Anonymous wrote:The Pixies were pretty bad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chris Stapleton live isn't 'awful,' at all, but sitting through a live show is -exactly- like playing one of his albums at home with good speakers. There's no riffing, no commentary, no extended songs, no surprise covers, no dancing, no deviation whatsoever from the recording you have on Spotify.
The best way to describe a Chris Stapleton concert is that it sounds exactly like a quality studio recording. Which is fine, but if $200 a ticket is a stretch, and sitting in parking lot for 40 minutes waiting to exit is a drag, you can skip this experience. You've already heard it.
Literally have no idea who Chris Stapleton is. Good on him for getting $200 a ticket to hear him.
Based on this thread, it's amazing how little about current music a bunch of middle aged moms seem to know.
Meh, depends on which middle-aged mom you ask.Love Chris Stapleton. His cover of Nothing Compares to U. *chef's kiss*
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chris Stapleton live isn't 'awful,' at all, but sitting through a live show is -exactly- like playing one of his albums at home with good speakers. There's no riffing, no commentary, no extended songs, no surprise covers, no dancing, no deviation whatsoever from the recording you have on Spotify.
The best way to describe a Chris Stapleton concert is that it sounds exactly like a quality studio recording. Which is fine, but if $200 a ticket is a stretch, and sitting in parking lot for 40 minutes waiting to exit is a drag, you can skip this experience. You've already heard it.
Literally have no idea who Chris Stapleton is. Good on him for getting $200 a ticket to hear him.
Based on this thread, it's amazing how little about current music a bunch of middle aged moms seem to know.
Love Chris Stapleton. His cover of Nothing Compares to U. *chef's kiss*Anonymous wrote:Blink 182
I think they’re such good songwriters. But they can’t sing live. At all.
Anonymous wrote:I wanted to love Bob Dylan, but couldn’t get past his mumblings so we left.
I’m debating about going to Train as heard he can’t reach his notes, any feedback?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenday. That dudes such a narcissist
Im going to disagree if you meant Billie Joe Armstrong. I would rate Green Day as one of my favorite concerts, very interactive with the audience, I’d see them again (saw them recently).
Anonymous wrote:The Black Keys. They were horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Madonna. Just don't go.
I saw her 20+ years ago, I think many are going to see what she could possibly do now and not seem like a Grandma acting foolish.
But then again, Cher is still rocking her Bob Mackie dresses in her 70s to an adoring following
Cher was the original!
Madonna was great, but she is holding onto "it" the wrong way. No suggestions here.
I heard Madonna made fans wait for 2.5 hours at her last DC area show and throughout that tour, for her to arrive onstage. NOT cool.
Anonymous wrote:Dave
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chris Stapleton live isn't 'awful,' at all, but sitting through a live show is -exactly- like playing one of his albums at home with good speakers. There's no riffing, no commentary, no extended songs, no surprise covers, no dancing, no deviation whatsoever from the recording you have on Spotify.
The best way to describe a Chris Stapleton concert is that it sounds exactly like a quality studio recording. Which is fine, but if $200 a ticket is a stretch, and sitting in parking lot for 40 minutes waiting to exit is a drag, you can skip this experience. You've already heard it.
Literally have no idea who Chris Stapleton is. Good on him for getting $200 a ticket to hear him.
Based on this thread, it's amazing how little about current music a bunch of middle aged moms seem to know.