Saturday night’s storms (which knocked down power lines and trees,
killing a man in Forest Park) also meant it was a rough night for outdoor shows. Governors Ball
ended early, cutting several artists from the lineup, and less than four miles away from Flushing Meadows Corona Park at Forest Hills Stadium, there was also a shortened night for
Bright Eyes. It was the third and final show of their celebration of 21 years of their albums 2005
I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning and
Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, although they were ultimately only able to play the former before the venue was evacuated because of the approaching storm (
Built to Spill also had their set, which was to have been between Bright Eyes’ two album sets, cut). I was definitely bummed to miss
Digital Ash, but the
Wide Awake set was a glorious reminder of the album’s status as a modern classic.
Bright Eyes are still making vital music — their most recent album, 2024’s
Five Dice, All Threes, was one of our
favorites of that year — but 2005 may have been the height of their mainstream popularity and critical acclaim, especially off the strength of the folk-inspired
Wide Awake. 21 years later, it remains just as relevant (although who knew in 2005 that the advent of the iPhone two years later would soon make the idea of getting lost on the way from the East Village to Brooklyn basically obsolete?), and timeless love song “First Day of My Life” and the haunting “Lua” (which has, since its release, been covered by the likes of
Mac Miller and Kevin Devine, among others) have lost none of their shine. Also hitting just as hard in 2026 are the political references on
Wide Awake, and the talk of wars fought over nothing got some of the biggest cheers of the night. “Poison Oak,” meanwhile, may be
Wide Awake‘s emotional peak, and I wasn’t the only one crying during it on Saturday night.
Emmylou Harris’ harmony vocals on “We Are Nowhere and It’s Now,” “Another Travelin’ Song,” and “Land Locked Blues” are one of the many highlights of
Wide Awake on record, and while she hasn’t appeared at any of these shows in person to reprise that contribution, Nashville-based singer-songwriter
Emma Ogier has been performing them in her place, and sounding fantastic in the process. Another memorable touch: bookending the
Wide Awake set were a group of children dressed in white running onstage, first dressed as parts of a plane, a lightning bolt, and clouds to act out the plane crash in the intro to “At the Bottom of Everything,” and later in safety vests and hard hats, wielding bats, to smash toy instruments at the end of “Road to Joy.”
For those who weren’t there in person, the show also
streamed live on Veeps. Check out pictures and a video clip below.
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
Bright Eyes (photo by Amanda M Hatfield)
SETLIST: BRIGHT EYES @ FOREST HILLS STADIUM, 6/6/2026 At the Bottom of Everything We Are Nowhere and It’s Now Old Soul Song (for the New World Order) Lua Train Under Water First Day of My Life Another Travelin’ Song Land Locked Blues Poison Oak Road to Joy
Continue reading...