Tour or residency? Jade, CMAT and Wolf Alice on live music debate
Tour or residency? Top artists give their views on live music debate 15 hours ago Pete Allison , Mollie Perellaand Georgia Levy-Collins ,BBC Newsbeat Can a tour be a tour if you don't move? It's a question more fans have been asking as some of the world's biggest acts have chosen to concentrate their upcoming shows in big cities.
But what do other artists think? BBC Newsbeat spoke to acts including CMAT, Jade Thirwall, Self Esteem and Wolf Alice for their takes. Speaking to Newsbeat on the Brit Awards red carpet, Jade says that, as a musician, residencies can be better for your body. "For an artist doing a residency, it's probably just healthier for your body and your voice and your mind to not be travelling all the time," she says.
However, the ex-Little Mix star added that she "personally really loves" touring and travelling.
"For artists like Harry Styles or Bruno Mars and Adele, they've toured 10 to 15 years of their life, sometimes nearly 20. "So it's like the idea that if they want to stay in one location, it feels very earned. "
The announcement didn't go down well with everyone, especially as the singer had taken a long break from performing to film the Wicked movies.
Some fans complained online that the booking 10 dates in one venue was "annoying".
For those coming in from out of town, there's the prospect of paying for accommodation, travel and food on top of a potentially hefty ticket price.
There were complaints about the prices for Styles' UK shows, which ranged from £44.
Rock band Wolf Alice tell Newsbeat residencies can make sense for certain artists. "It feels like a new thing and Harry's doing it in an amazing, unique way and it also feels like an artistic choice for him," says bassist Theo Ellis.
But they believe that residencies can mean fans miss out.
"I think the negative side can be that maybe not everyone gets to go and experience it," says Ellis. "You need to be an artist of a certain size to do it. " In their acceptance speech for group of the year, the band's singer Ellie Rowsell highlighted the crisis facing grassroots music venues where Wolf Alice cut their teeth. Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson, who performs as CMAT, tells Newsbeat smaller venues mustn't be neglected.
"Learning the differences between that makes creativity a bit more fertile.
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