March 25th - PALACIO DE DEPORTES, MADRID, SPAIN
Palacio de Deportes Madrid
250311.jpg

Capacity: 12,000
Concert starts: 8pm

Address of venue: Avenida de Felipe II, S/N, 28009 Madrid, Spain. MAP

Website: www.palaciodedeportes.com

 

COMMENTS

Roger's tour of The Wall moves from Portugal to Spain, and one of the smallest venues on the tour. Next show is also in Spain, over in Barcelona.

The RogerWaters.com presales began the week starting Monday, May 31st, with advance tickets available to those who had registered their interest in particular cities. General sale tickets went on sale at the start of June (exact dates and outlets can be found via Roger's website), however, we hear that all tickets for this show are now sold out. The public sale also sees a limited number of VIP packages made available for each show on the tour.

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 three of the tour, and the first of two nights in the Spanish city of Madrid. Always enthusiastic audiences, the show clearly went down well with the crowd, as you'll see from our good friend Simon's report below. If you also went to this show in Madrid, please let us know what you thought of the event, and if anything interesting or different happened if you've been to previous shows and can compare.

CONCERT REVIEW, VIDEO and PICTURES by BD CONTRIBUTOR, Simon Wimpenny

Having two days off between shows made it seem like an age since the last show in Lisbon. Last night was the first of two shows in Madrid, Spain. The venue was a modern building right in the heart of Madrid--a huge silver structure with a cavernous interior that juts out into the high street.

We headed toward the venue around 6:30pm, went for dinner at a restaurant across the street, then went into the venue about 7:30pm. The floor was all standing, and Kevin and I wandered over to the left hand side of the stage and reached our way to about two rows from the front. By the time we found our place, it was about 8:30pm. The shows in Lisbon started at 9pm, so naturally we presumed Madrid would be the same. However, it turned out to be 9:30pm before the band came onstage. We didn't want to stand in one place for an hour before the show, so we had a wander around the floor to take in the atmosphere.

The crowd started getting a touch restless around 9:20 and started whistling and chanting like they commonly do in Eurppe! Sure enough, at 9:31pm two "guards" holding Pink walked up to the front of the stage, and the "I'm Spartacus" background tape started to roll. "I'm Spartacus," "No I'M Spartacus," rang out through the huge venue to the sound of deafening cheers from the crowd. Pink was thrown onto the stage, and Roger's trumpet playing came on over the PA system.

Roger came on stage as happy as I've ever seen him, running up and down the full length from left to right holding his arms out and taking in the admiration.

Roger Waters - Madrid, 25th March 2011 Roger Waters - Madrid, 25th March 2011 Roger Waters - Madrid, 25th March 2011

The two guards had, by then, made their way onto the stage. One placed the leather trench coat on Roger while the other helped him with the sunglasses from the onstage mannequin. He belted the coat up, pulling the belt tight around his torso and walked over to the mic.

Not sure the third picture here is a new graphic that's on the wall during the start of In The Flesh, but I never noticed it before.

The crowd went wild as the plane came down, and the bricks exploded when it crashed into the wall.

During his speech before Mother, Roger said he performed The Wall thirty-one years ago in 1979 in LA. Then he said they returned to play Earls Court in 1980. They DIDN'T!! They played LA in 1980! Something new I saw tonight was when the words "No Fucking Way" appear on the right side of the wall, the same phrase was written out on the left side, but in Spanish!! I wonder if this will continue in each country according to the language; I bet it does.

While playing Mother, it was obvious to anyone watching the show that something was bothering Roger. He kept looking over to his right in disgust, then pointed to something off stage. It took a minute or so for the roadies to realise that there was a fire door open at the side of the hall, and the light it emitted onstage really bothered him. After some scuffling from the crew, the door was partially closed and the light turned off.

Apart from that, the first half went off without a hitch.

For the second half Kevin and I went to sit in the first block of seats at the right side of the stage--one of my favourite places to sit and watch the second half from. The second half was great, and it was fun to see the enthusiasm of the crowd from our seats.

Crowd During Run Like Hell:

Roger throwing down his shirt and tie:

The wall fall was great tonight, however, at the last three shows, the majority of bricks fell backwards onto the stage. Due to the size of the venues in Europe, there doesn't seem to be any clamps on the top of the wall on the sides. In the USA, this stopped certain parts of it falling down. Now, all the sides seem to fall, giving it a lot more impact.

After the wall fell it took ages for the band to come back on to do Outside The Wall. I could see Jon, Graham, Harry, and G.E. at my side of the stage waiting for Roger to go onstage--there was at least a five minute wait! Jon and Harry were looking at each other and talking to the crew. I think a few of them thought something was amiss, as did I. To the crowd, who knew no different, it was just an excuse to start the famous Spanish Ole, Ole, Ole chant, which sounded fantastic. I know Roger is aware they do this, and I have to wonder if his delay in coming back onstage was, in fact, to encourage the crowd to do this!

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 REVIEWS and PICTURES by other BD CONTRIBUTORS

Hopefully coming soon - we welcome all contributions!

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!

Last Updated ( Thursday, 16 June 2011 )