Alice Cooper Alice's Attic Tour Setlist
(Photo by Gary Miller/Getty Images)

Alice Cooper Alice’s Attic Tour Setlist



The Alice Cooper setlist for “Alice’s Attic Tour” has been revealed. Alice Cooper is known for turning concerts into full theatrical performances, mixing hard rock with horror-style staging, characters, and dark humor. His shows usually feel like a mix of rock concert and stage production, with songs tied closely to what is happening visually. That’s a big part of why his live sets feel so distinct. Alice’s Attic Tour is expected to keep that same spirit, with a set built around classic staples and songs that fit the tour’s theatrical mood.

What songs are on the Alice Cooper Alice’s Attic Tour setlist?

The following is what Alice Cooper is expected to play in his setlist for Alice’s Attic Tour. This is based on how the early shows have played out, where a pattern is already starting to emerge in how the set is being built. The bigger classics seem to anchor the night, while other songs are placed around the theatrical pacing of the show. From those first few dates, there’s already a good sense of how the show is likely to play out. As always, this expected setlist is subject to change.

  1. Hello, Hooray (Judy Collins cover)
  2. Who Do You Think We Are
  3. Spark in the Dark
  4. No More Mr. Nice Guy
  5. House of Fire
  6. Billion Dollar Babies
  7. I’m Eighteen
  8. Muscle of Love
  9. Feed My Frankenstein
  10. Dirty Diamonds
  11. Caught in a Dream
  12. Hey Stoopid
  13. Dangerous Tonight
  14. Poison
  15. Guitar Solo (Anna Cara)
  16. Brutal Planet
  17. Ballad of Dwight Fry
  18. Cold Ethyl
  19. Only Women Bleed
  20. Second Coming
  21. Going Home (band only)
  22. School’s Out
  23. Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana cover)
  24. Under My Wheels

Once the show gets going, some parts of the set can still shift a little depending on the night. Crowd reactions can affect the pacing, especially during some of the bigger crowd-favorite moments. The stage side matters too, since props, scene changes, and performance cues can sometimes shape where certain songs fit best. At the same time, Alice may decide in the moment that another song works better in a certain spot or fits the flow more naturally. Those little changes help keep the show feeling alive without changing the larger shape of the performance.

Alice’s Attic Tour fits naturally with the kind of live spectacle Alice Cooper has built his name on. The set leans on songs people expect, but the theatrical side gives those songs a different life on stage. That keeps the show from feeling like a straight run through old hits. Instead, it moves more like a performance with its own rhythm, where the music and stage elements carry the whole thing together.

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