Welcome to the official vault of Bonnie’s Mixtape and the backbone of a media empire in the making. Here’s where every show lives on: the iconic shots, the unfiltered reviews, the late-night magic, and the moments you can’t capture unless you’re right there in it.
This collection is curated, crafted, and powered by the lens and voice behind BonniesMixtape.com — and it’s only growing from here. Dive into the seasons, relive the shows, and get a front-row pass to the rise of a rock-and-roll powerhouse.
Wolf Alice took the stage in near darkness, the crowd erupting before a single note was played. They opened with a slow-burn track, Ellie Rowsell’s voice delicate and haunting, harmonies stretching across the venue like something apocalyptic, weaving into the bones of everyone packed inside.
Roger Daltrey gave everything he had to every song, his voice carrying the weight of five decades of rock history. Pete Townshend, with his trademark windmill guitar strums, sunglasses, and blazer, looked effortlessly cool—an icon still commanding the stage like no one else can.
In full tour mode, Kings of Leon kicked off the night with “Ballerina Radio,” igniting the crowd and setting the tone for a night full of sing-alongs. The band wasted no time, mixing tracks from their new album *Please Can We Have Fun* with their greatest hits. By the fourth song, “On Call,” the entire venue was in full sing-along mode, which continued through “Manhattan” and “Nowhere to Run,” as the energy in the crowd surged.
When Amos Lee tells the audience, “I got you and I am gonna play all the shit I love,” hang on because he means it! Amos came out on fire, despite confessing a previous night of insomnia. His Boston fans welcomed him with open arms as he hit the stage with his incredible band, performing his new release “Hold on Tight” along with crowd favorites like “Windows are Rolled Down” and “Keep it Loose, Keep it Tight.”
From the moment frontman Patrick Murphy stepped onstage, the energy was unstoppable. True to form, Murphy brought his quick wit and irreverent banter, weaving jokes between songs and working the stage like a seasoned showman. But Gaelic Storm has always balanced fun with real musical heart—and Friday night was no exception.
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