My Life in Music: The Smashing Pumpkins, Tulsa 1994

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The Smashing Pumpkins were hugely important to me as I was coming of age. MTV put “Cherub Rock” the first single from their newest album at the time, Siamese Dream, on heavy rotation. That got me to buy the album, and soon after I purchased their debut album, Gish. I loved them both. They contained some of the first music that I took really seriously. I listened to them over and over. I studied the different parts of the songs. I can remember taking my two stereo speakers, placing them around my head, and then listening to the music while lying on my floor with the lights out – the music swirling around my ears.

When I learned the Pumpkins were coming to Tulsa, I was so excited. I’d never been to a rock concert before. It is possible my parents took me to something when I was younger. My mother went to a lot of concerts in the 1960s, including pop bands like Herman’s Hermits and even The Doors. She used to catch Neil Diamond every time he came to town, but adulthood, responsibilities, and three kids kept her away from music for the most part while I was growing up.  I don’t think my dad was ever much for live music.

I think the only concerts I’d really been to were gospel groups. I remember seeing a group called Acapella in the very venue I’d be seeing The Smashing Pumpkins. That was part of the Soul Winning Workshop the Churches of Christ put on every year. We didn’t believe in instrumental music with our worship songs, so a cappella music was where it was at.

Anyway, the Pumpkins were playing at the Expo Square in Tulsa, which is one of those pavilion-type arenas with a big open area in the middle and stands circling around it.  The type of place you could hold a soccer match or a hockey event, but being Oklahoma, I think it was often used for rodeos and cow competitions. For my concert, the stage was set up on one side with the rest of the floor open to the audience. We had tickets in the stands. Front row, not too terribly far from the stage.

I was with my friend Dustin and someone else. Probably his friend Kris. I was so excited. 

For some reason on the floor, up near the stage, they had set these big concrete barriers. The type of thing you see on the highway when they are doing construction. They were just randomly set out for the first fifteen feet or so beyond the state. At the time I figured they were there to keep people from stage diving or moshing (do people still do that at concerts?). That seemed terribly stupid, as people were still going to do that, and now they were likely going to hurt themselves bashing into concrete. 

Security seemed awfully tight as well. There were a lot of guards standing around. I remember several fans up in the stands periodically trying to jump down to the floor. They’d run toward the stage, inevitably being caught by security and sent back up.  I remember one kid kept jumping down near us, getting caught each time. At about his fourth attempt, he was escorted out of the venue. 

A band called Red Red Meat opened for them. I’d never heard of them. I remember liking them, which was probably more of a product of having never been to a rock concert before and being overwhelmed by the entire scene. Still, I do remember wishing they’d hurry up and let the Pumpkins play.

When they did finish their set, they played The Wizard of Oz without sound on a big screen behind the stage. I thought that was cool for some reason. I thought everything was cool. This was all so new to me. I was just terribly excited to be there.

The band finally came on, and they rocked. I don’t remember much about the actual music except that it was awesome, and I could feel D’Arcy’s bass thumping inside my chest.  I don’t remember what songs they played. It felt like they played every song I knew, which would have been every song off of Gish and Siamese Dream.

But it is all fuzzy except for how wonderful it all was. I remember Billy Corgan being in good spirits. And then came the encore. I knew about encores from movies and TV shows, but I really thought they were something special. I didn’t realize every band always comes back. So I stood there clapping and shouting, hoping with all of my heart they would come play another song.  

It took them a while, but they did come back. I remember Corgan apologizing that it took them so long but that there was some old episode of Star Trek playing on the TV in the dressing rooms, and they got caught up in it. They played another song or two and then were gone for good. I stood there for a little bit hoping they’d come back again, but the lights came up and the crowd dispersed. 

The show was over, but that feeling lasted forever.

Wilco – Bentonville, AR (05/02/26)

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Wilco is one of my favorite bands. I’ve seen them more times in concert than any other artist by far. Not that this is a great accomplishment, I don’t actually go to that many concerts. But I catch Wilco every chance I can.

They seem to love playing at the Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa. We’ve seen them (or Jeff Tweedy solo) there half a dozen times. When they announced their most recent tour a few months back, they did not list Tulsa as a stop, but they were playing Bentonville, which is only about a two-hour drive from where I live. I immediately bought tickets.  Naturally, about two weeks later they announced they were playing Tulsa in July.

I looked at my wife and asked, “Are we going to see Wilco twice this summer?”  We bought tickets. My sister and her husband will be in town then, flying in from South Korea, and we bought them tickets too.

The Bentonville show was an outdoor gig and general admission. There was a time when I’d show up to a show well before the doors opened, hoping to score those great seats.  But I’m old now, and the idea of standing for two hours before a show and then another couple during the show is just too much for my back to take. 

We left about five for a show that started at eight. I figured that would be plenty of time to get there and even have a bit to eat on our way. We arrived about 7:30 and found a great long line. That was annoying because we had three lawn chairs, just as many blankets, plus a pillow, and some other stuff. Security was nice, but they made us open up our lawn chairs and open up my wife’s purse. 

Because everyone brought their own chairs, things were a little haphazard. Mostly people put them in straight lines, but there were large gaps and spaces everywhere. This meant we had to sit quite a ways into the back. We were maybe twenty yards behind the soundboard and off to the side.  Behind us was a small hill, which meant there was a walkway between it and us. The rest of the venue was pretty flat, which made it hard to see the stage.The sound back that far wasn’t great. It was really kind of distant, making the show sound like it was taking place someplace else.

I set all that up to say that the crowd was kind of obnoxious. I understand people are going to talk at a concert. I mean, I don’t get it, I don’t know why anyone pays a lot of money to see a band and then acts like they are just background music for their stupid conversation. But I understand that’s just the way it is. But this show was out of hand.  

There were two dudes behind us, sitting on that hill, that loudly talked through every song.  One lady came in late and sat beside my daughter. She literally turned her seat away from the band so she could chat with her friend.  A whole gang of folks gathered behind the soundboard, acting like they were at a bar, not a concert.

I do think the outdoor venue, the way we were all haphazardly positioned in our own chairs, and the poor sound quality at that contributed to all of this.

The music was good. The setlist was great. They opened with “Via Chicago” and then went into “Handshake Drugs.” The first set was a nice mix of newer songs and some old ones. Bassist John Stirratt even sang “It’s Just That Simple” off of their first album, AM. It ended with “California Stars”, one of my favorites.

I did my best to enjoy the music and not be annoyed by the talkers.  Sometimes I’d close my eyes and just try to listen.  It didn’t always work. I remember thinking this might be the worst concert I’ve ever been to.  Which sucked, because, like I said, the music was good.

At the set break, my daughter went to the bathroom, bought a drink, and then looked at the merch. On our way back to our seats, we noticed some open spaces much closer to the stage. We grabbed our chairs, explained everything to my wife, and, like the Jeffersons, “moved on up.”

What a difference that made.

The sound was so much better. The audience was much more into it. There were still a few talkers, but the sound drowned them out. The band was on fire. The setlist was off the charts good. They played songs from just about every album they’ve made and concentrated on the older ones. 

“Impossible Germany” was impossibly good. I’m a Nels Cline maniac. When we see them at Cain’s, I always stand on the Nels side of the stage. There is always a point where I turn to my wife and go, “Nels Fucking Cline!” On songs like “Impossible Germany” he tends to go crazy. He’ll launch into these frenzied solos where he just strums super fast and the band creates feedback behind him.  I love it.  But this time he played real solos. It reminded me a lot of the Jerry Garcia Band, where he was jamming, but it was still within the rhythm of the song. It was fantastic.

Jeff seemed in good spirits.  He chatted amiably and even had some short convos with the crowd.  The crowd was pretty laid-back. There wasn’t a lot of whooping and hollering.  During “Kingpin” there is a section where the crowd usually screams in response to Jeff singing “How Can I?” but here they were silent.  Jeff even joked with them about it, but it was a no go.

I suspect the cold had something to do with that.  It was quite chilly, and most of us were huddled under blankets. And the crowd seemed like they were maybe not huge fans.  The big songs off of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot got a lot of cheers, but the rest of the songs got claps, but nothing super enthusiastic.

But I was loving it. This show went from one of my least favorite concerts ever in the first set to one of my absolute favorite gigs in the second.  

If you are a fan I highly recommend checking them out this tour.

Here’s the setlist:

Set 1:

Via Chicago
Handshake Drugs
If I Ever Was a Child
Cruel Country
Forget the Flowers
Evicted
Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull
I’m Always in Love
Everyone Hides
Hummingbird
It’s Just That Simple
You and I
War on War
Falling Apart (Right Now)
California Stars

Set 2:
Box Full of Letters
Annihilation
I Am Trying to Break Your Heart
One Wing
Either Way
Love Is Everywhere (Beware)
Impossible Germany
Jesus, Etc.
The Universe
Hate It Here
Walken
Kingpin
Heavy Metal Drummer
I’m the Man Who Loves You

Encore:
The Late Greats
I Got You (At the End of the Century)
Outtasite (Outta Mind)

U2 awarded with 2025 Woody Guthrie Prize in Tulsa

bone and the edge in tulsa

Photo by Jay Blakesberg, courtesy of Harper House Music Foundation

Bono and The Edge were in Tulsa last night to accept the 2025 Woody Guthrie Prize on behalf of U2. They sat down at the historic Cain’s Ballroom to have a conversation T Bone Burnett about their long career as activist songwriters. They also performed an impromptu shot set.

The Cain’s is one of my favorite places to see music. It is a relatively small ballroom with a capacity of just 1,800 people. It was originally a garage then became a dancehall. It became famous in the late 1930s as the home of Bob Willis who performed a weekly radio show from there which helped popularize western swing. It later became famous for being one of the few stops the Sex Pistols made on their ill-fated tour of America in 1978.

Anyway it is a very cool place to see a show. I would have loved to have been there last night, but the moment it was announced I knew it would sell out immediately so I didn’t even try.

But watching the videos that are showing up on Youtube I sure wish I’d been there.

Setlist:

Running to Stand Still/This Train is Bound for Glory
Mothers of the Disappeared
Sunday Bloody Sunday
One
Pride (In the Name of Love)
Jesus Christ/Yahweh