Extreme Brings Their Thicker Than Blood Tour to Foxwoods Casino

Between gamblers playing slot machines and Black Jack, fans crowded into the sold-out Great Cedar Showroom at Foxwoods Casino for the veteran rock band Extreme. The band is on the Thicker Than Blood Tour, supporting their new record, Six. This is the second show for the band after the tour kicked off at the Bergan Performing Arts Center in Englewood, New Jersey.

Extreme was founded in 1985 in Malden, Massachusetts and is made up of Gary Cherone on lead vocals, Nuno Bettencourt on guitar,  Pat Badger on the bass guitar and Kevin Figueiredo on the drums. 

Prior to Extreme taking the stage, the New York City native band, Living Colour warmed up the crowd for a 45-minute set. Like Extreme, Living Colour was founded in the mid-1980s and has produced classic hits like “Cult of Personality,” and “Glamour Boys.”

Living Colour is comprised of guitarist Vernon Reid, Doug Wimbish on the bass guitar, and Will Calhoun from the Bronx, on drums with fellow New Yorker, Corey Glover on lead vocals.

For the entire 45 minutes, Living Colour produced a powerful and memorable set that included eight songs. During the last song of the band’s performance, as they blasted into the aforementioned “Cult of Personality,” Glover hopped off the stage and walked into the crowd while belting out the lyrics to the song. The crowd erupted as Glover walked up and down each section of the theater, stopping for photos with fans and high-fiving concertgoers. Living Colour did a phenomenal job getting the crowd ready for Extreme.

As the clock ticked to 9 p.m., the houselights dimmed as the Extreme banner raised behind Figueiredo’s drum kit. With the blue spotlights on them, the band jumped right into “It (‘s a Monster)” off of the band’s most successful record, 1990’s Extreme II: Pornograffitti.

Throughout the entirety of the band’s set, they incorporated music from their entire discography starting with their self-titled debut record up until their most recent record. While storming through each song, Figueiredo was a man possessed on the drums. His kit didn’t stand a chance as he belted away throughout each song providing chest-thumping beats. 

Fans who came to the show on the chilly Friday night were certainly in for a treat as Extreme played for two whole hours. At one point of the set, Figueiredo brought out a mini drum kit as the band embarked on a mini, two-song acoustic set that featured the beautiful ballads “Other Side of the Rainbow,” and “Hole Hearted.”

Even during the band’s acoustic set, there was still so much energy. Throughout the night Cherone slithered and stretched his way around the stage as Badger plucked at his bass guitar during Bettencourt’s shredding solos. It’s widely known that one of Bettencourt’s heroes was the late Eddie Van Halen and Bettencourt paid homage by playing the intro to Van Halen’s “Women In Love…” while saying “Happy Birthday Eddie.”

It was extremely impressive how each band member was able to work off one another and how they each complimented the other. The band’s stage presence and their comradery were visible from the stage and the smiles they had and the laughs they shared were heartwarming.

Each song that Extreme played was magical in its own way and it felt like the band was taking you on a career-spanning journey throughout the show. In between songs the band interacted with fans, joked around and overall gave the fans their money’s worth. 

As the doors flew up at the end of the show and the sound of chips hitting poker tables and slot machines rang in the halls, fans left happy and smiles were shared all around as one of the most hard-working bands in rock and roll right now performed another mind-blowing show.

Living Colour Setlist: Middle Man, Leave It Alone, Ignorance Is Bliss, Open Letter (to a Landlord), White Lines (Don’t Do It)/Apache/The Message, Glamour Boys, Love Rears Its Ugly Head, Cult of Personality

Extreme Setlist: It (‘s a Monster), Decadence Dance, #Rebel, Rest In Peace, Hip Today, Teacher’s Pet/Flesh ‘n’ Blood/Wind Me Up/Kid Ego, Play With Me, Other Side of the Rainbow, Hole Hearted, Drum Solo/Money Maker, Cupid’s Dead, Am I Ever Gonna Change, Thicker Than Blood, Midnight Express, Hurrican, More Than Words, Banshee, Take Us Alive/That’s All Right, Flight of the Bumblebee, Women In Love… (intro) Get The Funk Out, Small Town Beautiful/Song for Love, Rise

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