No known set list or recording but audience reviews indicate the following were played

Open The Boxoctosis
Mere Pseud Mag Ed
Middle Mass
I Can Hear The Grass Grow
Dr Bucks Letter
Theme From Sparta FC
Mountain Energei
Mr Pharmacist
Walk Like A Man
(We Are) Mod Mock Goth
I Am Damo Suzuki
White Lightning
Review from The Washington Post

Mark Jenkins, Washington Post, April 15, 2004:

The Fall at the Black Cat

There were no CDs on sale when the Fall performed Tuesday at the Black Cat, just an array of T-shirts depicting album covers dating all the way back to 1979’s “Live at the Witch Trials.” If the wearable history suggested that the venerable British cult band is now peddling nostalgia, the performance demonstrated otherwise. The latest version of the Fall is crisp, powerful and up-to-date.

Cantankerous frontman Mark E. Smith, who more than 20 years ago became the only survivor of the band’s original lineup, has been known to perform in various states of impairment, to sometimes chaotic effect. But this tour is a new challenge for the unpredictable singer: He broke his hip and femur last month and is currently using crutches to get around. As the four other musicians played looping vamps, Smith sat at a small table, chewing gum and pulling lyrics from a notebook. He had two microphones at his disposal, sometimes singing into both at once.

Although the band is tighter than many of its previous incarnations, it still sounds like the Fall. An uncanny meld of rockabilly, punk and Afrobeat, among other influences, the quintet’s style is unmistakable, yet not immutable. “Open the Box” was craggy, “Mr. Pharmacist” thumping and “Walk Like a Man” — an ironic choice — surprisingly jaunty. In a 70-minute set the group could barely skim its back catalogue, but that didn’t matter. All Fall songs are part of a continuum, one that the current lineup proved itself more than capable of sustaining.