Evanescence: 04-24-2012, Kansas City, Missouri‏

Evanescence Album Tour
April 24th,  2012
Midland Theater AMC
Kansas City, Missouri

It’s been a rough month and a day trip to Kansas  City to see Evanescence was the perfect vacation solution. I’d been hoping for  this opportunity since a second leg of the Evanescence Album Tour was announced.  I always have such high hopes for Amy Lee and Evanescence, especially not  knowing what’s going to be played during their set. Would it be a good mix of  new material? Would there be an encore? What would she be wearing? Would my  media pass be at will call before doors opened at 7pm? And how many more times  would Tim McCord get locked out of the bus. Seriously. The poor guy was locked  out three times while we stood outside the venue.

 

 

We took this opportunity to chat with some of the fans who had won the Meet  and Greet with the band, a dozen lucky fans.To everyone’s surprise, the Meet and  Greet also included sitting in on the band’s 5 song sound check. If the  reactions of the fans to the sound check were any indication, we were all in for  a real treat. We were lucky enough to have the chance to speak with Tim and  Terry Balsamo while we were waiting, and Amy Lee even made a quick escape from  the venue to the bus and back again.

 

 

Kansas City local band, Waiting For Signal opened the show with their own  brand of rock music. During Waiting For Signal’s performance, Amy Lee could be  seen from the side of the stage,watching the local KC band,and she was really  getting into their set. I’ve never seen her watching one of Evanescence’s  opening bands before. I’m not saying that she never does, just that I’ve never  seen it happen. Lee was visibly bouncing to the beats, and even head banged a  few times. Evanescence’s drummer, Will Hunt, took to the crowd for the last half  of WaitingFor Signal’s set and seemed very impressed with them.

 

 

While I didn’t really enjoy the style of music from Weaving The Fate, halfway  through their set, the crowd did finally start bouncing around.

 

 

The fans had set their expectations very high for Amy Lee since the release  of Evanescence’s self-titled album in the fall of 2011. It had been nearly five  years since the band had gone on tour, six years since their sophomore release,  and ten years since the release of their major label debut. Fans were rabid for  new material.

 

 

Tonight’s show marked my 12th time seeing the band live, and they truly were  in top form. The band opened their hour and a half long set with What You  Want, the first single off of their self-titled album, with founder and  only remaining original member, Amy Lee, twirling around the stage in a flowing  dress. Troy McLawhorn and Terry Balsamo hammered through guitar solos while  showed off their head banging talents. Tim McCord, however, played the casual,  cool band member, seductively strummed his bass. Will Hunt’s stage antics got  almost as much attention as Amy Lee’s. Nearly every song performed found Will  tossing a stick in the air, catching it behind his back and continuing his  assault on the drums. It’s wonderful to see the band having so much fun on  stage. This is Evanescence as it should have always been.

 

 

Lee and the boys hammered through Going Under, The Other  Side, Lee playing a keyboard during the tracks outtro, and Weight of  the World. The band pushed through an amazing version of Made Of Stone,  showcasing the boys’ talents with an extended intro, while Lee took once again  to the keyboard. Lee then retired to the Baldwin piano for Lost In Paradise,  My Heart Is Broken and Lithium. Seeing Lee hammering away at a  Baldwin while Terry and Troy thrash about on stage proves that Evanescence is a  full-fledgedrock band. I even noticed several people moshing during My Heart  Is Brokenand Lithium, bringing a smile to Lee’s face as she looked  into the crowd.

 

 

The emotions coming from Lee during My Heart Is Brokenwere  breathtaking. Lee’s vocals were perfect, hitting every note with ease. What was  truly impressive was the lack of any backing vocal tracks. The string  arrangements were the only prerecorded tracks.

 

 

While the stage show was rather stripped down, with very little decorations,  the light show only heightened the dark mood of the band’s music. Flashes of red  from stage right mixed with blue strobes from stage right and bathed the crowd  in an eerie glow, giving the appearance of staring at a 3D photo without the 3D  glasses. The synthesizer hum heralded the introduction of Sick,and  found the venue flashing and popping with a dark purple glow. During the third  verse of the track, Lee belted out “I can still taste the poison” while the  lights burst a sickening green.

 

 

The band took a short break after Sick and Lee took time to again address the  crowd while a microphone stand was brought on stage. “I’m having a lot of fun  tonight,” she told the crowd, and it showed in her energetic performance. I’ve  never seen Lee use a microphone stand before, but she clung to it like a woman  trying to hold on to her lover during The Change. Her facial  expressions went back and forth between anger and frustration during the 2nd and  3rd chorus’ of the track. While a simple sheet hung behind the stage, a smoke  and light show that danced around the venue and covered the backdrop, giving an  ethereal feel to the stage.

 

 

Another short break followed. Amy again addressed the crowd, at one point  apologizing for the last show they had to cancel in the KC area. “We’re so sorry  for the last time we had to cancel, but I want to thank all of you for giving us  a hard time and welcoming us back.” I can only assume she meant the food  poisoning incident back in 2007 that forced the band to cancel two shows. As a  stage hand wheeled her Baldwin piano back on stage, Lee was still talking to the  crowd. Paying no attention to what was going on behind her, she backed up and  nearly tripped over the piano stool and was caught by the stage hand. No one in  the crowd seemed to care though. We were all enthralled, worshipping the Rock  Goddess.

 

 

Lee stepped back to the keyboard,and the first chords beckoned Call Me  When You’re Sober. The crowd erupted. Their excitement continued through  Imaginary while the strobe lights burst, brilliant hues of purple washed over  the backdrop which flashed the band’s logo. Lee played Imaginary‘s  keyboard outtro while Will mercilessly beat his drum kit. It was so great seeing  Lee not rely on the prerecorded piano parts for this show and really show her  pure talent as an artist.

 

 

Lee then sat herself back at her piano and asked the crowd to “sing along  because I know you all know the words.” Cell phones and lighters sprung to life  and set the crowd in a sparkling glow as Lee purred her way through My  Immortal. The slight swaying of the crowd turned into all out jumping and  fist pumping when Hunt, McLawhorn, Balsamo and McCord joined Lee on stage for  the final chorus.

 

 

Leaving the stage without a word, the band soon returned for their encore.  With McLawhown on the acoustic guitar, McCord on keyboard, and Lee back at the  Baldwin, none of us were expecting to hear Swimming Home during  tonight’s set and Lee hit all the high notes. Still plucking away at the keys,  Lee tinked the opening notes for Your Starand the crowd erupted once  more. But there was more to come!

 

 

“Did we miss a song,” Lee asked the crowd? The funny thing about that  statement is that some of us were talking before the show about how we’d like  for Evanescence to end their set on a high note and not with their last song  being a ballad like My Immortal. Back at the piano for a final time,  Lee kicked off the last song of the evening: Bring Me To Life. Looking overjoyed  with the crowd’s reaction, Lee twirled and spun around the stage. The male  vocals are now cut from the live performance of the band’s break-through-single,  focusing more on the total style of this new version of Evanescence. Lee thanked  the fans one final time as the Terry and the boys played her off stage. A  perfect end to an amazing set.

 

 

With roughly 1,700 people attending tonight’s show, I was a little shocked  that only about three dozen fans waiting outside for the chance to meet the  band. Tim was the first to greet the fans, followed by Terry. Finally, Amy  walked over to the crowd who had been barricaded in next to their bus. While we  were not allowed to take photos with Amy, Tim and Terry did pose with the fans,  and Amy made sure to sign something for every fan. And thanks to one cool fan,  another cool fan got two things signed.

Setlist;

What You Want
Going Under
The Other Side
Weight of the World
Made of Stone
Lost in Paradise
My Heart Is Broken
Lithium
Sick
The Change
Call Me When You’re Sober
Imaginary
My Immortal

Encore:

Swimming Home
Your Star
Bring Me to Life