Nothing beats seeing your favorite band or musician live on stage—the energy, the set list and the experience is different at each performance. But even great performers have bad days, and whether because of exhaustion, nerves, trying something new to invigorate the crowd, or just bad lip-syncing, sometimes artists crash and burn—hard.
As we start to gear up for the upcoming New Year’s Eve, Super Bowl and awards season shows, we take a look at some of the worst live performances ever.
Mariah Carey, New Year’s Eve, Times Square, 2016
Mariah Carey had one of the best-known bad performances when she went live in Times Square during “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.” Her team said Carey couldn’t hear anything coming from her earpiece, and the singer was reportedly lip-syncing to some of her biggest hits, shown when an audio track malfunctioned.
The Red Hot Chili Peppers, “Under the Bridge,” Saturday Night Live, 1992
The Red Hot Chili Peppers performed “Under the Bridge” on February 22, 1992 while appearing on Saturday Night Live. At the time, the band was becoming increasingly popular, having sold millions of copies of their album, Blood Sugar Sex Magik. But guitarist John Frusciante was so unhappy with the band’s sudden success that he deliberately sabotaged the band’s SNL performance by playing slowly and erratically, and then later, screaming incoherently at the song’s end. Anthony Kiedis wrote in his autobiography, Scar Tissue, that it felt like he was “getting stabbed in the back and hung out to dry in front of all of America while Frusciante was off in a corner in the shadow, playing some dissonant out-of-tune experiment.”
Amy Winehouse, Tuborg Festival, Serbia, 2011
In 2011, Amy Winehouse was at the height of her career, and at the height of her struggle with addiction. She showed up drunk, incoherent and unable to play at the Tuborg Festival in Belgrade, Serbia in 2011. She was met with a mixture of anger, disappointment and concern from the crowd. The singer died one month later.
Led Zeppelin, “Whole Lotta Love,” Live Aid in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1985
In 1985, Led Zeppelin decided to reunite for the first time since drummer John Bonham’s death in 1980. The venue: the Live Aid concert at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The band was playing for a crowd of about 100,000 people and an estimated global audience of 1.9 billion on television. But singer Robert Plant’s voice was sore from playing three solo night shows before Live Aid, while guitarist Jimmy Page was handed an untuned guitar and Phil Collins was added as a second drummer at the last minute and was clearly unfamiliar with the material. The show suffered accordingly.
This article was featured in the InsideHook newsletter. Sign up now.