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THE DIVINE FEMININE MERCH FULL
“We love you and we will see you all tomorrow night in Houston.”Ĭheck out clips of each set opener and the full setlist below: “Dallas! Thank you for making our return to Texas so special,” the band wrote afterwards. Set two tipped its cap to Dallas’ nearby, historic Deep Elem neighborhood with a “Deep Elem Blues” (their first since 2019), before sinking into the evening’s most expansive segment: “Help on the Way”> “Slipknot!”> “Franklin’s Tower”> “The Other One”> “Drums”> “Space”> “Cumberland Blues.”Īfter “Death Don’t Have No Mercy” and “Sugar Magnolia,” the band comforted their audience once more, hammering home their pursuit of personal freedom with a “Liberty” encore. From there, the concept of the divine feminine continued with “Bertha,” “Queen Jane Approximately,” “Brown-Eyed Women,” “Peggy-O,” “Cassidy” and a closing “Sugaree.” In turn, Dead & Company’s Dallas show immediately acknowledged the state’s political tension, with a “Man Smart, Woman Smarter” opener. He and his wife marched with a sign reading, “Texas: Where a virus has reproductive rights and women don’t.” Successful litigants can collect at least $10,000.”īob Weir has been vocally against the ruling, even participating in a women’s march in San Francisco earlier this month.

14, nodding to the state’s recent anti-abortion ruling with a full set of women-themed songs, as well as new merchandise emblazoned with a feminist icon and the phrase “Save Our Rights.”Īccording to the Austin American Statesman, the law – which is currently under debate in the Texas court of appeals – “prohibits abortions after six weeks of pregnancy,” making it the most restrictive law of its kind in the U.S.ĭisturbingly, the law also “allows any private individuals to sue abortion providers or those who aid or abet abortions in violation of the law. Dead & Company pulled no punches in Dallas on Oct.
