Your independent guide to the best shows in Detroit
An independent show guide not a venue or show. All tickets 100% guaranteed, some are resale, prices may be above face value.We're an independent show guide not a venue or show. We sell primary, discount and resale tickets, all 100% guaranteed prices may be above face value.We are an independent show guide not a venue or show. We sell primary, discount and resale tickets, all 100% guaranteed and they may be priced above or below face value.
Judas Priest KILLED IT ! Deep Purple was good , but JP
should of headlined. the Temperance Movement held their
own. All in all it was a great show !!
Matt from Leavenworth, Kansas
BLAZING ROCK
I thought both bands were great. They left it all on the stage. Deep
Purple's bass was a little too much in the mix and messed with the
vocal sound at first but that got fixed. Great selection of tunes from
bands who represent different eras, same spirit. Loud, bold, fiery.
from Jacksonville, Florida
FLORIDA THE PRIEST IS BACK 🤘🏻
Excellent from start to finish the
sound was nice and loud the venue
was nice was slow to enter but not
bad I would come here again ,came
for the Priest and was not
disappointed!
John Lawrence from Marysville, California
JUDAS PRIEST/DEEP PURPLE TOYOTA AMPHITHEATER 9-30-18
I saw both bands in the late '80s and
JP again in '09.
Sunday night, for both bands being
up in years, they BOTH tore it up,
even better than their previous shows
that I saw.
Rock on!!!!
B Squared from San Francisco, California
THE PRIEST RULES THE NIGHT!
Shoreline will never be the same. From the first downbeat to their last
note Judas Priest was amazing. Rob Halford was mind blowing. His
vocals spot on and powerful. The guitars were blazing and the rythm
section amazingly tight. Deep Purple was decent and the Vocalist was
nothing more than average. The Priest riled the night..
Wayne from Kansas City, Missouri
LOUD AND LOUDER--BUT DARNED ENJOYABLE!
If you're a Priest fan, you may think you knew what to expect on September 18: I
certainly thought I did. I'd never seen the Priest live before, but their Rising in the
East DVD from a decade or so left me expecting little from Rob Halford: in that
earlier concert video, he lurched about in an almost Ozzy-life fashion. Surprisingly--
and delightfully--that was not the case in KC on this tour! Halford is no Bruce
Dickinson, but he paced the stage nonstop, And Halford's voice, while not as strong
as when I saw him with his eponymous solo group in 2000, was still a mighty force.
It was also clear how Ritchie Faulkner has become a "fan favorite"--the guy
practically oozes Cool , and although I missed seeing Ken and Glenn, Ritchie and the
other guy didn't miss a note all night. And it was LOUD but was worth it, every
decibel. Purple, alas, fell short of expectations due to an awful sound mix, but they
seemed to be having a lot of fun, which was infectious. A great time, all in all!
Jame from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
DP 4.5, JP 2.0
I'll admit my ticket was to see Purple, I have little or no interest in Rob Halford and
Judas Priest. I've never seen so many studs in leather as I did that night, they were
almost a parody right out of Spinal Tap. Rob doesn't seem to have the pipe or the
presence any more, he spent much of the night peering at the teleprompter in front
of the stage trying to remember the words. The audio mix for their set was horrible
as well, from where I sat (eighth row, section 100) you could not hear one word
clearly.
The two guitarists were adequate, nothing special. The drummer tried to make it
entertaining. Since I don't know the band's history, I cant comment on them with any
reliability. However, I will say that the diehard Priest fans in the audience, and they
were plentiful, sang along with much of the show, and seemed to enjoy it. I just
found myself looking at my watch all show long
Purple however gave their usual show - enteraining, superb playing, and better
audio.
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