Not-So-Quiet Riots: The Ten Worst Riots In Music Event History | DC9 At Night | Dallas | Dallas Observer | The Leading Independent News Source in Dallas, Texas
Navigation

Not-So-Quiet Riots: The Ten Worst Riots In Music Event History

Dallas Mavericks fans were notably well-behaved during yeterday's NBA Championship victory parade through downtown. Despite the fact that 200,000 or so people packed themselves in like sardines along the sidewalks of the route -- and in the sweltering heat, no less -- there were only five arrests. By contrast, Vancouver...
Share this:


Dallas Mavericks fans were notably well-behaved during yeterday's NBA Championship victory parade through downtown. Despite the fact that 200,000 or so people packed themselves in like sardines along the sidewalks of the route -- and in the sweltering heat, no less -- there were only five arrests.

By contrast, Vancouver Canucks fans set downtown afire after their team lost the Stanley Cup. Good sportsmanship upon a beloved team's loss is something Vancouver fans could learn from Mavs fans -- until this year, we'd lost NBA title after NBA title for 30-plus years, and no one's gotten hurt because of it.

But what, in general, causes an otherwise well-behaved crowd to suddenly turn violent? Well, music, for one. Some of the most famous and destructive riots in history have been the result of concerts gone wrong.

Along those lines, we've rounded up some of the most infamous concert riots in history after the jump. Turns out that Vancouver hockey fans aren't the only ones who could take a page from Dallas' stellar sportsmanship book. Take note, Limp Bizkit fans (all three of you).

10. Drake, New York City 2010. Free concerts are by nature unpredictable. And when Drake and '90s "Mmmbop"-ers Hanson scheduled one at the South Street Seaport, some 25,000 fans packed nearby streets. The NYPD shut down the show when fans began fist-fighting and throwing chairs from balconies -- and during soundcheck, even. The NYPD was able to bring the crowd under control relatively quickly, though, which proves that we've learned a thing or two since Altamont (more on that later).

9. Metallica, Bogota, 2010. This show was sold out. Hundreds of ticketless fans attempted to barge into the venue, throwing rocks and breaking windows in the process. Riot police arrested 160 unruly fans; eight people, including four officers, were injured.

8. Guns N' Roses and Metallica, Montreal, 1992. Openers Metallica had to cut their set short after James Hetfield suffered injuries in a pyrotechnic accident. Meanwhile, Guns' set found Axl up to his usual shenanigans; complaining of a sore throat, Rose left the stage in the middle of their set. Fans poured into the street and began overturning cars and setting fires.

7. Guns N' Roses, St. Louis 1991. Funny how the same names keep cropping up on this list. GNR has caused several riots in the wake of Axl's hasty departures from stage; this was the worst. Axl got pissed about fan heckling, threw down his mic and walked off; angry fans began ripping up seats and, eventually, the band's gear. It took riot police 45 minutes to get the crowd under control; 90 injuries and 16 arrests were reported, although the worst casualty of Axl's behavior may have been his career.

6. Woodstock '99. A combination of high-priced food and water, too few toilets and temperatures that soared above 100 degrees led to a crowd that was angry before the concert really got moving at full steam. Rioting began during Limp Bizkit's set and escalated when the Red Hot Chili Peppers took the stage. Four rapes were reported, six people were injured and seven were arrested -- although, amidst the chaos, many rioters went unidentified.  Fun fact: Muse played the "emerging artists" stage at Woodstock '99, a decade prior to their rise as indie darlings.

5. Alice Cooper in Toronto, 1980. Those crazy Canadians sure know how to tear shit up.  When Alice, then in the depths of his alcoholism, canceled his Toronto tour date, fans began throwing chairs and tearing up the stadium. When all was said and done, 31 people were arrested and 12 were hospitalized.

4. Altamont, 1969. If you want to throw a peace-and-love hippie festival, it might not be the best idea to hire Hells Angels as security guards. Rowdy fans clashed with the equally rowdy Angels as the Rolling Stones played. The Stones were too scared of what would happen if they stopped playing, so they soldiered on as concertgoers and bikers scuffled. One concertgoer was stabbed by a Hell's Angel, and more than 100 fans were injured.

3. The Who in Cincinnati, 1979. Ten thousand fans crowded outside the Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum, waiting as delay after delay pushed the start time back several hours.  When the doors finally opened, the crowd pushed forward, and 11 people were killed in the ensuing stampede.

2. Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring", Paris, 1913. It wasn't so much the music that caused this riot. Instead, it was Nijinsky's fertility-dance ballet that accompanied Stravinsky's that score sent offended fans into a frenzy during the Paris premiere of this work. Fistfights broke out in the aisles, and the cops were called before the piece reached intermission.

1. Paul Robeson, Peekskill, New York, 1949. Singer/actor Robeson was a politically active member of the civil rights movement. This concert in Peekskill, which at the time was a hot spot of KKK violence, was attended by 20,000 people. The lineup included Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger; concertgoers leaving the peaceful show were greeted by angry locals who threw rocks, chanted racist slurs, and dragged concertgoers from their cars. More than 140 people were injured, prompting nationwide anger over the inaction by police in the face of racism and violence.

BEFORE YOU GO...
Can you help us continue to share our stories? Since the beginning, Dallas Observer has been defined as the free, independent voice of Dallas — and we'd like to keep it that way. Our members allow us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls.