I got to see the setlist after the show thanks to someone who had taken it from the stage, and, despite my lack of expertise about Beam’s repertoire, I got the songs’ titles, most of them from the upcoming album of course.
‘Tree by the river’ sounded like a folky upbeat melody, very 70s-inspired, with flute, trumpet, saxophones, and even female vocals, a sort of nostalgic-retro adventure, whereas ‘Big Burned Hand’ had curiously some elements of funk, something I totally did not expected from Iron and Wine; it was probably because of many things, but that sax and wobbling keyboard combination was adding a Stevie Wonder feeling to the whole thing.
He also sang older songs from his 2007 ‘The Shepherd’s Dog’ album, ‘Boy with a coin’, an almost jazzy part, and ‘House by the sea’, which had a tropical beat which totally turned African when the saxs began their part, and ‘My lady’s house’ from a 2005 EP ‘Woman King’, during which he laid down his guitar and only crooned with his smooth and melodious voice
‘I thought it would be a good idea to play every other song on a different tuning, it’s a lot of fun’, he said as he was changing his guitar before each song.
A beautiful thing was happening on ‘Half Moon’, when the doo-wop backup vocals were repeating themselves and his voice was floating above, whereas ‘Me and Lazarus’ seemed much more experimental with its weird electronic sounds, and ‘Rabbit Will Run’, with its slow and quiet start, became a long epic maze of layered sounds, jazzy guitars and keyboards, sad horns, mixed with melancholic vocals.
We were quite far from the calm and acoustic songs of ‘Our Endless Numbered Days’, his 2004 album, the sound is fuller and bigger, but I am not the one who will complain.
Setlist:
Tree by the river
Big Burned Hand
House by the sea
Half Moon
Boy with a coin
My Lady’s house
Me and Lazarus
Rabbit Will Run
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTIiH41seTw&w=500&h=390]

