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REO Speedwagon Tickets

REO Speedwagon fans flock to hit songs like “Can’t Fight this Feeling” and “Keep on Loving You”! Don’t miss your chance to sing along with REO Speedwagon LIVE! Buy your REO Speedwagon tickets now!
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[3 of 3 customers found this review helpful]

would go again and again. and i have!!!!
By jenwitch from winamac, indiana on 6/30/2009
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Have seen them 14 times, In 40's and still love2go, My favorite of all bands, Never gets old, Perfect Set List, Was my 1st concert at 14
Best For:
Everyone

they were my 1st concert when i was 14 and had to beg my mom to let my uncle take me to see them. been hooked ever since and have seen the 14 times over the years. i am in my 40's now and my kids tell me i'm too old for concerts. never!!!!!!!!! i'll buy REO tickets as long as they're around. going in 3 weeks to see def leppard, cheap trick, and poison. they need to make music like this again!!

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REO @ Chastain
By Concert Man from Atlanta, Ga on 7/1/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Great Encores, Great Sound
Best For:
Everyone

Great concert and seats !!

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One of the best concerts I've seen.
By Tony L. from Enterprise, AL on 7/1/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

One of the greatest concerts I have ever seen. I would definitely do it again and again.

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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

REO Speedwagon Concert
By Stacy from Rome, GA on 7/1/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

Great concert, great seats. LOVED it.

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REO Speedwagon Info

You can’t fight the feeling, so grab your REO Speedwagon tickets now! 

Formed in 1967 by a couple of Midwestern-based college kids, REO Speedwagon has ground its way to the top through good old fashioned hard work. Neal Doughty dragged his rock and roll dream through the college bar circuit until the band caught Epic Records eye in 1971.

REO Speedwagon hit their peak in the early 1980’s with monster ballad hits like “Can’t Fight This Feeling” and “Keep On Loving You.” Instead of fading away like many 80s era bands, REO Speedwagon has continued to roll with the changes while still delivering unwavering live concert performances. The band’s smooth style has kept REO Speedwagon tickets a steady seller.

Still rocking decades later, REO Speedwagon is known for their down-to-earth persona and straightforward approach to music. Simply, no flash and just play the tunes. In 2009 a tour with bands STYX and 38 Special packed concert venues with timeless tunes and amazingly cheap ticket prices. The band paired with powerhouse rocker Pat Benatar in 2010 to create an unforgettable concert pairing. Fans give live REO Speedwagon performances one slammin’ review after another.

Join the legions that have enjoyed seeing this ageless act and get your REO Speedwagon tickets quick!


REO Speedwagon Biography

Three bands were the undisputed arena rock kings of the early '80s -- Styx, Journey, and REO Speedwagon -- yet all weren't overnight success stories (in fact, each group began pursuing different musical styles originally -- prog rock, fusion, and straight-ahead hard rock, respectively, before transforming slowly into chart-topping mainstream rockers). REO Speedwagon first formed in 1968, via a pair of University of Illinois students, keyboardist Neal Doughty and drummer Alan Gratzer. After graduation, the group signed on with then-unknown manager Irving Azoff (who would later guide the careers of such multi-platinum acts as the Eagles and Steely Dan), which led to the outfit building a devoted following in the Midwest due to nonstop touring. By the early '70s, Doughty and Gratzer had welcomed aboard guitarist Gary Richrath, who would soon prove to be the group's spark plug (and one of rock's more underrated players), in addition to bassist Gregg Philbin and singer Terry Luttrell. It was this lineup to be featured on the quintet's 1971 self-titled debut recording for Epic Records.

The debut failed to break REO through to the mainstream, as the band's future was thrust into uncertainty shortly thereafter, when Luttrell left the band. Newcomer Kevin Cronin got the gig, he was a folksinger/guitarist beforehand, with little to no experience fronting a loud rock & roll outfit. The Cronin-led lineup appeared to be headed in the right direction though, judging from 1972's R.E.O. T.W.O., but the other members grew impatient with their slow progress toward a commercial breakthrough, and gave Cronin his walking papers. Up next as REO's frontman was Mike Murphy, whose debut with the band, 1974's Ridin' the Storm Out, was their first album to chart on ~Billboard and spawned a concert standard with the rocking title track. Murphy stayed onboard for a couple of more releases -- 1974's Lost in a Dream and 1975's This Time We Mean It -- but neither managed to push REO to the next level.

Once more, a frontman change was required, and instead of searching for a fresh new face, REO welcomed back Cronin. The move paid off almost immediately, as REO found their niche by streamlining their sound and focusing on melodic rockers aimed at radio, as well as power ballads aimed at teenage girls' hearts. Released in 1976, R.E.O. signaled the beginning of the veteran group's winning streak, as both 1977's Live: You Get What You Play For and 1978's You Can Tune a Piano, But You Can't Tuna Fish were REO's first to earn gold and platinum certification. Another live album, Live Again, was also issued in 1978, followed up a year later by another gold-certified hit, Nine Lives. Although REO was slowly inching their way to big-time success, no one (not even the band) could have predicted the massive hit that their next album turned out to be, Hi Infidelity. Issued at the tail end of 1980, it became one of 1981's biggest albums -- spawning one of the best-known power ballads of all time, Keep on Loving You, as well as such popular rock radio hits as Don't Let Him Go and Take It on the Run. Hi Infidelity would eventually go on to sell more than nine million copies -- catapulting REO to arena-headlining status.

REO Speedwagon continued to score further hit albums (1982's Good Trouble, 1984's Wheels Are Turnin') and singles (Keep the Fire Burnin', the number one hit power ballad Can't Fight This Feeling, etc.), but the hits dried up shortly thereafter. Issued in 1987, Life as We Know It managed to go gold, but their fans' sudden disinterest coupled with turmoil between certain bandmembers led to the exit of both Richrath and Gratzer by the end of the decade. REO opted to soldier on, however, with replacement members Dave Amato (ex-Ted Nugent, guitar) and Bryan Hitt (ex-Wang Chung, drums) in tow, as their 14-track 1988 compilation The Hits proved to be a steady seller over the years. Further underappreciated studio releases followed, such as 1990's The Earth, a Small Man, His Dog and a Chicken and 1996's Building the Bridge. With interest at an all-time low, REO was set to pack it up for good, until a sudden wave of renewed interest in classic rock bands of yesteryear began to sweep the U.S. during the late '90s, resulting in REO launching successful co-headlining tours alongside such acts as Styx, Fleetwood Mac, Pat Benatar, Foreigner, Peter Frampton, Journey, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Bad Company, among others.

The '90s saw the emergence of countless REO compilations, including such titles as The Second Decade of Rock n' Roll: 1981 to 1991, Only the Strong Survive, The Ballads, and a specially priced three-disc set of Live: You Get What You Play For, You Can Tune a Piano, But You Can't Tuna Fish, and Hi Infidelity. Additionally, further in-concert releases cropped up -- Live: Plus, Extended Versions, and a 2001 live set, Arch Allies: Live at Riverport, split 50/50 between REO and touring mates Styx. In a 2001 episode of VH1's Behind the Music series that focused on REO Speedwagon, Cronin and Richrath cleared up any misconceptions of ill will existing between either camp and voiced approval of a possible reunion in the future. When REO returned to the studio later in the 2000s, however, it was without Richrath. Find Your Own Way Home, the band's first studio album of new songs in more than ten years, featured Cronin along with founding member Neal Doughty on keyboards, longtime bassist Bruce Hall, and '80s additions Amato and Hitt. This lineup also released an unabashed record of Christmas songs in 2009, titled Not So Silent Night. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi