
Due to an unexpected ticket from an unexpected and well-connected friend, I was in attendance at the latest stop on Ghost’s Skeletour 2026 last night, February 20, where the Nameless Ghouls and Papa V Perpetua turned what could have been just another large-room rock show into something approaching a genuine, sweat-soaked, incense-heavy liturgical experience that left me grinning like an idiot for hours afterward and still feeling faintly buzzed the next morning.

The set was a beautifully calibrated thing, opening with the slow-burn grandeur of “Peacefield” that immediately set the tone for the whole evening – those opening chords hitting like a velvet hammer – and then rolling straight into “Lachryma,” which felt sharper and more vicious live than on the record, the whole arena seeming to lean in as the riffs thickened. From there it was a masterclass in dynamics: the brooding pomp of “Spirit,” the anthemic life of “Faith,” “Call Me Little Sunshine” turning into this massive, sing-along catharsis that had even the most stoic floor-section types swaying like they were at some inverted revival meeting. “The Future Is a Foreign Land” landed with real emotional weight, “Devil Church” brought the theatrical instrumental weirdness, “Cirice” absolutely crushed with its slow-build menace, and “Darkness at the Heart of My Love” was an amazing mixture of haunting and tenderness. The whole two-hour set felt like it had actual narrative arc rather than just a string of bangers. Here’s the full setlist:
- Peacefield
- Lachryma
- Spirit
- Per Aspera ad Inferi
- Faith
- Call Me Little Sunshine
- The Future Is a Foreign Land
- Cirice
- Devil Church
- Darkness at the Heart of My Love
- Satanized
- Satan Prayer
- Umbra
- Year Zero
- He Is
- Rats
- Kiss the Go‑Goat
- Mummy Dust
- Monstrance Clock
- Mary on a Cross
- Dance Macabre
- Square Hammer

But listen, dear reader – none of that, not even the pyro, the robes, the masks, the sheer sonic immensity of the Ghouls locked in and delivering, would have mattered half as much if the place had been the usual sea of uplifted rectangles that has turned so many arena shows into a kind of collective digital documentation project instead of a shared, in-the-moment ritual. And here’s the part where I have to say, with genuine, almost embarrassing enthusiasm: Ghost’s decision to enforce a phone-lock policy (those little Yondr pouches handed out at entry, sealed tight, phones trapped until you hit the exit) was the single biggest factor in making the night transcendent rather than merely very good.

For the past twenty years or so, my default stance toward big-venue rock has been one of low-grade disgust bordering on refusal: the spectacle of tens of thousands of people paying premium prices to stand elbow-to-elbow watching a performance through the two-inch screen they’re holding aloft at arm’s length, half-trying to film it, half-trying to live it, but mostly succeeding at neither. The result is always this weirdly depersonalized event where everyone’s simultaneously present and absent, recording proof-of-attendance instead of actually attending, and the band ends up playing to a forest of tiny glowing screens rather than to faces. It’s exhausting, it’s tragic, it’s the opposite of what live music is supposed to be about.
Last night, though? None of that. The policy was standard – phones locked away, small bags screened, no sneaking – yet the execution felt almost revolutionary in its simplicity and effectiveness. And crucially, they didn’t just lock you down and leave you there; they had designated “cell phone use” zones out on the patios, little outdoor holding pens where you could step outside, get your device unlocked by staff, doomscroll or text or whatever for a song or two, then re-lock and return. It was smooth, it was civilized, it was – dare I say – almost elegant in how un-intrusive it managed to be while still solving the problem. No one seemed pissed about it; people just adapted, and the result was an audience that was actually watching the show, eyes up, bodies moving, voices raised in unison instead of thumbs poised for the record button.

I can’t overstate how much that changed everything. The energy in the room was feral and focused and communal in a way arena gigs almost never are anymore. You could feel the collective attention sharpen during the quiet moments, swell during the choruses, crest when the lights hit just right. No forest of phones meant no visual distraction, no low-level resentment bubbling under the surface, no sense that half the crowd was more interested in content than experience. It was just…people, together, losing their minds to music that demands to be felt in real time.

So yeah: this Skeletour stop was the best large-scale rock show I’ve seen in decades, not just because Ghost were firing on all cylinders (they were), but because the band and venue together managed to strip away the single most annoying, soul-deadening element of modern arena concerts and let the ritual breathe. If every big act adopted this approach tomorrow, I’d start going to more of them again without hesitation. As it stands, I’m still riding the high, replaying “Lachryma” in my head, and quietly plotting how to finagle tickets to whatever they do next. Ghost didn’t just put on a phenomenal concert—they restored my faith in the live music experience itself.

N.P.: “Faith” – Ghost






