Identifier756930
Created AtTue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Media TypeCD-R
Media Count1
Show RatingA
Sound RatingA-
Note"Wild Thing" Though the packaging says otherwise, this show is actually from 1988.
Source InfoSoundboard
Traded FromShroe
Traded From EmailMarvin456@aol.com
Trades Allowed
Performance
Chris Isaak 1991-04-26 The Riviera Theatre, Chicago, IL
Set 1Dancin'
Heart Shaped World
You Owe Me Some Kind of Love
Wicked Game
Gone Ridin'
Wild Love
Don't Make Me Dream About You
Diddley Daddy
In The Heart of the Jungle
Blue Hotel
Caldonia
Jack the Ripper
Wild Thing
Set 2
Set 3
CommentBootleg: "Live 1994"

shroe comments: Though the packaging says 1991, this show is rumored to be from 1988 (and it looks like it from the setlist).

A snippet of a full concert review dated April 29, 1991 (to put to rest any notion that this concert was from 1988):
Source: Chicago Sun-Times - Monday, April 29, 1991
Author: Jae-Ha Kim
Article snippet: "After six years of playing to seemingly the same small group of fans, Chris Isaak made a triumphant return to Chicago, this time as a bonafide pop star...Isaak kicked the concert off with "Dancin,' a single from his 1985 debut LP, "Silvertone." As Kenney Dale Johnson drummed the familiar opening beat, the fans cheered and clapped before Isaak sang his first verse. When he did sing, Isaak's smooth tenor belied the fact that on this tour, where he has few days off between predominantly back-to-back gigs, his vocal cords are getting minimal rest.

While the moody ballad "Wicked Game" received the evening's loudest ovation, Isaak had better songs up his sleeves. He varied his set, nestling the slower numbers in between more rocking songs from his three LPs, throwing in covers of Bo Diddley's "Diddley Daddy," the Troggs' "Wild Thing" and Tom Jones' "Delilah" and unleashing his accordion for a raucous version of "Caldonia." Later, softly strumming a guitar that his elder brother engraved for him, Isaak sang a languidly sensual version of "Blue Spanish Sky." Saxophonist Johnny Reno made his entrance during this song, creating sweet melodies that caressed Isaak's vocals like a cashmere glove."