Thanx Caracas for a beautiful evening! We had a blast playing under the dark blue sky!!! And thanx for singing along and making us feel like the biggest band on earth!
Couldn’t play any songs from Travelling due to the fact that the soundcheck got cancelled! Nevertheless, the band is an unstoppable monster right now and kicked ass even after a five week break (that’s what being on the road for more than a year does to you…)! Had some problems with the Chinese customs leaving Shanghai, lots of things were missing when our equipment arrived in Venezuela. Guitar stuff, a computer, all Marie’s jewellery, even Pelle’s sneakers……. Thanx for coming to the show, dear Venezuela-fans, see you soon we’re sure…. one way or another!!!! Luv, P&M&Co
Setlist
01. Dressed For Success
02. Sleeping In My Car
03. The Big L.
04. Wish I Could Fly
05. Stars
06. She’s Got Nothing On (But The Radio)
07. Perfect Day
08. Things Will Never Be The Same
09. It Must Have Been Love
10. 7twenty7
11. Fading Like A Flower
12. Crash!Boom!Bang!
13. How Do You Do!
14. Dangerous
Band Presentation
15. Joyride (introduced by “Caballo viejo)
16. Spending My Time
17. The Look
18. Listen To Your Heart
19. Church Of Your Heart
Live Nation has announced earlier today that Roxette will play in seven major Canadian cities – including previously rumoured Toronto on August 30. Roxette’s “Travelling” is due out in Canada on June 12 and Canadian Tour edition Hits! package on July 17.
Both bands to release Canadian Tour edition hits packages on July 17
1) Ottawa, Ontario, Canada @ Sotianbank Place
Wednesday, August 29
TICKETS (prices from CA$ 34.50 to CA$ 69.50 excluding fees; on sale from April 21)
2) Toronto, Canada @ Molson Amphitheatre
Thursday, August 30
TICKETS (prices from CA $88.50 to CA $116.75 including fees)
3) Montreal, Canada @ Centre Bell
Friday, August 31
Both Marie and Per arrived to Caracas, Venezuela yesterday. The band will come to South America later today. The first concert during this year’s Latin American’s leg is schedules for tomorrow, April 17. Meanwhile extensive promotion takes place – including billboards in the streets of e.g. Cracas and Rosario, Argentina.
The German Abendzeitung München interviewed Per Gessle about “Travelling” – not the album, but indeed travelling. The questions are quite interesting (and so are his answers) so we decided to give you a short translation.
Per Gessle, you are in sunny Stockholm right now. How long?
Per: Not very long. Very soon I leave to my other house on the west coast of Sweden and meet my mother and my brother. We will be together during Easter. Then I am off to South America. For five weeks.
And where have you been the first three months of 2012?
Per: It was an exciting year until now. We have been to Australia. In Southeast Asia. In China. We have never played in Shanghai before. Now I also look forward to South America, although we have been there last year already. But this time we are going to different places. Venezuela, Peru, Argentina, Brasil.
How do you cope with a jetlag?
Per: Good question! You never really get used to the different time zones. It’s not a problem to perform, that’s not exhausting. It’s the opposite. It gives me a lot of energy. It’s travelling, that’s exhausting. The airports, waiting all the time, the long flights and that your inner clock is confused all the time. Australia is 10 hours ahead, in Southeast Asia it’s still seven. That’s much. You need several weeks to get used to that. And now it’s the opposite direction. But hey – that’s life. And it’s fantastic. I can’t really complain.
So you don’t know any tricks to cope with tiredness?
Per: You have to listen to your body. You need your sleep. Especially, when you have to go on stage. Then you really have to be in good shape. I hate medicine. That’s why I never take any sleeping pills on long flights. During the last tour I just slept and ignored all those tips, that you have to stay awake until a certain moment.
What’s happening with you when you’re travelling? How does it change you as a human being?
Per: The world ist damn huge and there’s a variety out there which is just unbelievable. If you come from Shanghai to Stockholm you wonder where all the people are. But if you come from a small town like Halmstad, where I was born, to Stockholm, this town feels too big. Travelling changes your perspective. People around the world have different attitudes and opinions. In China and Scandinavia the politics are completely different. Or compare Lima in Peru with Hongkong? You have to learn how big the world is. And when I travel a lot I really appreciate Sweden a lot more. It’s very clean here, the air isn’t polluted. And then there’s the climate. Well, yes. Not really. Only from May to October. These months are really wonderful. Then there’s a west wind in my hometown, you feel the salt of the sea. Winter is big joke here. So I don’t really care when I am travelling in January.
You like the weather in Sweden?
Per: Not really. Only from May to October. These months are really wonderful. Then there’s a west wind in my hometown, you feel the salt of the sea. Winter is big joke here. So I don’t really care when I am travelling in January.
Where do you sleep best?
Per: At home, of course. We always sleep in great hotels. But they are never as good as the bed at home. In hotels you sometimes wake up and ask yourself where you are, where the bathroom is. I can’t sleep in planes. I don’t really like flying. It’s not that I am afraid, but I don’t feel very well being up in the air.
What do you do in the plane when you can’t sleep?
Per: The plane is a good place to read. At home I barely have time for that. But in the plane I always have books with me. At the moment I read the biography of Bernie Ecclestone. I am a huge fan of Formula 1. On flights I also hear a lot of music. It’s cool that you can take so much of your favourite music with you on an iPod.
Is there anything you always have to have with you?
Per: Nowadays it’s of course a computer that you always carry around. And I actually always have an instrument with me. Mostly a guitar. But I am guy who always starts packing very late. A few hours before I have to go. Even when I am away for a month. My wife always does that one month in advance. I don’t. I have my favourite jeans, my favourite shoes..
You are kind of a hotel expert and own a hotel on your own in Tylösand. When is a hotel a good hotel?
Per: It depends on what you want. For me the first impression is important. The people who work there have to be very friendly. You should feel welcome from the beginning. If you like Spas, that’s important. If you like good food, then the restaurant is important.
And you?
Per: My wife likes Spas. I prefer the studio to work out. I think the staff is important. And a non-smoking room. It’s horrible to come into a room where people have smoked. If that happens I always change the room. I don’t need a big suite. I hate it, when they upgrade me to the “Präsidentensuite” (I really don’t know the English word right since I am in a hurry, it’s the biggest suite in a hotel). I don’t want to play tennis in my hotel room. I always close all the doors and stay in my bedroom. If you’re alone you really don’t need more than one room.