Here's the set list for the 17th (not in order) and a few thoughts.
Everything from the new album was played plus several other songs
The Snow it Melts the Soonest 
Gabriel's Message 	  
Soul Cake 	 
There Is No Rose of Such Virtue 	 
Christmas at Sea 	 
Lo How a Rose E'er Blooming 	 
Cold Song 	 
The Burning Babe 	 
Ghost Story
Now Winter Comes Slowly 	 
The Hounds Of Winter 	 
Balulalow 	 
Cherry Tree Carol 	 
Lullaby To An Anxious Child 	 
Hurdy Gurdy Man 	 
The Coventry Carol
Bethlehem Down
I Saw Three Ships
You Only Cross My Mind in Winter
In
 midset, Kathryn and Peter Tickell also performed three rousing 
Northumbrian songs on their fiddles but we're ashamed to say that we 
can't recall all their titles, although one was 'Team Spirit'. They got a
 great cheer though and deservedly so. 
The whole show was one continual high spot, 
but if we had to pick highlights, then Soul Cake is the catchiest and 
most immediate track on the album. It will be used to help promote the 
album probably and you can hear why - come December this will surely be 
being played on radio 2 etc... But 'Christmas at Sea', a Robert Louis 
Stevenson poem set to music, with part gaelic singing from Mary 
Macmaster is stunning. It could have come straight from the Soul Cages 
album and is our favorite track on the album. Just stunning. (We told 
Sting how fantastic it would be to hear the Soul Cages given the classic
 album treatment by being performed in its entirety by this band, but he
 just laughed and said "Soul Cages, Oh get away..." Can't say we didn't 
try though.)
Other highspots - I saw Three Ships near the end was
 very rousing, nice to hear Ghost Story, Gabriel's Message with the blue
 spot shining straight through the cross on the central tower, the 
Coventry Carol with the 8 Durham Cathedral choristers, Lullaby with 
Dominic's false start (which meant we got two full versions including 
band introductions, and a bit of laugh as Sting joked about calling the 
song 'Lullaby to an Anxious Singer'), and the Cherry Tree Carol which 
Sting described as "Appalachian" and was a carol that was almost bluesy 
with Dominic playing bottleneck on his acoustic.
Nice to see so 
many new and old faces last night especially those that had travelled 
from Canada, the States, Japan and Australia to be there. Hope you all 
had a brilliant time.
(c) Dave & Wendy for Sting.com