Hello to all,
Although I've been lurking about on this forum for a few weeks now, this is my first actual post. I must say that reading so many enthusiastic entries has made my own experience of the now official Police reunion that much more exciting. It's nice to see so many people who, like me, were unable to attend any of the Synchronicity concerts but who now, at long last, have a chance to see one of the world's greatest bands-- a band most of us believed we would never see live. In particular, it is fantastic to see so much appreciation for Stewart, who I have always believed was the heart and soul of the Police. While there's no question that Andy, Stewart, and Sting together share an unusual synergy, it is Stewart's drumming that, for me, really distinguishes the Police not only from other band's of their era, but from other bands in general. His style is as identifiable as a singer's voice or a guitar hero's licks: you always know it's Stewart behind the drum kit.
As happy as I am about the Police reunion, though, it's not as if we don't have to take the good with the bad. Corporate tie-ins and exorbitant fan club and ticket prices have a way of rubbing the polish right off of this newly glimmering dream-come-true. At $90 plus a head-- let alone $225 for the really fine seats-- one is reminded that all this reunion business isn't just about sentiment, it's about business. It hasn't taken long for the very thing that broke up the Police in the first place (that is, at least according to Andy) to rear its ugly head yet again: there is a tremendous weight on our heroes to deliver the goods, to keep a legion of promoters, financial backers, and corporate CEOs well in the black this year.
I'm sorry, but to charge people $100 to join a fan club in order to gain the opportunity "maybe" to get slightly better tickets than the rest of us is both abusive to fans who are dying to see this band and blatantly unethical generally. $100 to the fan club (who pockets this money anyway?), another $100 or more for a single (decent) seat at a show-- is it me or has the touring industry gotten WAY out of control? Does the band-- do any popular artists-- have a say in any of this? While the disparity between the haves in the have-nots in the U.S. and elsewhere widens by the day, are artists so distracted by their own fame that they have lost touch with how much money $100 really is, let alone $225? Who do they expect will freely cough up such sums? Hard core fans? Or fair-weather, upper middle class Americans with disposable income to burn? I can't figure out who is more cynical, me or the people behind tours like this who know most people can't afford these prices but charge them anyway because ... well, because they can. Because our emotional attachment to bands like the Police is so very strong that we are willing to bit the bullet.
Like most of you, I'm thrilled that I get to see the Police this summer-- it really is a dream come true. And like so many others, I am as bonded to their music as (according to Stewart) the band members currently are to one another. But I can't help but wonder at what point my dedication to their music will cease to eclipse the anger I feel at being so obviously taken advantage of. The Police have decided to give us a lean and mean show this summer: three guys on a stage-- that's it. It's too bad we can't apply some of that same simplicity to the ticketing process: no expensive presales, no exorbitant fees, no bloated ticket prices. Whatever happened to lean and mean, one price fits all ticketing with all tickets going on sale at the same time, giving people of modest means an equal chance at scoring a decent seat. When did rock n' roll stop being about fairness and community and become a trinket of the world's wealthiest? Has rock music come full circle, catering to the very forces that it began in protest against?