Quote
dtrom4
Right. Unless he's playing Shadow Song or Matthew 25:21, in which case just mouth the words under your breath. It's awesome at those times when the crowd is silent; you can hear a pin drop.
Oh, of course, that was implied. I didn't mean singing along to EVERY song.
Quote
Johnp
Singing along is for festival gigs when people are drunk in the afternoon in a field. If I pay (hard-earned, diminishing) money to see a concert, I like to hear the band and not the audience. First Iron & Wine gig I saw was ruined by a coterie who thought off-key harmonising was the order of the day.
You don't shoot your own movie at the movies, act out at a play, dance along at the ballet, so why should it be alright to impinge on someone's enjoyment at a concert? Clearly, I'm not a "REAL fan"...
Hey, man, cool your jets. I wasn't saying to shout at the top of your lungs constantly--if you're actually obstructing someone else's enjoyment of the show, then tone it down, of course. But on the opposite side of the coin, don't be an asshole about it if someone near you is singing along. It's a concert, it's what people do. It shouldn't matter about some guy next to you tastefully singing along, nor should it matter if there's some drunk chick singing a few rows behind you--unless of course she's shouting it like, in your ear, in which case you should drop kick her. Unless they're actually being a nuisance, who cares? Let people have fun. What matters is the music.
Here:
[
www.youtube.com]
I was at this. This is proof that singing along with the song is NOT just for drunk people at festivals. It can be SO much better than just standing there playing with yourself and not getting involved while the rest of the audience has fun...
like a vision straight outta Holly Hobbie