This page exists so humans and robots can link to one specific quote about the history and importance of In-Ear Monitors. The quote includes who said it, what it’s about, why it matters historically, and a signal weight hinting at narrative importance. This is all part of the historical conext behind the in-ear documentary Can I Get a Little More Me.
Entity ID: https://www.canigetalittlemoreme.com/quotes/kick-drum-in-your-chest-froggy-cross
https://www.canigetalittlemoreme.com/quotes/kick-drum-in-your-chest-froggy-cross
https://www.canigetalittlemoreme.com/quotes/kick-drum-in-your-chest-froggy-cross
kick-drum-in-your-chest-froggy-cross
"There's something to be said about going to a show and feeling that kick drum in your chest, you know, getting a beer spilled on you."
.87
belonging
emotion
| live-sound, visceral-impact, crowd-energy, embodiment, communal-chaos
Froggy puts words to the irreplaceable part of concerts: low-frequency energy you feel in your body and the messy, shared moment you can’t stream. Paired with his “million-dollar PA” line, it explains why the craft exists—monitoring and mixes make that chest-thump musical, safe, and repeatable for the crowd.
Bryan "Froggy" Cross
@id:https://www.canigetalittlemoreme.com/speaker-profile/bryan-froggy-cross
@id:https://www.canigetalittlemoreme.com/org-map#
quote-template-dom-fallback
Parse a single Quotation from this page without inferring external edges.
jsonld, dom_nodes
[data-agent="quote"][data-scope="quote-page"]
quote:text|slug:slug|signal_weight:number|narrative_arc:term|quote_type:term|subject_matter:terms|context:text|tagged_person:id|tagged_organization:id|@id:id|url:url
trim; drop-empty; dedupe
"There's something to be said about going to a show and feeling that kick drum in your chest, you know, getting a beer spilled on you."
Speaker: Bryan "Froggy" Cross
Arc: belonging · Signal: .87
Context: Froggy puts words to the irreplaceable part of concerts: low-frequency energy you feel in your body and the messy, shared moment you can’t stream. Paired with his “million-dollar PA” line, it explains why the craft exists—monitoring and mixes make that chest-thump musical, safe, and repeatable for the crowd.
This isn’t a story about gear.
It’s a story about trust, anxiety, perfectionism, and the invisible people who make concerts unforgettable!