While we're at it, I'll go ahead and stick you in the money-grubbers camp.
uke:
Thats fine. In fact, I appreciate the assumption that I'm only doing this for money. No really. Nevermind the fact that I haven't broken even from Dark Empire, and have put myself into debt for it, just so I can share my creation with the world, with the hope that someday I might actually be able to do what I love for a living. Yes, I must only be in it for the money
Name successful, influential bands that didn't market lunchboxes and sell their t-shirts and vip tickets at hot topic and fye? Why don't you name all the founders of death and black metal.
Those Immortal and Emperor t shirts I saw at Hot Topic were pretty sweet.
Dream Theater is not a band anymore in the same sense that GE is not an electric company anymore. These people expand and expand into every possible outlet of cash they can find, and the result? Dillution of the original focus. You want me to make it clear? I think it's VERY clear already, but I suppose some people only see $$$.
So what you're saying is that there is somehow an acceptable threshold of how much a band can earn from their art? Who decides this? What is your personal cut off? If a band member makes 30 grand a year off of his band its ok, but if he starts making 40 grand, watch out, he's only in it for money and has "lost focus", even though its quite presumptuous for you to decide if an artist has "lost focus", especially based on the amount of t shirt designs they have for sale. I guess Roger Waters lost a shitload of focus when Pink Floyd made The Wall, what with the tie-in movie, extravagant concert performances, t shirts, fuck Ive seen stuffed "pink" dolls too. I used to think The Wall was a briliant artistic statement, thank you for showing me the light.
When a band makes music they're passionate about, that's respectable. When the band sells that music on an album to fund future releases or support themselves, that's respectable. When a band films a DVD of a concert and sells that, that's respectable.
So when a band puts out bullshit like a live album and DVD after every major tour with the same damn setlist, aside from 1 or 2 new songs, thats respectable? Or should I say, somehow different than coming out with a new t shirt design or two?
When a band sells special tickets that essentially undermines the typical, historical mechanic of live shows, this is NOT respectable. Generally speaking, the big fans will show up hours before the casual followers, and though both pay the same ticket price, the former gets the benefit of being first in line and first to the barrier. Their enthusiasm is itself a VIP ticket to be closest to the band. The result? The front of a gig is filled with the most hardcore of fans.
Yea, for GA shows. This is totally cool and, I agree, part of many a concert experience. I myself have waited extra early for a show just to get right up front many times.
When it is a *seated* venue, this of course is a different story. First of all, its often the venues that set prices for tickets, or at least a baseline that they need to make and then the artist can charge however much more or less they want. Think of the luxury you have with a ticket for a front row seat above a GA show. Your spot is reserved for you, you can show up whenever you want and have it, you can get up to go to the bathroom or get a drink and come right back to it. Not to mention you're close up. Why the hell shouldn't a venue charge more for an in demand seat if they want to?
Most metal shows are in GA venues because they can't fill a venue large enough for seats. Granted, this is part of what makes a metal show cool... they're cheap (usually), you can get up front simply by being early, you can jump in the pit and bash some peoples heads in if thats your thing, get smushed up against some dude with really bad BO... its awesome (Im not being sarcastic either, this all adds to the vibe of going to a metal show, I think).
But yea, seated venues, you are now in a venue with the luxury of having your spot reserved for you, and dammit if the venue isn't going to make you pay a little more (or a lot more) for that luxury. And don't ever go to a symphony, opera, theater performance, or any other performance art like that, cause from my understanding, they usually only have those in seated venues. Perhaps the BSO or New York Philharmonic forgot the historical mechanics of going to see a performance.
When a band instead blocks off these seats and SELLS them for more than triple the price, just to make a buck, this means the front row will not be filled with the most enthusiastic fans. It will be filled with the richest fans, and I have a SERIOUS problem with that attitude.
Yea, it sucks. I agree its sheisty, I think 300 bucks for a close up seat and VIP pass is too much. I don't disagree with you or Zach on that. I disagree with the assertion that the band is somehow violating the audiences right to see a concert to charge that much, and that if they do, they're somehow money grubbing fiends that don't care about music anymore.
Lets look at the reason Portnoy gave for WHY their *manager* came up with the idea to do this. To help pay for the extra cost of a light show and screens. This is part of the *performance*. I get the impression that you can't understand that there is an art to performance. There are people who don't write music but love to fucking death the art of performing it. There are people who love both. If Dream Theater want to aid in their performance and bring a more elaborate show to their fans, which costs more money to put on, where is it written that this makes them care less about fans and more about money? If I ran a market and the cost of bringing food in went up, does it somehow mean I want my customers to starve because I have to charge more money on my product to cover my overhead?
As for light shows, is this a metal concert or is this a circus production? Trans-Siberian Orchestra fucked themselves over by spending more and more and more on lasers and booking arenas, and now their shows are utter crap. In fact, they're the same every year except with more lights. No new album. It's like KISS. You just play the same shit each time, new spectacle. It's all business, no art.
For the record, unless you wanna sound like a gigantic hypocrite, don't ever praise Mozart or Wagner for their art, because those motherfuckers put on operatic performances that, for their time, made TSO look like a petting zoo. Or Pink Floyd. And To my knowladge Don Giovanni plays out the same way every time.
Next on the list, backstage passes for a price. They're selling a poster, an autograph to go with the poster, and a Q&A with the band. If the band wants to make any cash off of this, they have to DENY these things to those without the VIP status. AKA they're forced to be assholes. It cheapens interaction between band and fans, and it is the equivalent of a tourist paying for the experience one can genuinely have for free with a degree of effort. This culture is disgusting, lazy, wealth-driven, and undermining the very core of live music.
This is true, yea. Why would they make themselves available to everyone and then make some people pay 300 bucks to see em, thus cheapening the point of having the VIP tickets. However, this is going on the assumption that a band is somehow obligated to spend time with their fans after shows. I don't know about you, but I think it would be shittier if the only reason a band was making themselves available to meet fans would be because they were obligated to do it, and not because they really wanted to. Interaction between band and fans? The only interaction your ticket price gives you is a (hopefully) kick the fuck ass show. If a band member (or members) WANTS TO spend time with fans afterwards, that is their choice. (and just for the record, I love talking to anyone who would call themselves a fan of my music, and I don't feel obligated to do it, I enjoy it and want to do it).
Please elaborate on what the very core of live music is too, because from what I gather, in your perfect world, it is free GA concerts where the funding magically appears to put the show on. That kind of idealism was put into effect at one point in our history actually, then the Soviet Union fell.
So again, fuck that bullshit, I will buy regular admission if I even attend, and I would rather attend a concert such as Anathema, Orphaned Land, Zero Hour, Opeth, Katatonia, Dark Tranquillity, Scar Symmetry, Evergrey, After Forever, Threshold, Nightingale/Edge of Sanity, Porcupine Tree, Fates Warning, or any such band in which hanging out with the band comes at no extra charge, because they are decent people.
Because they are outgoing people. There are plenty of artists who are very introverted and unsocial, but apparently this makes them ungrateful of their fans too. Ive seen you praise Pain of Salvation before, and they were the single most unsocial band at Progpower V, not a single member hung out with anyone, and actually called to complain to the hotel that the people partying were making too much noise. Horrible money grubbers that don't give a shit about their fans, right?
You wanna be a poser and pay to talk to somebody, go ahead Moliti.
Well, I'm already paying 50 bucks a month to argue with you on the internet
PS: If Dark Empire ever enjoyed the kind of influence and success you're talking about, would you charge me $300 to talk to you? I'd certainly not consider such as worth the money. Some bands are real people. Others are corporate zombies.
Nah. As I've stated I think the VIP tickets are too much, I'm simply defending Dream Theater's right to charge that much. I wouldn't pay 300 bucks to talk to me
I know you have it in your head that any performer putting on more than a GA show where tickets are 20 bucks are somehow not real artists or just in it for the cash.
I don't know if you know who Bumblefoot is, but he is one of the single greatest musical and artistic minds I've ever had the pleasure of spending time with. He is also one of the single most genuinely pleasant people I've ever met. He's someone that you would meet and it would actually give you hope for humanity to know that people like him exist. he also plays guitar in Guns n Roses, one of the biggest "corperate rock" bands out there. Someone like you would take one look at him on stage and think of him as a souless corperate zombie. I look at him on stage with GnR and I see: 1) someone who loves to perform for people, because it makes people happy 2) someone who is providing for his wife, paying his bills, and putting food on his plate, and 3) someone who is providing himself with the financial means to support his own solo creative endeavors.
Jokes on you, then.
edit: actually, I did at one point pay over 600 dollars to see a band. I flew to Germany just to see my favorite band, Rage, because they never tour or play in the US. It was a regular show, no festival or anything. And for the record, my friend, unbeknownst to me, told their (now ex) drummer about it via email, and he thought that was so awesome he put all of us on the guest list and got in for free (and yes, got a chance to meet the band and get pics/autographs and the bar after the show). But to me, it was worth it to shell out that much money to see Rage, because thats how big of a fan I am. So maybe to some Dream Theater fans its worth it to shell out 300 bucks to see em up close and meet em.