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Motley Crue Tickets

Motley Crue is back! The Crue sold millions of albums behind singles such as “Dr. Feelgood,” and “Girls, Girls, Girls,” to name a few. Come see Tommy Lee (drums), Nikki Sixx (bass), Mick Mars (guitar), and the revamped Vince Neil (vocals) as they take on the nation! Buy your Motley Crue tickets now!
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Awesome show
By HJM from Waterloo, Iowa on 6/28/2011
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence
Best For:
Adults

This was my 4th time seeing Motley Crue and I was very pleased with the show. Awesome Stage show, great setlist, engaged with the fans. Can't wait to go to the Moline show.

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[6 of 7 customers found this review helpful]

Poison rocked...Motley Not
By c from Houston Texas on 6/12/2011
Pros:
Great opening act Poison
Cons:
Poor Sound Quality
Best For:
Adults

I was really disappointed with the Motley Crue performance. It seemed really disorganized...way too much time between songs. They slaughtered Home Sweet Home, and most of the other songs were difficult to listen to because the sound was so messed up. The best thing about the show was Poison.

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[17 of 18 customers found this review helpful]

Föuntain of Yoüth
By hockey4 from Camden, NJ on 8/6/2009

Motley Crue took their performance to a whole new level in Cruefest-2 with, no-joke, the best concert I've ever seen. I offer my apologies to Metallica, GNR, Audioslave, Aerosmith, Rage Against the Machine, Soundgarden, Megadeath, etc, who've all put on phenomenal shows in their prime- just not THIS good. Otherwise, I'm not the type to bother writing a review. I was at Camden NJ for the first concert of Cruefest 2 and my fourth time seeing the Crue since 2005. In the three previous concerts, I went in hopes of simply being entertained by some great live music and rejuvenating memories of my youth when music was a big part of my life. They delivered, each time. But last Sunday it was different: they put on a performance that exceeded all expectations- I was on a (natural) high for days afterwards. They were the tightest I've ever seen them play. They were more passionate and energized about their music than I'd seen previously. Vince Neil capitalized on his talent for far-reaching vocal range and sang with the precision of a studio album. Tommy Lee and Nikki Sixx were flawless and powerful in their delivery, as well as entertaining, as always. Most impressive of all was Mick Mars. He carried the band with a phenomenal performance unlike any lead guitarist I've seen in concert. For lack of better words, his accuracy with every note was seamless, his delivery was potent/commanding, and his solo moments were captivating. Their decision to "re-release" the Feelgood album/tour was genius. Their performance probably challenges even their own best 20 years ago. Yeah, I'm definitely pumped about this concert… They didn't just bring back memories of my youth; their performance made me feel like I was transported back in time, proving (at least to me) that youth is not an age, but a state of mind.

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[6 of 7 customers found this review helpful]

CRUETASTIC!!!!! BEST ROCK SHOW EVER
By Cathy from San Angelo, TX on 7/26/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List, The show was awesome
Cons:
Need autograph session
Best For:
DIE HARD FANS, Everyone

This was by far the best show ever...the only thing lacking is an autograph session for the people in the PIT...we are die hard and would love to and deserve at the very least, an autograph.....NIKKI SIXX IS THE BEST...one things for sure.....they still got it and cant be beat

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Motley Crue Tickets

“Let Us Prey” that you scoop up your Motley Crue tickets before they are all gone! 

Motley Crue, born circa 1981, is by far one of the most significant bands of the 1980s metal hair band era. Known as much for their hard partying ways as their hard sound, Mötley Crüe brought glam and guitars to a whole new level. A history littered with breakups, members departing, serious turmoil and reunifications are coupled with explosive live concert performances. There is nothing like Motley Crue tickets to secure an awesome, heavy metal packed occasion.

Mötley Crüe members Nikki Sixx, Mick Mars, Vince Neil and Tommy Lee joined forces in Los Angeles during early 1981, and pushed their first album “Too Fast for Love” out the door later that year. The band’s name is derived from the mind of guitarist Mars, who kept a phrase in the back of his mind that had been uttered years earlier about a band that he previously played with. Name in hand and album hitting the airwaves, Motley Crue took to the road. By the mid-1980s many incidents, including airport arrests and destruction of hotel rooms, had become the band’s best form of PR. Continued success saw the band release smash hit albums including “Shout at the Devil,” “Theatre of Pain,” “Girls, Girls, Girls,” “Dr. Feelgood” and “Mötley Crüe,” as well as a handful of other titles. The Crue has collaborated with Buckcherry and shared a bill with Aerosmith, Megadeth, Poison and the New York Dolls. Each member of Motley Crue lives in infamy the world over, as well as the band being infamous as a unit.

Witness the breadth and energy that is a live Motley Crue concert and take away a piece of musical history. A great performance anytime, the reviews from concertgoers shout “best live concert ever,” “they are still the best” and declare that Mötley Crüe is a great live concert experience! Grab your opportunity to experience the legend yourself when you buy your Motley Crue concert tickets today!


Motley Crue Biography

Mtley Cre were one of the most influential hair metal bands of the '80s, boasting a striking visual presence and hedonistic reputation rivaled only by Guns N' Roses. By combining Alice Cooper's shock rock with the bluesy, metallic stomp of the New York Dolls and Aerosmith, they helped establish hair metal as a commercial genre, sending their first five albums to platinum status in the process. Such success was at least partially due to Mtley Cre's reputation as a riotous pack of rabble-rousers, replete with drug addictions, near-death experiences, groupie encounters, and celebrity girlfriends. Of course, that same self-indulgence nearly derailed the band, forcing the musicians to embrace sobriety during the creation of their most successful album to date, 1989's Dr. Feelgood. Like most hair metal bands, Mtley Cre's album sales waned during the 1990s, as the popularity of grunge overshadowed most of the music that immediately prefaced it. Nevertheless, the band soldiered through the decade with modest success, releasing two gold-selling albums along the way. The new millennium brought similar luck, as Mtley Cre established themselves as a fashionable touring act (with ~Cre Fest becoming the summer's highest-grossing festival in 2008) while continuing to release new material.

Formed in January 1981, Mtley Cre were originally the pet project of bassist Nikki Sixx (born Frank Ferrana), vocalist/guitarist Greg Leon, and drummer Tommy Lee (born Thomas Lee Bass). Leon was a veteran of the Hollywood scene, having replaced Randy Rhoads in Quiet Riot two years prior. He butted heads with the strong-willed Sixx, however, resulting in his departure from the lineup several months later. Local guitarist Bob Mick Mars Deal joined in his place, bringing the moniker Mottley Krue with him. After altering the name and adding a pair of umlauts (allegedly in tribute to German beer), the trio began efforts to recruit Vincent Neil Wharton, vocalist for the L.A.-based band Rock Candy. Neil initially refused the advances, only joining the band after his Rock Candy cohorts announced their decision to transform their group into a new wave act. With Vince Neil now on board, Mtley Cre became a cult favorite on the L.A. circuit, infamously known for such theatrics as setting Sixx's pants on fire midsong.

The band soon secured management with Allan Coffman, who financed recording sessions for a debut album. Initially released in November 1981 by Lethur Records -- a small, independent label launched by Coffman and the band -- Too Fast for Love sold a surprising 20,000 copies. It also prompted a Canadian tour, where the musicians made headlines by wearing their spike-laden stage attire onto the plane, carrying suitcases of pornographic material through airport security, and fielding death threats from incensed fans in Edmonton. Such exposure only served to fuel Mtley Cre's sensationalist appeal, generating the sort of shocked press coverage that the band desired.

Back at home, Elektra Records had become impressed by the band's popularity in local venues, prompting the label to sign Mtley Cre before releasing a new, remastered version of Too Fast for Love. Following the band's return to California, Elektra also released the sophomore effort Shout at the Devil in 1983. The video for Looks That Kill became an MTV hit, broadcasting the group's glammed-up theatrics to an audience unfamiliar with Mtley Cre's popularity on the club circuit, and the record went platinum as a result. Shout at the Devil sold an additional million copies in 1984, but the party was brought to a temporary standstill when Vince Neil crashed his car on December 8, killing passenger Nicholas Razzle Dingley of Hanoi Rocks. The other victims emerged with broken bones and brain damage, while a relatively unscathed Neil was found guilty of vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence. He was ultimately incarcerated for 15 days in 1986, in addition to performing community service and paying a large cash settlement. By the time Neil was sentenced, however, the band's newest record, Theatre of Pain, had already enjoyed a lengthy stay on the charts, cementing the band's mainstream status and producing Mtley Cre's first Top 40 hit with a cover of Brownsville Station's Smokin' in the Boys' Room. Neil's stint in jail was brief, and the band was free to continue its decadent reign.

Under the management of Doug Thaler and Doc McGhee, the latter of whom also managed Bon Jovi, Mtley Cre's popularity expanded throughout the latter half of the '80s. Home Sweet Home, a power ballad from Theatre of Pain, yielded another popular music video, while a 44-minute home video cassette entitled Uncensored was issued in 1986 to multi-platinum sales. Meanwhile, Lee married actress Heather Locklear, and the band returned to the studio to record a fourth album, Girls, Girls, Girls. Released during the band's substance-addled heyday in 1987, the album debuted at number two, with the raunchy title track becoming Mtley Cre's second Top 40 hit. The group quickly embarked on a headlining tour, but the European dates were canceled when Sixx suffered a near-fatal heroin overdose. He was pronounced legally dead en route to the hospital, only to be revived by two shots of adrenaline to the heart. Upon returning home, Sixx immediately shot up once again. Shocked, Thaler and McGhee urged their clients to enter a drug rehabilitation program, and Mtley Cre remained out of the spotlight while the bandmates cleaned up their act.

They returned in 1989 -- clean and sober this time -- with the release of Dr. Feelgood, a muscled album that became Mtley Cre's first release to top the ~Billboard charts. Meanwhile, the title track became the band's first Top Ten hit, and a string of additional singles -- Kickstart My Heart (inspired by Sixx's brush with death), Don't Go Away Mad (Just Go Away), and Without You -- made Dr. Feelgood the most successful Cre album to date. After another worldwide tour, the compilation album Decade of Decadence arrived in 1991, propelled to multi-platinum status by a new version of Home Sweet Home that became the band's final Top 40 hit.

After creating their own record label, Mtley Records, the bandmates signed a renewed contract with Elektra for 25 million. The music industry had begun to devote most of its attention to grunge music, however, and the pressure to keep pace with changing trends took its toll on the band's camaraderie. In 1992, sessions for Mtley Cre's next album turned ugly, leading to the dismissal (or departure, depending on the source) of Neil, who was replaced by the Scream's John Corabi. The revised band issued Mtley Cre in 1994, which peaked at number seven in the U.S. and eventually went gold. Such an attempt to embrace a new, grungier sound proved to be a commercial disappointment, however, as did the band's supporting tour. Corabi was fired in 1997 at the label's behest, and Neil returned to the lineup for the release of Generation Swine. The subject of a heavy marketing campaign, Generation Swine debuted at number four, although it failed to generate any significant singles. Meanwhile, Corabi resurfaced alongside former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick in the group Union.

Shortly after the release of Greatest Hits in 1998, Tommy Lee was arrested for spousal abuse against Pamela Anderson. He spent most of the year in jail, effectively killing any momentum generated by the gold-selling status of Greatest Hits and Generation Swine. Meanwhile, the group's contract with Elektra fell apart, prompting Mtley Records to switch its affiliation to the Beyond label. The band acquired the rights to its back catalog in the process.

After numerous bitter encounters with Neil, Tommy Lee left the band in 1999 to form Methods of Mayhem, which released a self-titled debut album later that year. He was replaced by former Ozzy Osbourne drummer Randy Castillo, and the revamped lineup celebrated its acquisition of the Cre catalog by issuing remastered editions of every studio album, as well as the rarities collection Supersonic and Demonic Relics. A collection of new material, New Tattoo, appeared in the summer of 2000 to a lukewarm reception, and Castillo became stricken with an undisclosed illness on the eve of the requisite tour. While he recuperated at home, the band temporarily enlisted Hole's drummer (and lifelong Cre fan), Samantha Maloney, to handle percussion duties.

In May 2001, the band issued a best-selling, tell-all biography entitled -The Dirt. During the downtime that followed its release, Neil launched a brief solo tour of U.S. clubs and Sixx wrote material for other artists, including Tantric, Meat Loaf, Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, and James Michael. Sadly, Castillo succumbed to cancer during the following spring, prompting the band to continue its hiatus. Although Sixx speculated publicly about the possibility of a reunion tour, Tommy Lee quickly rebutted such rumors, claiming that his relationship with Vince Neil was simply too poor for any sort of reconciliation. Controversy surrounded the band again as former producer Tom Werman sued for unpaid royalties, Neil's former wife Heidi Mark publicly accused him of physical abuse, and Neil was kicked off a nationally syndicated radio show for being too drunk to maintain an interview.

Rumors of a reunion continued to swirl throughout the following two years, even as Mtley Cre's members remained loyal to their individual projects. Both Tommy Lee and Vince Neil participated in celebrity TV shows -- Lee as the focus of an NBC series that featured the drummer attending college classes, and Neil in the first season of The Surreal Life -- while Sixx toured and released an album with his new band, Brides of Destruction. In late 2004, however, the four original members announced a full-scale reunion tour for the following year, marking their first outing since the late '90s. The tour coincided with the February release of Mtley Cre's double-disc greatest-hits collection, Red, White & Cre, which went platinum within six months of its release. The reunion tour was further celebrated by the release of a concert album, Carnival of Sins Live, in 2006, while a record of new material, Saints of Los Angeles, arrived in 2008. In keeping with their recent dedication to the road, the bandmates subsequently unveiled plans for ~Cre Fest, a summer package tour that netted over 40 million during its inaugural year. ~ Andrew Leahey, Rovi