BSC exited stage to great cheers, and pronounced that they would head towards the merchandise stand. Well, it was time for a beer and a t-shirt. There was no Lepp tees left, so I had to settle for a sweet BSC tee. I was determined to get in a good standing position to see Whitesnake kick off their shenanigans, so didn't hesistate long and therefore didn't get to meet the BSC guys. Another day!
A short wait, and the lights went down and on came David Coverdale. Talk about stage presence! Full hair and howl, Whitesnake opened with Best Years off their brilliant new Good To Be Badalbum. Coverdale was immense, talking the audience up and getting roses from the front. "Make some f***ing noise Newcasttteeeleee!" Hell yeah! I was surprised that they played a lot from the new album, but there was enough classics to please all. Love Ain't No Stranger was special. Coverdale and Aldrich did some acoustic stuff, with Aldrich sat on a special "Whitesnake" stool ("Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, Whitesnake...have furniture!") doing Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City and the smooth The Deeper the Love. The best crowd reactions were saved for Is This Love, Here I Go Again..., and the absolutely stunningly frawkin' good Still of the Night. Not forgetting Fool For Your Loving, of course. Credit to the man, he gave equal part to each of his excellent musicians. Doug Aldrich and
I made a wise move not to leave after Whitesnake left. This let me to move to the front a little more while others dashed to the bar...and I waited for Def Leppard to appear. After quite a while of Stones and AC/DC tunes over the speakers, the lights went down once more and the humongous screen lit up across the arena. This was a montage of Leppard since the beginning to some guitar build-up. "That...Was...Then..." it proclaimed, "This...Is...Now!", and to great roars, on came Def Leppard playing Rocket.
The place came alive once more. The vibration of the speakers was intense. Leppard proved immediately that they were no ordinary "old rock band". Joe Elliot still has a tremendous voice, and with guitarists Vivian Campbell (thought he was particularly skilful!), Phil Collen, and Rick Savage behind him, the place shook with the rocking souls of what seemed to be a few thousand people. One-armed Rick Allen is one heck of a drummer too. Leppard had more old hits to
perform this night, and the only ones off Songs From the Sparkle Lounge were C'mon C'mon, Nine Lives, and Bad Actress (in the encore). These tracks are sure to become classics in turn. Personal favourites were Animal, Hysteria (one of the best ever), Rock of Ages (superb),Photograph, and of course the legendary Pour Some Sugar On Me. They even did some great acoustic stuff when they came right to the front of the catwalk-type-strangely-setup stage. The lights went off, and a spotlight was shone on Rick Savage's Union-Jack-flag-bass. I didn't know it at the time, but this was a version of David Essex's Rock On, from the Yeah! covers album. It rocked, anyway. The encore was the best, however. They came back on to perform Bad Actress, and then Elliot said: "Do You Wanna Get Rocked?", and we all sang Let's Get Rocked. "We'll see ya next time - and there WILL BE A NEXT TIME!" Elliot shouted over the screams of the audience. There better bloody well be. Pure Rock N'Roll, nothing like it!!!!!
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