MovieChat Forums > General Discussion > What’s the best live show you’ve seen?

What’s the best live show you’ve seen?


There is nothing that can compare to live entertainment. Recordings are good, but the immediate flow of energy between the artists and the audience is something our technology cannot even begin to mimic, yet. My best live experience is a Christmas concert at Boston’s Symphony Hall, featuring Liza Minnelli, Ben Vereen and the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes. Liza and Ben are both fantastic dancers, so I hoped they would dance. They did not. They sang. Ben opened the show. We gave him a standing ovation. He answered, “Liza is just going to eat you up.” My city gives good audience! We may be the reserved “Athens of America,” we may be the educational center of the Western world and the biotech center, too; but we have a fucking heart that none dares trifle with. Ask those Marathon bombing assholes. Oh, wait. You can’t, anymore.

Y’know, I’ve gotten to know a few entertainers: Patty LaBelle, Queen, Patti Smyth,my father. When they say something, they say it from their heart. That is 1 reason why they are mesmerizing entertainers.

My second best live experience was Man of La Mancha. “To dream the impossible dream”? Are you kidding me? You’d have to be DEAD not to be moved by that performed live in a Standing Room Only theater.

My third best was Queen in concert.

My fourth was the Moody Blues, in concert with John Mayall on his The Turning Point tour.

My fifth best was 10 Years After in 2 separate concerts.

My sixth best was Bo Diddley, who’s a gunslinger.

My seventh was The Mothers of Invention.

Now it’s your turn.

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Les Cowboys Fringants: RIP Karl Tremblay

Placebo

Styx

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I'd say September 19, 1981, Simon and Garfunkel's free concert in Central Park.

I'd just turned 40 and was dragged along by some younger co-workers.

A few songs in I no longer felt 40, I was 14 again, having the time of my life.

Best concert ever.

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SO...YOU'RE IN YOUR 80S?

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I thought he was meant to be 21 🤔

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An 80 year old digital multitasker?!

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Cut and paste the incorrect sock perhaps?

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He would be 82 now.

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Forgive my math. Yes, 82. 😀

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He must be a frequent sock changer.

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"Best Live Shows" as interpreted by me mean: great sound quality, closely replicating the original studio recording in accuracy, great set list, a feeling of energetic elation. Special effects mean nothing to me.

Judas Priest, Palladium in NYC, 1980

Ozzy Osbourne/Blizzard of Oz, Nassau Colosseum, 1981. Guitarist Randy Rhodes blew us away.

Iron Maiden, Palladium, 1983

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That is a very good criterion for “best “ that you have shared. Thank you.

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Well, let's see...

Wild Animal Park in San Diego: bird show was great.

Wild Animal Kingdom in Disney World: Bird show there was good too, and a great way to escape the heat for a while.

Disney Hollywood in Disney World: I would always recommend the Indiana Jones Stunt Show. It's awesome watching the stunt guy dodging all the traps from "Raiders of the Lost Ark," in addition to the explosions.

Universal Studios: Animal show was fun, and it's awesome seeing what people can train animals to do for movies.

Disneyworld (can't remember which park it was): the live-action Little Mermaid show was great, and it even had holograms! There was a similar show for Beauty and the Beast.

Knotts Berry Farm: Probably the funniest stunt show you've ever seen in your life. It takes place in the Wild West near the end of the Civil War era (you can tell based on the actors' costumes). The humor and story are so good, that they barely have had to change it at all, save for adding in a few current pop culture jokes now and then.

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I’ve seen some of the Disney live stunt shows and they ARE amazing. It begs credulity that they can do them day after day, but then, that’s what pro wrestling does, too. Pro wrestling is real time stunt work. I don’t know how much of the audience realizes this. It’s actually much harder than it looks.

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I think they have a setup where they have several people play the parts of the stunts, so they can slip different people in and out of the role and give some of some a break while others take up different shifts. Plus, they make sure the setup is safe, not just for the audience, but the actors on stage too. (Can't vouch for the wrestling setup, but that's how it is for theme park stunt shows).

Oh yes, stuntwork is very difficult. It takes a very unique kind of person to do that, and even in this day and age, it's a very risky job. But stuntmen and women are in very high demand in Hollywood, whether it be at theme parks or on the set of a movie/tv show.

One really cool part of the Indiana Jones stunt show was, they actually showed the audience some of the secrets behind the "magic," like how the rolling giant ball is actually hollow, and light enough a woman set worker can roll it backwards up the track, or when people are punching each other on-screen, they aren't actually punching each other at all. They even show how they fake it, and the two people have to work as a team to sell it, or it doesn't look realistic. One has to do the punching, the other has to do the reaction, and the sound people put in the punch noise in post-production.

(The Mythbusters actually demonstrated that the sound is fake, designed for adding drama and increasing the impact of the punch emotionally on the audience. In real life, a punch in the face actually sounds like someone getting slapped, as Jamie demonstrated when he punched a stand-in pig carcass for the camera).

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Frank Zappa
Not the best but certainly the most outstanding in the 1980s.
The concert started more than an hour too late, the audience was already in a rage.
Without any "Hallo" or explanation he played with the back to us.
Then he said: "Don't throw anything on the stage, even not a little tampon!"
Well, in a kind of way he asked for it.
Zappa's performance lasted about 10-15 mins and the security had a tough job. ☺

Prince
After-show in the "Grünspan" (Hamburg)
Great music, great artist...amazing, that little big man! ☼
Yah, it was an extra concert, not a sex-party.

Freddie Mercury
Silent minute in a pub the day he died.
And it was dead silent...the rest of the night only Queen music.
Yah, a way to learn dancing on graves. *snivel*

Public dog training of the local Police 🐕​ 🐕​ 🐕​
So cute when the youngster dogs try their little 'tricks'. ♥
"Stay" means stay!
Don't secretly crawl after your master when he/she turns around. 🦭​ ☺☺☺
That video has nothing to do with it, but is one of my favourites.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhWC9R3IA0Y
"Go Rudy! His full name is Von Rudolph Augustus Perkins and he stole all of our hearts."

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I’m sorry for your experience with The Mothers concert. It sounds awful. I caught them when there were doing the Billy the Mountain tour (and Ethel was a tree growing out of his shoulder). Not their greatest moment, but I loved them like I did when I was a child and first discovered MAD Magazine. I never thought anything could be that great. One thing that really impressed me was that Frank, contrary to all appearances, was 100 percent clean and sober. I admire Dolph Lundgren for the same reason. Who the hell else in show business can make that claim?

Freddie Mercury 🥵🥵🥵

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Hmm, I cannot remember if any of Zappa's "Mothers" were with him.
He definitely would've needed them if the security line hadn't held.
Zappa escaped healthy, "clean and sober". ☺
For the bloody noses were enough unused (!) tampons on stage. 🤘🏽​

Yaaaaahhh, the MAD Magazine.
Mostly liked their surprising folding pictures. ♥♥♥

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I will take MAD Magazine any day of the freaking (censored) week over the smug, privileged National Lampoon and not just because most Harvies are assholes. I grieve its passing, but I am grateful that it was. What? Me worry?

MAD Magazine and The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle probably saved a generation from drug addiction.

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Sorry, I don't know the "National Lampoon".
What about the National Lampion? 🏮​...sounds better.

And the Unabomber was in Harvard too! *scream*
Ok ok, I'll get me something to eat, before I talk more nonsense. 😳​

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The National Lampoon was created by refugees from an internal Harvard publication, The Harvard Lampoon, by graduating Harvard students who did not actually want to work after entering The World. When folks toss around the phrase “white privilege,” they mean Harvard, although 25 percent of every Harvard freshman class is Asian. These guys (Please! Gender-specific! Radcliffe is for the girls) dug up enough support from
Sugar daddies to start a national magazine AND make a series of allegedly funny movies—all of them starring the loathsome Chevy Chase who somehow thought it was funny that he named himself after his home town. They also leveraged this privileged empire to create Saturday Night Live, which for too long has needed a stake driven through its heart. I hope that answers your question.

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Yah...yes, thank you! ♥...that certainly answers all questions.
Though wouldn't call Chevy Chase "loathsome".
Much worse, he's totally boring and absolutely not funny. ☻
Ok ok, some people here found him funny.
But that was after they leastwise smoked 3 pipes. 🥬​🥬​🥬​🌪️​🌪️​🌪️​

And I didn't know Bullwinkle 🦌​ and his buddy Rocky 🐿️​ until Popcorngal talked about them in her thread "Beware of elk...".
For perhaps good reasons Bullwinkle wasn't shown on our TV. Though many only identify us with our evil Nazi era "eyes straight ahead, marching in step", we're more a bag of fleas...hard to get in one direction.
Fleas better don't get inspired by an inflammatory moose. ☺
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj2VfA7y0WI

Like many others Christiane F. saved me from drug addiction.
Christiane Felscherinow is still alive in Berlin.
That's pretty amazing regarding her past. She certainly didn't become a perfect woman (who is? *ahem*), but I'm still grateful for her warnings and honesty. ♥
https://moviechat.org/tt0082176/Christiane-F-Wir-Kinder-vom-Bahnhof-Zoo/58c736d75ec57f0478fb2b48/Thank-You-Christiane-Felscherinowand-shes-still-very-vivid-smiling-face

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