LOUDEST Concert and Tinnitus


This is a two part question.

1. What is the loudest concert (or event) that you have attended?

2. How long have you had tinnitus, is it getting better or worse and how are you dealing with it?

Personally, the loudest concert was UB40 at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre in Vancouver. Loudest event was drag racing at SIR (Seattle International Raceway) which was like sticking your head in a jet engine.

Regarding tinnitus. Over the past year or so I have noticed a constant high pitched "sound" in my ears. Mostly the left ear. At this point I don't actually know if it is constant or whether I just forget about it sometimes. I know use a white noise box when I go to sleep. Otherwise I tend to fixate on the ringing.

128x128tony1954

@daledeee1 

I was always amazed how loud a Feder guitar amp will go as well.

In jr high school, 79’, one of our friends would show up at parties with a Fender Twin (I think 65w) and play Eruption perfect (there were a few ‘bands’ in the school) - that amp could rip your face off if you got too close!

@cd318

Cool story - I had the pleasure of meeting Douglas Adams - related to an immersive “game” called Starship Titanic about 2 parallel universes on board a ship

We provided authoring software

he died too early

Jacksonville Coliseum 1974(?) Black Sabbath. First two songs sounded amazing then drenching sound level panicked me…..ear canals felt “slick”….stuffed napkins didn’t stop 4-5 days of ringing numbness.

Johnny Winter, smaller club New Orleans 1980; injured his fretting hand, had to play slide only….brutal volume, I left.

Funkadelic, 1970 (?), Miss State cow barn; first introduction to “wall of sound”.

Fell asleep to Yes’ Close to the Edge at home late-late a few years ago, too loud…ears ringing for a few days…never again.

Can still hear refrigerator turn on at night so all is not lost….but random mild ringing happens occasionally. Am lucky.

My loudest show as an audience member was The Ramones at The Santa Monica Civic Auditorium,  a cement bunker of a room. Second was Ray Davies Telecaster when The Kinks played The Fillmore Auditorium (or was it Winterland?) in 1971. SO piercing!

But the biggest scare I had was when I did a long audition (eight hours!) with a band that was forming that same year. I was positioned directly across the room from one of the two guitarists. His Guild Starfire was plugged into a Fender Twin Reverb amp, the latter pointed directly at me from about ten or twelve feet away. We jammed from ten at night until six the next morning, and as I packed up my drums the sound of the guys' voices were drastically muffled-sounding, like a blanket was over their heads. Scared me to death! My hearing eventually returned to normal, but I'm sure there was some permanent damage.

Ted Nugent a dozen times, stereos, Black Sabbath, BTO, years-no, decades, of engines and race tracks and dyno runs...a lifetime of poor judgment regarding my hearing. Now I have a permanent noise floor that sounds like 1000 metallic crickets. A cautionary tale for anyone not there yet. Mine didn't start until about 10 years ago, after I started taking precautions.