Elsewhere, rousing recent single Use My Voice is given an emotional introductory speech, while Amy uses Bring Me To Life to draw attention to the felt-absence of the crowd. “This isn’t going to be quite the same without you guys all singing back to me,” she says beforehand. While it’s true that nothing can replace the ecstatic power of band/audience interaction, there is something to compensate for it. Quite frankly, the sight of The Bitter Truth producer Nick Raskulinecz air drumming and miming the whole way through their 2003 anthem is worth the price of admission alone. We see you, Nick. We see you.
As the set comes into its home strait, Amy declares her intention to “shift gears” and moves over to an acoustic piano. First comes a gorgeous solo rendition of Lost In Paradise – one of the finest songs in their canon. What’s truly impressive isn’t just the notes Amy hits, but rather the way she inhabits the feeling of the words. Through its elegant, slowburn passages, she delivers the lyrics as if she’s coming up with the words on the spot, rather than merely reciting them. It’s a stunning, vulnerable performance that sets up the poignant closing cover of Portishead’s Glory Box.
Given that this is but a nine-song set, there are obviously some big tracks missing, not least their compelling new single Yeah Right which sees Evanescence surprisingly tapping into the same kind of electro-glam stomp Goldfrapp practiced circa 2003. In truth, though, it wouldn’t have fit. This brilliantly conceived set isn’t concerned with ticking every box, it’s about capturing a particular mood. Evanescence present a collection of songs that speak to the particular pressures, agonies and hopes of the here are now. And it’s spectacular.