Chased out of Savannah Center last night Chased out of Savannah Center last night - Page 2 - Talk of The Villages Florida

Chased out of Savannah Center last night

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Old 05-29-2022, 05:26 AM
Mushkie Mushkie is offline
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Default We must have been at the same ZZ Top concert!

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Originally Posted by tophcfa View Post
My ears are still ringing from a ZZ Top concert almost 45 years ago. The volume at the Savana Center is relatively low for a concert.
The ZZ Top Concert at the outside amphitheater at San Diego State University was soooooo loud and the bass to dominate, that I threw up. I hadn’t been drinking or doing any drugs- the vibrations were too much for me.
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Old 05-29-2022, 06:12 AM
jacivell jacivell is offline
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If the music is too loud for you, ask any usher for earplugs.
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Old 05-29-2022, 06:20 AM
RICH1 RICH1 is offline
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The real question is , Did anyone smell any Moon cabbage burning ?
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Old 05-29-2022, 06:40 AM
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Mary Jane brought the moon cabbage!
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Old 05-29-2022, 06:41 AM
VApeople VApeople is offline
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As I have gotten older, I have become more intolerant of things that irritate me. I like what Jesus said in his Sermon on the Mount: "If they eye offend thee, then pluck it out."

Loud noises irritate me, so I don't put up with them. When we are invited to a wedding, I always bring ear protectors so I can put them on if the music gets too loud.

I have been to the Savannah Center for a one-person performance and a train show, but I would never go there for a musical performance
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Old 05-29-2022, 06:57 AM
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the Eliminator Tour, 1983!!! ahahaha!!
That was a great tour!
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Old 05-29-2022, 07:01 AM
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Default Savanna Abba

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Originally Posted by delpi767 View Post
We went to Savanah last night to enjoy the music of Almost Abba. Ten minutes after the performance started we had to leave because of the volume. The sound engineer (a 30 something smart ass) wouldn't listen to the facility manager and refused to lower the volume which was in the neighborhood of 95 decibels.

The bass was literally so loud it shook the floor.

So after 15 years of enjoying Savannah, we won't go back and spend $80-100 on the off chance that we will be able to enjoy the performance.

Word is that over 100 folks left at intermission.
My wife & I were on front row and had no problems with the volume, it was an EXCELLENT performance and we enjoyed it... incidentally, there Wes NO intermission.
  #23  
Old 05-29-2022, 07:05 AM
YeOldeCurmudgeon YeOldeCurmudgeon is offline
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Default Pink Floyd

In the mid-70s, I went to a Pink Floyd concert and sat near the front -- now I had been to many other rock concerts, including Led Zeppelin -- and this was by far louder, so ear-splitting that I had to move back onto the lawn area. It was so loud I thought my eardrums were going to break. I wonder how many decibels it was and how the musicians could endure this, night after night of performing. I'm sure it affected their hearing when they got older and I'm sure many people who attended such concerts developed tinnitus. Surprising that a concert playing soft rock like ABBA would be so loud. Because I wasn't there, hard to know what it was like for me to compare.
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Old 05-29-2022, 07:09 AM
LonnyP LonnyP is offline
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If it's too loud you're too old.
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Old 05-29-2022, 07:10 AM
MandoMan MandoMan is offline
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Originally Posted by OrangeBlossomBaby View Post
A lawnmower is around 90db. The average rock concert is around 120db. If it was truly 95db (+/- 5) then it was reasonable to expect for an ABBA tribute concert.

If it was the Trans-Siberian Orchestra, it'd be considered low-volume. If it was a Who concert they'd have been booed off the stage and the sound engineer hunted down and shot.

Peoples' hearing changes over the years. Often, the sharper high-pitched sounds become more annoying, while low bass tones can reverberate uncomfortably. The two extremes can be just as difficult to bear as fingernails on a chalkboard, versus someone pounding a padded drumstick on your chest over and over again.

My suggestion: next time you go to an indoor concert, bring disposable earplugs, like the kind they used to give away on airplanes. You'll still hear the music - ALL the music - but it'll be at a more manageable level for your personal needs.
I play a mandolin that hits 95 decibels at times without extra amplification. This concert must have been much louder. I avoid going to loud concerts because my hearing sort of gets paralyzed, and then I feel like I’m listening underwater. Very unpleasant. I have special earplugs, but it’s not the same. I went to the Rolling Stone tribute a few weeks ago at Savannah and had to use the earplugs, but it was like listening from down the hall. The evening entertainment at the squares is usually loud, but not as loud as the Original Poster is complaining about. It sounds to me like the volume was way louder than usual, and of course it was a paid concert, not a free one, and indoors. At big rock concerts, as in dance clubs, the idea is not just to hear the music, but to feel it in your chest. This gets people excited and dancing. It literally moves them. But I don’t want to be moved that way. I want to hear the music. Was the sound guy trying to recreate that feeling? Probably. Sound guys should pay attention to audience complaints. There should also be a standard of volume for performances here. Perhaps there is. Does anyone know?

Meanwhile, there are free Decibel Meter apps available from the Apple App Store. Put one on your phone, then test the volume at concerts and see what the peak seems to be. Then, you’ll be in a position to tell a sound guy, “Most bands limit themselves to 107 decibels max, but you are at 125. You are going to drive away your audience, and your band won’t be asked back.”
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Old 05-29-2022, 07:34 AM
BlackHarley BlackHarley is offline
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Originally Posted by tophcfa View Post
My ears are still ringing from a ZZ Top concert almost 45 years ago. The volume at the Savana Center is relatively low for a concert.
I think I was at that show. Realistically, my ears rang for 2 days. Would I have changed a thing? Hell no!
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Old 05-29-2022, 07:41 AM
rsmurano rsmurano is offline
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I listen to my stereo system at about those levels every so often. I grew up playing drums in heavy metal bands playing in front of 6’ tall Marshall amps, and in big concerts, I couldn’t hear myself play. I have seen Aerosmith, Dave Mathews, The WHO, Boston, Kansas, Toto,and many more rock concerts with my pant legs flapping from the pressure of the sound. We have seen dozens and dozens of jazz and blues concerts and they are much better sounding.
The loudness isn’t a big concern to me, but bass that’s too loud/over power ing, I can’t stand that.
  #28  
Old 05-29-2022, 07:44 AM
OrangeBlossomBaby OrangeBlossomBaby is online now
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Originally Posted by MandoMan View Post
I play a mandolin that hits 95 decibels at times without extra amplification. This concert must have been much louder. I avoid going to loud concerts because my hearing sort of gets paralyzed, and then I feel like I’m listening underwater. Very unpleasant. I have special earplugs, but it’s not the same. I went to the Rolling Stone tribute a few weeks ago at Savannah and had to use the earplugs, but it was like listening from down the hall. The evening entertainment at the squares is usually loud, but not as loud as the Original Poster is complaining about. It sounds to me like the volume was way louder than usual, and of course it was a paid concert, not a free one, and indoors. At big rock concerts, as in dance clubs, the idea is not just to hear the music, but to feel it in your chest. This gets people excited and dancing. It literally moves them. But I don’t want to be moved that way. I want to hear the music. Was the sound guy trying to recreate that feeling? Probably. Sound guys should pay attention to audience complaints. There should also be a standard of volume for performances here. Perhaps there is. Does anyone know?

Meanwhile, there are free Decibel Meter apps available from the Apple App Store. Put one on your phone, then test the volume at concerts and see what the peak seems to be. Then, you’ll be in a position to tell a sound guy, “Most bands limit themselves to 107 decibels max, but you are at 125. You are going to drive away your audience, and your band won’t be asked back.”
Sounds to me that you've never seen or heard ABBA. This is a high-energy dance band. They want the audience to get up and dance at their seats (or in the aisles if allowed). You don't sit quietly and listen to ABBA.
  #29  
Old 05-29-2022, 07:48 AM
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It's been a few years since I've been to an indoor concert, but if I were you, I'd take a couple of those orange foam earplugs you can get (free) at Shooters World close to Brownwood. They work well in the shooting ranges so they should certainly work in a concert.
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  #30  
Old 05-29-2022, 07:48 AM
retiredguy123 retiredguy123 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AZ SLIM View Post
I remember a bumper sticker from about 40 years ago that said, "if it's too loud, you're too old." That certainly applies to me now days.
For me, it is not about being old. I have never liked loud music. Even when I was a teenager a few years ago, I hated loud music.
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