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Florence and the Machine Concert Tickets

Florence + The Machine (recording as Florence And The Machine) is the name of Florence Welch and a collaboration of other artists who provide backing music for her voice. Florence is an art college dropout from Camberwell, London, who was discovered singing Motown covers in a nightclub toilet, drunk. Musically Florence and the Machine's sound is generally referred to as soul-inspired indie rock. Check our available Florence and the Machine concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Florence and the Machine Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Hipsters unite! For you shall now loathe Florence and the Machine for doing an MTV Unplugged album. The scum sold out like Beavis and Butt-head when they did a Christmas special. Ew. No longer the darlings of your obscure playlist, the ginger-fronted English band have taken MTV's dirty money for MTV Unplugged - The Live Show, which is - like its idiot-proof title states - a live show...
- www.musicreview.co.za
Summary: Florence and the Machine's sound is too large for the acoustic outfit. 2 of 2 thought this review was well written Florence and the Machine seems like the perfect outfit for an MTV Unplugged performance...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
Summary: It's a melody, it's a final cry, it's a symphony. Florence Welch's sophomore album is a rarity. Many records possess the quality of being dark, but all too often do they fail to transcend the musical or lyrical approach that drove them to such claustrophobic, suffocating corners to begin with. Darkness isn't synonymous with "devoid of any and all hope", yet so many artists confine themselves to that rigid definition...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
Playing an unplugged show is always a dicey prospect. The artists put themselves out there before an unforgiving audience, exposed without the safety net of their electric instrumentation to fall back on. It's a hit-or-miss affair, turning one's trademark sound inside-out. For a group like Florence + the Machine, the risks are exceptionally high, but as they display on MTV Unplugged, the rewards they serve through their masterfully reworked songs were worth the gamble...
- www.popmatters.com
Mention MTV Unplugged to those who have even a half-arsed record collection and they'll instantly think of one thing; Nirvana's flawless, iconic 1993 performance and accompanying multi-million selling album. It proved that they had hearts as big as their riffs and showed off their stunning melodies to those who had dismissed grunge as merely a racket. For better or for worse, over the years it's also made it easy to forget that the franchise had roped in some rather less celebrated acts...
- www.nme.com
Sound: Somehow each specific type of vocal of contemporary female singers resembles to the specific type of music they play...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
When MTV's Unplugged series started in the late 1980s, the idea of stripped-back acoustic versions of popular songs was relatively fresh. Now, more than two decades on, it seems you can't move without stumbling over one, be it on Radio 1's Live Lounge or a TV talent programme. "Wow," the judges crow, "you really made that song your own." The problem here is that Florence is all about the show. She's all about the histrionics, the flights of fancy, the vocal acrobatics...
- www.bbc.co.uk
What made last year's Ceremonials such a treat was that Paul Epworth's production was as frenetically over-the-top as Welch's frenzied diva-isms. Here, Welch's hysterical delivery definitely begs for a 40-piece orchestra backed by a 50-plus choir, without which the songs suffer from too much space for Welch's gigantic instrument...
- hour.ca
To answer your first question: Yes, they still do these. "MTV Unplugged" was once a showcase for pop culture writ impossibly large-- a place where the entire world could gasp at Gene Simmons' bare face or where Kurt Cobain could introduce over five million record buyers to the Vaselines. But in recent years, the show's institutional power has fizzled, and its most recent installments have featured tepid, obligatorily low-lit performances from are-they-really-that-famous...
- pitchfork.com
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