|
In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
|
Video games open for Evanescence on concert tour
Monday August 11, 2003
By ANTHONY BREZNICAN AP Entertainment Writer
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. (AP) Now opening for the dark-rock band
Evanescence: Luke Skywalker, extreme snowboarders and the
claymation man-and-dog duo Wallace and Gromit.
Seeking new eyeballs and thumbs for its video games, Nintendo is
using the Evanescence tour to showcase game characters at kiosks
installed in concert venues. It's the latest cross-pollination
between games and music, as record labels seek to introduce unknown
bands and console manufacturers piggyback on big music acts.
``For me it just made sense to give people more of a good
time,'' Evanescence guitarist Ben Moody said before the tour's
inaugural show last week at the Universal Amphitheatre outside Los
Angeles.
``We've got these GameCubes set up everywhere. I just wanted
more of an event. Nintendo, it's like since I was 2 or whatever
that's a good time. That's how you do it. It's just more
entertainment,'' Moody said.
Evanescense's album ``Fallen'' has sold about 1.8 million copies
since it debuted in March, fueled by the omnipresent radio play of
``Bring Me To Life.'' The Nintendo Fusion Tour also includes Cold,
Revis and alternately Cauterize and Finger Eleven.
At the kiosks, players can sample the GameCube or GameBoy
Advance snowboarding game ``1080: Avalanche,'' the futuristic racer
``F-Zero GX,'' the latest ``Star Wars'' adventure ``Rogue Squadron
III: Rebel Strike'' and the comical cartoon-style ``Wallace and
Gromit in Project Zoo.''
Meanwhile, Microsoft's Xbox sponsored this summer's Lollapalooza
tour and set up ``GameRiot'' tents to let ticketholders play
against each other in games such as ``Tony Hawk's Underground,''
``Midtown Madness 3'' and ``Return to Castle Wolfenstein.''
Sony's PlayStation 2 also sets up a game-playing tent on the
``Vans Warped Tour'' which includes the bands Simple Plan, Less
Than Jake and The Ataris and shows up at some goth-metal Ozzfest
shows with a 77-foot truck loaded with game stations.
Game makers want to earn street credentials by associating their
products with the hard-living youth lifestyle, while music labels
often introduce new bands or songs through video game soundtracks.
In a recent survey of about 1,000 gamers, about 32 percent said
they discovered a new band through a video game. Among hardcore
gamers, categorized as those who buy more than 12 games a year, the
number was about 50 percent. The survey was conducted by Ziff Davis
Media, which publishes PC Magazine and Electronic Gaming Monthly.
The pro-football simulator ``Madden NFL 2003'' has been credited
with jump starting the career of OK Go by prominently featuring the
group's arena-rock anthem ``Get Over It.'' But game soundtracks
aren't solely the domain of lesser-known acts many top-tier
artists are getting in on the digital experience.
``Madden NFL 2003'' also featured songs by Bon Jovi and Andrew
W.K., while the recent wrestling game ``Def Jam Vendetta'' features
digital versions of rappers such as Ludacris, DMX and Redman
brawling beneath their own pulsing beats.
Sometimes, however, games can distract fans from the music
especially at a concert.
At the Universal Amphitheatre, while hundreds were inside
listening to the opening acts, scores of others played games
outside to pass the hours before Evanescence took the stage.
Todd Metcalf, a 26-year-old teacher from Orange County, said the
Nintendo games were a factor in his ticket purchase.
While manipulating a waifish woman warrior against a
sword-wielding brute in the battle game ``Soul Caliber II,'' he
said, ``I knew at the very least I'd be doing this for part of the
night playing the games while some of the not-so-good bands are
on, and then go in there and watch Evanescence.''
Peter Wurster, 23, a debt-management supervisor from Burbank,
steered a sleek racer through the streets of ``F-Zero GX'' and said
he discovered Revis through its song ``Caught in the Rain'' on the
``MVP Baseball 2003'' game.
But he was more captivated by the games than seeing Revis
perform.
``A lot of people are pulled out and they're just hypnotized by
video games,'' he said about the small crowds gathered around the
kiosks. ``So if I was playing onstage, I'd probably be (ticked) off
that the video games are out here.''
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
|