GEORGE LYNCH Joins DOKKEN For Three Classics At Waterloo, NY Show; Fan-Filmed Video Avauilable | News @ METAL.RADIO.FM
Sunday, 22 December 2024 20:49

GEORGE LYNCH Joins DOKKEN For Three Classics At Waterloo, NY Show; Fan-Filmed Video Avauilable



dokkengeorge lynchhard rock
16:00 Monday, 20 February 2023
GEORGE LYNCH Joins DOKKEN For Three Classics At Waterloo, NY Show; Fan-Filmed Video Avauilable

On February 17th, Dokken performed at Del Lago Resort & Casino in Waterloo, NY. They were joined by former Dokken guitarist George Lynch for three of the band's classics: "Kiss Of Death", "When Heaven Comes Down" and "Tooth And Nail". Fan-filmed video is available below.

On January 27th, Lynch Mob - featuring former Dokken guitarist George Lynch - performed at the Blue Note in Cincinnati, OH. Fan-filmed video of the entire show is available below.

The setlist was as follows:

"She's Evil But She's Mine"
"River of Love"
"When Heaven Comes Down" (Dokken)
"Unchain the Night" (Dokken)
"Street Fightin' Man"
"Voodoo Child (Slight Return)"
"All I Want"
"Into the Fire" (Dokken)
"Testify"
"Sweet Sister Mercy" 
"Lightnin' Strikes Again" (Dokken)
"The Hunter" (Dokken)
"Rain"
"Mr. Scary" (Dokken)
"Wicked Sensation"
"Flesh and Blood" 
"Hell Child"
"Tooth And Nail" (Dokken)

In 2021, guitar legend George Lynch (ex-Dokken) officially dropped his Lynch Mob band name, saying it "has always been problematic, and now it's inexcusable to keep the name." He then started working with a band under the name Electric Freedom. Recent shows in Hinton, OK and Santa Fe, NM however, saw Lynch back in business under the Lynch Mob name.

Speaking with Full In Bloom, Lynch explained why he decided to go back to using the Lynch Mob moniker.

Lynch: "Lynch Mob is just a brand I'd established for decades, obviously... over three decades. Nothing's perfect, and I've gotta just live with the fact that it has some negative connotations that I probably have to continue explaining for the rest of my life, and I don't mind doing that. But it is a brand that I built, and I'm just gonna stick with it. As far as a marketing thing and a brand thing and a business thing and a working thing, and it keeps my band guys working and it keeps the fans happy, it makes sense.

It's a brand. I mean, nobody wants Coke to change their recipe. Just stay the same, and that's what you built over the years. 'Why would you change it?' is a rhetorical question. Why I'm probably not more successful in some ways in my career is because I followed my aspirations musically rather than sometimes being smart about just sticking to the plan (laughs)."





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