Monday, January 28, 2008

Music, direct from their throats (and strings) and straight into my ears.

Switchfoot is coming to town in a few more days!

I can't wait. I've been anticipating this for a month now. I've had tickets to the show for 3 weeks. I went out and bought their albums and have been listening to their songs regularly so that I can sing along during the performance. I made the effort to memorise the lyrics of the songs that I like very much, and to get the chorus down pat at least for the less-liked ones. I've been trying to predict which songs will make the cut.

The last time I went to a concert was a show by My Chemical Romance, last year. That was also my first time attending a rock concert. It totally blew my mind away. I was screaming and singing and bouncing up and down and pumping my fists in the air and waving them in time to the music. And all this under a light rain! I scream-sung for so long that I was hoarse near the end. I also managed to scare this girl next to me with my incessant scream-singing and jumping. She was so cowed that she sat down and eyed me nervously for the rest of the night. My sister later commented that she had gone deaf in one ear solely from the noise I was making beside her. But, you know. Whatever. I don't hear the other 3 thousand-odd spectators complaining.

The experience of a live rock concert is incredible. The lights, the music, the antics of the performers on stage all combine to create a sensory high that you can't get anywhere else. But what really gives the shows that critical mass is the audience. A thousand or more fans screaming and jumping and singing to the songs in unison....a thousand minds tuned in simultaneously to the same melody, being affected by the same lyrics, reacting in more or less the same ways....You could almost describe the whole thing as spiritual, at the risk of bordering on blasphemy. The fans are the acolytes, the band members are the servitors, and the singer is the fanatical archbishop who whips the followers into a screaming cacophony of praise to the gods of rock.

Don't knock it until you try it.

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