INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - October 28, 2011
Singer Jennifer Nettles told Friday night's crowd - including
some of those injured during the collapse - that the tragedy had
changed them all.
Nettles opened 2½-hour show at a packed Conesco Fieldhouse in
Indianapolis by telling audience members they were in store for an
emotional night that would also be part celebration. She also told
fans that Sugarland had visited the fairgrounds, where high winds
toppled scaffolding and stage rigging on Aug. 13 into a crowd
awaiting a performance by the country duo. Seven people were
killed.
"Obviously we are here in October - we were supposed to do this
show in August. Obviously, the stage is different, you are
different and we are different. We are all changed by what happened
then," she said. "But we are going to try to give you the best
show that we can and to celebrate healing with you and to celebrate
life and music with you here tonight."
Sugarland's free concert came 10 weeks after the stage collapsed
as a storm neared the fairgrounds' Grandstand a few miles north of
Friday night's venue. Attendees were asked to donate to a victim
relief fund that already has raised nearly $1 million.
Indianapolis resident Sue Humphrey, whose 17-year-old son, Brad,
was left partially paralyzed when he was struck by falling stage
rigging that night, attended Friday's concert with her son, who
only decided Friday afternoon that he wanted to go.
Humphrey said Brad was unsure if the concert would be too
emotional for him, but she said it was herself, and not her son,
who got choked up at one point during the show as her mind cast
back to August's tragedy.
She said Brad, a high school senior who attended the concert
after finishing his first week back at school since he was injured,
held up fine. Humphrey and her son, who is now in a wheelchair, sat
in the venue's handicapped section.
Humphrey said she was touched when Nettles held up a flag near
the end of the concert with the word "Heal" painted on it and
then walked through the audience holding it aloft.
"She usually has `Love' on that flag, but this time she
spray-painted `Heal' on it and I thought that was a very, very good
touch to the show," she said.
Rick Stevens, who served as an Army medic in Vietnam, said
Sugarland "hit a home run" with Friday's concert by balancing a
remembrance of August's stage collapse with several vibrant and
powerful renditions of their songs, including "The Incredible
Machine," the name of their current album.
"I've seen them play five times and this is their most
emotional, most heartfelt concerts I've seen. They just played
their hearts out," he said. "It was a slam dunk."
The 57-year-old Terre Haute, Ind., resident was among those who
rushed into the tangled metal rigging to help people crushed in
August's collapse. He said he saw people at Friday's concert whom
he had rescued.
Indiana-based musician Corey Cox and actress Rita Wilson
performed before Sugarland took the stage.
Cox performed a few weeks ago at a benefit concert for a woman
from his hometown of Pendleton, Ind. - 30-year-old Andrea Vellinga
- who suffered severe head injuries in the stage collapse and still
is struggling to recover. Vellinga's family and friends attended
the show.
He dedicated one of his songs, "That'll Take You Back" to his
hometown "and every other small town across this country who came
together the week after Aug. 13 and prayed and supported" the
victims of the collapse.
A psychiatrist who specializes in treating survivors of
disasters said attending the concert could help some of the roughly
40 people injured in the stage collapse and relatives of those
killed come to terms with the tragedy. But he said there's a chance
it could deal others a setback, dredging up intense and painful
memories.
"It's good that this benefit concert should happen, but it may
be too hard for some people to go through it," said Anthony Ng,
interim chief medical officer at The Acadia Hospital in Bangor,
Maine. "Obviously everybody's different and there's no right way
or wrong way to do this."
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Online:
Sugarland: http://www.sugarlandmusic.com/
Corey Cox: http://www.coreycoxmusic.com/
Sugarland: `We are all changed' by collapse
By 6abc
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