My first tour sold out in Glasgow, and they were one of the loudest. I couldn't hear myself.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My first-ever date on my first tour, the sound completely cut out. So I had to go on and just shout loudly to the audience.
I went to see Mogwai at the Fillmore, and that was both the loudest and quietest concert I've ever been to.
It was an experience being on a Beatles tour. They weren't very good. The singing was great, but the playing was a bit weak.
A tour is the most intense, stimulating way to hear music; it's the best form to receive it. There's genuine excitement from people. I feel like we've stepped up a level.
I did a long concert tour in England and Denmark and Sweden, and I also sang for the Soviet people, one of the finest musical audiences in the world.
Then we did what we called basically I suppose a club tour in England, which was the time I think that our second album came out, we club toured around the whole country where the venues were hold to five hundreds upwards to that sort of thing you know.
What had disappointed me at the time of the last tour, was to go on a worldwide tour, we were at some incredible places and we couldn't enjoy it, hadn't the time.
I had my first concert in front of 80,000 people at the International Soca Monarch Finals.
All my concerts had no sounds in them; they were completely silent. People had to make up their own music in their minds!
I'd never been on tour until I met the Rudimental boys. Never done a live show in front of an audience.