@@michaelcraig9449son i was there at both and 99 was better. Nothing compares to how ‘blind’ got us going. Alright you caught me i watched it all on youtube and netflix. Still i make a valid point.
I've seen them close with that at an outdoor concert, the pyrotechniques were amazing, better than they can do indoors. Ironically, from the title, it should be an opening song.
@@grattonland I know you know this, but for those who don't...in Rock 'n Roll music the word "rock" is often code for a certain other four letter word...hence the song being their closing song. Meant for all those lucky enough to bring that special someone to the concert.
For Those About to Rock definitely my all time favorite closing song at a concert, the build up, the energy. the power, the cannons, everyone yelling "Fire" and "We Salute You". Definitely one of the great ones.
Muse - Knights of Cydonia. Absolute killer track, crazy show closer. It's got everything, slow burn intro, super sticky hook, massive chorus that gets the whole stadium singing, and monster guitar solo outro. Would love to see a little more Muse love.
I was sitting here tearing up and literally got goosebumps up the back of my neck when you played Freddy Mercury singing with the audience!!! I don't even know how to describe the feeling of being in a huge crowd like that and everybody's singing together...it's just...one of the coolest experiences you could ever have!!!! I don't even think we realized how totally blessed and/or lucky we were to be at concerts like that back in the late 70's and through 90's. Great topic!!!
OMG I love your passion for music. I am not artistic, I cannot hold a tune to sing. But I love music, especially Rock N Roll. I'm old they say, listen to country they say. I say I will listen to whatever the hell I want to listen to. Always have, always will. I'm 64 but I still love Rock N Roll. And I have found a channel that I can listen too and enjoy the music coming at me as well as the words being said to me by a man named Michael Palmisano. Your passion, I love it!
Agreed, too bad the kid isn't old enough to have seen real Rock and Roll shows. This list is somewhat lame and mild. Floyd rocked Yankee Stadium when I saw them as did Roger Waters and ZZ Top, Ronnie James Dio... Too many to mention.
@@jimmurphy6095 I've seen all of those except Floyd I was only 8 in 94 when they stopped playing. I've seen DG and RW shows separately but it's not the same. What year did you see them at Yankee Stadium?
@@RMHutchings I got to see the Division Bell Tour. '94? I still have the shirt from that night. They played the whole Dark Side album for the second half. First time in decades they had played it. Amazing show.
As a professional musician who has been fortunate enough to share the stage with some of the greats, you my friend never fail to capture the passionate breakdowns of what makes each song iconic in its own right. You have a gift for explaining "that feeling" . Keep it up brother, much love!💙🎹🎸
My all time favorite was U2 for The Unforgettable Fire tour: Last song was "40" - Bono had the crowd serenading back "how long to sing this song", then as he left the stage the crowd still continued. The Edge then took off the guitar, waved and left the stage, then Adam, leaving Larry to continue the beat while the crowd still sang... Then Larry left the stage and while they waited a minute or more to turn the house lights on, the crowd still sung the line over and over again. I remember walking through the concourse and parking garage and people were still singing... it was epic!
Saw ‘em on that tour and War in ‘83, and 40 was the last song then too. We kept singing it as we exited the arena and kept it going in the streets for quite a while. Also on ‘87’s JT tour. Parking lot full of singers after the show.
YES! I saw them for their 2 shows filmed at Sun Devil Stadium during the filming of Rattle and Hum and I remember that too. We were still singing it in the parking lot.
Too much to say that Live Aid was struggling but Queen appeared and in 20 glorious minutes transformed the Wembley crowd. Special band. Special frontman. RIP Freddie.
@@RustyManisduckman you are incorrect according to Geldofs autobiography they were bang on time unlike many of the other bands they had rehearsed their set down to the second.
True Story. I sat next to Rickey Medlocke on a flight. Lynard Skynard was flying back from Summer Fest in Milwaukee. I specifically asked him what it's like to be expected to play Free Bird every night for the encore. His answer kind of surprised me... he said its pretty awesome because the crowd is loosing their minds, but that the guitar solos are actually really hard to nail... particularly when all three leads are raging together. He also said, they have tried to play it at other parts of the show, they even tried to open with it, and it just kinda flops. Basically, people need to be drunk enough to be ready for Free Bird! LOL
I saw them in 2001 on the Stiff Upper Lip tour and hearing those guns go off was epic but then they closed it with Shot Down in Flames as a second encore one of the only times they didn't end it with For Those About to Rock
Run Like Hell from the Pulse concert is my favourite concert closer. Every light, laser and strobe all going off , fireworks and the stage being 'blown up' at the end . Glad you at least mentioned it
I miss "Run like Hell - Pink Floyd". The Pulse tour (1994). It's a matter of taste, but for me, the Pulse tour from Pink Floyd was the best tour of all time. Everything was perfect. Great songs, perfect guitar solos from guitar god David Gilmour (specially Comfortably Numb) and a wonderful light and/or laser show. Perfect!!!
How can you forget Pink Floyd closing with Numb and Run like Hell. Man when that disco ball drops and opens up while Gilmour is making that guitar sing is a beautiful sight
For me, the greatest closer I've ever seen was The Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again." Talk about a crowd going crazy and singing along with a really crazy energy!
It is a cold, dead heart that is not moved by "We are the Champions". I love many songs for many different reasons, but it is my favourite song of all time. That switch from Cm to Eb major as the lyrics get more positive, then up to F major for the chorus is genius. I have had the honour of being in the crowd twice for Queen + Adam Lambert, and the feeling of being among thousands singing along to especially this song is beyond description.
Anyone remember the Outlaws???...I saw them close their concert in the late seventies with the song/anthem "Green Grass and High Tides Forever." Epic!!!
Anyone remember the four horsemen!!!?? Not Metallica brand ones!! Actual band that released an album called nobody said it was easy in the early nineties i think. Had the title track and another called rocking is my business, and wanted man!! They had that driving guitar like AC/DC and a killer grimy voice and sound and were a little grimy themselves!! I loved it. Anyone check it out it’ll be worth it
Recently stumbled across Your channel and I love it. I'm one of those "non-musicians" that You talk about. Tried learning the guitar as a kid in the 70's but never got the hang of it. 👊👍😎
I saw the Queen performance broadcast live when I was kid and it's one of those things like the Beatles on Ed Sullivan that it doesn't matter how many times I've seen it since it rockets me back to that day at my childhood home.
I appreciate your fervor for music, the insight you steep into all of your videos. And your apparent honed sensibility, as a musician and as a teacher! Keep the great videos rolling...
For me it's For Those About To Rock by AC/DC. First saw this live on the tour of that album at Wembley Arena. I had seen a concert on TV earlyier that year and they didn't have real canons then but boy when those cannons appeared.. Spectactular. Also Motorhead with Overkill...just brilliant. Lastly and though not the ending the show but ending the main set, in 1981 on the Moving Pictures tour I saw Rush bookend the main set, opening with 2112 Overture and closing with 2112 Grand Finale.... "Attention all planets of the Solar Federation............. We have assumed control".
Grateful Dead closing with Not Fade Away. Near the end the crowd chants you know our love will not fade away and continues until the band comes back out for the encode. Every time no matter where in the country without fail.
I have too disagree with you on this. I got on the bus in 1979 & I've heard a lot of different closers. Although in the 90s-10s I did notice NFA being brought out quite often. I could live without it actually because of the "clappers" idk why but sometimes it really gets under my skin. But I guess I'm old lol In the 80s they would play a certain gaggle of encoures throughout tour, which I could've done w/out (Day Job, Touch of Gray, When Push Comes to Shove, Miracle etc...) but I was just a wee lass
@@billycramer8066 that's the great think about music. What it does for you. I think you missed the point. The crowd didn't interfere with the band. The band and crowd were one and it was tangible. I agree with you on the Donna comment though.
Queen saved Live Aid! The 20 best minutes in concert history! Freddie at 60 percent was still better than most frontmen at 100 percent! Remarkable that he was so sick here!
Great analysis and thoughts enjoyed listening to you. I remember watching live aid as a kid in the 80s and everyone was blown away by queen at the time.
Gotta chime back in. Man, them Skynyrd boys sure could play. Allen Collins....Steve Gaines...Gary Rossington....holy S***. Gotta check out their Knebworth show from 1976....monsters.
The knebworth show absolutely kicked ass. First time id heard " gimme a t for texas. That reminds me Ronnie calls someone out in the crowd just don't let that flag at the ground. Opposite from R. A. T. M.. rage not on my list. I. M. O
I don’t know if Rush Live in Rio YYZ was an opening song or closing song but regardless of when they did it in the concert- it’s a song that has ZERO lyrics, yet the crowd as soon as they heard Neil Peart tapping the symbols, the crowd instantaneous was on alert and ready to vocalize their pleasure. They were 1000% involved in the song- so much so that they sang the different riffs throughout the entire song. Has to be the single most iconic rock anthem EVER!
can't carry a tune in a bucket, can't play two notes without scaring crows, deer, and kids, but I love music and you help widen my understanding of what I love. thank you.
While I appreciate your list but I think the inclusion of "Comfortably Numb" by Pink Floyd should have been a no-brainer! David Gilmour's solo at the end of the track lifts the audience up and leaves them there emotionally choked up and stunned!! My two bits.
Roger Waters finished with Numb at Wembley, the night I was there Gilmour came onto the top of the Wall they build during the gig and played the solo, blew us all away..!
Michael at certain gigs, in certain times, the planets align where the collective energy of the music, band and crowd connect as one. It is awesome to be there, everything is alive with 'electricity', goosebumps, hair standing on end. It is a wonderous thing to be part of. That RATM moment was one them and obviously Queen. The strange thing is Queens performance jumped the bridge and arrived in your home - truly a remarkable moment in time. Love your work, love the things you point out - I've never seen Prince knock over the mic. My moment was in Dublin many decades ago watching AC/DC. BJ held the mic out at the start of The Jack and the crowd sang the first lines perfectly. He pulled the mic back, missed his lyrics and we all noticed. He held up his hands in apology switched off the mic stuck it in his pocket, sat on the drum riser encouraging us to complete the job. The crowd sang the whole song perfectly start to finish. Yes it's easy but to be part of 10,000 doing so was simply awesome. Brian walked to the front, applauded and simply said in that Geordie accent "Jaysus, that was something!" It was epic and we nearly lifted the roof off the building. The feedback a band get from these situations must be off the charts. Saw Queen in Dublin too, outstandingly good start to finish.
I went to many concerts when I was much younger and the one that will always stick in my head is Dire Straits - 1985, the last song of the concert was "Going Home" - from Local Hero... the entire crowd screaming along with the saxophone while Mark Knopfler wails counterpoint to the final double beat. Then the crowd went fully ape-sh!t. In my brain forever.
The chord progression change in freebird from going from F-C-G to G-Bb-C is like grabbing 3rd from overdrive and just letting the big dog eat. Hold on to your tail, we’re about to take off.
Biko - Peter Gabriel tour in the late 80's. The band leaves the stage one at a time, while the crowd sings BIKO, BIKO, BIKO.... until it is only a drum and Peter...
Great list! So many others could be in there! To quote Raine Wilson’s character in the movie “RockStar,” the Freebird solo section builds like a “…TANK FLYING DOWN THE SIDE OF A MOUNTAIN!!!” 🤙🏻🎸🎸🎸
Chris Squire and Steve Howe growing the Wurm riff from a 3 chord strum to a swaggering no-holes-barred crunching power-packed stomp that left you on a massive high and humming that riff for years. Well worth covering ..
I can think of two closing songs that are just incredible, but they're both probably what you were talking about with copywrite hassles. KISS - Rock N Roll All Night, and Alice Cooper - School's Out
Dude this was awesome. So many songs could fit this narrative. I really like your list. Some of my list includes Molly Hatche-Flirtn With Disaster. The Outlaws-Green Grass and High Tides. There are so so many others. Good video.
Molly Hatchet! Love it. Saw them with The Outlaws @ Springfield CC around 1979-80 like a week or so after my first show (Dead). Lots of sick young teens partying just a little too much lol
How much I adore and respect your videos!! It’s like I am watching myself every time I watch them! Couldn’t agree more than Journey :Seperate ways !!! Rest of videos with Randy Rhoads Mr.Crowley ?? Black Sabbath war pigs !?? SRV?? Honestly it’s like we are best friends and we listen from teenagers the same ! Thank you !!!!
Steve Perry is undeniable. Great choice to start off this list, Michael! For me, I would add Deep Purple- Hush on this list as well as CSNY- Ohio. By the way, you’re absolutely right about Prince. He is the best of them all!! 🤘🏽🤘🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽🔥🔥🔥
Glad you mentioned Deep Purple - Hush. I was 18 when it was released in 1968 and fortunate enough to see them do it live in St Louis as a senior citizen. Even though the band had gone through many changes by then, they performed Hush exactly as it was originally recorded.
Loved your list. Queen always ended their concerts with We will rock you followed by We are the Champions. My favourite band since I was a kid, would have loved to see them live with Freddie but I saw Queen + Paul Rogers in Hyde Park in 2005, a great show and I got to see Brian May and Roger Talor. Love Rage Against the Machine and I too was screaming and cursing in their crowd when I was 12, at a concert in 1993 in Iceland. Epic to say the least! Also a shout out to Prince and Lynyrd Skynyrd, definitely on my list of bands/musicians that I would have want to see live.
I saw the Allmans end a show with "Whipping Post". The crowd absolutely ate it up- we were singing "Tied to the Whipping Post" and "Good Lord I Feel Like I'm Dyin'" even louder than Gregg was thru the PA. The whole show was incredible- still my number 1 after all these years. Haven't actually seen him live (which totally SUCKS!), but I'm sure George Thorogood can burn the barn down as good as anyone. He's another of those one of a kind showmen that come to PLAY. (I know- not a stadium act, but Jesus, does he BRING IT live!!) Run Like Hell and Green Grass and High Tides Forever are solid choices, too. I own both Floyd's Pulse and Hittin the Road (again) Live by The Outlaws and both of those were absolute crowd killers.
Allman Brothers, 3 hour show, with whipping post in the kettle moraine of alpine valley with the fog rolling in just amazing. Oncore, Jessica ! Big Hammond B3 sound, never forget it.
@@a.barker7792 Yep- they were definitely an act that needed to be seen outdoors! That sound was way too big for an inside venue, lol- and it just sounds better outdoors, on a sunny summer afternoon with your best friends- and a huge crowd of the coolest most chill fans ever! (blazed to the gills)
Saw U2 many times “back in the day” when Bono could still walk through a doorway without his head getting stuck. The Edge and Adam would swap guitars and they’d always close with “40”. One by one they’d leave the stage as the audience just sang the refrain “ How long to sing this song”… great times.
As soon as you started describing it, I knew you were talking about Prince, and started crying. It has to be the most perfect moment in rock. And I agree... if you haven't seen the NFL film on it, go click on it now
If you’re not a musician a don’t think that someone in the crowd said holy hell did you just catch that switch from f major into that minor third on Brian Mayes guitar right then!!!! WTF and I’ve gotta say Mercury and his enthusiasm and stage presence is what had the crowd eating out of his palms!!!! But Brian may is great and I like your breakdowns I’m just giving ya a hard time!! And also where was yellow Ledbetter on this list just saying?!?!?! Doesn’t have to be super classic
So lonely by The Police, Atlanta 1983. Surely in the top 5. For the generation who missed '77. Andy Summers' succinct epic solo, his harmonics, Steward Copeland's sharp drums driving an ecstatic crowd. And thank you! Other pretenders: 40 by U2 and I'm the Resurrection by the Stone Roses
Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (running into Run Like Hell depending on the concert). Pulse BluRay has a superb version with restored video and remastered audio. Perfect!
I know you can’t show it on here because they block videos, but Pink Floyd “Run Like Hell” from the Pulse concert is amazing! Not to mention their second set was Dark Side beginning to end followed by “Wish You Here”, “Comfortably Numb”, and “Run Like Hell” to close.
FNA! Now that sounds like a very cool show! I never synced up with them while touring. I saw Roger Waters @ Hartford CC in the 80s or 90s lol (too little time)'Pros & Cons of Hitchhiking' A good friend a stage hand then & now explained to me that the band had a quadrophonic sound system so even when in the side nose bleeds you got the sound that was intended, but seemingly always only available near the soundboard. Not sold out so a friend & I went the next & got scalper tix for $15... kind of pricey back then lol
I happened to see Springsteen the night after Lennon was shot. He closed the show with a 20 minute version of Twist and Shout with the house lights on. Hard to top that as a show closer.
I saw him the night Lennon was shot . . he was unaware of it at the time but the band knew and they were flat. A real bummer of a night when we got in the car and headed up 95 and turned on Philly FM radio and heard the news. Haven't seen Bruce since.
I was at Hyde park when he played “I saw her standing there” with McCartney, then had the plug pulled during the encore. There was a lot of rock history on stage that night.
Thanks for the passion Michael, great selection but... Satisfaction by the Stones is setting on fire every concert for half a Century in five continents!! Greetings
I can watch you for hours😁 I play guitar for years not because I m good at it but because I love it.I don t have much music theory knowledge and will never have.When I her your comments , your explaining of details I listen and wonder how I manage to understand it and then suddenly I know why I understand It s because of what you say with your Eyes, Face reactions that is what all of us who love music have inside us.I cannot explain it in music theory words but what you feel while listening and the little Mimic reactions are more explaining of the magic of music than anthing else. Keep on rocking BR
The Who Won’t Get Fooled Again October 20, 2001 The Concert for New York City Madison Square Garden Their set on that night in a lot of ways rivals Queen’s performance at Wembley in ‘85. Epic There last
Brilliant list Michael, when you said RATM for that last one, sent me straight back to 2000, saw them at Leeds Festival in the UK. Think it also had Foo Fighters and Queens Of The Stone Age as well that weekend. Was in a rare tangle.
Grab Your Guitar & Join Guitargate: Guitargate.com/courses
Nothing from Woodstock 99? Korn blind Metallica one limp bizkuit break stuff RHCP fire
@@MusicMan3 REAL Woodstock 1969 was way better.. JIMI!
@@michaelcraig9449son i was there at both and 99 was better. Nothing compares to how ‘blind’ got us going.
Alright you caught me i watched it all on youtube and netflix. Still i make a valid point.
FREDDIE MERCURY IS A TRUE LEGEND AND OBVIOUSLY THE WHOLE GROUP ie QUEEN!!!
Also GUNS AND ROSES 🌹 ARE ANOTHER LEGENDARY BAND😱😍🏴🌹🏴🌹🙏🙏🙏💥💥💥
For Those About to Rock. Gives me goosebumps every time i hear it. I nearly cried tears of joy the first time i got to see AC/DC perform it live.
I'm with you. That's my top closing song of all time! FIRE! 😅😅😅
First song I thought of.
🔥
I've seen them close with that at an outdoor concert, the pyrotechniques were amazing, better than they can do indoors.
Ironically, from the title, it should be an opening song.
@@grattonland I know you know this, but for those who don't...in Rock 'n Roll music the word "rock" is often code for a certain other four letter word...hence the song being their closing song. Meant for all those lucky enough to bring that special someone to the concert.
For Those About to Rock definitely my all time favorite closing song at a concert, the build up, the energy. the power, the cannons, everyone yelling "Fire" and "We Salute You". Definitely one of the great ones.
Muse - Knights of Cydonia. Absolute killer track, crazy show closer. It's got everything, slow burn intro, super sticky hook, massive chorus that gets the whole stadium singing, and monster guitar solo outro. Would love to see a little more Muse love.
Came here to say exactly this. Best end to a concert you will ever experience in my opinion
You stole my post! ;-)
yes, sir...yes!
Ditto
I've seen a bunch of Muse shows. Knights of Cydonia is an epic closer. There is only one Muse song topping this: Stockholm Syndrome!
I was sitting here tearing up and literally got goosebumps up the back of my neck when you played Freddy Mercury singing with the audience!!! I don't even know how to describe the feeling of being in a huge crowd like that and everybody's singing together...it's just...one of the coolest experiences you could ever have!!!! I don't even think we realized how totally blessed and/or lucky we were to be at concerts like that back in the late 70's and through 90's. Great topic!!!
OMG I love your passion for music. I am not artistic, I cannot hold a tune to sing. But I love music, especially Rock N Roll. I'm old they say, listen to country they say. I say I will listen to whatever the hell I want to listen to. Always have, always will. I'm 64 but I still love Rock N Roll. And I have found a channel that I can listen too and enjoy the music coming at me as well as the words being said to me by a man named Michael Palmisano. Your passion, I love it!
"Won't Get Fooled Again" the Who. Pitch dark... bump, bump, bump... KABOOOOM!!!!! Lights, power,... majesty!!!
I can relate to that.
I have the Pulse live album from Pink Floyd and I gotta say that Run Like Hell as the closing song is pretty epic.
Great shout, no one does it quite like Pink Floyd.
Agreed, too bad the kid isn't old enough to have seen real Rock and Roll shows. This list is somewhat lame and mild. Floyd rocked Yankee Stadium when I saw them as did Roger Waters and ZZ Top, Ronnie James Dio... Too many to mention.
My Pulse live album closes on Brain Damage and Eclipse and that is truly legendary.
@@jimmurphy6095 I've seen all of those except Floyd I was only 8 in 94 when they stopped playing. I've seen DG and RW shows separately but it's not the same. What year did you see them at Yankee Stadium?
@@RMHutchings I got to see the Division Bell Tour. '94? I still have the shirt from that night.
They played the whole Dark Side album for the second half. First time in decades they had played it. Amazing show.
Rock N Roll All Nite, always brings down the house! After being bludgeoned for 2 hours, what a fun way to stop.
Yep, like the band or not, it was always an epic finish.
Yeah agreed...this should easily be in the top 5...so iconic 👍🤘
i love kiss because of this song
Won't Get Fooled Again. I'm not even a huge Who fan but that's about as solid as closers come.
damn right.
Unfortunately notorious blockers, so no one heard it. Come on Pete, it will sell songs buddy.
It NEVER gets better than Queen and Freddie!
As a professional musician who has been fortunate enough to share the stage with some of the greats, you my friend never fail to capture the passionate breakdowns of what makes each song iconic in its own right. You have a gift for explaining "that feeling" . Keep it up brother, much love!💙🎹🎸
My thoughts exactly. His way of explaining why it's epic is in it's own right..epic.
agreed
Rush Working Man Live in Cleveland is a phenomenal performance to wrap up a 2 hour and 40 min show.
My all time favorite was U2 for The Unforgettable Fire tour: Last song was "40" - Bono had the crowd serenading back "how long to sing this song", then as he left the stage the crowd still continued. The Edge then took off the guitar, waved and left the stage, then Adam, leaving Larry to continue the beat while the crowd still sang... Then Larry left the stage and while they waited a minute or more to turn the house lights on, the crowd still sung the line over and over again. I remember walking through the concourse and parking garage and people were still singing... it was epic!
Saw ‘em on that tour and War in ‘83, and 40 was the last song then too. We kept singing it as we exited the arena and kept it going in the streets for quite a while. Also on ‘87’s JT tour. Parking lot full of singers after the show.
YES! I saw them for their 2 shows filmed at Sun Devil Stadium during the filming of Rattle and Hum and I remember that too. We were still singing it in the parking lot.
i just found your site and I finally found someone who notices the littlest thing about a song. especially when its different than the recording. thx
Another great list. Purple Rain is my fave closer. Formal, social, concern. Incredible.
Too much to say that Live Aid was struggling but Queen appeared and in 20 glorious minutes transformed the Wembley crowd. Special band. Special frontman. RIP Freddie.
Queen was so good they went over their time limit and pissed off every band to play after them.
@@RustyManisduckman you are incorrect according to Geldofs autobiography they were bang on time unlike many of the other bands they had rehearsed their set down to the second.
Rusty, that is not true. They were perfectly timed and didn’t upset anyone.
They just stole Live Aid completely
Freddy was the best
True Story. I sat next to Rickey Medlocke on a flight. Lynard Skynard was flying back from Summer Fest in Milwaukee. I specifically asked him what it's like to be expected to play Free Bird every night for the encore. His answer kind of surprised me... he said its pretty awesome because the crowd is loosing their minds, but that the guitar solos are actually really hard to nail... particularly when all three leads are raging together. He also said, they have tried to play it at other parts of the show, they even tried to open with it, and it just kinda flops. Basically, people need to be drunk enough to be ready for Free Bird! LOL
Awesome story, Medlocke is one of my faves right back in his blackfoot days
Awesome story - Thanks!
Summer Fest was awesome back then.
I was planning a trip to FL bc I had tickets to the show after the one they missed. 😭
I think the fans wanted & expected to hear it last. What else is a better close?
It's even better when the fans tighten their mind.
Spectacular!!! Haha thanks for that
in '08 AC/DC closing with "For Those About To Rock" with the cannons was beyond epic.
I saw them in 2001 on the Stiff Upper Lip tour and hearing those guns go off was epic but then they closed it with Shot Down in Flames as a second encore one of the only times they didn't end it with For Those About to Rock
For me it is Los Endos by Genesis(Seconds Out). It nicely bookends the album and even better than on Trick of the Tail.
Run Like Hell from the Pulse concert is my favourite concert closer. Every light, laser and strobe all going off , fireworks and the stage being 'blown up' at the end . Glad you at least mentioned it
Prince and Freddie wow. Miss them so much. Music that was epic. Good choices. Thx
Bravo Prince. Can't have magic happen when your lip-syching or playing recorded instruments. Real music played by real musicians!!
Mine was SRV Live in 1990... his encore / last song was Voodoo Chile (slight return). I still get chills thinking about that song.
I miss "Run like Hell - Pink Floyd". The Pulse tour (1994). It's a matter of taste, but for me, the Pulse tour from Pink Floyd was the best tour of all time. Everything was perfect. Great songs, perfect guitar solos from guitar god David Gilmour (specially Comfortably Numb) and a wonderful light and/or laser show. Perfect!!!
Run Like Hell is from The Wall, 1981. They just still used it into the 90’s and 00’s.
You are exactly correct
SR Castic I think he's saying the pulse tour was in 94
How can you forget Pink Floyd closing with Numb and Run like Hell. Man when that disco ball drops and opens up while Gilmour is making that guitar sing is a beautiful sight
For me, the greatest closer I've ever seen was The Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again." Talk about a crowd going crazy and singing along with a really crazy energy!
Absolutely 😊
It is a cold, dead heart that is not moved by "We are the Champions". I love many songs for many different reasons, but it is my favourite song of all time. That switch from Cm to Eb major as the lyrics get more positive, then up to F major for the chorus is genius. I have had the honour of being in the crowd twice for Queen + Adam Lambert, and the feeling of being among thousands singing along to especially this song is beyond description.
The greatest show closer of all time is “For those about to rock”. I don’t even have to name the band cause you already know. ⚡️
Always thought Jackson Browne closing with 'The Load Out / Stay' was a really cool way to finish out a show.
The Load Out / Stay is amazing. Perfect way to end a show.
I absolutely agree. 👍👍
Agreed, that was very special and quite literally the best closing of all time.
It’s a classic finale that was genius branding. Gave a hook for everyone to stay till the end and all share an experience.
VERY solid choice! There's a reason it still gets airplay all these years later.
i absolutely love your enthusiasm...for music especially when it looks like you want to join in
Anyone remember the Outlaws???...I saw them close their concert in the late seventies with the song/anthem "Green Grass and High Tides Forever." Epic!!!
Yes!!!! I still have that album and every song on it is good!!!
Anyone remember the four horsemen!!!?? Not Metallica brand ones!! Actual band that released an album called nobody said it was easy in the early nineties i think. Had the title track and another called rocking is my business, and wanted man!! They had that driving guitar like AC/DC and a killer grimy voice and sound and were a little grimy themselves!! I loved it. Anyone check it out it’ll be worth it
Recently stumbled across Your channel and I love it. I'm one of those "non-musicians" that You talk about. Tried learning the guitar as a kid in the 70's but never got the hang of it. 👊👍😎
Dude i just love your passion..keep it coming my good friend
I LOVE your enthusiasm! I know nothing about actually making music, but you make me feel smarter just by watching.
I saw the Queen performance broadcast live when I was kid and it's one of those things like the Beatles on Ed Sullivan that it doesn't matter how many times I've seen it since it rockets me back to that day at my childhood home.
I appreciate your fervor for music, the insight you steep into all of your videos. And your apparent honed sensibility, as a musician and as a teacher!
Keep the great videos rolling...
For me it's For Those About To Rock by AC/DC. First saw this live on the tour of that album at Wembley Arena. I had seen a concert on TV earlyier that year and they didn't have real canons then but boy when those cannons appeared.. Spectactular.
Also Motorhead with Overkill...just brilliant.
Lastly and though not the ending the show but ending the main set, in 1981 on the Moving Pictures tour I saw Rush bookend the main set, opening with 2112 Overture and closing with 2112 Grand Finale.... "Attention all planets of the Solar Federation............. We have assumed control".
For those about to rock..we salute you!!!
Cannons firing and all that stuff!
One of the greatest show Enders!
Queen did the best ever 20 min live set. Love them or hate them for it. They were technically and musically perfect.
Aerosmith "Train kept a rollin" was incredible all 7 times I went through that ending...
Yes sir!!!!
Queen at Wembley gives me goosebumps, remember the day.
Grateful Dead closing with Not Fade Away. Near the end the crowd chants you know our love will not fade away and continues until the band comes back out for the encode. Every time no matter where in the country without fail.
I have too disagree with you on this. I got on the bus in 1979 & I've heard a lot of different closers. Although in the 90s-10s I did notice NFA being brought out quite often. I could live without it actually because of the "clappers" idk why but sometimes it really gets under my skin. But I guess I'm old lol In the 80s they would play a certain gaggle of encoures throughout tour, which I could've done w/out (Day Job, Touch of Gray, When Push Comes to Shove, Miracle etc...) but I was just a wee lass
I don't like when the crowd interferes with the band. Sorry east coast Dead fans. You have ruined many songs. So has Donna's voice. Lol
@@billycramer8066 that's the great think about music. What it does for you. I think you missed the point. The crowd didn't interfere with the band. The band and crowd were one and it was tangible. I agree with you on the Donna comment though.
@@catinvt we are everywhere. ha 'clappers' forever and a day. epic . That unbroken chain was pretty sick too
US Blues was probably my favorite GD show closer. A good rockin song, crowd dancin and singin along . Wave that flag, wave it wide and high!
Great stuff Mr. Palmisano.
Queen saved Live Aid! The 20 best minutes in concert history! Freddie at 60 percent was still better than most frontmen at 100 percent! Remarkable that he was so sick here!
He wasn't sick until later
@@donovanemery597 He was diagnosed with bronchitis before the concert and the doctor advised he not perform
Absolutely 💯
so great to see someone tak so enthusiastically about even the slightest detail ... the man LIVES music. thank you.
Great analysis and thoughts enjoyed listening to you. I remember watching live aid as a kid in the 80s and everyone was blown away by queen at the time.
Gotta chime back in. Man, them Skynyrd boys sure could play. Allen Collins....Steve Gaines...Gary Rossington....holy S***. Gotta check out their Knebworth show from 1976....monsters.
The knebworth show absolutely kicked ass. First time id heard " gimme a t for texas. That reminds me Ronnie calls someone out in the crowd just don't let that flag at the ground. Opposite from R. A. T. M.. rage not on my list. I. M. O
The winterland show in 76 is a good one.. i think 76... 😆
I don’t know if Rush Live in Rio YYZ was an opening song or closing song but regardless of when they did it in the concert- it’s a song that has ZERO lyrics, yet the crowd as soon as they heard Neil Peart tapping the symbols, the crowd instantaneous was on alert and ready to vocalize their pleasure. They were 1000% involved in the song- so much so that they sang the different riffs throughout the entire song. Has to be the single most iconic rock anthem EVER!
wasn’t either. it was in the middle. closing song was working man and that was amazing and it works super well. opening was tom sawyer
can't carry a tune in a bucket, can't play two notes without scaring crows, deer, and kids, but I love music and you help widen my understanding of what I love. thank you.
Hey man if I can get rocking so can you! It’s the heart of rock that guides the fingers man
Another great job as always Michael. Love your enthusiasm for rock music.
Steve Perry was such an awesome singer. I'm more of a heavy metal guy, but you just gotta love Journey .. they made some awesome music.
Steve Perry was so good....
@@amandabooth7399 - Indeed .. fabulous voice
While I appreciate your list but I think the inclusion of "Comfortably Numb" by Pink Floyd should have been a no-brainer! David Gilmour's solo at the end of the track lifts the audience up and leaves them there emotionally choked up and stunned!! My two bits.
If you are talking about the Pulse concert , Run Like Hell is the closing track. Comfortably numb was breathtaking though
@@pauldocmusic2411 I was referring to David Gilmour concerts - " Remember That Night" Live at the Royal Albert Hall, "Live in GDańsk".
@@pradipchaudhuri9240 fair enough mate , those are brilliant too
Roger Waters finished with Numb at Wembley, the night I was there Gilmour came onto the top of the Wall they build during the gig and played the solo, blew us all away..!
PF / Gilmour usually closed with run like hell.
Mr Palmisano, I never, ever expected to find RATM in there. It's made my day
Peter Frampton’s “Do You Fee Like We Do” is a hell of a way to close a show.
Very good suggestion I love him also....
Michael at certain gigs, in certain times, the planets align where the collective energy of the music, band and crowd connect as one. It is awesome to be there, everything is alive with 'electricity', goosebumps, hair standing on end. It is a wonderous thing to be part of. That RATM moment was one them and obviously Queen. The strange thing is Queens performance jumped the bridge and arrived in your home - truly a remarkable moment in time. Love your work, love the things you point out - I've never seen Prince knock over the mic. My moment was in Dublin many decades ago watching AC/DC. BJ held the mic out at the start of The Jack and the crowd sang the first lines perfectly. He pulled the mic back, missed his lyrics and we all noticed. He held up his hands in apology switched off the mic stuck it in his pocket, sat on the drum riser encouraging us to complete the job. The crowd sang the whole song perfectly start to finish. Yes it's easy but to be part of 10,000 doing so was simply awesome. Brian walked to the front, applauded and simply said in that Geordie accent "Jaysus, that was something!" It was epic and we nearly lifted the roof off the building. The feedback a band get from these situations must be off the charts. Saw Queen in Dublin too, outstandingly good start to finish.
I went to many concerts when I was much younger and the one that will always stick in my head is Dire Straits - 1985, the last song of the concert was "Going Home" - from Local Hero... the entire crowd screaming along with the saxophone while Mark Knopfler wails counterpoint to the final double beat. Then the crowd went fully ape-sh!t. In my brain forever.
What a wonderful world we live in that we have all this high-quality recordings of great songs performed live.
The chord progression change in freebird from going from F-C-G to G-Bb-C is like grabbing 3rd from overdrive and just letting the big dog eat. Hold on to your tail, we’re about to take off.
For Those About To Rock.....now that is the way you end a concert! Long Live AC/DC.
Biko - Peter Gabriel tour in the late 80's. The band leaves the stage one at a time, while the crowd sings BIKO, BIKO, BIKO.... until it is only a drum and Peter...
Great list! So many others could be in there! To quote Raine Wilson’s character in the movie “RockStar,” the Freebird solo section builds like a “…TANK FLYING DOWN THE SIDE OF A MOUNTAIN!!!” 🤙🏻🎸🎸🎸
The best closing song ever saw them in 1977 , I almost took the guy’s head next to me off I was so pumped!!!!!
I remember Yes finishing with Starship Trooper. Pretty epic
Chris Squire and Steve Howe growing the Wurm riff from a 3 chord strum to a swaggering no-holes-barred crunching power-packed stomp that left you on a massive high and humming that riff for years. Well worth covering ..
@@timwestcott361 Completely!!
I'm way late to this Mikey P. This list is truly killer. Not one I would have thought to pick and each deserves to be on the list...I'm watching dude.
Goosebumps every time I hear the live aid set
Wonderful musical insights. Loved these songs and breaking them down as well as you do makes them even better - much appreciated!!!!
I can think of two closing songs that are just incredible, but they're both probably what you were talking about with copywrite hassles. KISS - Rock N Roll All Night, and Alice Cooper - School's Out
Dude this was awesome. So many songs could fit this narrative. I really like your list. Some of my list includes Molly Hatche-Flirtn With Disaster. The Outlaws-Green Grass and High Tides. There are so so many others. Good video.
Molly Hatchet! Love it. Saw them with The Outlaws @ Springfield CC around 1979-80 like a week or so after my first show (Dead). Lots of sick young teens partying just a little too much lol
Brokedown Palace agreed! Standing on the Moon with a uber sincere "I'd rather be with you!" , another closing great.
How much I adore and respect your videos!! It’s like I am watching myself every time I watch them! Couldn’t agree more than Journey :Seperate ways !!! Rest of videos with Randy Rhoads Mr.Crowley ?? Black Sabbath war pigs !?? SRV?? Honestly it’s like we are best friends and we listen from teenagers the same ! Thank you !!!!
Steve Perry is undeniable. Great choice to start off this list, Michael!
For me, I would add Deep Purple- Hush on this list as well as CSNY- Ohio.
By the way, you’re absolutely right about Prince. He is the best of them all!! 🤘🏽🤘🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽🔥🔥🔥
Glad you mentioned Deep Purple - Hush. I was 18 when it was released in 1968 and fortunate enough to see them do it live in St Louis as a senior citizen. Even though the band had gone through many changes by then, they performed Hush exactly as it was originally recorded.
Loved your list. Queen always ended their concerts with We will rock you followed by We are the Champions. My favourite band since I was a kid, would have loved to see them live with Freddie but I saw Queen + Paul Rogers in Hyde Park in 2005, a great show and I got to see Brian May and Roger Talor.
Love Rage Against the Machine and I too was screaming and cursing in their crowd when I was 12, at a concert in 1993 in Iceland. Epic to say the least!
Also a shout out to Prince and Lynyrd Skynyrd, definitely on my list of bands/musicians that I would have want to see live.
Muse - Knights of Cydonia was the best ender on a live show I've been to (so far)
I saw the Allmans end a show with "Whipping Post". The crowd absolutely ate it up- we were singing "Tied to the Whipping Post" and "Good Lord I Feel Like I'm Dyin'" even louder than Gregg was thru the PA. The whole show was incredible- still my number 1 after all these years.
Haven't actually seen him live (which totally SUCKS!), but I'm sure George Thorogood can burn the barn down as good as anyone. He's another of those one of a kind showmen that come to PLAY. (I know- not a stadium act, but Jesus, does he BRING IT live!!)
Run Like Hell and Green Grass and High Tides Forever are solid choices, too. I own both Floyd's Pulse and Hittin the Road (again) Live by The Outlaws and both of those were absolute crowd killers.
Allman Brothers, 3 hour show, with whipping post in the kettle moraine of alpine valley with the fog rolling in just amazing. Oncore, Jessica !
Big Hammond B3 sound, never forget it.
@@a.barker7792 Yep- they were definitely an act that needed to be seen outdoors! That sound was way too big for an inside venue, lol- and it just sounds better outdoors, on a sunny summer afternoon with your best friends- and a huge crowd of the coolest most chill fans ever! (blazed to the gills)
I've seen GeorgeThorogood live. The man was so good at creating a PARTY in the audience,
Saw U2 many times “back in the day” when Bono could still walk through a doorway without his head getting stuck. The Edge and Adam would swap guitars and they’d always close with “40”. One by one they’d leave the stage as the audience just sang the refrain “ How long to sing this song”… great times.
This was my first thought when I saw this video. Amazing way to close a show.
Bono was superhuman live
I remember them closing with that in Los Angeles and we, the audience, kept singing as we left. Some of us were still singing in the parking lot.
I was fortunate to participate in the sing along during the War tour at a sold out show of 4,800 people in 83.
Saw them at the Spectrum in Philadelphia on the Unforgettable Fire tour and everyone was filing out after the concert still singing “40”
As soon as you started describing it, I knew you were talking about Prince, and started crying.
It has to be the most perfect moment in rock.
And I agree... if you haven't seen the NFL film on it, go click on it now
Rock and roll is supposed to be dangerous. I'm going to see Rage at MSG in August. Can't wait! My (past) band played Killing - it was the closer.
I flipping still to this very play renegade of funk at least a couple times a week!!!
To this very day!!! Spellcheck I hate you
If you’re not a musician a don’t think that someone in the crowd said holy hell did you just catch that switch from f major into that minor third on Brian Mayes guitar right then!!!! WTF and I’ve gotta say Mercury and his enthusiasm and stage presence is what had the crowd eating out of his palms!!!! But Brian may is great and I like your breakdowns I’m just giving ya a hard time!! And also where was yellow Ledbetter on this list just saying?!?!?! Doesn’t have to be super classic
I seen Lynerd on July 4, 1976. EPIC ! So grateful 😇
Wasn't that a great show? Saw it a few months before with outlaws and J. Giles
So lonely by The Police, Atlanta 1983. Surely in the top 5. For the generation who missed '77. Andy Summers' succinct epic solo, his harmonics, Steward Copeland's sharp drums driving an ecstatic crowd. And thank you! Other pretenders: 40 by U2 and I'm the Resurrection by the Stone Roses
I saw that concert!
Peter Gabriel's Biko. Manu Katche on drums, the lights coming down, as that primal beat continues until light and sound are extinguished...
Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (running into Run Like Hell depending on the concert). Pulse BluRay has a superb version with restored video and remastered audio. Perfect!
Love your rock passion and musical knowledge; thanks for sharing! I loved the deathly silence and somberness after the Ode to the Last Whale, CSN
I know you can’t show it on here because they block videos, but Pink Floyd “Run Like Hell” from the Pulse concert is amazing! Not to mention their second set was Dark Side beginning to end followed by “Wish You Here”, “Comfortably Numb”, and “Run Like Hell” to close.
FNA! Now that sounds like a very cool show! I never synced up with them while touring. I saw Roger Waters @ Hartford CC in the 80s or 90s lol (too little time)'Pros & Cons of Hitchhiking' A good friend a stage hand then & now explained to me that the band had a quadrophonic sound system so even when in the side nose bleeds you got the sound that was intended, but seemingly always only available near the soundboard. Not sold out so a friend & I went the next & got scalper tix for $15... kind of pricey back then lol
Oops forgot the topic of thread...can't remember either way 😃
I freakin' love this channel!!!!!
I happened to see Springsteen the night after Lennon was shot. He closed the show with a 20 minute version of Twist and Shout with the house lights on. Hard to top that as a show closer.
I saw him the night Lennon was shot . . he was unaware of it at the time but the band knew and they were flat. A real bummer of a night when we got in the car and headed up 95 and turned on Philly FM radio and heard the news. Haven't seen Bruce since.
I was at Hyde park when he played “I saw her standing there” with McCartney, then had the plug pulled during the encore. There was a lot of rock history on stage that night.
Dude, love that you're wearing an Umphrey's Mcgee shirt. That's a band that needs more recognition, they are absolutely killer!
If you don’t love music as much as this dude does, you’re not listening right.
Dude I have been a drummer for 57 years and you are the bomb. Don't stop keep it going
Thanks for the passion Michael, great selection but... Satisfaction by the Stones is setting on fire every concert for half a Century in five continents!! Greetings
AC/DC For those About to Rock, and Springsteen Born to Run....great perennial closing songs.
This brought a tear to my eye. Saw prince in norway, only thing was that my brother never got to experience him! Best concert ever!
Loving this series keep it up!!
I can watch you for hours😁
I play guitar for years not because I m good at it but because I love it.I don t have much music theory knowledge and will never have.When I her your comments , your explaining of details I listen and wonder how I manage to understand it and then suddenly I know why I understand
It s because of what you say with your Eyes, Face reactions that is what all of us who love music have inside us.I cannot explain it in music theory words but what you feel while listening and the little Mimic reactions are more explaining of the magic of music than anthing else.
Keep on rocking
BR
AC/DC "For Those About to Rock, We Salute You." Lead guitar intro, cannon ending. 'Nuff said.
Correct
The Who
Won’t Get Fooled Again
October 20, 2001
The Concert for New York City
Madison Square Garden
Their set on that night in a lot of ways rivals Queen’s performance at Wembley in ‘85. Epic
There last
Absolutely epic!
Give it Away by Red Hot Chili Peppers has been their closer for 30 years and it's phenomenal. Would love to see you break it down in a future vid!
I enjoy your video... Your so into all the details that make these songs. rock on
Genesis. Dance on a volcano transitioning to Los Endos. Truly magical!
Brilliant list Michael, when you said RATM for that last one, sent me straight back to 2000, saw them at Leeds Festival in the UK. Think it also had Foo Fighters and Queens Of The Stone Age as well that weekend. Was in a rare tangle.
For Those About to Rock is the loudest damn thing I ever heard and I was in marching band.
I agree completely 21 years after experiencing that live and I still have a slight ringing in my ears from those guns