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Date
  Thursday 2005-05-05 12:00:00 AM
City
  New York, NY, United States of America
Venue
  Hammerstein Ballroom
Attendance
  2,700, Capacity: 2,700
 
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Home  / Live  / Concert Browser  
Thursday 2005-05-05 12:00:00 AM, New York, NY, United States of America







OrderSongNotes
1Love Vigilantes 
2Crystal 
3Regret 
4Hey Now What You Doing 
5Krafty 
6Transmission 
7True Faith 
8Run Wild 
9Jetstreamwith Ana Matronic
10Waiting For The Sirens' Call 
11Bizarre Love Triangle 
12Love Will Tear Us Apart 
13Temptation 
14She's Lost ControlEncore
15AtmosphereEncore
16Blue MondayEncore








From NewOrderOnline.com (mattisland)

Review: New Order, Hammerstein Ballroom,NYC, 5/5/05
from: http://djdurutti.blogspot.com

So, its been 25 years (almost to the day) since Ian Curtis' suicide on the eve of Joy Division's first U.S. Tour. Deprived of the opportunity to see the legendary band then, here we are watching the same musicians (Phil Cunningham in place of Gillian in place of Curtis), all pushing 50, rip through Atmosphere, Transmission and She's Lost Control. And, of course Love Will Tear Us Apart, introduced by Bernard as "a good old fashioned northern sing-a-long" (and the crowd did sing a long). While it felt perfectly natural to sing "dance dance dance to the radio . . ." to the churning Transmission, it was odd, even a bit surreal to see 20-50 somethings bouncing on their toes and ebulliently singing "there's a taste in my mouth as desperation takes hold" to a Joyfull (bad pun intended) version of LWTUA. As Kelefa Sanneh noted in her NY Times review of New Order @ the Coachella Festival on May 2, "it was odd (but not unpleasant) to hear the group bounce through a fast, peppy version of ''Love Will Tear Us Apart.'' Pitchfork's take: "Yes, it was all quite disconcerting, but in a good way. Knee-jerk deference to the canon is for purists I wouldn't want to party with anyway. And neither would New Order. "

And it was a party. A phenomenal party, although I wish they would've included Fine Time or Confusion, and was disappointed that a few of the cutting edge dancefloor classics were performed in straight, album track format (they did stretch out the breaks a bit for True Faith and Bizarre Love Triangle). As you would expect, Blue Monday was the evening's highlight, sounding fresher than ever, embellished w/ Kylie Minogue samples and other effects. Which reminds me just how vital, current and, yes, fresh No's 80's dance tracks sound after all these years. And not just b/c we're in the midst of a glorious early 80's post punk / dance funk revival (eat yr heart out Out Hud, Bloc Party and !!!). No, its more because we've all been hearing New Order's signature sound and innovations in just about every form of alternative dance and electronica that has rocked dancefloors, car stereos, walkman's & (now) iPods from the late 80's through the present. That's part of the reason why NME recently crowned New Order "God-Like Geniuses" (WTF??). New Order hugely influenced, if not created, everything from Madchester and acid house to Detroit techno and trance to indi electronica and contemporary dance funk. But fuck all that . . . it was a joyful, kick-ass show! -- m


Other Reviews:

NewOrderOnline.com (mattisland)
NewOrderOnline.com (Raz Jazza)


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PictureDescriptionAuthor
Ticket
Ticket
NewOrderTicket20050505.jpg
2005-04-16 5:30:00 AM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
32KB
Outside Hammerstein Ballroom
Outside Hammerstein Ballroom
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2005-05-06 12:14:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
1,339KB
Outside Hammerstein Ballroom
Outside Hammerstein Ballroom
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2005-05-06 12:19:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
1,210KB
Inside Hammerstein Ballroom
Inside Hammerstein Ballroom
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2005-05-06 12:21:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Inside Hammerstein Ballroom
Inside Hammerstein Ballroom
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2005-05-06 12:22:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Autocue
Autocue
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2005-05-06 12:22:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Stage
Stage
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2005-05-06 12:23:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Crowd
Crowd
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2005-05-06 12:24:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Crowd
Crowd
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2005-05-06 12:25:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
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2005-05-06 12:26:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Stephen Morris
Stephen Morris
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2005-05-06 12:27:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Bernard Sumner
Bernard Sumner
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2005-05-06 12:29:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
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2005-05-06 12:30:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
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2005-05-06 12:31:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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New Order
New Order
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Peter Hook & WenOrder
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Stephen Morris
Stephen Morris
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2005-05-06 12:38:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Bernard Sumner
Bernard Sumner
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2005-05-06 12:39:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
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2005-05-06 12:40:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Peter Hook
Peter Hook
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2005-05-06 12:41:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
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2005-05-06 12:46:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Stephen Morris
Stephen Morris
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2005-05-06 12:47:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Peter Hook
Peter Hook
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2005-05-06 12:48:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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Bernard Sumner
Bernard Sumner
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2005-05-06 12:49:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
1,128KB
Peter Hook
Peter Hook
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2005-05-06 12:51:00 PM
by Nicolas LeBlanc
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