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INXS Tickets

Though the original INXS lineup is on tour without lead singer Michael Hutchence, INXS is ready to rock! Don't miss your chance to see the group responsible for hits “Need You Tonight,” “Original Sin,” and “Never Tear Us Apart.” If you're an INXS fan, a rare tour by INXS is exactly “What You Need”! Don't miss your chance to see INXS perform LIVE on tour! Buy your INXS tickets now!
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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

INXS was Great - Venue not Great
By Tuck from Houston, TX on 8/27/2007
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Sound was a problem
Cons:
Too Expensive - For Time, Too Short

Love INXS, thought the Venue had problems with the sound quality and it was very expensive for a one hour show. We would not do this again at Hard Rock.

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I'm IN to Stay
By MIke from Fort Lauderdale on 11/23/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Perfect Set List
Cons:
Poor Sound Quality
Best For:
Everyone

The Unknwon Warm UP bank was not matched well with the band music style. The Venue was just ok, did not really cater to their quests cosnidering over half theseats were empty. INXS was great and did put on an amazing albeit short show.

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Concert of a lifetime
By Kim from Calgary, Alberta, Canada on 7/11/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Incredibly hot singer, Perfect Set List, Perfect stage presence, The concert was awesome
Best For:
Anyone who likes INXS

The concert was a blast. We had 5th row tickets on the floor but we ended up in the first row, the energy from the band was great, they sang all their best songs and eventhough the singer, JD Fortune had a cast on his leg (awww) he was so energetic and did his best to show no pain!! My niece and I had an incredible night watching them, they are truly a legend!!

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Great end to INXS' North American Tour
By GabbyD from Sterling Heights, MI on 7/1/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

This was the longest distance I have traveled for ANY concert, and the experience was well worth it. INXS puts on a fantastic show, with a perfect blend of old and new material. New singer JD Fortune fits the band like a glove. I have been lucky enough to have attended four shows on this tour, and it only gets better. I would recommend this show to all fans- new and old!!! You will not be disappointed.

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INXS Biography

INXS hailed from the pubs of Australia, which is part of the reason the band never comfortably fit in with new wave. Even when they branched out into synth pop on their early recordings, they were underpinned by a hard, Stonesy beat and lead singer Michael Hutchence's Jagger-esque strut. Ultimately, these were the very things that made INXS into international superstars in the late '80s. By that time, the group had harnessed its hard rock, dance, and new wave influences into a sleek, stylish groove that made its 1987 album, Kick, a multi-million-selling hit. While that sound was their key to stardom, it also proved to be their undoing INXS became boxed in by their Stonesy pop-funk in the early '90s, when their audience became entranced by harder-edged alternative rock. In spite of declining sales, they soldiered on, continuing to tour and record for a dedicated fan base until Hutchence's 1997 death brought the band's heyday to a close.

Appropriately for a band that featured three brothers, INXS had their roots in a family act, the Farriss Brothers. The group came together while keyboardist Andrew Farriss, the middle brother, was attending high school with vocalist Michael Hutchence. The two formed a band with bassist Gary Beers. Simultaneously, guitarist Tim Farriss was playing in various groups with his friend, guitarist/saxophonist Kirk Pengilly. Eventually, the two groups merged in 1977, with Jon Farriss joining the unified lineup as drummer. Two years later, when Jon graduated from high school, the band renamed itself INXS, moved from Perth to Sydney, and began to play the pub circuit. Within a year, the group landed an Australian record contract and released an eponymous debut on Deluxe in 1980.

INXS and Underneath the Colours (1981) became Australian hits, leading the band to an American contract with Atco Records. In 1983, they released their U.S. debut, Shabooh Shoobah, and embarked on an extensive tour which, thanks to the hit single Don't Change, made them minor new wave stars. For their next album, INXS recorded a few sessions with producer Nile Rodgers, which resulted in the sleek, funky Original Sin, the first inclination that the band was making a move toward a fusion of Stonesy rock and dance music. Original Sin made 1984's The Swing a minor hit, yet the group didn't have a genuine mainstream breakthrough until 1985's Listen Like Thieves, which climbed to number 11 in the U.S. on the strength of the single What You Need.

Listen Like Thieves laid the groundwork for Kick, the album that made INXS international superstars. Released late in 1987, Kick worked its way to multi-platinum status over the course of 1988, as four singles -- the number one Need You Tonight, Devil Inside, New Sensation, and Never Tear Us Apart -- climbed into the U.S. Top Ten. In the wake of the album's success, Hutchence was hailed in some quarters as the heir to Jagger's throne, and the group was considered to rival U2 in terms of international popularity. However, such success went to the group's head. Hutchence released the experimental side project Max Q in early 1990, and the record tanked. X, INXS' follow-up to Kick, appeared in the fall of 1990 to mostly negative reviews. While the album generated several hits, including Disappear and Bitter Tears, only its first single, Suicide Blonde, reached the Top Ten in the U.S., and the sales of X were disappointing when compared to Kick.

X hurt INXS' momentum considerably. Although the group was still quite popular on its accompanying tour -- the 1991 live album Live Baby Live was recorded at ~Wembley Stadium, the second largest stadium in Europe -- the group could no longer be considered in the same league as U2 or R.E.M. Hutchence continued to live a jet-setting lifestyle, dating Kylie Minogue and various supermodels, which did not wear well in the wake of alternative rock's commercial breakthrough in 1992. By the time INXS released Welcome to Wherever You Are, their most adventurous record, they were out of date in 1992, and even a rash of reviews that favorably compared the record to U2's Achtung Baby couldn't make it a hit. Full Moon, Dirty Hearts followed in 1993 and was generally ignored. Following its release, INXS left Atlantic's roster, releasing Greatest Hits as their last album for the label.

INXS signed with PolyGram in 1994, yet it took them three years to release a new album. During that time, Hutchence was involved in several tabloid scandals, most notably his love affair with British TV personality Paula Yates (which brought an end to her marriage to Bob Geldof), and he hinted that he was recording a solo album. That record didn't materialize, but INXS returned in the spring of 1997 with Elegantly Wasted. While the album was greeted with poor reviews, its hedonistic dance-rock was better suited to the late '90s than the early '90s, which made the record the group's biggest hit since X. On November 22 of that year, however, Hutchence was found dead in his Sydney hotel room, the victim of an apparent hanging. His long-in-the-works solo debut was posthumously issued in late 1999.

Terence Trent D'Arby took the frontman role for an abbreviated set at the opening of Sydney's Stadium Australia in 1999, and Jon Stevens filled the spot for occasional gigs that took place through the end of 2003. The latter singer eventually left to pursue a solo career. INXS remained quiet throughout the following year, but in 2005 they teamed up with reality show maverick Mark Burnett to launch Rock Star: INXS, a global TV show that aimed to find a permanent replacement for Hutchence. The winner was J.D. Fortune, a former Elvis impersonator from Canada. Fortune joined INXS, sang on their 2005 album Switch, and participated in the accompanying world tour. Switch only charted well in Fortune's native Canada, though, and his cocaine habit drove a wedge between Fortune and his bandmates as the tour wound down. Another period of inactivity followed. When INXS returned in 2010, they did so with a long list of guest vocalists, retaining Fortune as the official frontman but enlisting stars like Rob Thomas and Ben Harper to appear on their next album, Original Sin, which featured reworked versions of the band's past hits. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi