Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Diehard Greta Van Fleet fans camp outside Fiserv Forum

- Claire Reid

At 11:30 a.m. on Monday, about 70 fans of the rock band Greta Van Fleet were already lined up in tents and lawn chairs to secure pit tickets for the band’s Fiserv Forum concert on Tuesday evening, the final stop on their “Starcatche­r World Tour.”

About 20 tents and counting lined Juneau Avenue, full of fans hoping to snag tickets closest to the stage. Fans passed the time by making beaded friendship bracelets, reading, sleeping and socializin­g with friends they hadn’t seen in a while. Some brought solarpower­ed phone chargers, gallon water jugs, and pool floaties and blow-up chairs to sit on. Spirits were calm and upbeat. One fan called the experience “a big slumber party.”

Some fans had been camped out since late Sunday night; others arrived early Monday morning before sunrise. Pat Sterner of Duluth, Minn., arrived around 11 p.m. Sunday with his daughter and her friend. This will be Sterner and his daughter’s second Greta Van Fleet concert and first time in the pit.

“My daughter’s a huge fan. I have now become a fan as well,” he said. “For me, it’s the connectivi­ty with my daughter. I love having that fatherdaug­hter connection.”

Sterner said they already braved Sunday night’s rain and will continue waiting in line no matter the weather. Rain and possible severe thundersto­rms are in Milwaukee’s Monday night forecast. Many fans brought waterproof tents. However, a pair of sisters from West Bend who arrived on Juneau Avenue at 10 p.m. Sunday night said their first tent flooded, and they had to buy a new one.

Christalyn Barker, a recent graduate of Columbia College Chicago, traveled to Milwaukee by herself for her first Greta Van Fleet pit experience. Equipped with a baguette, a jar of peanut butter, a few books, a blanket and a blow-up chair, she said she wished she had a tent and a mattress. But, she continued, the uncomforta­ble wait will be worth it.

The pit “(is) different than if you were in the nosebleeds or something,” Barker said. “You can actually see them, which makes the music even more real.”

Many fans said their shared love of the band and experience­s at its concerts have brought them a great deal of community. Kaleigh Gieraltows­ki of Michigan waited in line Monday with Naomi Schwam and Hannah Singletary, both of Orlando. The three women met camping out before a Greta Van Fleet concert in Flint, Michigan, in 2022. Although that show was canceled, the group has since attended other concerts together and become good friends.

Emily Dunbar, from the Chicago area, is attending the concert with a fellow fan of the band she met on Twitter and has traveled with to a few of its concerts. Dunbar said there is a large Greta Van Fleet fandom on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok, and the band’s message of “acceptance, love and peace” brings them together.

“I met some amazing people through this band. I have friends from even several years ago that I met through this band that I still go to shows with and talk to pretty regularly ...,” Dunbar said “It’s always so welcoming going to concerts with such nice fans.”

How to get tickets to Greta Van Fleet’s show in Milwaukee

Standard admission and more expensive platinum-level tickets are still available on Ticketmast­er for Greta Van Fleet’s Fiserv Forum show. Verified resale tickets start at $60, and standard admission starts at $74.50. The show is at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, May 21.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Fans wait in line Monday across the street from Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee for a chance to be in the “pit” for Tuesday’s Greta Van Fleet concert.
MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Fans wait in line Monday across the street from Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee for a chance to be in the “pit” for Tuesday’s Greta Van Fleet concert.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States