RobbieMnemonic
Member
Something that hasn't been mentioned(yet) is the situation with spotlights on stage.
With an averaging meter which means most compacts. It is very possible to burn out the highlights entirely.
Ever seen a snapshot where the stage is dark and there's a white blob on someone's shoulders?
But with that the Olympus SP does have a spotmeter function.......http://www.kenrockwell.com/olympus/35-sp.htm
***Another thought is the size of the viewfinider. The SP and GIII 1,7 are decent sized. Compact cameras VF's can be pretty squinty.
Good point! I am actually looking at both of those as good options as well! Thanks!
The lens is only 35mm and the max aperture is f/2.8 for the XA and f/3.5 for the XA2. Film with speed higher than 800 is not really usable. No manual exposure control. For the kind of concert lighting it's better to have manual exposure control.
Yeah, I'm leaning towards a compact rangefinder or something like that now I think. Some of them are certainly small enough where I shouldn't have a problem I would think. (I hope! lol)

Most point and shoot zooms exposure and shutter speed is all auto, there is no read out, you dont know what your aperture or shutter speed is, a few of the more advanced models and brands give more information. So in this case, by turning on the flash you know that the shutter speed will be hand holdable, you tape over the flash so it does give away to the staff and the flash will not reach the stage anyway. All you can do is shoot , push, and pray. You can pick up any number for point and shoots for under $20, I get mine for a just few dollars. Pentax IQ zoom ranged as long as 180 and 200, the lens are quite good for a budget camera. You will need to send your film to a custom lab for push processing. I think Blue Moon will push film.
Taping over a flash is a good idea! Didn't think of that.

Best fit from what I have seen would be a compact fixed lens rangefinder. Faster lenses that can be a bit longer, some had 40-45mm f/1.7 which is a whole lot more light than the P&S which only ever had f/2.8 (except for the bulky Canon ML which was 40/1.9). AF in a concert setting is asking for trouble and any of the P&S compacts that had manual focus and more settings are going to run $2-600. There even is a Yashica Lynx 14E that has a 45/1.4 but that's basically as big as a small SLR so might get too much attention. A lot of the compacts were 35mm and that's a different scene than the 40mm.
Manual focus would be easy to set once and basically forget about it, unless you totally changed where you were shooting. Manual setting of aperture and shutter would allow you to underexpose as much as you like, and you could have the shop develop the film however you wanted.
Last suggestions would be to do a search or three on Flickr for the venue and see what other film shots look like, what a Stylus Epic can get you for results in low light and what some of the other options might do for you. I would not want to be trying to remember to shut off the Epic's flash...but that's why I don't have any of them any more after trying them several, several times.
Thanks!
There are two aspects to the question, what is ideal, and what will get past the bouncers. The answer to the first is easy, an SLR with a 50mm or 80mm f1.2 lens. The second is trickier, and means finding the most inoffensive camera available in the hope the bag search will conclude you don't have a clue what you're doing, and let you pass as a harmless idiot. Go for something pink with hello kitty stickers and you should be good.
LOL! Yeah, I don't think I'll have problem, provided its tiny and doesn't have a interchangeable lens. I'll should just sticker up a Mamiya 7 or something with hello kitty like you said. lol!