A concert is a concert is a concert is a concert. An album is an album is an album is an album. Musically, both have nothing in common.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Going to a concert can sometimes be very difficult. It can be a long journey. There's the ticket prices. But when the music goes to the community - not the community coming to the concert - they say, 'Wow! I didn't know that this music was so amazing!'
The nature of touring is packaging acts together that have strong catalogues of music. It's about making sure that it's a winning combination. It's really about giving people value for their money.
You create a community with music, not just at concerts but by talking about it with your friends.
Albums are chapters. They're part of a story.
Each album takes two or two-and-a-half years to finish between recording and touring. It's like being with an old boyfriend every single night watching the same things on TV. There is a world out there going on that I'm missing.
I wouldn't do just a tour, it would have to be an album, and the album would have to beat Pull.
An album is a thing you take time out and go work on.
A concert is not a live rendition of our album. It's a theatrica! event.
When you go to a concert, part of being there is that you're all hearing the same thing. It's about being in a crowd. If you go to a gig and there are two people there, then it's not the same thing.
Apple, iTunes, and streaming services have made the single a more easy thing to access. What that's done has made the album as a collection of songs almost meaningless. But an album that has a concept or story or reason to be an album, if anything, has more meaning now than it ever has.