1:40:49
Hall & Oates – Full Concert
Recorded Live: 12/11/1976 – Capitol Theatre (Passaic, NJ)
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Setlist:
0:00:00 – Back Together Again
0:05:03 – Rich Girl
0:08:24 – Crazy Eyes
0:11:15 – Do What You Want, Be What You Are
0:19:12 – Lady Rain
0:25:21 – Falling
0:33:32 – Carmelia
0:37:25 – You’re Much Too Soon (Incomplete)
0:42:04 – Is It A Star
0:52:09 – Laughing Boy / I’m Just A Kid
1:02:08 – Sara Smile
1:09:16 – She’s Gone
1:15:24 – Abandoned Luncheonette
1:21:56 – Ennui On The Mountain
1:26:42 – Gino The Manager
1:30:06 – Room To Breathe / Jonny Gore & The “C” Eaters (incomplete)
Personnel:
Daryl Hall – vocals, keyboards
John Oates – vocals, guitar
Todd Sharp – lead guitar
David Kent – keyboards, bg vocals
Charlie DeChant – saxophone, keyboards, percussion, bg vocals
Stephen Dees – bass, bg vocals
Eddie Zyne – drums
Summary:
Rarely does a band suddenly achieve massive global success on their ninth album, but such was the case with Daryl Hall & John Oates. After nearly a decade of relentless touring and modest success, Hall and Oates began veering toward a cleaner, more pop-oriented sound that would begin dominating the charts at the dawn of the 1980s.
Recorded in the middle of that first developmental decade of their career, when Hall and Oates headlined a 5th Anniversary celebration at Passaic New Jersey’s Capitol Theatre, this recording captures the group shortly after the release of their fifth album, Bigger Than Both of Us. Leaning toward a cleaner, more pop-oriented sound, this album would strike pay dirt with “Rich Girl,” the group’s first single release to hit the #1 spot on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart.
Performing a wide range of material from their early catalogue, the group is still defining their sound, vacillating between folk, soul, rock and pop. Riding on the success of their first #1 single, but not yet swaggering with the overconfidence of becoming the most popular act in America, this live recording captures Hall and Oates during a rapidly evolving point in their careers, when they were just beginning to define their vision of blue-eyed soul, but still several years prior to that vision reaching full fruition.