@thecarpathian -- It was awful. Just dreadful. Drinking a beer with him after the show was pure misery, I tell ya. Misery! 😆
Now you’re just rubbing it in!!
Is anyone here still into live concerts these days?
Concert Ticket Prices Are Expected to Keep Rising in 2025 and Beyond
keeps me wondering if it's even worth it anymore (smaller live music venues excluded as they don't typically charge as much)
Now you’re just rubbing it in!! |
I am not at all into anything that would qualify as mainstream music, that would be at large venues, and cost a lot of money. My tastes run to the progressive, avant-garde, underground, musicianship oriented, type of music, that tends to have a limited following. So, by default, I am only going to small venues for live music, and relatively low ticket prices. With those caveats, I go to quite a few live concerts.  |
Due to the ridiculous cost of tickets, I have only attended two concerts in the last two years. They were Sarah McLachlan and Robert Plant / Allison Krauss and both shows were at outdoor venues here in the Seattle area. It’s quite enjoyable drinking wine while listening to live music outdoors on a Summer evening. Growing up in LA, I had the opportunity to see a lot of the greats in concert back in the day when tickets were affordable (The Rolling Stones, The Who, Bob Dylan, David Bowie, Simon and Garfunkel, Van Morrison, U2, R.E.M, The Clash, The Pretenders, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young, Lou Reed, Steve Winwood, John Fogerty, Tom Petty, Jefferson Airplane, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck). I’m thankful for those memories. |
@thecarpathian -- |
 I got spoiled by the $3 tickets to get in the Fillmore (San Francisco) in the 60’s and early-70’s. For $3 I got to see Cream, Hendrix, The Who, Jeff Beck, The Kinks, Procol Harum, Elton John (with just a drummer and bassist, his original live line-up), many others. The last big show I attended was The Stones at The Staples Center in L.A. I got a pair of comp tickets, so didn’t feel bad when my gal and I left after three songs. Not only was it like watching TV, but they also stunk. The last Rock ’n’ Roll band I saw live were NRBQ, at a small club in Portland. They were as great as ever (I’d previously seen them three times in the 80’s and 90’s, at The Roxy Theater in L.A.), and it cost me only $30 I believe it was. It’s the cost of drinks that hurts!  |