Pauleo1214
Well-known member
One of my favorite things to do before Covid was to go to concerts at Merriweather Post Pavillion. The Baltimore area market is inexpensive for ticket prices, and the venue always draws excellent acts. Growing up, I saw Blink 182, Oasis and Black Crowes, Smashing Pumpkins, Cage the Elephant, Black Keys, White Stripes, Arctic Monkeys, The Cure, Sigur Ros, Missy Elliott, The Killers, Interpol, The Beach Boys. Even concerts that I attended for my wife (Mumford and Sons and Dave Matthews w/Tim Reynold's) were enjoyable. The Mumford and Sons concert should have been miserable because it was a 95-degree day in May with a shit ton of humidity. Then the hail storm hit, and the lawn seats turned into a total mud pit; people decided not to give a fuck and make a party of it instead.
Of course, I can't discuss concerts without talking about Ticketmaster and Livenation. Convenience fees and ticket buying bots that resale tickets for criminally inflated prices on resale sites like Stubhub. Then I saw this.
ultimateclassicrock.com
I am guilty of enjoying the recent pop-punk resurgence, and news of the original trio reuniting made me happy, even if their new single is a bit of a hit and a miss. However, seeing their ticket prices breaks my heart. On the one hand, it's a blatant cash grab to fund retirement. On the other, it feels like a disingenuous ploy where the artist and ticket sale/ venue conglomerate get to hide behind one another.
I can understand the cost of doing business has gone up; travel and moving expenses are likely unreal. But, for the fans, we all know wages have not gone up. Nosebleed seats for tickets to see them in Baltimore are $180 a piece before FEE-FI-FO-FUM, and Ticketmaster slams a $79 convenience fee per ticket.
My question for you guys is, what are your current thoughts on ticket prices? I don't see this as sustainable for music fans, and I'm disillusioned the industry is willingly driving to that cliff.
Of course, I can't discuss concerts without talking about Ticketmaster and Livenation. Convenience fees and ticket buying bots that resale tickets for criminally inflated prices on resale sites like Stubhub. Then I saw this.
Mark Hoppus Tried to Buy Blink-182 Tickets but Couldn't
Mark Hoppus acknowledged fans’ frustrating experience of buying tickets for Blink-182's reunion tour as prices topped $600 in October 2022.
I am guilty of enjoying the recent pop-punk resurgence, and news of the original trio reuniting made me happy, even if their new single is a bit of a hit and a miss. However, seeing their ticket prices breaks my heart. On the one hand, it's a blatant cash grab to fund retirement. On the other, it feels like a disingenuous ploy where the artist and ticket sale/ venue conglomerate get to hide behind one another.
I can understand the cost of doing business has gone up; travel and moving expenses are likely unreal. But, for the fans, we all know wages have not gone up. Nosebleed seats for tickets to see them in Baltimore are $180 a piece before FEE-FI-FO-FUM, and Ticketmaster slams a $79 convenience fee per ticket.
My question for you guys is, what are your current thoughts on ticket prices? I don't see this as sustainable for music fans, and I'm disillusioned the industry is willingly driving to that cliff.