Brandi Carlile Made Xfinity Mobile Arena Feel Intimate on Her Opening Night in Philadelphia

Photo by: Emma Zoe Polyak
The first show on a tour, I believe, always carries a particular kind of excitement: There’s a sense that anything can happen. By every measure, it seemed like Carlile had the same expectation on night one of her tour, here in Philly. By the end of the show, Brandi Carlile told the crowd that her job was to make big places feel small; she managed to do exactly that, bringing together a packed room for an almost two-hour set that felt intimate, generous, and alive.



Before she even stepped onstage, the crowd was already on its feet. The Head and the Heart got the room warmed up, and Madonna’s “Like a Prayer” blared through the venue just before Carlile’s set began, prompting the audience to stand up and dance and turning the room into a party.
As the first stop on her first arena tour, the Philadelphia show carried a sense of both scale and vulnerability. Carlile is no stranger to large stages — she performed “America the Beautiful” at the Super Bowl this past weekend — but there was a feeling throughout the set that this was still new territory. Don’t get me wrong, though: The size of the room never overwhelmed the performance. Carlile’s warmth and humor were constant, grounding the night and reminding the audience that intimacy isn’t lost simply because the venue is larger.
Take, for example, her decision to try something new by inviting the audience to shout out song requests, putting herself and her trusted bandmates Phil and Tim Hanseroth on the spot to remember lyrics and chords. The first pick was “What Can I Say,” followed by “Josephine,” two tracks from Carlile’s earlier discography. The “request section” then eased into a short acoustic stretch, with songs like “You Without Me” and “The Mother.”

It was during these quieter moments that Carlile’s banter felt most genuine. Stripped back, her humor and self-awareness softened into thoughtful reflections on her family and her relationship to the music, especially on “You Without Me” and “The Mother.” For a moment, the arena felt small.
When the full band returned, the energy shifted again, moving from ballads to rockier anthems. Carlile introduced “No One Knows” as one of her favorite songs to play live right now, and it was easy to hear why. Where the recording has a gradual, slightly subdued build, the live version multiplied that by ten. The refrain of “Don’t be a stranger” felt like another reminder of the community that had gathered in Xfinity Arena.



That song was followed by “Sinners, Saints and Fools,” which Carlile said she wrote because it felt timely — and which now lands as a form of personal catharsis. The song’s second half, driven by a striking violin line, built into a heavier, more rocking conclusion, with the full band on display.

And speaking of the band: No Brandi Carlile show is complete without a group of musicians working together with that kind of cohesion. Earlier in the set, most of the band joined Carlile at the front of the stage to sing “Who Believes in Angels?,” a song she co-wrote with Elton John. While the legend himself wasn’t there, there was still something undeniably legendary about the version heard in Philadelphia.
By night’s end, it was clear that Philly hadn’t just witnessed the beginning of something large — it had helped make the first night of Carlile’s arena tour feel, as she put it herself, like heaven.
