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It's interesting that this kind of complaint would come about for a Jazz concert. This sort of thing has been going on at Rock concerts decades ago, long before cell phones. Sometimes an over-zealous concert goer might throw fireworks at the stage, if they wanted to get the artist's attention.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3b2J9Qevo1E"Smoke On The Water" was inspired by the Flare Gun at the Montreux incident, but I think there are better ways for the audience to participate. Concerts have become absurdly expensive, and people have this entitlement mentality....I payed my money, so I can do whatever I want. Well, so did the guy next to you, stupid.
It's become more and more selfish as we have more and more distractions from actual real life shared experience. That's the irony. Distracted by cell phones, tweets, pics, etc. and the dynamics of social networking, but lacking the social skills and decency necessary to have a 'real' shared experience.
Well then here's an idea for you. Don't go to the concert. Just get a DVD. Saves the hassle of holding a phone up and you can gab away all you want and ignore what's on to your heart's content. How's that for adapting. Leave the rest of us troglodytes for live experience. Win-win.
Bjork has been making the same request and for the same reasons at shows. It's a curious phenomenon, this immortalizing experiences via recording them at the expense of actually experiencing them. It's as if no one trusts their own memory anymore. Mind you, they won't have any actual memories of events other than fumbling with their iPhones... If the only way you're going to experience an event is through the recorded version after the fact, why not save your money and stay home. Just watch it on YouTube. No need to actually connect with the experience while it's unfolding, right? You know...experience it?Splendid isolation.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SxBHpYlDOfwD.D.
I have been heavily into photography, and still I can't understand this phenomenon.
If you listen to sociologists, it is a generational thing. Millennial's have a need to share everything and the smart phone is the tool of choice, obviously. The experience is not real if not shared with one's vast cyber-friends network. There is no real time joy of the moment.Of course YMMV,Cheers,Geary
I'm not sure how to express this, but while you do have a right to express youe opinion, couldn't it at least be clever or amusing. Fullrangeman, ok we get it, you don't like Keith Jarrett. Please give it a rest.Larry