Current:Home > reviewsShania Twain joins Foo Fighters at Austin City Limits Music Festival: 'Take it, Shania!' -ProfitLogic
Shania Twain joins Foo Fighters at Austin City Limits Music Festival: 'Take it, Shania!'
View
Date:2025-04-12 01:39:59
AUSTIN, Texas − You kinda figured ‘ol Dave Grohl would pull a fast one.
Famous for onstage surprises, he and the Foo Fighters welcomed fellow Austin City Limits Music Festival headliner and country legend Shania Twain up to sing “Best of You” just after her concurrent set across Zilker Park wrapped Saturday night.
“She took a golf cart all the way up here,” Grohl said of Twain, who wore silver sequins and fire-red hair.
It was loose and fun, with lots of “Take it, Shania!” moments where Grohl would suddenly cede the spotlight and she’d do that great “Has someone taken your faith? It's real, the pain you feel” breakdown.
Beforehand, through 18 songs, and more playful riffing via half-baked covers of “Sabotage,” the longtime act relished its role as an inter-generational genre bridge and as preachers of the sonic gospel. Grohl has spoken about the need for rock to be relatable and accessible to fans − the punk royalty present in this band is astonishing − and as an arena mainstay seems to live for breaking decorum and inviting strangers up to play guitar, which he famously did in Austin back in 2018.
But dear Dave, please never play “My Hero” as a ballad again. You do that a lot and it’s excruciating.
“My Hero” is a vague and corny song that would get laughed out of a Train brainstorming session. Gavin McGraw would be like “No thanks, I’m good.” Yet it also has the best drum intro in rock history, propelling its seventh-grade-level guitar tabs.
Review:Queen and Adam Lambert kick off tour with pomp, vigor and the spirit of Freddie Mercury
The Foo Fighters are a drummer-first band, after all. The emotion and joy of their music comes from behind the kit. The Foos are drummer royals who have featured the best since 1995. Drum nerds can tell the difference between Grohl’s punk-paced pummeling and songs featuring the late Taylor Hawkins, who was a Neil Peart disciple and expanded the pocket to make it rich with fills, rolls and splash.
Too bad the Foo Fighters played “My Hero” as a lighters-on, sway-with-your-bestie send-up, dedicating the 1997 rock single to their manager of 33 years, whose birthday Grohl said it was. Somber feels. No intro.
Reader, this reporter booed.
The band lost longtime drummer Hawkins when he suddenly died in 2022 while the band was touring South America. He was honored with “Aurora,” a 1999 B-side that Grohl told fans was Hawkins’ favorite. Also, he said, the first they wrote together.
And it was during “Breakout,” also from 1999’s “There Is Nothing Left to Lose,” that the new guy proved he was a ringer, playing a technical, clanging solo. That’d be Josh Freese, a session guy who played drums on “She Hates Me” by Puddle of Mudd and Evanescence’s “Bring Me to Life.” (As well as live with Bruce Springsteen, Guns N' Roses, Lana Del Rey, The Vandals and Sting.)
Grohl called him “the man that made this possible.”
Review:U2 brings swagger, iconic songs to Sphere Las Vegas in jaw-dropping opening night concert
Hawkins was celebrated but proceedings were intentionally joyful and dad air-drumming exuberant. Again, a celebration of rock’s muscular catalog.
“I need to know who you are before we go any further,” Grohl said, testing onlookers with time-tested guitar riffs by Ozzy Osbourne and Metallica.
He concluded, “I think we’ll get along just fine.”
“What’s up ACL, it’s been a while? I feel like last time I was here I had a broken leg,” Grohl said early, calling out the 2015 ACL appearance wherein he performed on a big Foo-branded throne amid an in-season injury.
Saturday marked the Foos’ third ACL headlining slot since 2008. This one closed with “Everlong,” a love song so good (that also runs on fast, hard drumming) it rivals anything Grohl’s played on. It's centered on gratitude, which is why it's so memorable.
“I don’t wanna sing alone,” Grohl said, one of many singalongs he courted the crowd to join. “It’s not Beethoven. It’s pretty easy.”
Foo Fighters' Austin City Limits Music Festival setlist:
"All My Life"
"The Pretender"
"No Son of Mine"
"Learn to Fly"
"Rescued"
"Walk"
"Times Like These"
"Breakout"
"Sabotage" (Beastie Boys cover)
"Blitzkrieg Bop" (Ramones cover)
"Whip It" (Devo cover)
"My Hero"
"This Is a Call"
"The Sky Is a Neighborhood"
"Nothing At All" (with "Blackbird" cover)
"These Days"
"Aurora"
"Monkey Wrench"
"Best of You"
"Everlong"
veryGood! (833)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Bruce Willis' Wife Emma Heming Shares Why She Struggles With Guilt Amid His Health Journey
- Prince’s puffy ‘Purple Rain’ shirt and other pieces from late singer’s wardrobe go up for auction
- Tough housing market is luring buyers without kids and higher incomes
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- More than 180,000 march in France against antisemitism amid Israel-Hamas war
- Travis Kelce Gets the Ultimate Stamp of Approval From Taylor Swift’s BFF Abigail
- High blood pressure? Reducing salt in your diet may be as effective as a common drug, study finds
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Jon Batiste to embark on The Uneasy Tour in 2024, first North American headlining tour
Ranking
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Jana Kramer and Fiancé Allan Russell Reveal Meaning Behind Baby Boy’s Name
- At summit, Biden aims to show he can focus on Pacific amid crises in Ukraine, Mideast and Washington
- 3 hunters dead in Kentucky and Iowa after separate shootings deemed accidental
- Average rate on 30
- Why Jacob Elordi Is Throwing Shade at Ridiculous Kissing Booth Movies
- The Promise and the Limits of the UAW Deals
- Jill Biden tells National Student Poets that poetry feeds a hungry human spirit
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Bobby Berk Leaving Queer Eye After Season 8
High-ranking Mormon leader M. Russell Ballard dies at age 95. He was second-in-line to lead faith
Patrick Mahomes confirms he has worn the same pair of underwear to every single game of his NFL career
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Drake announces new It's All a Blur 2024 concert tour with J. Cole: Tickets, dates, more
Michigan man pleads guilty to making violent threats against Jews
Biden's limit on drug industry middlemen backfires, pharmacists say