The Melissa Etheridge setlist for the “Rise Tour” has been revealed. Melissa Etheridge is known for powerful rock vocals, emotional songwriting, and live shows that feel both personal and energetic. Her concerts usually move between bigger sing-along songs, slower emotional moments, and the kind of tracks that let her voice really take over the room. That balance is a big reason her live shows connect so strongly with the audience. The Rise Tour is expected to carry that same feel, with a set that blends the songs fans know best with newer material.
What is the setlist for Melissa Etheridge’s Rise Tour set?
The following is what Melissa Etheridge is expected to play in her setlist for the Rise Tour. This is based on the first few shows from the run, where the bigger crowd favorites and the songs that fit the stronger stage moments have been showing up most often. A few other songs can still move around depending on the city, the way the show is paced, and what feels right for the mood of that night. That gives a pretty clear idea of the kind of set fans are likely to hear on the tour. As always, this expected setlist is subject to change.
- Don’t You Want a Woman
- Bring Me Some Water / No Souvenirs
- Matches
- Let me go / Angels Would Fall
- Tomboy
- If I Wanted To / SimilarFeatures
- To Be a Woman
- All the Way to Heaven
- Rise
- I Want to Come Over
- I’m the Only One
- Bein’ Alive
- Come to My Window
- Like the Way I do
- More Love
Once the concert begins, the feel of the set can still shift a little from night to night. If the crowd gets especially loud during one of the bigger songs, she might stay in that stronger mood for another track before slowing things down. Some songs can also move because they sit better with the way the instruments and stage moments are lining up that night. On top of that, Melissa may simply feel that a different song belongs in that spot and change it in the moment. Those kinds of small switches help the show feel more alive and less exactly the same every night.
The Rise Tour fits her live style really naturally because her shows already move between emotional songs and stronger rock moments so well. The songs people always wait for are likely to stay as the big anchors of the night, while the newer tracks help the set feel fresh without changing its overall warmth. That mix usually makes the whole concert feel easy to follow and emotionally satisfying by the end.
