missing THE best show of your life, I have never seen anything like it in my life and even though I'm seeing this show 52 times I knew from the second I saw the first one I wasn't going to get bored once during the tour and I'm going to be seeing different things in the production every night!! The amount of work Roger has put into this show is incredible, he has thought of every little thing and it all just works so well!!

Make sure you check out Simon's blog at SimonWimpenny.blogspot.com where you'll find full details of all his travels, along with more pictures and videos.

CONCERT PICTURES by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Timothy Richards

Toronto, 16th September 2010
Toronto, 16th September 2010
Toronto, 16th September 2010

CONCERT REVIEW by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Jens Dam-Libach

What can I say!! The band was in great form for the second show and blew us away yet again. Everyone was doing so extremely well and you could definately tell from the various performances of the bandmembers that they were enjoying themselves. It just came through and across from the stage so extremely well.

Gilmour vocalist Robbie Wyckoff seemed a lot more confident on the second night and delivered his parts beautifully. I have to tip my hat for this guy.

GE Smith seemed a bit uneasy the first night, but you could definately hear by the first show he was going to get better by every performance, but I must admit I didn't expect him to be picking up on the solos that fast. He was so much more better second night and makes me wonder what we're in for on the third show and the shows to follow.

Roger was in great form yet again.

We were sat 24 rows further back for the second show (row 34 on the floor) and it was just mindblowing to sit at that distance from the wall with all the visuals. You got the old shivers, hair standing up on arms, back and head as the various projections was on the lush full backdrop. Mr Screen was so extremely beautiful from that distance and was of course more in view from that distance. Just a note here: Perfect distance for the visual experience would be rows 25-40 on the floor!!!

Highlights of the show last night would be: Goodbye Blue Sky.....visuals are intimidating and so very much full of angst. Bombers droppings is just so beautiful in such a scary way!!!

The Last Few Bricks is fantastic to sit through both musically and visually. Quite a desperate feeling to see the lost loved ones disappear into nothingness.

Fantastic performance and killer show!

CONCERT REVIEW by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Bobby G

I was at last night's opening show, and tonight as well, and worries that seeing the show a second time would be an anticlimax turned out to be wrong. Tonight's show was just as awesome as the opener, with the band playing a great concert. The ACC was rocking from beginning to end!!

I urge anyone who hasn't got tix for an upcoming show to get them. It's a show I won't ever forget!!

CONCERT PICTURES by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Johnny P

Toronto, 16th September 2010 Toronto, 16th September 2010 Toronto, 16th September 2010

CONCERT REVIEW by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Botley

As we took our seats prior to the start of the show (while the dulcet tones of some 1960s-era Bob Dylan tunes wafted through the air), a strange, ragged-looking person pushed a shopping cart up and down the seating aisles on the arena floor. His cart was full of empty cans and hand-scrawled placards bearing slogans like "keep taking the tablets!" As he shook hands with passersby and goofed around for the crowd's benefit, doffing his cowboy hat and generally carrying on like a bloody lunatic, someone sitting next to me suggested that this could be Roger himself; closer inspection proved that this was NOT the case (fantastic though it may have been to contemplate such a ballsy move on his part!) — but he did kick things off with a flourish.

While showtime grew ever closer, intense anticipation palpably building up among the crowd, the preshow soundtrack morphed from Dylan to dialogue. Clips from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, several classic television comedies, and finally Spartacus rang out over the quadraphonic speakers as the sounds of an old TV dial being turned mimicked the iconic ambient "hotel room" effect of the television noise from the album. Just as the show was about to begin, our friend pulled to a halt in front of the stage, reached down into his cart, and from among the empty cans pulled out Pink himself, the soft limp pink puppet, tossing it onstage as the house lights went out leaving a single narrow spotlight on the small, pathetic figure. A lone trumpet blew out the introductory theme from "Outside the Wall"...

Then the band kicked into "In the Flesh?" with all the pomp and pyrotechnics one would expect. The enormous circular Mr. Screen lit up above with the giant white-and-red crossed hammers. The partially-built wall itself was illuminated with images of graffiti and torn posters, bearing that iconic hammer logo and the legend "TRUST US" — and I was immediately struck by the sheer brilliant clarity of the fifteen gigantic video projectors required to light its staggering entirety. Each individual brick had about the same level of detail and brightness as a high-definition TV, so if you can imagine a whole arena's width, stacked to the upper bowl with HDTVs, you'll get some idea of what watching this show is like.

Of course, all that video is just one component of the spectacle. There is also the great Floydian art of the arena-sized visual props, and ever since the 1970s it has been the band's daring tradition to fly an enormous model plane over the audience's heads, crashing it onstage, right on cue, with fiery fury. I happily report that Roger has brought this tradition back to life! The wall-building itself was also expertly timed, brick by brick, down to the last second. As the band played "In the Flesh?", a moving platform full of menacing figures bearing hammer banners rose out of the stage and up to the wall-building heights they would rise to throughout the first half of the show.

What I was most interested in finding out was how Roger would update the show's content for the "more political" bent he had promised. It turns out that this was done somewhat more subtly, or at least much less pervasively than I had expected. If you wanted to visualize "a million tear-stained eyes" you could just listen to "The Thin Ice", or you could watch hundreds of faces of people killed in conflicts appear on the screen, along with their names and places of birth and death, then take their places as projected upon an individual brick over the course of the song (starting with Roger's father, of course, and continuing on through the young men, women and children sent to the slaughter in modern-day Iraq). It was a powerful sight, and the first of many times I was moved to tears that night by the combination of images and music.

Stark, blood-red imagery from a camera moving over a body of water accompanied "Another Brick in the Wall, Part One" along with the faces of children from the conflict zones of the Middle East. Haunting stuff, and it meshed very well with the famous helicopter flyby of "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" — one of many parallels between the childhood recounted in song and those children today whose way of life is threatened by our war-torn age. Several spotlight operators rose up on trapeze-like moving platforms and scanned the audience, prompting cheers of delight as the thunderous sound moved around the arena — then an audible gasp of disbelief followed as the inflatable Teacher was revealed seemingly out of nowhere in front of the wall, with a hearty "YOU! YES, YOU..."

People all around me were awestruck at their first sight of the massive puppet, it was SO cartoonish and menacing, and yet moved with lifelike precision while Roger and a local kids' chorus pointed and shouted in its direction during "Another Brick in the Wall, Part Two". Sadly, the mother puppet was improperly illuminated for some reason (though it was still visible) during "Mother" — what I could see of it seemed pretty spectacular, even though that was not much. Hopefully this kink gets ironed out by the next show!

It was a real delight for me during that tune to watch video of Roger in Earls Court circa 1980, projected all across on the wall throughout most of the whole song, singing and playing guitar along with Roger circa 2010 onstage. It was tantalizing, to say the least, considering what must also surely exist of those concerts in such high video quality. Meanwhile, on Mr. Screen there was a CCTV camera with a menacing HAL9000-like stare, adding a clever Orwellian slant to the song's anti-government stance, with the message "Big Mother Is Watching You"! G.E. Smith took an extra slide guitar solo after Snowy White executed the opening salvo to great musical effect.

The anti-war message was amped up with "Goodbye Blue Sky" in a whole new piece of animation that depicted planes dropping not bombs but recognizable logos — symbols of greed and religion — over the landscape, which I thought was good but not nearly of the same calibre as Gerald Scarfe's original clip from the movie. Thankfully, that was soon rectifed with the transition to "Empty Spaces/What Shall We Do Now?" — kept largely in tact from the original film, but beautifully re-framed and extended to fill the entire width of the wall instead of just Mr. Screen. It was nothing short of stunning.

Something like one of the "frightened ones" from that unseen "Goodbye Blue Sky" clip took on a life of its own in later parts of the show, being rendered as a hulking monstrous figure with a gas mask-like face that represented Pink at his most maniacal. Again, a good idea, but not rendered quite as effectively as the original execution, in my opinion. Another moment early in the show rang slightly flat, when the sexualized "Young Lust" imagery seemed a little under-baked, at least compared to the rest of the first half. There could have been a missed opportunity here to further tie in the theme of repression, although the giant unblinking eyes that connected this song with the following sequence were a nice touch. Great Hammond organ solo from Harry Waters, though!

A new piece of video, shot specifically for this tour, accompanied "One of My Turns". It featured an actress recreating the groupie scene from the movie (minus Bob Geldof, obviously), in CCTV hues of black and white. As with most of the rest of the show, the monologue was taken straight from the original album recording, though thankfully the actress' lips didn't move to match it! This and the following song "Don't Leave Me Now" were in a lower key, about a whole tone or so, to let Roger sing them without straining too hard.

Moving away from the blow-by-blow account, let me just say that Roger's singing has never sounded better. There were no obvious seams in his performance, being clear and full-voiced throughout (except for an apparent microphone failure in "Bring the Boys Back Home"). I spotted only one moment of obvious pre-recorded support — and that was the megaphone voice in "Waiting for the Worms" (which he has always mimed onstage). As I mentioned, it appeared that parts of the music were lowered in key to accommodate his now-lowered vocal range, but it was hardly noticeable and otherwise he is hitting the notes that would have given him great difficulty twenty years ago.

His band is tightly rehearsed, of course, and never misses a beat. Their combined sound was powerful but not overwhelming... in fact, I would have liked to have heard a touch more "oomph" in the mix, as Graham Broad's cracking snare drum was occasionally lost in the shuffle of quadrophonic sound effects and the thick wash of two keyboards, three guitars, and four backing vocalists. Speaking of backups, the three Lennons from Venice do a terrific job of duplicating all those Beach Boys harmonies (along with Jon Joyce, deftly reprising his bass vocal parts from the original) and Robbie Wyckoff pulls off a very serviceable stand-in for David Gilmour's lilting vocal delivery.

Dave Kilminster sang most of these parts on Waters' Dark Side of the Moon Live tour, and while he did a fine job at it, his real talent was clearly to take command of Gilmour's lead guitar parts — and that's exactly what he concentrates on doing throughout The Wall Live. I witnessed a moment of sheer beauty and poignancy, watching him stand atop the completed wall and playing the climactic passages of "Comfortably Numb" while the projected image upon it exploded from a stark, austere white edifice into a kaleidoscopic rainbow. I can only imagine what that moment will be like when Gilmour himself decides to join Waters at one of the upcoming shows on the tour!

The remaining guitarists, G.E. Smith (replacing Waters' touring stalwart Andy Fairweather-Low on additional rhythm and bass guitars) and Pink Floyd alumnus Snowy White are both given their own moments to shine. During "Another Brick in the Wall Part 2", all three took a guitar lead in turn, Smith trading off with Harry who played some more tasty Hammond organ licks. Snowy leans further on the bluesy side, as he did in the original Pink Floyd shows (he is the only member of the band, other than Joyce and Waters, to have played at all of the 1980 shows and the 1990 Berlin outdoor spectacular).

Jon Carin (also a former touring member of Pink Floyd) ably fills in the other keyboard and occasional rhythm guitar parts. His ear for texture and sonic quality have always been an exceptional asset to both Gilmour's and Waters' solo jaunts through the Pink Floyd catalogue. He had a vital supporting role here, as The Wall stands out as one of the most densely-packed "ear candy" records, even among the works of a band known for demanding headphone-listening! All the right chords were struck in this department, with panache.

There was even the occasional flash of unexpected humour. For "the defendant's wife" in "The Trial", Roger took on an outrageous faux-French accent that worked splendidly and undercut the venom of that verse somewhat. Roger also had a laugh at the expense of a failed trumpet valve that prevented him from executing the outro of "Outside the Wall", betraying some annoyance at this mishap! Other surprises during that number included seeing Kilminster strumming on a banjo and Smith leading the band on mandolin... even drummer Graham Broad blithely picked away at a ukelele!

Not sure what's left to put in words about this; I guess you could say it was a thrill ride. Anyway, on the whole I'd say the show is pretty faithful to the original. There are no lasers, no surprise guest stars, no flashy light-show gimmicks (except for the occasional — tasteful — big bright brash moment of strobing). As ever, the focus is on some seriously stunning projected videos, the amazing props, and of course the music. If you like The Wall then you MUST see this show. It stays fairly close to the live album Is There Anybody Out There? as far as arrangements go, minus the second drummer and adding an additional few bars to fill in an extra moment here and there. In fact, I'd say that it breathes a bit more, and has better dramatic pacing, than any previous incarnation. Even among such a crowded embarrassment of riches, there is surely room for the show to keep growing and taking on new elements as it rolls across the globe over the next year.

IN SHORT: DO NOT MISS THIS CONCERT TOUR.

Toronto, 16th September 2010CONCERT COMMENTS and PICTURE by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Rob Peets

Second show was awesome, as you've seen by now Roger has a leather jacket (he wore the hoodie on the first night, as I mentioned in my quick review)... and on night one Roger played a trumpet on Outside the Wall... but he didn't on night 2, as he thrust it into the air and said "I would have liked to have played the fucking trumpet for you, but the valve broke!" Hehe!

YOUR HELP NEEDED! We want to cover Roger's concerts the best we can, to share the experience with everyone, especially those who won't be able to attend the shows. We'd love to see ANY pictures, tickets scans, reviews, newspaper reports, and anything else you come across for this show - we look forward to hearing from you!

 
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