John Brown wrote:I can't understand anybody who goes to see a concert of one of the greatest rock and roll groups in of this and the last century and complain that people are stood up dancing

. The audiance are not being sellfish its called enjoying yourself

. Its a good job thousands of us are attending the concerts or there wouldn't be a DVD

I'm sorry, John, but I certainly can't agree with that.
Ticket prices for concerts are phenomenal these days (and you haven't finished shelling out after buying them, not by a long chalk).
The concert-goer attends in order to hear and see the artiste(s). I was luckier than some in that I was quite high up on Saturday night, so that the people who "are just having fun" (at the expense of others) didn't affect me, but I'm totally with Brian, Rob, etc, above. They're quite right - blocking the view of other fans is selfish and unjustifiable. In fact, we were all warned (some time ago) what would happen in the event of a Cliff/Shadows tour. Fortunately, the ticket allocation was done in a way that bypassed the massed car-park campers, but we were forewarned of this bad-mannered habit of running down to the front of the stage by those who are familiar with it from other Cliff concerts.
Of course, bad behaviour by audience members is nothing new. I can recall being intensely irritated by a field of (as it happens) American high-schoolgirls at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre during a performance of "The Tempest" (featuring no actors of less stature than Sir Michael Hordern, David Suchet, Ian Charleson, Richard Griffiths and Alan Rickman).Those teenage girls had clearly been dragged along there as part of an educational effort to instil some culture into them - and it didn't work. They just kept rabbiting on at normal conversational levels throughout the early part of the performance (this in a large theatre where the actors are not amplified). Thank God it was before the era of the mobile phone. Grrr!
JN...who hopes that his seats at the Liverpool Echo Arena (7th October) are unaffected.