Fuck me tonight in Aarhus
Lonely housewives want free chat Sex ladies in Aarhus wanting sexual dating.
.jpg)
.jpg)

.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)

.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)

.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
See other girls from Denmark: Whores in Lyngby-Taarbæk, Clinton girls xxx in Horsens, Talk to horny girls free in Helsingor
Lately I seem to find myself attending shows by very well-established artists, the latest being seminal progressive rock band Yes who are currently on their Triple album Europe Tour, the name describing precisely the setup of it. On the tour they are playing three of their most important albums from the 's in their entirety, namely "The Yes Album" from , "Close to the Edge" from and "Going for the One" from My interest in attending tonight is primarily based upon knowing that they are an important name in progressive rock history, and I'm curious to discover if they will be as interesting live in as they were on record in This is also my first time at the venue Train since they refurbished in January and I spend the time before the show wandering about, checking out the new and much more spacious and open interior.
This soon becomes difficult however, as the venue gets incredibly crowded as we approach the time the band is supposed to begin. The stars enter the stage to great applause but only after we've heard nothing less than Igor Stravinsky's "Firebird Suite" accompanying a slide show of pictures that mark the highlights of the band's career on the big screen that fills out the entire backdrop. The same screen is also utilized for announcing the album name and title of every song they play tonight, rendering it essentially unnecessary for any of the band members to address the crowd at any point, but between each album they do us the courtesy of presenting the one that is next with little anecdote-like phrases.
The visuals on the screen distract me majorly in the beginning as they feature relatively harmless images of mountains, galaxies, and shining, meditating figures, but all in an awkward PowerPoint fashion. At one point we are presented with the images of a giant turtle overlaid with pictures of the universe, so it seemingly swims through space, but by then I am luckily caught up in the music and avoid bursting into laughter. They kick off tonight with 's "Close to the Edge".
The exact moment when I stop being distracted and is successfully swooned by the music arrives with the third part, "I Get Up, I Get Down", of the twenty-minute long first song "Close to the Edge", when vocalist Jon Davison lets the strong notes ring clear across the room.