All Hope Is Gone World Tour - Set Lists

Set Lists

Mayhem Festival
  • "Surfacing"
  • "The Blister Exists"
  • "Get This"
  • "Before I Forget"
  • "Disasterpiece"
  • "Psychosocial"
  • "The Heretic Anthem"
  • "Prosthetics"
  • "Duality"
  • "People = Shit"
Encore
  • "(sic)"
  • "All Hope Is Gone"

Note: "All Hope is Gone" was played once as an addition to the set list.

2008
  • "Surfacing"
  • "The Blister Exists"
  • "Get This"
  • "Before I Forget"
  • "Liberate"
  • "Disasterpiece"
  • "Dead Memories"
  • "Psychosocial"
  • "The Heretic Anthem"
  • "Prosthetics"
  • "Spit It Out
  • "Duality"
  • "Only One"
Encore
  • "People = Shit"
  • "(sic)"

Note: The following songs were occasionally added to the set list: "Eyeless", "Eeyore" and "Pulse of the Maggots"

2009
  • "(sic)"
  • "Eyeless"
  • "Wait and Bleed"
  • "Get This"
  • "Before I Forget"
  • "Sulfur"
  • "The Blister Exists"
  • "Dead Memories"
  • "Left Behind"
  • "Disasterpiece"
  • "Purity" (until May 5) / Vermilion" (from May 5 onwards)
  • "Psychosocial"
  • "Everything Ends"
  • "Duality"
  • "People = Shit"
Encore
  • "Surfacing"
  • "Spit It Out"

Note: In addition to the set list, the band played "Me Inside" "The Heretic Anthem" several times at the start of the winter US leg and "Snuff" occasionally towards the end of the final US leg.

Read more about this topic:  All Hope Is Gone World Tour

Famous quotes containing the words set and/or lists:

    In public buildings set aside for the care and maintenance of the goods of the middle ages, a staff of civil service art attendants praise all the dead, irrelevant scribblings and scrawlings that, at best, have only historical interest for idiots and layabouts.
    George Grosz (1893–1959)

    Most of our platitudes notwithstanding, self-deception remains the most difficult deception. The tricks that work on others count for nothing in that very well-lit back alley where one keeps assignations with oneself: no winning smiles will do here, no prettily drawn lists of good intentions.
    Joan Didion (b. 1934)