The above setlist is incorrect because Mike Bones busted a string shredding so hard on Dogie, he had to exit the stage to go restring. Cass and Betancourt did Missionary Bell then Bones and Vaughn rejoined on stage to carry on with Home At Last.
Priestess
Miss Mabee
Asphodel
Dogie
Missionary bell (Cass acoustic with bass accompaniment)
Home at last (Cass acoustic)
Peace (Cass acoustic)
Juvenile (Cass on keys)
Trains (Cass on keys)
Mother and father (Cass on keys)
Meet me here at dawn (Cass on keys, accompaniment with Meg Duffy on guitar with pill bottle slide)
Big wheel
Music is blue
Opium flower
Bum bum bum
Sleeping volcanoes
Encore:
County line
That's That
Setlist courtesy of me! It was Betancourt’s. I grabbed it off the stage at the conclusion of the encore. Early in the show I could tell it said That’s That would be the last song of the encore and I was beside myself with excitement — every song is my favorite song but that one is really one of my favorites. I also really, really appreciated Mother and Father… that one reminds me of late 2009 when my mom came to live with me in San Francisco and I was working on the poems in my MFA thesis. I would stay up late to grab the only alone time I could, listening to that song on my headphone over and over in the dark living room. Unlike the speaker of the song, I still had my mom and what a heavy burden to accept her into my home at age 26 after being estranged from her most of my teenage years. Library doors are locked… I could relate to this when I lived in Amsterdam and had no where to go, and now I see it every day at my work.
Speaking of my work, I had made about 15 earthday poetry zines at my bimonthly zine social the evening of the show, and I had brought them to give to the band. I successfully handed them off to Meg from Hand Habits at the merch table and they said they would make sure they got distributed around! The next night in Los Angeles Meg said they’d loved the zines. After Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Humble Bee and by me! Kelci M. Kelci.