ltwoman wrote:Random question. I am watching The Police Live In Concert (Rio de Janiero 12/8/07); since I have never been to a Police Concert, and haven't been to a concert since the mega-concert concept became the gold standard (HUGE venues, video feeds on LARGE screens around the venue) when you're in the audience, do you look at the stage (real people, just sometimes very small and FAR away) or watch the HUGE screens (larger than life comingsoon to a stadium near you!)??? What is the reality of that experience like and is everyone really standing up the entire time???
Depended on how close I was to the stage. If I was further away, I definitely watched the screen way more than the stage. If I was within 12-15 rows of the stage, then that was all it was about, for sure.
It was weird, though. Some of the shows that I found the most memorable for musically, I was further away and really could only concentrate on the music and the screens, which created a bit of distance. The first Philly show in '07 and the Holmdel NJ show near the end were like that for me. When I was so close up, I'd get so fixated on watching the details and the guys that honestly the overall experience of the music could get lost. Not saying I wouldn't trade those experiences for anything, though, as especially the last show, for me, was far more about being there with all the Nutters and certain interactions with the band that could've only happened so close up.
But it's like...on one hand I regret that the only show I was able to take my mom to (and she is a die-hard Police fan like I am) was Philly '07, where we had shitty seats up in the bleachers. But she loved it and thought it was perfect, because the performance was so great and all we could concentrate on was the music. (And as she bluntly put it, "I want to remember them the way they looked in the 80s...so I'm going to listen to the music and keep my eyes closed anyway!")
The whole thing was a weird experience. I'm just glad I got to experience it from all kinds of different vantage points, from the first row to the nose bleed seats.