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So who WOULD you pa...
 

So who WOULD you pay silly money to see live?

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Was lucky enough to catch Fugazi and Black Sabbath before it was too late but yeah an 'in their prime' Queen or LED Zeppelin would be incredible, I tried to get tickets for the mothership tour, no chance.

I was due to see Rage Against The Machine in 2020... well that didn't happen for obvious reasons.

Those would probably be my 3


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 9:47 pm
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Napalm Death

It was ENT with KLF wasn't it?


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 9:53 pm
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No band in a sodding stadium - well I do sometimes pay silly money to see Scotland at Murrayfield.  If I want to be that far away and looking at a big screen, I have YouTube.


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 10:03 pm
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Live music in a modern stadium is my idea of hell and any money is too much money. I did see the Stuffies at Bescott in Walsall but that was a long time ago and tiny compared to stadiums today. Also saw The Cure at Crystal Palace Bowl but that was a cool venue with the massive lake in front of the stage and everyone lying around on the grass…long gone now.

If I was paying silly money now it would be because I was seeing bands in other countries….Of Monsters and Men in Iceland next year for instance.

A few years ago I went to Amsterdam to support a local band that normally plays tiny venues within 20 miles of my house! That was silly money.

Edit - just found a promo flyer for that Wonderstuff gig with New Fads and Swervedriver in support - £15.50!! Adjusted for inflation that’s about £35


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 10:53 pm
jamesoz and jamesoz reacted
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Live music in a modern stadium is my idea of hell

Is it the stadium itself thats the problem? Or the band?

I can't imagine any act at Woodstock when you were 200,00 people back listening to a 1960s PA was any good

Conversely my 1st ever gig on my own was U2 in 1993 at Parkhead and it absolutely set the standard over what a huge gig should be. Looking back, given the tech available at the time, it was light years ahead of it's time. A multimedia work of art.

If the band in question makes the most of the environment, then it doesn't matter if it's a 100 capacity club or a 100,000 capacity stadium.

If the band's good, they're good

Stop making up rules to exclude yourself from awesome stuff


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:16 pm
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 Nirvana.

The whole reason to see Nirvana would be Kirk Kobaine. I’m not sure I’d pay a reformed Nirvana much at all (just like I wouldn’t pay much to see Foo Fighters).


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:24 pm
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The whole reason to see Nirvana would be Kirk Kobaine.

Who?


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:27 pm
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Just to annoy everyone on page 1 saying the Prodigy or Keith, I just thought I'd mention that my first ever gig was The Chemical Brothers with Keith from the Prodigy doing a set afterwards.

That is all


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:30 pm
lesshaste, Marko, roger_mellie and 5 people reacted
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The now-dead lead singer of the band who took his own life but I couldn’t be bothered to spell check his name as it’s obvious everyone knows exactly who I am talking about (goes off to find a rolly eyes emoji).


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:30 pm
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If we are annoying people, I did get to see Queen at Maine Road (with Status Quo and Beluios Some supporting - again, not spell checked) the year after Live Aid.


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:32 pm
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Talk Talk playing their later stuff live.....which they never did. Or Kate Bush. Or / and Led Zeppelin. Maybe original line up Black Sabbath.


 
Posted : 02/09/2024 11:46 pm
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I love Black Sabbath - I saw them do a warm-up gig for the 13 tour at Birmingham O2 Academy then saw them do the full show at the arena, but I don’t think a reformed band would be worth spoiling the legacy for (they are rumoured to be doing a one-off in Birmingham next year) - Ozzy is a complete wreck now 🙁


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 12:00 am
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I just had a thought, I'd love to see The Specials again.

And then I remembered that Terry Hall died, and now I'm sad.

I was too young to see them as a kid, but loved the music. Then I did at least see them on a reunion tour in about 2009 - 30th anniversary.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 12:02 am
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If we can say "bands where someone's died" then does that open the doors to "bands at a specific point in time"? Cos if so I'm off to Donington Monsters Of Rock 1994. Basically the thing that got me into rock music, I'd just started getting Kerrang and they went really massive on it and I just kind of immersed into that, then it was all on the radio, so many amazing sets and a bunch of bands that I later came to love that were just absolutely at their finest- I'd kill to have seen Therapy?, Sepultura and the Wildhearts that day but tbh I'd love to see every single band there. Um, except Cry of Love, sorry Cry of Love.

winston
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Live music in a modern stadium is my idea of hell and any money is too much money.

Just once, I went to a stadium show and it was fantastic- Muse, My Chemical Romance and Biffy Clyro, all 3 bands that I love and that could really rise to it and make it an event. And being at Wembley was pretty cool too. Even Simon Neil out of Biffy had to do a day-oh, it's the law.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 12:30 am
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Zelensky so long as all the money went to building drones for him.

Most expensive gig I've been to was Slade at Birmingham Town Hall, £2 was many weeks of income at the time. 😉 As was the Slade Alive album, also £2. For years gigs were about the same price as an album.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 7:54 am
hot_fiat and hot_fiat reacted
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"Stop making up rules to exclude yourself from awesome stuff"

The rule excluding me from "awesome stuff" is my bank account.  I'm priced out now.   As for Woodstock, don't know about that but Glastonbury Main Stage looks pretty rough. A view of flags and mobiles.  Seen plenty of awesome stuff in places where you can actually see the performance. A good band is good on your telly as well as the big screen in Murrayfield*.

Only stadium so far was Wee Free Kings and Runrig in Dingwall.  Back then it was more like Rushall Olympic than Walsall.

*unsure if anyone any good has played there - most years the act is on my pay good money to avoid list.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:37 am
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I remember when the Velvet Underground reformed (early 90’s?). I was a mega Velvets fan early mid 80’s, I was buying all the boot lps I could lay my hands on. A mate really wanted to go but I wasn’t having any as i knew that I really wanted to see them as per 67-69, not some old numpties. Having seen the dvd of some the reunion show, man, definitely a bullet dodged there!

That said me na day mates hummed and heyed re going to see Buzzcocks (cheap at a small Aberdeen venue) in early 90’s (they were the first band I went to see in 78) but we weakened and went. It was pretty decent though, for what it was (but they definitely enjoyed playing). Even think Mike Joyce was the drummer…

Mate, I went to see the Velvets at Wembley Arena and it was one of the worst gigs I've experienced. Maybe not because of the absolute quality of their performance (I can't remember), but because they were clearly very uncomfortable and because sitting in a plastic seat drinking warm Carling didn't feel very Underground IYKWIM.

I also saw the Buzzcocks on that tour. It was the same year I saw Ramones (incredible) and I came away feeling a bit let down. They played too slow and were wearing woolly jumpers IIRC. Them and the Velvets soured me on seeing "reformed for tax purposes" bands for decades after.

Glad I relented for Iggy & The Stooges / Suicide though.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:48 am
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 Kirk Kobaine.
Who?

Y'know, that grunge guy who died at 27 - like Jackie Jormp-Jormp and Amy Winegums.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:51 am
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Just to put some things in context concerning prices as Queen are so often mentioned.

We were at the "A Night at the Opera" at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1975. Ticket prices ranged from £1 to £2.50

Not sure what we paid but had great seats....    What would they cost now if possible.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:53 am
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Marr’s concerts are great, often in smaller venues or at festivals, and cheap. No one needs a high ticket price Smiths semi-reunion.

I saw The Smiths at the Dome in Brighton in 1985 and I saw Johnny Marr there a couple of months ago. It was every bit as good a gig and for me a Smiths gig without Rourke or Joyce wouldn't be a Smiths gig anyway.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:59 am
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Stadium gigs are awful, saw REM at Twickenham I think it was once, dull as shit and I love REM. Friend worked for Ticketmaster at the time so it was free ...

I'd like to see Bob Dylan. Heard him at a festival once but was a bit erm....altered and couldn't stand up.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 10:00 am
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<smug mode>I saw Prince at the Camden Roundhouse, and he was just as good as you would imagine.</smug mode>

@johndoh I paid a lot of money (at the time) to see Roger Waters tour The Wall and it was almost as good as the Prince gig above. It made me understand why people rave about Pink Floyd.

I was gutted to miss AC:DC this year because I was in the Alps.

I'd pay a lot of money to see Depeche Mode.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 10:13 am
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I was due to see Rage Against The Machine in 2020… well that didn’t happen for obvious reasons.

I saw them live at a Download. You didn't miss much. Every so often in between Zack's political grandstanding monologues they'd occasionally play a song. I sodded off halfway through and went to watch My Chemical Romance instead, who were excellent.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 12:50 pm
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I’m off to Donington Monsters Of Rock 1994

Oh, I was there for that. That was the gig where Gary Cherone comitted career suicide by being utterly contemptuous towards the crowd.

I’d kill to have seen Therapy?

I've seen them... three times now I think? They make one hell of a noise for just three blokes.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 12:59 pm
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No one, stadium gigs are crap and so are the greedy tossers playing them.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:14 pm
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No one, stadium gigs are crap and so are the greedy tossers playing them.

I don't agree. I have seen stadium gigs that absolutely nailed it (Queen, Iron Maiden, AC/DC and The Cure being my stand-outs) along with ones that didn't (Jamiroquai springs to mind). AC/DC do seem to have crept into 'greedy' territory, although the River Plate gig proves they can fill a huge place and nail it. Iron Maiden and The Cure still charge reasonable ticket prices so big respect to them.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:19 pm
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It made me understand why people rave about Pink Floyd.

I saw Floyd during the Pulse tour, I was at the rescheduled gig after part of the seating collapsed.  I was never a fan particularly.  I went solely because I could and because I figured, it might be one of those things that I'd kick myself for the rest of my life if I didn't.

It was astonishingly good, just indescribable, probably one of the best gigs I've ever been to.  The band were tight, the sound was perfect beginning-to-end, the stage show was incredible, and they had Sam Brown on backing vocals who absolutely annihilated Great Gig In The Sky.  I'm getting a tingling on the back of my neck now just thinking about that performance.

If the remit of this thread was "what would you pay silly money for to reattend a gig you've already been to" it'd either be Floyd at Earl's Court in 1994 or MoR at Donington 1990 (my first ever 'proper' gig).


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:30 pm
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AC/DC do seem to have crept into ‘greedy’ territory

I was never a fan of AC/DC either, they make Status Quo look nuanced.  But they've disappeared firmly up their own arseholes in recent years.

They finally relented to do a festival - Download - after years of saying they never would, neatly sidestepping the fact that for many fans it was Donington which put them on the map in the first place.  They refused to share a stage with anyone so an entire second main stage had to be built right next to the actual main stage.  They vetoed having their name on the official tee-shirt, so if you bought a download shirt that year it was missing the headline act; you could however buy their own merch.

Money-grubbing self-important cockbags.  And it wouldn't have left such a bad taste in my mouth if after all that palaver they hadn't turned out to be not much beyond mediocre.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:40 pm
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For me, 'silly money' is £100.
Bit niche, but the only band that immediately comes to mind is Dance Hall Crashers. Gutted I never got the chance in the 90s.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:44 pm
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Are The Cure good live still?

Wish I'd joined my friends at the Crystal Palace gig in the 90s. One of the very few big acts I'd be interested in seeing.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 1:56 pm
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Are The Cure good live still?

Yes - I saw them a couple of years ago at Leeds Arena and they were mesmerisingly beautiful. No theatrics, no fancy sets, just the band captivating their audience from start to finish. I just wish I had seen them earlier in my life – I don't know why I didn't as I have attended gigs from aged 14 back in 1981 and I have always liked them.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 2:17 pm
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 pk13
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The cure also set the ticket prices recently and did some very successful gigs I've always wanted to see them


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 2:23 pm
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Bit niche, but I'd pay silly money* to see Dance Hall Crashers, as I never got the chance before they split.

I'd also pay a good amount to see Daughter play on a venue that had atmosphere to suit.

Tbh I have no desire to see a band in a huge venue, Biggest gig I've ever been to was the Foos at MK bowl. Not a huge fan but was pretty excited about seeing Jimmy Eat World in support, but they did nothing for me, (not due to some sort of inverse snobbery, just horses for courses) Take me back to the pissy walled Tunbridge Wells Forum(Symposium, 1998 ISH, Chefskiss.gif), Upstairs @The Garage(Idlewild, Captain era, incredible), or Brighton Concorde and I'm a happy man.

*To me £100 is silly money...


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 2:26 pm
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Queen. Obviously. If they were that good a spectacle in the pre-Napster era, imagine how mind-bendingly amazing they’d be now? Downloadable music may have reduced revenue from recordings but it doesn’t half make people put on a stunning show now and when they don’t make the effort people really kick off about it (looking at you Ian Brown, Kings of Leon, Aerosmith @ download 2010). Even batshit mentalists like Jane’s Addiction who’d otherwise turn up stoned, do a pi$$ poor half show and then clear off have seemingly cottoned onto the idea of professionalism in live music.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 2:44 pm
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OK, The Cure are on my list then 🙂

Upstairs @The Garage

I saw the Jazz Butcher (RIP) killing it at that venue, and later ran an easy listening themed club night there 😀


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 2:50 pm
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Paid very silly money for the Cure. I was seeing a lot of punk bands at the time, so thought their standing still strumming away was quite boring. I'd see em again. (For the same price)

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Posted : 03/09/2024 3:03 pm
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After watching these two videos, I'd pay a lot for the Foo Zeps or the Lead Fighters


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 4:59 pm
hot_fiat and hot_fiat reacted
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If we're including dead people, Amy Winehouse.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 5:09 pm
 fs1e
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A few mentioned above plus The Band, Joni Mitchell, The Alman Brothers Band and Stephen Stills


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 5:20 pm
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The Cure

Mate, I saw them when they were support for Siouxsie & the Banshees in Aberdeen when the Banshees split.

The Cure played, someone came on said that half the band had naffed off and that was that. Except Siouxsie and Budgie came out and did a couple of songs with… the Cure (Lords Prayer & Helter Skelter from memory). And then they gave us a refund 😀

Saw them again on the A Forest/Seventeen Seconds tour.

For dead folk, I’d loved to have seen the Clash (always missed them). I did see Joe Strummer & the Rockabilly War which was decent (esp. I’d low expectations). Around London Calling era please!

Saw Bob Dylan in AECC (not really my choice but how could we not…) and that was actually really good (well for a Dylan gig).

Also, I saw MBV (supporting the Pixies) at Manchester International 2…


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 8:05 pm
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Bob Marley.... the only one i missed back in the day.

Luckily got to see all my heroes, including Joy Division (Leeds supporting the Buzzcocks) Clash, Cure, The Jam, Bruce in 85 St James Park, Southern Death Cult, Spear of Destiny, RamonesBig Country, INXS at Newcastle City Hall. would like to see the Rumjacks if they land in the UK. I was the right age at the right time and luckily made the most of it.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 8:46 pm
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Another vote for Queen but only if they played their earlier material (up to and including Jazz, though I'll give them permission to also include Radio Gaga)

And only a proper theatre gig...not a soulless arena


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:18 pm
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Are The Cure good live still?

Based on the gig Mrs Vlad went to a few years ago, they'd be good value as they were on stage for about 3.5 hrs and did about three encores!


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:28 pm
 Gunz
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I saw Queen at Wembley Stadium when I was 15 in 1986. I know it doesn't count in this thread, I just never miss the opportunity to tell people and they were at least as good as you imagine them to be (actually better).


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 9:49 pm
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I managed to see Aphex Twin last year at Forewards Festival last year, amazing! That was a bucket list gig. My missus ****ing hated it!

I've seen most bands that I love over the years at various gigs and festivals not Radiohead as yet so certainly them. Smiths as others have said but no chance.

Dead, would be Nirvana, absolutely worshipped them as a teen. Frank Zappa would've been great too.


 
Posted : 03/09/2024 10:03 pm
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