Music fans are some of the most passionate people in the
world. They pretty well define the word “fan” in its original meaning – short for
“fanatic.” Find a fan who’s passionate about an act or artists, and then say something bad about that act or artist, watch what happens*.
*if you do
this and get hit, don’t come crying to me! It was simply a statement to make a
point!
It doesn’t matter what kind of music, either. Hard rock and
heavy metal fans have a stereotype/cliché reputation of being mean or fighters,
but I guarantee you can find the same thing at a country show, or a hip-hop
show…maybe not so much a show with a lighter tone like R&B (I know the
crowd at the John Legend show in St. Louis didn’t cause any concern for me!).
I’ve been dropping in on a lot of concerts lately, and I
like to read reviews of the shows and comments from fans afterward. I’ve
noticed a really surprising trend in some of the fans of these shows: anger. A
lot of the ‘hardcore’ fans seem to be very angry over the shows, namely the set-lists.
One example: In February, Bon Jovi had a stop on their “This House Is Not For
Sale” world tour in St. Louis. They played a total of twenty-four songs, with six
of those coming from the new album. That makes sense, right? They’re promoting
the new album, they want to play that material. That’s only ¼ of the show. One
of the comments posted on Facebook was from a fan that said he left the show
halfway through because the band wasn’t playing songs he knew. Obviously, he
left too early, because that last nine of twenty-four songs were all songs that
have been played to death!
The other side of the coin can be found, too. When
Metallica brought their “WorldWired” tour to St. Louis, they played five songs
from the new album out of a total of eighteen. Five more came off of their
self-titled, 16x-platinum “Black Album.” Of course, there were folks
complaining that they play all the same songs, tour after tour. They were
looking for deep cuts, tracks that are buried in the lists of songs from the
first and second album from more than three decades ago.
This is a long-winded way of getting to my point. How big
of a fan are you? Why do you only want to hear “the hits” from a band? But on
the flipside of that, what do you expect to hear at a concert catering to ten,
fifteen, twenty thousand people?
Eddie Trunk talked about this a month or two back on his
SiriusXM show. Bands don’t tour for the hard-core fans. They can’t. There
simply aren’t enough of them, and there’s not enough time in a concert-set. When
a band goes on tour for a new album, they’re going to play a good number of
those songs. That’s truly the point of a tour, promoting a new product. Then
they’re going to play the songs that everyone knows because the crowd wants to
feel connected. Of course a fan wants to hear Metallica play “Motorbreath” or “No
Remorse.” But out of nearly 39,000 people in the stadium in St. Louis, how many
would have known those songs? Hard-core fans of Garth Brooks would love to hear
“Alabama Clay” and “What She’s Doing Now” from the man in the hat, but what do
you remove from his set-list to fit them in?
I’m slightly guilty of this myself. In my review of the
Iron Maiden show in Chicago last year, I commented on the fact that “Run to the
Hills” wasn’t in the set. This song has been a long-standing staple. But my
comment was more one of surprise at the absence, not anger over the omission.
Iron Maiden is playing six new tracks and eight hits scattered throughout their
career. Maiden is known to have some long, epic songs, so they fill up more of
the set-time with fewer songs. But that’s what you should expect from their
show.
The point of all this comes down to this question: What
kind of a fan are you? Are you the casual fan that only knows the hits and eschews
anything new? Are you the hard-nosed ‘no one knows these guys like I do!’ fan
that wants to hear obscure tracks that seem more like something you made up?
Either of these is fine. This is not a critique of you, but you might want to
consider that concerts aren’t really for you. Listen to your albums and enjoy
the songs you like. But these two groups are, generally speaking, the fringe
groups on either end of the spectrum.
Because live shows, for most bands, are for the fans in the
middle. The fans that love to sing along with the classics, and get excited to
be “let in early” to the new stuff that hasn’t even hit the store shelves (or
streaming feeds) yet. The live shows are for the fans that are fans, no matter
what the band is playing.
That’s my take on it, anyway.
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