Jump to content

Crowd surfing

From Wikipedia

Template:Short description

File:Crowdsurfen Heideroosjes.gif
Crowd surfing at a concert.

Crowd surfing is the process in which a person is passed overhead from person to person (often during a concert). The "crowd surfer" is passed above everyone's heads, with everyone's hands supporting the person's weight.

Origins

File:Crowd Surfer at Music Midtown - 1997.jpg
Crowdsurfer at Music Midtown festival, Atlanta, 1997

Iggy Pop leapt into the crowd at the 1970 Cincinnati Summer Pop Festival, an early example of crowd surfing.[1]

In early 1980 Peter Gabriel crowd surfed during performances of "Games Without Frontiers" by falling into his audience "crucifix style" and then being passed around.[2][3] Gabriel would later crowd surf during performances of his song "Lay Your Hands on Me".[4]

Said Gabriel:

Template:Blockquote

The first official video release to depict Gabriel crowd surfing was POV, a concert video released in 1990 and produced by Martin Scorsese.[5] When Billy Joel crowdsurfed in a concert during his 1987 concert tour of the Soviet Union, bandmate Kevin Dukes described it as the "Peter Gabriel flop".[6]

Crowd surfing extended for the first time to the classical music scene, when in June 2014 at the Bristol Proms an audience-member was ejected by fellow audience members during a performance of Handel's Messiah after he took the director's invitation to "clap and whoop" to the music a step too far by attempting to crowd-surf.[7]

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Sister project

Template:Rock festival

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Template:Cite magazine
  3. Template:Cite magazine
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Template:Cite AV media
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".