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After ASU football wrapped up a 52-31 victory over Washington State in its final home game of the 2014 season, The Fray played a free concert for all fans in attendance. Of the 51, 428 fans in attendance for the game, several hundred stuck around for the Colorado-based rock band.
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Playing at the 25-yard line in front of most of the student section, The Fray played some classics as well as some songs from a new album, "Helios."
Slade got the crowd cheering again when he congratulated the team on its victory. For the most part, the setlist kept the mood mellow throughout the show.
The Fray was an interesting choice for the concert as most of the band's songs are emotional and soft.
Despite the band's repertoire, fun was had by all. The group got the crowd pumped up early as lead vocalist Isaac Slade jumped down from the stage and actually climbed the fence that separates the stands from the field to get the crowd involved.
S/O to @TheFray for a beautiful performance for our student section after today's win
— ASU Confessions (@ASUConfessions) November 22, 2014
This was, by far, the high point of the show — Slade actually abandoned the field entirely and climbed into the stands. Surrounded by flocking fans, the singer wandered into the center of the student section and remained there for several songs.
Slade had no shortage of surprises in store, at one point tip-toeing across the narrow concrete barrier in front of the first row of section 33 of Sun Devil Stadium before hopping the fence and jogging back to the stage.
He then took to the piano to belt out The Fray's most popular song, "How to Save a Life," the band's triple-platinum hit from 2004.
To its credit, the band finished on a high note, wrapping up the performance with a rendition of "Love Don't Die" that got the crowd up and moving for one of the first times after the game. As the band left the stage, the crowd took up a chant of "ASU."
Tell the sports editor your favorite way to save a life at icbeck@asu.edu or follow him on Twitter @ICBeck21
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