Some unlucky Lamb Of God followers might have had fairly the stunning expertise over the weekend. A December twentieth occasion on the Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium in Spartanburg, SC was billed as a present from the above-mentioned Richmond, VA groove steel band on the favored ticket change web site StubHub. Essentially, that occasion, ‘Andrew Peterson’s Behold The Lamb Of God’, was something however.
As an alternative, that live performance was based mostly round Christian musician/creator Andrew Peterson’s 2004 conceptual album, “Behold The Lamb Of God: The True Tall Story Of The Coming Of Christ” — a Christmas-themed album concerning the introduction of Jesus Christ.

As you may see within the above screencap of the itemizing because it appeared on StubHub, it’s apparent how some confusion might have occurred. Embarrassingly for StubHub, that date was the closing cease of Peterson‘s 13-date ‘Behold The Lamb Of God‘ U.S. tour, that means there was no less than some precedent to keep away from the error. The snafu prompted StubHub to concern an apology and provide refunds to anybody affected by the matter. That assertion learn:
“We acknowledge the itemizing for the December 20 occasion at Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium was deceptive and apologize for the confusion this brought about. Forward of the present we up to date the occasion web page and reached out to prospects to make clear the occasion particulars. Anybody who bought tickets underneath the impression this was a special efficiency is inspired to contact us—we’ll honor a full refund underneath our FanProtect Assure.”
Lamb Of God performed their final present of the 12 months this previous November. The band’s vocalist Randy Blythe laughed off StubHub‘s mistake on his Instagram story, providing,:
“We normally play @groundzerovenue NOT Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium. This why StubHub Sucks. Merry Christmas, Spartanburg.”

Mockingly, this previous weekend’s combine up recollects an analogous incident that transpired again in 2014, when Lamb Of God’s brand was used with out permission on promotional supplies for an Easter-themed occasion that was held yearly in Salem, VA.
[via WSPA 7 News]



