Concert Ticket Prices - Not a Rant - Just an Observation


I’m not a major concert-goer. I do look for new bands playing small venues and I enjoy those. Some of these are as low as $15. Some as high as $50. I recently saw Marcus King at a tiny venue. Tickets were $90.

I haven’t seen a band in a large venue in ages. 

I recently ’discovered’ a band that I was blown away by. Came across them on YouTube. They’re called The Red Clay Strays. They are relatively new from a recognition standpoint. I figured I’d look up their tour dates and maybe find a concert in a small-ish venue.

Well, my first surprise is that this band has already hit the big time. I ’discovered’ them a year too late. They are already playing civic arena sized venues almost exclusively.

I figured that since they’re coming to a couple of cities near me I’d go to a show. That’s when I got my second surprise. They’re ticket prices are in the $350-500 range. Yes, there are some for around $175 but most of those are single seats in the nose bleed sections of civic arenas.

I’ve heard that Taylor Swift and Springsteen tickets are $1000+.

I looked up Rush tickets and they’re in the $350-600 range.

I got to thinking about ticket prices. I went to see a lot of concerts in high school and college. Early to mid 80s. I remember seeing the big bands like Foreigner and Journey, often with 2 opening acts for $12.50. That never seemed like too much even for a high school kid with no allowance and an after school job for cash. An AI search indicates that that was indeed the typical price for big artists even bands like The Who, Fleetwood Mac and Rush.

A Google search indicates that $12.50 in 1982 was about like $80 is now. But tickets for the big acts are not $80. They are 4-8 times more than that now. That’s quite a phenomenon that vastly out paces inflation.

That brings me back to seeing the Red Clay Strays. They’re coming to my area in October. They usually sell out. Tickets for these shows were moving fast almost 4 months before the show. 

My wife and I decided to go. We have some old friends, two couples, who also love this band and who have been extremely generous to us over the years. We decided to get six tickets and treat them to the show. We could not find six seats in a row at any price. Even as we browsed seats were disappearing. We finally found 4 seats in a row with two right behind them.

We bought the six tickets. Good seats too. Our friends are thrilled and we are thrilled to repay some of their kindness to us. It will be great to see them and get together for this.

Yes ticket prices are shocking even for a new act like the Red Clay Strays which, in fairness seem to have hit it big. But their shows are selling out and a tight wad like me bought six of them. 

So it seems like they are charging what the market will bear.

Hope they put on a good show.

 

 

n80

@fred60 I think you’re right and honestly, if I can at least feel like some of that ticket money reaches the band I feel a little better about it.

I heard someone say on a pod cast, or here, or somewhere that buying a CD or vinyl from a band’s website is comparable to 10,000 hits on streaming. I don’t know if there is any truth to that or not. But, I’m still into CDs so if I hear something decent I get a CD and if it is an active band I get if from their website.

I’m not a vinyl guy. I have an old Sony turntable with a decent cartridge on it and a DJ Pre 2 phono pre, which I am assuming is terrible, but I bought the Red Clay Strays double album from a live show at the Ryman because it has several songs you can’t get elsewhere. It was $45. For their latest album (Grateful) they released different colored vinyl in limited runs and people were paying hundreds of dollars for them. Seems nuts to me but good for the band I suppose.

My niece has a band that has gotten 400,000 streams for one of their songs, which works out to something like $14K.  The only way to make money as a musician is to get millions of streams-- multi-millions.  If you don’t get multi-millions of streams, it’s just not viable.  Unfortunately.  She only makes money when she performs live.

I'll wait till the video comes out on YouTube. Can't believe people go to concerts to hold their camera phones super steady for the entire duration of the concert just so I can enjoy the fruits of their efforts. Sometimes the sound quality is amazing and sometimes they sit really close.. 

And now I've saved some money that I can put toward speaker cables.

And I can send out for some nice food and avoid the hassle of being unhappy with the people I'm sitting around because they tend to scream a lot.

Plus I don't have to stand up for the entire concert which is the way lots of concerts are these days.

And then the volume of the music is too loud. 

And of course there' are delays as the performer wants to somehow feel it's good to make people wait.

And then the depression of facing a trip home after the concert. also like the end of a vacation which is also very depressing.