TEN BANDS THAT SHOULD RETIRE
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- Опубліковано 18 чер 2024
- Ten bands that should retire from touring, and a few dishonounable mentions at the very end. Bands that swell the Tickbastard coffers.
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When a Band becomes their own tribute act, that's the time to call it a day.
so true :(
But what if it's the ORIGINAL vocalist who can still perform well, but they just tour with a group of random 'Studio Musicians'?
It's not like they'll be writing NEW music, and 'fans' just want to hear the songs played like the sounded on the CD anyway, so if they're just emulating the music on the CD recording then will the crowd care, or may of them even notice?
@@StreetPreacherr you bring up a great point there Stan, and I'm of the opinion that any band that records new music after doing a "farewell tour" should be sued by the record label. Now that being said, I think they can still do shows after a farewell tour especially in the hometown where they are from. Especially when the band still has all the original members, it's an opportunity not to be missed
Yeah thats definitely kiss.
It's your money. Nothing like a fake show. Backing tracks. Lip synching, $40 crappy beer, $50 parking, $100 tshirts. Ah the memories. A fool and his money soon part. Good times, Good times
I remember being so excited to see KISS on their "farewell tour". That was 25 years ago.
My cousin went to one of the concerts here in Australia. He enjoyed it. Unfortunately, "farewell" doesn't always mean that.
😂
I saw that tour, and the one after that…😂
Kiss is the absolute worst at this
Paul got a divorce, which costed him millions. To recoup he had to keep KISS going
As a professional musician I can honestly say, when music is in your heart and soul, it's not easy to just retire.
This makes sense because it becomes a person's identity. But I also see other ways to look at it. Some professional musicians are happy that they're not "too famous." One person said he's happy to tour and go out for coffee while not being recognized, while other musicians have that celebrity status, but have no privacy. They can't just walk down the street. The guy who likes his coffee also has other work as a side-gig as a peer support worker that provided income during the pandemic.
Nobody said it was easy. Genuine self reflection often isn't.
@@paulhilton6426 This is very true. Actually, I have to agree even more because when musicians have experienced fame, they often believe that the status is permanent.
@@paulhilton6426If you can still DO something.. and you have the desire to do it...and people will STILL support it...the f#ck it...its called FREE WILL....which is ageless...
but you can move on toward the future, rather than continue to live in the Boomer past.
as fans of these groups for many years, we don't mind that they have trouble singing like they once did. we don't expect them to sound like they did many years ago. We love just seeing them once again and remembering all the great performances in their younger days.
At 80 years old, when Mick sings "I Can't Get No Satisfaction", he really means it.
He's a virgin
If he hasn't gotten any satisfaction by now there's nobody to blame but Mick Jagger.
@@truebluemiataThem lips and silly accent probably didn't help. Both must have been passion killers!
What girl wants to be slobbered on by a bloke with a funny voice?
@@yuntakukai1002 Nope. He has been wearing make up & wigs/dresses since the '70s.
😂😂😂😂 true
Grace Slick was absolutely correct- she retired at 50 saying It’s not for the fans touring over 50, it’s a cash grab. And she was about keeping it real. She’s happy now just being an fine art artist.
She retired well after 50. She was 30 when their first singles came out.😆😆😆
@@MichaelKurse 24 when Somebody To Love hit the charts in 1964. BD 30/10/1939
@@MichaelKurse she retired after the tour for the Jefferson Airplane reunion album in 1989. (Discounting the two appearances in 1996 when they were inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame and received a Lifetime Grammy) so she was born 1939 and retired in 1989. That made her- 50! My mum was with Paul Kantner at the time, and I talked to her about it.
Grace had it right.
That's just her opinion (and everyone who agrees with her)
I saw many bands in the 70's and 80's when concert tickets were cheap, the bands were young and the music was great. Van Halen, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Kiss, Rush, Aerosmith. AC/DC, Def Leppard. All of which were in their 20's or early 30's. I never saw any of these bands in the 90's or beyond. The only "old guy" that I have gone to see in the past few years is Joe Satriani. That's it.
@@ingridfitz5677Going to the actual venue early in the early morning to get good seats.
I saw Aerosmith with opening band AC/DC (with Bon Scott, never heard of them before that show) in 1978. AC/DC was incredible, of course, but Aerosmith was already so smacked out at that point that they were one of the worst bands I’ve ever seen live.
So never saw a great band then 😂😂😂
@@theestimator The bands he listed aren’t great? Or were you joking? Sometimes it’s hard to tell.
Let them make their band
I'd include QUEEN in that list , After Freddie Died they should have left that Sports car that was QUEEN in the Garage !!!
Wasn't and couldn't be same without him !!!...
The white and the black album. The rest was pure mainsteam pop. Mercury is highly highly overrated. Same with Dire Straits.
Of all the bands that did it right.. Zeppelin. They said it just wouldn't be the same. Robert Plant said 'it has been done, and you can't go back'.
Then they gave it complete closure by doing one last incredible concert in 07 with Bonzo’s son on drums.
@@boataxe4605 Yeah and they put on an incredible show to cap off an amazing career as a band. Now they can and have returned to making their own music or producing in the case of JPJ so with much grace they left an indelible memory of how great a band they were and still are on record. When it comes down to a great live show, then "The Song Remains the Same" movie is unmatched in capturing them at their peak. They got out of the circus before it became a clownshow :)
The Bloated Blimp would be out there... but for Robert Plant refusing to do it.
So, yer misleading with the comment.
If Plant was game for it... they'd be out there... and you'd be loving it hypocritically.
Will give them that. Think it was Plant who made the decision for all.
I will give them credit for not replacing Plant, too, and taking advantage of the fans in that way... even though the fans woulda flocked to it no matter...@@Saffy-yr8vo
My first concert was Van Halen in 1982. I'm talking the fire breathing fuel injected Van Halen in their prime. I was 15 and all four band members were in their 20's. My friends & I drank cheap, shitty beer in the arena's parking lot and smoked it up inside the arena. My version of Led Zeppelin hit the stage full throttle and didn't let up the entire concert. My wife is a huge Bruce Springsteen fan. I went with her to see him a few years ago. Inside the arena, I honestly felt like I was at a corporate convention. I saw my rock heroes when I was supposed to. When I was young & dumb and everything felt possible and the bands were on fire. I'm not the most eloquent person with my words, but hopefully someone reads this and understands what I'm trying to say.
Nailed it 👍
Honesty. Rock gods are actually mortal souls and fade as a leaf unto death as any one of us. Sic transit gloria mundi. ("Thus passes the glory of the world.")
I remember not long before Eddie's passing my best friend and I were both saying to my aunt that VH needed to retire. They're reunion with Sammy didn't go over. Michael got screwed out of money. VH made their mark with some great songs in the 80's and 90's but sadly their time is up. I think it's awesome you got to see them in 1982 at age 15, I was only 3.
Agree. VH in 81 was my first concert. They embodied the spirit of rock and roll then. Plus they were touring on Fair Warning; a blistering, nasty, dark album.
@@matthewvoss7365 Yeah, I saw them on that 2004 tour. It was a disaster. You could literally see band coming apart at the seams night I saw them. The original years (1978-1985) with Roth were the real Van Halen. If you want to ever see the 1982 tour, type in Van Halen Largo '82. I saw them about 6 weeks before the Largo, MD shows. Video quality is poor, but it will give you an idea of what it was like.
You missed one : Queen. Freddie died, John retired. Brian and Roger are still pretending that Queen is a band.
Justin Hayward and John Lodge are both doing Solo Shows and giving great performances. Doing it on a small scale but great all the same. Love The Moodies!! 🎶
As Bruford pointed out in his autobiography. These bands that should retire but haven't still tour because THEY CAN'T afford to retire. Shady management, bad marriages, drug habits, bad investments all contribute.
In general, I suppose. None of the things you mention applies to Jethro Tull- or rather Ian Anderson however. In his case, I personally think, that he really loves being on stage, the hype, etc etc...Can't be "to earn money"as their ticket prices are never high...I am a hard core fan, by the way but do not go to the gigs anymore. Still enjoy almost everything they have done so far.
@@handebarlas6248 Bruford never mentioned Tull in his book. He did mention The Moody Blues.
Quite a few of them blew their money, in more ways than one. I personally know some artists who had a kind of moderate success and they did dumb stuff like buying multiple houses, the best German grand pianos, sports cars, etc. They wonder why they went broke…lol,.,
Also to take into consideration is if you put all your youth and energy into becoming a musician ; then you probably have no other job skills and this is the only way you can make $$$$$$. These groups at least have a 'name brand' they can cash in on, I have know guys that have played guitar, drums, etc. their whole life and never risen above local band status and are in their 40s and 50s.(and 60s) They clean offices at night so they can maybe get a gig on the weekend.
That book should be read by most music fans. It distills a lot of important points into a pretty easy to digest book. Stuff people should really think about when it comes to the artist's motivations, the biz and the crowd's relationship.
I Too am a huge Jethro Tull fan. Saw them first on my 13th birthday in 1976 and fell in love. Do one more tour with Martin and hang it up before more damage is done to your legacy! Tull Was Once Incredible!
Amen to that!! I saw them in 92 and they had no resemblance of Jethro Tull as a live act.
In the Fall of 1981 I had a close friend who "camped out" to get tickets to the Rolling Stones tour. I do not know if it was called a "farewell" tour, but my friend assured me that it would be their last. That was 1981! The warm-up band was the Go-Go's, who are long G-Gone. Even then, the Stones were pushing 40 and well past their prime.
That was there farewell tour, I saw them that same year.
I like in the movie Almost Famous when a new manager is trying to steal the band in the movie away from their original manager. "You gotta make it now while your YOUNG. Do you think Mick Jagger is going to be doing this in his thirties???" That line always got a laugh.
The stones look like they are melting... once band members start actually dieing through old age surely it's time to pack it in
I saw them on that tour at Slane, Ireland promoting Tattoo You and they were terrible. Out of tune and their timing was off. I thought then that they should have quit. Seeing them in recent videos they have improved but the cost of tickets is outrageous. That concert in 1982 - the ticket was less than £12!
Last May, I went and saw Paul McCartney. At the time he was 79 years and 11 months old. I believe it was a 38 song set. He was freaking awesome!! Up until the last 5-6 songs, his voice was as clean and clear as ever. But the last few, you could tell he was almost 80 years old. Absolutely no regrets!! Worth every penny. For me was the most I’ve spent for any concert.
5 songs out of 40 is dam good and would be worth the price any day.
B S
i heard from someone he did two hours all by himself a few years ago and was fantastic! Why are people so obsessed with numbers? Even if he's 100 and able to do well on stage, leave it alone. We are privileged to have him.
@Beth Virginia Phillips I think thats the prevailing line is that the bands listed in the video should quit not because of age but because they can't hack it anymore.
@@Denozo88 When you lose your edge you should step down. Some groups go down in flames by the time they hit 40 after years of dissipation and excess. People like the Stones, McCartney and Ringo, whom I saw in person a few years ago, are really very sharp and should continue. I do agree that some bands should have hung it up as early as the swingin' sixties.
I cant believe nobody's mentioned the number 1 offender...Lynyrd Skynyrd!! The surviving pre-crash lineup actually reunited for a "TRIBUTE tour" on the 10th anniversary of their demise, and 35 years later, they're still touring heavily! The only surviving original member, Gary Rossington, only plays with them for a few songs, and is in bad health. They're supposedly on their farewell tour, but, like Kiss, the farewell tour doesn't seem to have no ending.
Marshall tucker is the worst of all
Too many individuals keep paying to say farewell over and again
Ya, I saw that Skynryd Farewell tour back in 18....
Well said. LS is now a tribute band of the worst kind. The air crash was the end of the band.
GR now passed, RIP. No better time to stop.
You're absolutely spot on about Jethro Tull. Saw Ian play a few years ago, and he just could not sing. He couldn't reach the notes and it sounded nasal and restrained.
It is painful to watch, especially if you grew up in the 70s, and remember those shows!
Go see Martin Barre, his band is incredible, the singer sounds a lot like Ian.
you're right....when glenn fry passed they shoulda retired
I always respected that when Ian Curtis died, Joy Division as a brand died and morphed into New Order with an evolution of sound that went in a different direction musically while retaining most of the original members.
100% the way to do it. If you've got the talent you'll still succeed.
Play_fare yes kudos to Joy Division to go on without Ian but class decision to go on as New Order. Also in a similar situation Pink Floyd when Sid Barrett left Floyd continued on with great success as did New Order!
@@johnschaefer2238 Pink Floyd went on to greater success and acclaim! When they obtained synthesizers they made history, esp. with 'Moon'.
It's Foreigner for me. With Mick Jones unable to tour due to his health, it just feels like seeing a tribute band as the rest of the band joined from 2004 onwards
It's Mick Jones - The Tribute Band.
Saw them during their "Farewell" and waited for Mick Jones to show. In recent years, he would be introduced after the 3rd song. It never happened and mention of him. Glorified Tribute Band! Loverboy opened up, and all but one were original members, and they were excellent!
With no original members, or at least from the first album (many bands have different members in their founding phase) a band should be considered retired. With no originals in it its a tribute
@@Dilley_G45I’d go ever further and say if it’s all about the vocalist….if he/she isn’t there ……
Same w/Journey and Styx, you got karaoke singers fronting the bands trying to keep what once was alive. No shade on these talents and they know nothing else but when you lose the front man and replace w/a similar sounding man you're now a touring cover band. Van Halen/Hagar is one that comes to mind that did well w/both. Radio sucks ass these days thanks to corporations ruining it but I"m not hearing the singers of today being played, all I hear (when the radios do play something off their corporate playlist) are the old classics w/original singers.
I saw the Stones in Seattle in 1994. It was the 3rd time seeing them, the first time being in Pittsburgh in 1966. In both concerts they opened with Fade Away, and were spectacular. I think I'll live with the memory of those concerts. Interesting to note that when I saw them in NYC in 1972, Stevie Wonder opened for them. I knew that I was witnessing the end of an era of big names opening a show like that. I believe Stevie Wonder is one of the rare ones of that generation still going strong. I'm surprised Madonna wasn't mentioned. When I saw her perform at the halftime Superbowl at least 10 years ago, being lifted and danced around by the chorus boys, I thought uh-oh!
Was it the voodoo lounge tour? I saw them then. So glad I got to go, it was a great experience for 16 year old me
@@chillydawgg4354 it was that tour. The sets were incredible!
The Stones on their 1994 tour were better than their 1989 tour, due to advances in concert sound technology. That was my last Stones show.
A couple bands that I've seen recently, who should also hang it up are Foghat and Foreigner. Both are basically tribute bands at this point, especially Foreigner. At least Foghat still has one remaining founding member, drummer Roger Earl. On the flip side, Kansas recently celebrated their 50th anniversary, and still performing quite well, with 3 original members still active.
Maybe it’s just me but I have no desire to try to relive my past glory days with my fav bands. The atmosphere will never be any where close and it just reminds me how old I am and how much better it all was! It’s quite palpable and as a previous commenter mentioned, put the old vinyl on, crank it up and remember those days as they were! Don’t taint that experience
100 % agree with this
Yep!
That's true with almost everything. It's not just a time or place it's YOU at a certain age and how you took it all in. Revisiting old haunts can actually be very disappointing because you are seeing it with older eyes now.
Hear hear.
I remember how my Dad would sometimes put on his old Glenn Miller or Tommy Dorsey records, and kick back in his chair. I'd catch him looking up at the ceiling with the "Thousand yard stare", and I'd ask my mom, "what's dad looking at?" And she'd say "He's looking at 1945".
I didn't understand what she meant by that back then, but I sure do now.
Queen should´ve called it a night after Freddie´s demise. Seeing Queen without Freddie is like seeing Sam Smith without vomiting.
Actually they/them/thar/hills/nonbinary is a great artist. So less of the hate please
@@carlmcgrath484 🤣🤣🤣🤣
They did. It didn't take
Sam Smith's nipple tassels remind me of Right Said Fred.
I liked their project with Paul Rogers he had charisma and his place among rock stars
I see so many older folks bringing grandkids to these shows. I feel it's not that important if Ian Anderson doesn't sound the way he used, but that children of my children will remember being taken to the show and then taking over my collection of LPs and keeping a good memory. These bands are a living legacy and I thank them for doing this as long as they want.
I find these shows to be kind of a bittersweet mixed blessing. I'm in my 30s and missed the "classic" era for the bands you mentioned. My choice is to see the current lineup and enjoy the music for what it is, or not see them at all. For me, at the end of the day the music carries the show, and I always manage to have a good time.
Honestly? Go see a tribute band, those bands rely on being bang on, and often perform the songs better than the original band once the original band has got too old - case in point, I'd much rather see a Metallica covers band at this point, with a drummer who can actually be assed trying, and a lead singer who can actually sing.
As a musician, rapidly approaching 70, I love getting up on stage and playing, giving my all and hoping the audience enjoys. I will stop wanting to do that 2 days after my funeral.
You go, boy! 👍
Most people who didn't watch the video, assume I'm saying artists of a certain age should retire. That's not what I'm saying at all. I'm artists who cannot perform, and have to mime to backing tracks, should retire
That's what I said! I lot of these old guys probably still do it because they ENJOY performing in front of an adoring live crowd. And spending 2 hours on stage in front of thousands of fans who worship you must be better than sitting at home next to their pool drinking a caeser at 11am....
@@StreetPreacherr Agree Stan. I think Classic Album Review isn't talking about musos needing to play but quality reducing over the decades. There should be honesty in show advertising but these shows take the punters back to their youth too. Musos will know when they need retire - the stadium will be empty.
Joe Walsh is a great solo act. No need for Eagles. I have seen the Stones the first time was 1972. Right now I’d rather see the Expensive Winos.
I was a musician for 35 years, you should understand that when you are getting old, you cannot stop and watch your past on a screen, you just need this energy that fans give you when you are on a stage: nothing in life can get this feeling.
Sure, but tell the fans before they buy a ticket you will be miming to some tracks and using backing musicians hidden away to play what you cannot play anymore... Just be honest with people. I don't mind if someone is old - lots of great artists like Mark Farner and Steve Hackett are playing and performing brilliantly.
@@classicalbum About fake performances you are right. But mostly everybody can take a look on UA-cam and see artists playing the week before they buy a ticket. And I think a lot of people don't really know, or cares about backtracks on live shows.
If its genuinely about just playing live and not the money, then they should downsize the show and go solo. Play some of the hits but dont charge ridiculous amounts of money for a sub par experience. And even if it's about the money, get behind and boost a tribute band. Even Mick Fleetwood endorses Rumours of Fleetwood Mac. Records a segment for them to show before they go on. They could even join the band for the last few songs in a couple of shows. I get the need to continue playing, but milking the cash cow after its death, just produces a sour product.
Not all are faking stuff, &/or need aids. If so, yes they should be honest. Not all suck now & people should be able to visit with their ol favorites again if they wish. & Same for others, albeit young, new, or later to the band/scene for what evee reason. They shouldn't be denied the experience. & Hopefully a great one! That being said, if the band can not give a great experience, they should admittedly use aids, some maybe even need to retire a member that truly may not have their passions anymore (Vince Neil, like him but must be honest he is not being fair) doing it for the money poorly is not acceptable! Thus they should charge fair fees. & that also should be a rule across the board regardless.
I have concert stubs from major acts at arenas in the 80's mostly around $5. & would play multi sold out nights, which many would/could attend all. Even merchandise was affordable. Food & drinks were high, yet still no where near as outrageous. & We would go to see many shows a week &/or a day which happened often. Especially being so close to Philly, NJ & NY. Even DE, MD, VA etc were in our mix.
Were many shows we did not even know the bands playing. If nothing else going on, we could check out a concert as most did not suck as bad back then & if that bad, leave & only loose a few dollars. Then go & have fun in the parking lots anyways. Got familiar with many bands during those years. Bands i heard on radio/tv we weren't fond of won us over live. & Many blind fans were made as well.
Mainly possible since costs of many venues stayed steady through the late 80s early 90s. Also when a lot of those headlining major acts were downgraded to playing them. Only time a ticket cost more than $25./$50. is if one was going through a broker for a sold out show &/or premium seat. Then those prices started skyrocketing. Then Barbara tickets go to $100. Then $1k & the ego battles began of who can charge the most! & All else start upping costs forcing fewer to be able to go.
So if all can get on the same page, those who still have passions can express & indulge themselves all they want & fans can as well while we still can. Life is short & time flies by too quick we must capture every moment we can whilst we can.
fair enough. if folks are willing to watch and listen who is anyone to tell you to stop.
Excellent video, presentation is well done. Sad about The Beach Boys, but you are spot on!
I have to disagree in regards to AC/DC. their most recent album is another masterpiece among their many masterpieces. and as an old person myself I appreciate that they are showing that us old people aren't dead yet. however I believe they are on their last album. and I believe the reason they keep going is. because Malcolm Young would have wanted them to, just like Bon Scott would have wanted them to.
Roger Hodgson from Supertramp is another musician that is performing well. in fact he seems happier now. and his connection with his audience's seem to back that up.
I noticed that nobody has mentioned anything about how Robert Plant understood this very thing. Led Zeppelin is my very favorite band of all bands and I have seen Page Plant live Robert by himself live a couple times and am considering seeing him with Allison this late spring. Plant said straight out that even though he enjoys singing certain Zeppelin songs arranged a bit differently he does not feel that way about Zeppelin as a whole, the person he is now is not the person he was then. I was angry about it at first but as I am about to be 60 I actually understand and respect him for that, Plant is not a faker or a fraud. This is who he is now. And I must say that when I saw him with Jimmy Page in Boston in 1995 he was amazing, 3 hour long concert and they closed with Kashmir and Plant hit and held the long note in the middle, we went nuts. He can't be that anymore and doesn't try. So many people could learn some life lessons from that. Sorry that was so long
I agree 100%. He still has the voice, but he has nothing to prove to anyone. He was the best. In my opinion, still is.
I'm sorry he never got to duet with Elvis. Now there's a dream duet.
I share all your sentiments. I also saw Page & Plant on their Unledded tour in the mid-90s, though I saw them in the Wembley Arena in London. Unforgettable hours. I love Page of course for who he is but Robert is the one who has gained the most of my respect. There is simply no pretence about him and he has very sensible perspectives on music and life in general.
You're spot on regarding Robert, I was lucky enough to catch him and Alison krauss in Boston last september when I was on holiday from Scotland, fantastic show, his voice is perfect for the stuff they do. Do yourself a favour and get tickets 🏴🇺🇲
I enjoyed reading your response. I am even older than you, at 72. I grew up with all of these bands and Led Zeppelin is also one of my favorites. I liked your response because I am in the camp that thinks LZ should do a tour. You gave me something to think about. I guess that there is another side to this.
But there does seem to be an huge demand for a Zeppelin tour. They're London get together some years had, I believe something like 10 million ticket requests.
I last saw Genesis live in 2007 at Twickenham, a really good concert, but I could tell then that they were past their best. I also saw them in 1987 at Wembley Stadium When I saw that they were doing their farewell tour in 2022, I decided not to try to get a ticket. I saw some excerpts of one of the concerts on UA-cam and was glad that I had made that decision. Phil Collins, bless him, was just a pale shadow of his former glory. I would prefer to remember them in their prime
My friend saw them in December of 2021 in Philadelphia and he said it was hard to watch Phil Collins. He also paid $200.00 for a ticket.
I recently saw Steve Hackett in concert playing Genesis's Seconds Out album. Now that was an amazing concert!
@@mickylawless1941 I am definitely going to get some tickets the next time he tours the UK. I have seen some UA-cam videos and it does look and sound great.
Whilst phil collins looked frail still enjoyed them in 2021 and at least it was the nucleus of the lineup we all know and i think that will be it whereas the stones et all just seem to go on forever
I agree that the online clips from the recent Genesis tour didn't sound too great, however i attended one of the Liverpool shows and hand on heart it was superb, my favourite ever gig and i've seen so many of the top artists of the last 50 years. It was strange and also wonderful in that Phil Collins seemed to totally forget his ailments and limitations and midway through the show he became almost trancendent, he had the whole crowd in the palm of his hand, totally amazing to witness it. The band were of course superb, best stage production i have ever seen too.
Alice Cooper still sounds awesome just saw a show and it was amazing how he sounds
Yeah, I've seen some footage of him recently performing with Johnny Depp. "Poison" will always be one of my all time favorites from Alice Cooper.
Agree, he was outstanding in 2022
I saw the Doobie Brothers last year. Tom Johnson wasn’t there due to back surgery but did make it to middle of the tour. Michael MacDonald was with them on this tour. Man they sounded great, especially when a Michael MacDonald sung song came on the crowd went nuts. And it was sold out
Hope to see At Madison Square Garden this coming August with my cousin from Long Island 🏝️! Should be great!!!
The thing I hate is not the bands touring but them charging outrageous prices.
That's out of a band's control. Agencies like LiveNation are to blame. They skyrocket prices on what they think people will pay by adding ridiculous fees into it. They are getting so ridiculous that B list bands can barely afford to tour now, even though the ticket prices are crazy. Mix that with venues now taking 10% - 20% of all merchandise sales at shows and it's a wonder we have live music at all.
@@groovelife415 You're absolutely correct. Last year, my husband and I went to see Bloodywood- an up and coming metal band. It was their first US tour, and ticket prices were advertised at $20 per ticket because they were playing mostly very small venues (larger bars and union halls). We had to get the tickets through Ticketmaster, and by the time all the fees were added in, two tickets cost us about $75. Festival tickets, by the time fees are added in, can be close to $300 per ticket, just for the basic ticket. As contrast to that, the first concert ticket I ever bought as a teenager in the mid-70's cost me $4 and I paid cash at the box office to see Uriah Heep.
Some still yield an arm and a leg to relieve distant youth
I saw AC/DC in 1984 on the flick of the switch tour for $19 dollars and 35 years later on rock or bust it was $190 dollars and they played the same 15 songs both times lol
Surprised people pay these prices
As a massive Queen fan myself, I'd sadly add Queen + Adam Lambert. When it's time to go, it's time to go, that's it!
I’d see Brian by himself in a more intimate venue anytime, but not “Queen”
I don't think it would be such a contentious issue if they'd retired the band name.
@@richardbuckley1232 Yes, that'd be definitely more suitable.
@@andrewcarr5923 I agree. It seems John Deacon was right all along.
@@andrewcarr5923 Yes it would. For practical economic reasons, you can always command more money with the more powerful name. That's why Fripp changed the name of his then new band Discipline (1981) back to King Crimson. Most fans not only don't care the Adam Lambert is in the band, they LIKE Adam Lambert.
I'm old enough to remember the Rolling Stones 1981 tour - when people said you better go see them now, this could be their last tour! And the Who's 'final' tour was a year or two after that!
yeah I remember all the hype about The Who's "last" concert- 40 years ago LMAO
@@cinnamongirl5410 Their last show in Toronto was a pay per view concert.
Yeah, my brother and I thought the SAME thing about Paul McCartney when he was headlining some festival a few hours away... That was probably over 20 years ago now, and the guy is STILL going 'strong'!
I saw them that year as well. I was in the Navy. The show was at the Hampton Coliseum. "Going to a go-go" tour. Fun times and a great memory.
@@sundevilkevin I actually paid to go see that show broadcast in a college auditorium..😂
I saw kiss last year and they were totally fabulous. Best live entertainment I’ve ever seen.
I went to see the Stones during one of their Farewell tours back in the late 90's . They've been saying goodbye for decades.
No they haven't. Please enlighten me, when and where did they say Goodbye? They have always maintained that they would retire when nobody wanted to see them. Demand for them is still massive as of June '24.
It is extremely hard for musicians to stop playing...it is their Whole life
They have stopped playing... they're miming
Musicians are the only occupation that us ageless and can't be driven away by age discrimination
@@classicalbum True. Sadly, the are miming for a paycheck.
By coincidence, I was listening to a BBC radio program today about professional musicians in orchestras who, through accident or illness could no longer perform, and how catastrophic it has been to their mental well-being. Their lives were totally changed by the loss of their musical abilities.
totally true ☝🏻it’s there career and if they want to continue it’s totally there choice ✊🏻
I get a load of grief for saying I think Queen should have stopped after the 1992 Tribute. I love Queen and have seen them on numerous occasions, but over £150 for Brian and Roger? not for me though i understand why many think differently
I'm not a fan so wouldn't go along anyway, but you're right - rather like The Who percentage of original members wise and perhaps more crucially with Queen, there's no show without Punch.
I have an interview with Freddie alone, and he says "I'm not going to be on a stage when I'm 50. It would be ridiculous!" I like to think Queen would've stuck to that, had he lived
I disagree Bonn was the man, but Brian Johnson has paid his due's and he shouldn't be included IMO
@@DaleRC75 It's Queen +. So, Adam isn't replacing Freddie
Queen should me have stopped at Innuendo and with Frieddie’s death.
I saw Rush on their final tour. I was telling people beforehand they should go see them because I thought it would be their last chance. Most of the responses were “Oh, bands always say it’s their ‘farewell tour,’ it’s just a bullshit ploy to sell more tickets.” I said no, it wasn’t even promoted as a farewell tour, just that I had the strong feeling that it would turn out to be that way. A few months later, Neil Peart died. R.I.P., Professor.
have you done a video on the bands still touring with no original members? there are WAY to many
Wow. That's just sad.
23 years ago I went to see Kiss on their farewell tour. Yes it was called the farewell tour.
As has every KISS tour ever since. All four members could have retired in style at the end of 1978. Laughable how many keep buying the FAREWELL bait.
Farewell to the original lineup.
Read Paul's book. It was "farewell" until the fans were clamoring for them to not retire. So, they didn't.
They've been doing shows in packed arenas since. But this time, father time is catching up to them.
2 years ago they did a gig in Colombia promoted as the last show ever in Colombia, April 15 they are playing again as the last show once again
@@andrescarrasco1248 again, who are you to tell them not to take money if people want to give it to them. Maybe people wanted them to come back. Don't buy the ticket if you don't want to go.
@@rocsaltjohn I'm no one to tell them that, I'm a kiss fan that has come to peace believing 2012 was the last year of kiss and all the next decade was just a bad imitation band, and saddens me for the people who have paid for that sh..it show they have become
Paul McCartney should too. Such a shame they don’t know when to stop. He should announce a finale world tour at very cheap prices to enable everyone to wave him off
I think the problem is that Sir Paul simply loves performing. It isn’t as if he needs the money. I’ve often said to my wife if Paul dies on stage one night, we’ll know he died a happy man.
@@kato64 I agree, I think some of these old rockers just 'need' to get on a stage.....
Paul doesn’t have the vocal range he once had. That was one of his strengths. Too bad.
Ironically, Ringo Starr still sounds quite good-and he’s two years older than Macca. It obviously helps that Ringo was a much more limited singer to begin with.
@@c.7610 it is ironic but he never had great range so his songs were easier. Saw him last summer, to me he’s nailed the later years format by having other performers
During the Black Sabbath “13” tour; I believe it was Geezer Butler who said in an interview that they and everybody they knew while making albums have grown up … however the audience had not, they were still the same age as they were in their 20’s-30’s!
And THAT is why Classic Rock artists still perform. People, especially the younger generations want to pay money to go see them perform, live!
Just found you. It's a relevant whether I always agree with you or not, I find you refreshingly humorous and informed. Even for a Brit. I literally laughed out loud with your video on responding to the cesspool of this world known as trolls. Brilliant. You will be on regular rotation now, but I warn you no more talking about the stones retiring! I'm not going to admit that you might be right, but history's greatest rock n roll band defines the lives of so many of us that we're afraid that when they stop, we just might stop too.
I think drummer Nick Mason had the right idea with the Saucerful of Secrets tour, a great way to revisit the early Pink Floyd catalogue without pretending to be Pink Floyd, looks like a stonking gig too..
David Gilmour only tours when he has a new album out. He will play Pink Floyd tracks but also solo tracks.
I enjoyed it
Roger Earl of Foghat should do the same thing. The current line up is so disappointing but they are not interested because their new album is doing really well. I don't get it
I agree wholeheartedly.
I saw NMSoS twice, and they were fantastic.
It was particularly nice getting to hear many songs that never once were performed by Pink Floyd proper, namely the likes of "Fearless," "Candy and a Currant Bun," and "Remember a Day."
Their performance of "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun," "A Saucerful of Secrets," and "Echoes" were so mindblowingly good that I actually needed to collect myself for a bit after each.
@@Gunners_Mate_Guns sounds fantastic, I'll have to try and go to one 👍
I went to see the Stones in Wellington, NZ in 2006, because I assumed it would be my last chance to see them. I never thought they'd still be going 17 years later.
My first time to see the Stones, and my first time to see Paul McCartney were back in the 90's. At the time I though, better go see them now, they won't be touring much longer. LOL.
When the Stones were formed back in 1962, they probably thought they'd be done by 1972, if not waaay sooner.
People are entitled to like what the Stones are doing now, but seeing men over 80 act that way makes me cringe.
I vaguely remember the Stones touring in 1995 and thinking "those old farts? How can that be a good gig?"
Saw the Stones in 82…..Seeing them again 2024
Hi, you might know that Roger Waters did not sing "Have a Cigar" back then. It was Roy Harper. Alghough Roger Waters and David Gilmour tried to do it later. Anyway, you have a great labour of love going on with your "Classic Album Review". Thanks. It is interesting and entertaining.
As an older guy myself, I was all set to get mad at you, but I can't. You are right about all of them, and you stated your reasons well. What makes your reasoning fair is that there are still some older bands that can perform on the stage, and are even creating new music. Great video!
I loved these bands, so I take no pleasure in agreeing with his point. But the truth is, most of them can’t perform any longer. It is what it is.
It will be a sad day for me if I don't get to see AC/DC again. I have seen them 34 times since 1985. They are the absolute best live show. They are the reason I have tinnitus. It was worth it.
They played at Laverton High in Victoria in the 1970's!? I say if they can still rock it and people are willing to pay money..Let them sing forever! I would pay money again to see some no longer with us. Billy Thorpe, Daryl Cotton, Ted Mulry? I would mortgage the house to get to hear Farnham just one more time.😪 One person I would have loved to see live is Steve Perry. In his prime he was an absolute legend. He may not be able to hit the same notes but, like John Farnham, he is The Voice!
Iron Maiden is still the best live band in the world😜
Up the mighty Irons🤘🤘🤘🤘
They have tinnitus too ill bet
Joking of course, aren't you?
I’m glad he didn’t mention Steely Dan because I saw Donald Fagen and the “Steely Dan musicians” last year and they were fantastic.
RIP Walter Becker.
If you are a fan of Becker, check out what he did long after SD. There was a great English 80s band that never quite made it in America - China Crisis. I just loved them. Obviously Walter did too. After hearing their classic "Working With Fire And Steel", he contacted them - to ask if he could JOIN the band! You better believe they said yes. And what came from that - "Flaunt The Imperfection", "What Price Paradise" - just wonderful. In addition to the guitar, he produced them. They are must-hears for any Becker fan.
@@zendae54
Thanks
I’ll check it out
@@zendae54 - I saw China Crisis open for Simple Minds in ‘84….Fire+Steel is a great tune! Arizona Sky is pretty good too…
@@zendae54 yup! *Flaunt the Imperfection* was beautifully produced by *Becker!* Still sounds good today, as do most of *Steely Dan's* back catalogue. 👌
I had the privilege of seeing these legends around 1996 at Irvine Ampitheater. Donald Fagen truly was the grand master of the stage at center surrounded by his various keyboards, as Becker was content to be in the background on guitar accompaniment. The sound was fairly good, the backup band and stage decor was minimal, but nobody cared - because everyone in the packed audience felt it was an unforgettable evening to actually see two legends of music performing live.
I see there is a part 2 to this so I won't add any bands until I've seen that. I have zero objections to any of the bands cited here. I was fortunate enough to see most of the bands I wanted to see in the 70s when they could still deliver. My first rock show was a Tull concert and it blew me completely away. I ended up seeing them five times in a six or seven year period. If Tull was in town, I was there. Then I took my wife and some friends to a Tull concert in 93 and man, is he right. Ian Anderson couldn't hit the notes back then and would put flute runs in where the vocals should have been. They played a lot of the earlier more jazzy stuff from Stand Up, mostly because it wasn't so demanding I guess, and while I recognized the songs my friends, who weren't as well versed, didn't. They wanted Cross Eyed Mary, Aqualung, Thick as a Brick and the like. We got none of that and the show ended after a little more than an hour. I ended up apologizing to my friends because I had built the band up so much. As for the Stones, I think they died 10 years ago and they aren't touring as much as they are running from the mortician. And the Who? I could never figure that one out. I saw them right after Keith passed away but the core was still in tact. Without the Ox? It's just two old guys singing songs.
For some of them, like McCartney, maybe it's like the Stones said; "They just get married cause there's nothing else to do." I think some of them tour because they don't know how to be anything but a rock and roll star. Retirement from anything is tough. It took me three kicks at the can and a couple major medical procedures to get used to the idea, and I didn't have millions of fans screaming for me. Hanging around past their expiration date is a thing with boomers as a whole, be it rock and roll, politics, movies, or driving a bus. I'm on the tail end of the generation that learned to hold their breath until they got their way. If any generation needs to call it a day, it's the boomers. We broke the place pretty hard, now it's time to get out of the way so someone else can fix it. But that's me. The only entertainer I remember who could still deliver the goods in his 80s was Frank Sinatra, but he was the Chairman of the Board, and there was only one Frank Sinatra.
I agree completely about Jethro Tull. I saw them in the 70s like you. By the 90s it was just painful to watch.
Excellent list. I'm wondering if your opinion has changed about the Stones since their latest release, which wasn't out yet when you made this video.
20 years back my son use to hang out with the son of the drummer in one of these bands. His Dad’s band was about to go on tour again and the sons comment was “ Dad’s run out of money again”.
Briiliant song
The kid's comment should've been "dad can pay for my everything again." Ungreatful sh1t.
I can recall in the 1970's when bands like the Platters were touring with only a few original members and I thought "well that'll never happen with the bands I listen to". You got it right with the Stones and Fleetwood Mac. Also, AC/DC should have done the honourable thing after Malcolm. Led Zepp got it right and Rush.
Much better than Navika.......
Much better than Navikha
I think there were several bands using the Platters name in the '70s.
I saw The Platters (quite by accident) in the early 1990s, with ONE original member. They played in a hotel, as far as I remember. Very pleasant and all.
Well put and spot on, sir. Couldn't and won't put my $$$ into seeing any of those groups today even though everyone of them were once some of the most incredible bands in history. Ive been in bands and playing gigs since around 15. I'm nearing 60 now, and I'm no where half they player i once was. I couldn't imagine being in any of those groups and toured the schedule they had in their prime, and believe that I'd have anything left in the tank at 60! Id been done touring 10 years ago. Retire guys. We still have and love the music.
One minute in, and you have captured me. It is like everything you are saying in this video are my thoughts exactly! 😂 Love it!
My friends are totally stunned when they hear me say I'll never see Jethro Tull live again, but then understand when I tell them why. The very last time I saw them was in Atlanta at some weekend festival in Piedmont Park. It was plainly obvious that he was holding back on his voice for more than half the concert and when it came time for the big, can't mess this up, can't skip performing songs he barely had it in him.
I've seen them more than any other band but now just want to cherish the memories, get and watch videos, and even continue to get new releases (though the newer stuff has been slow at me falling in love with it). It's very sad, as they have been my favorite band since I heard the first minute of Aqualung shortly after it was released.
I'm a huge Jethro Tull, and I stopped attending shows in the mid 2000s.
Yep. I first saw Tull in 1975 and since then about six more times. Last time eight or ten years ago. Sad, but at least I have memories of the old days.
My understanding is he has breathing issues, COPD so he is lucky to be out at all.
I saw Tull at Hammersmith in 78 on the Heavy Horses tour. My abiding memory was of people being threatened by security because Anderson had a "seated only" policy for the audience ie the bums on seats that paid his wages.
As soon as the Heavy rock part of Minstrel In The Gallery started and the crowd got to its feet the bouncers were all over us threatening to chuck people out! "SIT DOWN GET BACK IN YOUR F***ING SEATS OR WE'LL THROW YOU OUT!"
I've never forgiven beardy for that.
From around the early 2000s, it became painful to listen to Ian Anderson struggling through the songs that were more demanding. The set list became boring and predictable (Aqualung, Too Old to RnR etc) and when Martin Barre left in 2011, that was the really the end of Jethro Tull (even Ian Anderson said as much at that time).
As Mr Anderson sees Jethro Tull as "a business", it was just too much of a temptation to not use the Tull name when ticket and album sales were diminishing for Anderson's solo albums and tours. In my opinion, the last decade or so of substandard material and singing, with various line-ups has merely diminished the legacy of a great band.
On the flip side, I saw Cheap Trick last year and they were terrific. Voices still strong.
I love that Robin Zander - what a singer ! He always had such a great strong voice, I've always loved him and then
(Them)
Cheap Trick still has it!
I saw them in November ‘22, and they kicked ass!!! I was so happy!!!
Another one is ZZTop.
I really like Billy’s work with the BFGs and his blues album.
The old ZZ material is kind of stale by comparison.
Better to flame out than to fade away, eh? (To paraphrase legacy legend Neil Young's Hey, Hey, my, my.)
Ritchie Blackmore figured out how to avoid the pitfall of being an aging vocalist - sack the old one & hire a younger one: Dio, Bennett, Turner, ... Romero + Candance Night. And when the fretting hand slows down, slow the rempo or change genre.
The guy is right. What no one wants to admit is that most of these acts, especially the vocalists, can not perform well any longer. There are a ton of classic acts that were far more effective in the studio, than they ever were live, to begin with. There is this weird obsession that people have of attending concerts, almost so they can say “I saw them live!” It doesn’t matter that they saw a watered down version of an act that has one remaining original member, that the vocalist talks, rather than sings, that the vocalist allows the crowd to sing half of his lyrics, or that the ticket prices rival those of the Super Bowl. None of that matters, because they were there!
I was shocked when the Stones continued after Charlie died. He was too integral in my mind. Kiss should have quit in 1977.
1987
No not 1977, Creatures of The Night, Lick It Up and even Animalize were worthy albums and tours. Later in the 80s perhaps? Crazy Nights or Hot In The Shade onwards.
Hahaha!! And Motley Crue in 83!
@@barryscott8041 Steve Jordan had Charlie's blessing to replace him. Keith started working with him back in the '80s on Charlie's recommendation. And I don't know exactly how he is a "showboat" from behind the drums. He doesn't get any solos, he doesn't do anything to particularly call attention to himself. It's kinda easy to forget he's back there - until you see a shot of him on the screen and are reminded that it's no longer Charlie.
KISS never should have started.
Steve Hackett definitely has it correct,a superb musician who produces new music too
And has amazing musicians surrounding him. The hard-core Genesis fans LOVE it!!
@@rich9619 a million upvotes here. :-)
Hackett and his band are superb - I saw them live playing through the Seconds Out setlist and more in late 2021, a brilliant gig.
@@louise_rose So cool Louise! I saw Steve and band play Genesis Live ...amazing! Even Suppers Ready like a 30 minute song! Singer Nad is great too. Sounds just like Peter AND Phil. I'd go see them again any time
@@rich9619Exactly early Genesis fans love him and his revisited live band that always have absolutely best musicians available. The concerst never suck.
Remember, Steve Hackett is just 72 and the other guys much younger.
The best concert I have ever seen was Genesis Live Revisited in 2014 in Finland, in a small venue with not too lound sound. They played nearly 3 hours not a single dull moment.
Incredible performances such as The Knife. I felt an illusion being on a Genesis gig in England in 1972 souting Knife ! It was spectacular. I know I will never ever experience such a musical nirvana in my lifetime and that's it.
I saw The Who at Edinburgh Castle last year and Roger Daltry still has a great voice. It isn't what I saw in 1979 at my first ever gig or even what I saw 20 years ago at the Cancer Trust concerts at the Albert Hall which I've always loved as a venue. But it was definitely worth the ticket price and I got that rush of various emotions that are missing in everyday life at my age.
Roger Waters just fcking annoys me now. These massive stadium concerts and like the Cirque du Soleil for Roger's ego. He seems to have actually become the arrogant fascist megalomanic of The Wall.
So glad you included Tull. If you hadn't, I would have added them/him here. The 50th anniversary tour would have been better served as a documentary.
I think the genius of King Crimson is their evolution. I'm not sure if Robert Fripp will tour anymore, but his changing of band members over the years kept it fresh.
Fripps happy appearing on UA-cam playing funny short versions of famous songs with his wife Toyah.
@@fus149hammer5 He's pretty much retired
I’ve enjoyed their 2014 and later shows immensely. Much more than the 95/2001/2002 tours.
When Fripp talks or plays, I listen.
Spot on in all cases. With Tull at least we can see Martin Barre and his band. You'll get smaller venues, far better vocals from Dan Crisp, and a more interesting set list than Ian offers these days.
I have no problem with old bands touring. I appreciate this list as I agree with them all. My BIG problem is when a band claims a "farewell" tour, that is your last tour. Had a friend spend $200+ for nosebleeds 3 TIMES to see a last tour from KISS. Motley Crew should NOT be touring as they "sync" all singing and instruments.
I saw the KISS farewell show in 1999. Little did i know that, 25 years later, they would still be doing a farewell show.
I did too. Nashville TN. And now they're saying they're going to continue as avatars. Jeez already!
Alice Cooper and Rick Springfield. Both in their 70’s and both still rocking well
I saw Rick Springfield do an acoustic set. He nailed it.
Don't forget Iggy Pop!
I remember Rick Springfield in ZOOT. [Yes. I AM that old!] He was with Daryl Cotton, Beeb Birtels [who went on to play in Little River Band] They had a big hit with Elanor Rigby in Oz in the late 1960's..
Sometimes it's not about the quality of the performance, but the performer's legacy. For example, I saw Gordon Lightfoot perform a couple years ago. He was 78 and his voice was pretty frail. But it was still a thrill for me to see him after listening to his music most of my life. I also saw Ringo Starr's all-star band when he was over 70. He didn't play the full set but he was the reason I went to see the concert.
Ringo's Voice sounds still good. Paul McCartney s voice is gone
Lightfoot is badly senile. Its elder abuse to put him up there.
@@danielkokal8819 While he certainly appears frail, I've not seen any reports of senility or other mental issues. If true, I would agree with you.
If youre meaning Ringo didnt play his drums a full set , he didnt do that 30 years ago when he started touring .
I also saw Gordon Lightfoot several years ago. While his guitar playing was great, he no longer could hit the high notes. He was heckled. He looked frail. It was the saddest concert I have ever attended. Glad I saw him in the 80's.
The problem is most of the old bands never thought they would make it to age 60. As such they have no idea what to do with their time. How sad.
The Who's Farewell Tour in 1982. Fooled us all again.
As an old bastard myself, seeing some of these bands live 'back in the day', I have to agree with these picks. Look guys, we're all getting old, and there's nothing wrong with admitting that. Grab the original album, crank it up and enjoy. They can never take that away from us!
Correct.
I agree. It's just sad to see these people that I loved so much getting old and sounding bad. Of course I look exactly the same as I did in the 80's.
People will throw stacks of money at them, and being cheered is addictive. But at some point self-respect should kick in. Grace Slick said that people over 50 doing rock music looks stupid, and she has lived up to her word.
@@samstone22744Exactly my thought since 1976 when David Byron the Performer left Uriah Heep in Summer of 1976
. 47 years ago ! I never bought a new Heep album after David had gone forever. RIP
'Look guys' cringe.
Comment had some merit up to that point.
It’s like that saying Don’t Meet Your Idols. I would rather remember the bands when they still could perform rather then having a memory of how horrible they are now.
Ya. I recently bought a blu-ray concert of a singer that I always liked (who shall go nameless). Was terribly disappointed, because she sang everything out of key. It was cringe level nine. Never played it again since. Probably won't. Just play her original albums, where she sounded good. But, at least I won't waste more money on tickets if she comes to my city.
Ummmm…..I think I would want to see Janice Joplin, Jimi, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain rather than remembering them young.
The Rolling Bones have seriously worn-out their welcome a long time ago 😢!!!
Despite all being in their 70s and 80s they've all got such LOVELY HAIR!
Seen Hackett a few times these last years. It is wonderful to see a real talent playing. The Genesis stuff with Nad Sylvan doing a very credible Gabriel is magic. Steves solo stuff in the shows is also wonderful.
And he stands up to play throughout his entire set when he sat down in his 20s. He's living back to front.
The most I ever paid for a rock concert was $45 (cheap seats) to see the stones in a football stadium in 1995. Most bands I saw in my younger days were under $20. Like Jethro Tull, Steppenwolf, Doobie Brothers, Alice Cooper, etc...
Interesting Victor, I saw Cooper in 87 & 2001. Good seats definitely under $100 for sure. In his title track from 'From the Inside Album' he mentions '8 bucks even buys a folding chair' referencing one of his shows. Wow. That must have been before they released 'Love it Death'.
Saw Aerosmith in an ice arena in a shitty town in Michigan...$5...when they first started
@@robertallen6710 Wings Stadium in Kalamazoo
Saw the Stones for 6$ in 76 coulda been 77 at the Fox theater in Atlanta GA. The cockroaches tour LOL.
Saw the Voodoo Lounge tour at Florida Field in Gainesville. What a great show.
Your "XXX plays the music of YYY" is aa good idea. I also like the idea of "Official Tribute Band" when it comes to acts like The Outlaws and Lynyrd Skynyrd. I'd love to see Alex and Geddy do a Rush Tribute tour, too, as I wasn't a fan when they were all alive so I never saw them.
I agree wholeheartedly with your list here, but the problem is there is no one to replace them. I cannot listen to the radio these days because the stations around here play a great classic rock song to every 50 not-so-great songs. MP3 players and an iPod are my mainstays.
Interesting comment about Steve Hackett and his Genesis Revisited shows. I've been to some and they really are wonderful. The most recent three studio albums that he's put out in recent years, for me, are as good as Defector and Highly Strung and unfortunately only a small amount of that new music gets played live. Instead of a 70/30 split of Genesis music to Hackett music, I think he could afford to reverse the ratios, celebrate his new stuff and still get full houses at the London Palladium or Hammersmith Apollo.
100% with you. He’s playing as well as ever and the new material stands up well.
"who the fuck wants to see a bunch of old people on a stage?" -- Grace Slick on why she stopped performing at the end of the 80s.
Oh please, this is what they do. If they can keep going let them. To see living legends are a chance of a lifetime. No matter what. Pure joy pure joy for so many people. They may sound different but who cares!!!! Let them be.
Different should not mean “suck” Deborah, and I loved all of these bands. If the performance is well below subpar, I am not interested. I want to hear the music at its best, or close to it. I don’t want to hear some acoustic version of “Baba O’Reilly”, just because Daltry can’t reach the notes. This is why tribute bands have been so successful. Great music, played( and sung very well), and reasonably priced.
I love your ending statement when you said the most important thing is that we keep coming to your pod instead of caring about our well-being! Well played, sir!
From Australia , as much as I have always loved DEEP PURPLE , it's time to call it a day unless they do a short 10 to 15 date world tour with Ritchie Blackmore to put it to rest because there fans deserve for them to go out on top and with a little class but I don't see it happening unfortunately , there certainly was something special about a DEEP PURPLE concert in the early 70s, Peace from down under.
Speaking of Australia, I wonder what in the heck the remaining members of INXS were thinking after the very sad death of the absolutely irreplaceable Hutchence. Flailing about looking for a new singer, even selling out to a ridiculous reality show. Sigh. At least they've got the hint now. But man, was INXS brilliant in their heyday.
Personally, I suspect the issue was that Michael really wasn't the same in the head after that assault in Denmark with the cabbie. He had plenty of public affairs and dirty laundry even before, but at least his brilliance was a counterbalance. After the assault, I think that wasn't the case anymore. So his bandmates were already fed up with him, probably didn't mourn his passing as much as the fans, and thought they could do better and go on. They were wrong. You can't recapture the magic.
Try listening to a band called Beast in Black. I saw them in Munich a week ago and as good as DP ever were in the day.
However, Deep Purple have put out records thst they support by touring. It would be different if they just kept going around to county fairs playing. But I get your point too.
Simon McBride, Airey, and Paice are excellent.
I just saw Deep Purple (FEB 10 2023), and agree with two or three exceptions, they are still putting out new material to support, they have a great new guitarist who seems to do the classic material justice without trying to be Blackmore, and selfishly I'm glad they stuck to it long enough for me to finally see them. Ian Gillan obviously can't hit the screams like he could 50 years ago, but he could certainly still entertain.
It would be slick to see a list of the bands we wish were still together. It might be a long list.
It’s a cashcow for them. As a previous commenter said they maybe skint . I personally would have to have a damn good reason to get out of chair and pay good money to see some of these 75 to 80 years pretend that they’ve still got it…..frankly they haven’t 😊
If you want a prime example of a Band who knew it was time to take a bow and leave the Stage it is RUSH, The band members knew it was time and they left gracefully and with the utmost of dignity both for themselves and for their fans. Even though Geddy Lee has stated that although there might be the possibility of He and Alex Lifeson again making music together; with the passing of Neil Peart it would not be as RUSH.
Agreed. I went to see a concert in their final tour and though I hate to admit it, Geddy’s voice wasn’t quite up to his standard of the concert I had been to just 5 years prior. I still admire the heck out of all of them and the amazing music they made that touched my life and contributed to my development and I’d still go see Geddy and Alex in a concert if they ever did another one. It wasn’t that he couldn’t sing any of the songs, but at times he was obviously straining. It also could have been partially to blame on my old ears. 😜Before I go to another concert I really need to buy some hearing protection made just for concerts. I hear a lot of ringing at loud concerts now and it lasts past the concert.
Sure it would. Neil was not an original member and there was a Rush before him so technically speaking there could be one without him. I'm not sure if that would happen but it's up to Alex and Geddy
I feel like I am the only one who feels this way, but Geddy lost his voice decades ago. I even looked online for any thread discussing what happened to his voice and found none. It looks like it hurt him to try to sing anywhere close to where he could in the 70's and 80's. Musically they sounded perfect, but I cant watch Geddy struggling through those lyrics in any live videos over the past 30 years.
@@TLoumena You're not the only one that feels that way.
Who are Rush?
On a positive note - I would like to add that Stryper is still all original , rocking ad well as ever ( some have said better ) and miraculously Michael Sweet's voice is STILL UNBELIEVABLE !?!?! These guys have stayed true to their sound , message and fans...I really respect that about them !!!!!
Stryper has the bassist from Firehouse, Perry Richardson, he's played on their last 2 albums so far. Tim Gaines hasn't been in the band for a couple of years now. I agree though, they still sound great!!
Well, pyre13 beat me to it. Yeah Perry is not an origianl member. I've known Perry since Firehouse was Max Warrior and living around Myrtle Beach SC.
You sure that's a positive note?
please tell me they still dont dress and look like chicks!
As long as they're having fun and not just doing it for the money, I say keep on rockin.
The first concert I attended was Chicago and The Beach Boys back in the 1975. That was almost 50 years ago!
Hey, you are a great singer! I saw your performance of Stardust.
We saw The Who in Cincinnati. They played at our soccer stadium, TQL stadium in May, 2022. They hadn't played here since that fateful night of 1979, which we were at. I couldn't believe how Roger's voice held out. Pretty emotional for us. That sounded great.
Damn......................in that case, glad you survived that awful tragedy!
Some bands stayed fit and have good new members. Roger Daltry is like Tom Jones voice wise , as good as ever. Debbie Harry of Blondie can still sing and their drummer Clem Burke still has amazing energy and is a huge fan of Keith Moon !
Zack Starkey is a brilliant drummer and really revitalized the band
Saw the Who in 76 and in 2019 ( the Two) and the addition of a full orchestra in 19 to play Tommy,and others was brilliant- not the same band,but excellent performers still!!
You have the who needed to retire after Johnny and Swizzle died
With the "benefit" of hindsight, U2 should've retired in 1993...
Yes, In the name of love... please stop.
@@classicalbum 😂
They are tragic 😂😂
maybe 1983...?
@@blindpink even better
I saw The Beach Boys last year at The Royal Albert Hall. I knew it would only be Mike Love and Bruce Jonnson plus some relatives of other past members but i went for the music which was absolutely authentic and captured the "surf sound" perfectly!!! Played virtually every hit so well worth it!!
Largely agree with you, but I also like your comments about Steve Hackett. What you get is a reasonably priced, genuine, show, performed brilliantly. On the occasions I've seen him, there is always someone asking for "The Knife", which he doesn't play, presumably because it was written before he was a member of Genesis - so he's showing respect too.
Steve played a great version of The Knife during his Genesis Revisited 2014 tour as an encore. He definitely played the song at the Glasgow Armadillo (SEC) concert which I attended. He also played on it on the early 1973 Genesis live album so I guess this qualifies to play it live as solo artist when he wants to, which isn't very often.
Would like to see Mike Oldfield doing even a handful of Concerts to celebrate 50 years of Tubular Bells.
Do you (or a friend) have Amazon Prime? One of the London gigs is free to watch.
Saw him live in 1980. Wasn't impressed.
@@kevinthetruckdriver353 Think he works better in the studio all right but it would be more to mark the Occasion for him to do a gig.Rory Gallagher, now there was a Musician that could perform live👍
Why doesn't he do shows anymore?
@@JamesSmith-qy3eu His last gig Id say was The Opening Caremony of the 2012 Olympics.Hes been living in the Bahamas since🤷♂️