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Red Hot Chili Peppers, Post Malone perform at Accor Stadium

The Red Hot Chili Peppers were never going to please everyone when they pleased themselves with a Sydney setlist featuring songs not everyone expected.

Anthony Kiedis, Flea and Chad Smith of Red Hot Chili Peppers, who played in front of a packed Aussie stadium on February 2. Picture: Getty Images
Anthony Kiedis, Flea and Chad Smith of Red Hot Chili Peppers, who played in front of a packed Aussie stadium on February 2. Picture: Getty Images

The Red Hot Chili Peppers were never going to please everyone when they pleased themselves with a Sydney setlist featuring seven new songs.

While their opening Accor Stadium concert setlist pulled together songs stretching from 1989 to 2022, fans were divided about the band devoting a third of the show to tracks from last year’s Unlimited Love and Return Of The Dream Canteen albums.

The Chili Peppers are renowned for cycling new works into their tours, yet some concertgoers complained on social media about a third of the set featuring more recent tracks.

But as the band turns 40 this year, they staunchly refuse to become a jukebox band on this current Global Stadium tour.

They also appeared to offer confirmation the secret to eternal youth may lie in a life devoted to rock‘n’roll with their first Sydney stadium show on Thursday.

The dynamic antics of 60-year-olds Anthony Kiedis and Flea – and their older bandmate Chad Smith and younger guitarist John Frusciante – encouraged more than 60,000 people at Accor Stadium to party like it was the ’90s again.

“What’s up kids?” bare-chested bassist Flea asked their adoring fans after the band had delivered a blistering “Can’t Stop”.

Red Hot Chili Peppers Anthony Kiedis on stage for their first concert at Accor Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Red Hot Chili Peppers Anthony Kiedis on stage for their first concert at Accor Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park. Picture: Jonathan Ng

Frontman Kiedis, kitted in a black mesh top for the first few songs before going topless, sounded as fit as he looked.

And powerhouse drummer Smith is relentless and commanding at his kit.

Anthony Kiedis belts out some classics on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Anthony Kiedis belts out some classics on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Anthony Kiedis on stage. Picture: WireImage
Anthony Kiedis on stage. Picture: WireImage

The gig had that feeling this was indeed a renaissance for a band who exploded to global domination with the release of their 1991 record Blood Sugar Sex Magik.

The Chili Peppers were indisputably red hot as they jammed, defiantly defying the scripted conventions of the modern concert as they did their own thing.

Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea on stage at Accor Stadium. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea on stage at Accor Stadium. Picture: Jonathan Ng

The return of Frusciante after he quit the band in 2009, a supremely innovative musician hailed as one of the greatest guitarists of his generation, has clearly reinvigorated the band.

They released two new albums in six months last year and both were given their due in the era-spanning setlist.

Red Hot Chili Peppers at Accor Stadium: Picture: Jonathan Ng
Red Hot Chili Peppers at Accor Stadium: Picture: Jonathan Ng
Flea rocking with his guitar. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Flea rocking with his guitar. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Chad Smith on stage for the band’s first concert at Accor Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Chad Smith on stage for the band’s first concert at Accor Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park. Picture: Jonathan Ng

While their diehard fans may have preferred the old stuff to the new stuff, instead of leading the charge for the bar when they played “Eddie”, their sonic tribute to the late legendary founder of Van Halen, there was a loud chorus of cheers and applause.

The frustrations experienced by many fans who had been stuck in long traffic jams or on delayed train services fell away.

But let’s face it. While the new songs fit comfortably within their extensive catalogue, it was the classics which drew the most engagement, throwbacks like “Nobody Weird Like Me” and “Throw Away Your Television”, “Californication” and then “By The Way” and “Give It Away” to bring it home.

Crowd enjoying the Red Hot Chili Peppers gig. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Crowd enjoying the Red Hot Chili Peppers gig. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Chad Smith on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Chad Smith on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Flea was rocking out on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng
Flea was rocking out on stage in Sydney. Picture: Jonathan Ng

The Chili Peppers’ full court assault was in stark contrast to the solo yet no less stadium-worthy opening performance by Post Malone, an artist who commands the pop zeitgeist.

He sounded brilliant as he ran through a hits-only set, complete with fireworks and pyro, a luxury for an opening act in twilight.

Post Malone opened for Red Hot Chili Peppers: Picture: Supplied
Post Malone opened for Red Hot Chili Peppers: Picture: Supplied

The Red Hot Chili Peppers and Post Malone perform at Accor Stadium on Saturday.

For all dates, livenation.com.au

The Red Hot Chili Peppers setlist, Accor Stadium, February 2

Intro Jam

Can’t Stop

The Zephyr Song

Here Ever After

Snow (hey oh)

Eddie

Throw Away Your Television

Reach Out

Soul To Squeeze

Nobody Weird Like Me

These Are The Ways

The Heavy Wing

Tippa My Tongue

Californication

Pea

The Drummer

Black Summer

By The Way

Encore

Sir Psycho Sexy

They’re Red Hot (Robert Johnson cover)

Give It Away

Originally published as Red Hot Chili Peppers, Post Malone perform at Accor Stadium

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Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/entertainment/music/red-hot-chili-peppers-post-malone-perform-at-accor-stadium/news-story/671c6a0d2b6b29127e97eb3e7368137a