No no no no no no: She stood up first between “Cold Day” and “Fruits”; still, eight songs is a long sitdown, even post-stroke. Otherwise, the list is accurate.
Here are a few “poignant” (or not so poignant) addenda:
Lu makes a New Testament allusion after song one, calling her brother Robert the “Prodigal Son.”
Clyde Woodward gave Lu a recipe for “pimento cheese from scratch,” a propos of song five.
We learn before song eight that new guy Jim Oblon hails from NYC, but he declines Lu’s bait of adding to the stock of common sayings like “It will be a cold day in hell before. . .”
Lu hopes before song nine, upon standing, that we haven’t found her “too feeble.”
“Stolen Moments” will definitely be on the next album, she says: so there!
During song twelve, Jim abandons his usual tambourine and rocks out for second half with band.
On song fourteen, Jim is on keys, which I think is a departure from his usual guitar work on that song this tour.
The graduate teaching assistants at the Univ. of Indiana may be on strike, but our Lu shows up for work and does it dutifully!