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As far as autograph collecting and music fan experiences goes, I find the range of stories I hear about various meet & greets to be pretty fascinating. I've heard of people paying modest fees (or nothing) for wonderful, fun experiences - and other stories of fans shelling out large amounts of money for a massive disappointment. And, of course, everything in between.
I thought we should have a comprehensive thread on the topic. Have you been to a pre-show or post-show meet and greet or know someone who has? Was it a bargain or a ripoff? What was the mood - structured and hurried or casual and fun?
My favorite band does meet and greets at every headline show they perform on this tour, chosen at fandom by fans who sign up for their fanclub and enter the show-specific drawing. There is no charge, and (usually) I don't believe a show ticket is even required. They were asked about this in an interview early this tour, and the response from one of the band members, Martin, was pretty passionate about musicians who charge high prices for meet & greets. FYI: I get that this band isn't quite a household name yet, so there might be a sentiment of "Who are they to say . . ." However they have an interesting perspective as both successful musicians with Top 10 records and huge music fans themselves).
Here's that portion of the interview:
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My preference has typically been to go to a show and then wait for the band or artist post show by their tour bus. I've been to only a few paid meet and greets. From what I'm seeing described, most of the paid ones almost sound like they have an inherent awkwardness to them that can't be avoided.
In the past year I paid $45 for a Kimbra meet & greet, $50 for a Shirley Manson meet & greet and $75 for a private event with my favorite band mentioned above. In the latter two cases, 100% of the proceeds were to benefit a cause.
The Kimbra meet and greet included a mini tour poster and some novelty buttons. 10 of us were taken upstairs to a table at the venue's bar area. She sat right next to me, and each of us were allowed to ask a question. When I asked about a song she'd recorded for an upcoming Disney compilation album, she started singing it to me. Afterwards, we were each allowed a photo with her and one autograph per person. Nice experience.
Shirley Manson is wonderful to her fans in every scenario possible. It was very late at this postshow meet and greet. I think the venue would have preferred that things hurry along, but Shirley took her time talking to each fan, signing whatever you wanted, taking multiple photos, etc.
I was checking out TOOL's website for their upcoming tour, for $500 you get a "VIP experience", where they take away your phone, you get a QA with 1 of the members (which one it won't specify 100%), and maybe a photo op. Just insanity. Anything over $150, these people can go shove it.
The Ozzy and KISS scenarios described sound pretty unforgivable.
Maybe I'm off here, but didn't KISS use to be pretty good to their fans?
I think, regardless of how much disposable income those fans have, "furious" is a legitimate response. Not shocked to hear that that's what happened with Ozzy.
At least it gives people insight into thinking twice before they meet their idols and spend that sort of money.
With conventions, at least you can be more or less guaranteed to meet and get a photo/autograph with the personality.
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