Dave Matthews Band’s finale at SPAC saw the band go decidedly old school with their setlist as they hit the Saratoga Springs, NY stage for the 35th time in their storied career.

The opening combo will rank among their best as the band came out with a pair of Before These Crowded Streets highlights in “Pig” and “The Last Stop,” played for just the fourth and third time this summer, respectively. The band then turned it back to 1996’s Crash with “#41,” wrapping up a throwback start to the show.

From there, DMB peppered in older cuts like “Song That Jane Likes,” “What Would You Say” and “Dancing Nancies” from their earliest days. Crew member and guitarist Joe Lawlor would later join the fold for “Rhyme & Reason,” a Lawlor staple over the years, before the Jeff Coffin and Carter Beauford led the band into the Crash cut “Say Goodbye” with the typical flute/drums jam.

The show concluded with a tender take from Matthews’ Some Devil record “Oh” before the band obliged the “Two Step” chant in the crowd with just the second rendition of the Crash anthem this summer. As they have in the past, the extended jam found its way into “Halloween,” to bookend the show with material from Before These Crowded Streets.

When the dust settled, the show marked the first time “Pig,” “Last Stop,” “Two Step” and “Halloween” have showed up in a setlist together since April 21, 1998. While the show may have contained numerous old school song combinations, the band did not deliver any tour debuts throughout their SPAC run, marking the first time that has happened since 2005.

DMB’s tour continues July 19 in Toronto, ON.

Here’s a look at the setlist:

Dave Matthews Band
Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY

Pig, The Last Stop, #41, Seven, When the World Ends, The Song That Jane Likes, Proudest Monkey > Bismarck, What Would You Say, Mercy, Dancing Nancies, The Space Between, Rhyme & Reason*, Say Goodbye, You Might Die Trying, Kill the Preacher > Why I Am, All Along the Watchtower

Enc: Oh, Two Step > Halloween

Notes: *w/Joe Lawlor