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Last Post 7/17/2007 7:29 AM by  Ally
Barbra Streisand: Italians say 'no!'
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Peejay
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5/28/2007 5:25 AM
Touchy.

I'm not saying that Streisand is the root cause of this problem, I just used her in the first post as a recent example. In fact I said that concert was too ridiculous to even discuss (but people did anyway). The problem is far greater than the Streisands and Bocelli's of this world. I'd agree that they're aimed at a different, wealthier market than your average Crawdaddy fan, but I also think there's ripple affect and bigger concerts in places like the Point or Vicar St (like those places or not) are generally becoming much more expensive. That's my point.

ALL TICKETS are a rip off in this country..in particular festiavl tickets...so if on one hand you are insane about the price of Barbara Streisand yet still shifting over 220 lids for a weekend with up and comers in a field in Laois..do you not think you are contradicting yourself?


This is nonsense. €220 for a weekend of music from dozens of bands, compared to €300 (average) for a two-hour concert with a woman forty years passed her prime? I don't see the contradiction myself.

Oh, and there were protests for Arcade Fire, even though I think €44 is fairly reasonable. This band will probably be too big for Olympia the next time they come to town.

PARTON
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5/28/2007 8:51 AM
Look, I really think the anger is being vented the wrong way here...the fact is; its what you are getting individually for the spend in termns of value for money and a pleasurable experience that wont be easily forgotten.

I mean, sure, not every gig is going to be like this, but high profile ones wherebye the artist is performing for the first time/last time in a country, regardless of taste is going to be easy to sell. As a result the market is exploited. Which is simple econimics and has happened through history....

My issue is where this attitude to the market " the greatest show ever by the best band in the world" type line being thrown around like anybody's business is applied to all concerts. A band/act regardless of how high profile should be sold on the strength of two things; popular demand and value for money based on the length/effort of the show (which would encompass the back catelogue and present material base).

Ok; Arcade Fire, I thought were rather expensive considering the lack of material, but I suppose in retrospective given the fact they are an experience to remember, The Killers would be a better example. €54.5 yet they sold out effortlessly to a crowd mostly made up of students/young 18-15 year olds.

I have news boys n girls, everybody has money right now on the whole, and concerts will sell. Personally as I've said before while EP is no doubt full of artistic quality, for that price I personally would expect to see one large act, and by large I mean Prince sort of standard at it, not Primal Scream (i am a fan of them though).. ye know?

Check out the glasto lineup and ticket price and compare and contrast with EP....economic exploitation...which i choose not to be a part of. If you do, then maybe your getting the memorable experience I referred to previously....

I guess that that protest in Italy was admirable, it doesnt change anything, and like every other good and service in this country at present the market state will dictate the prices and we, unfortunately can do sfa about it....
Peejay
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5/29/2007 1:45 AM
As a result the market is exploited.


Well I can only agree with this, we are being exploited. But your "lets just shut up and pay" attitude isn't going to get us anywhere either.

My issue is where this attitude to the market " the greatest show ever by the best band in the world" type line being thrown around like anybody's business is applied to all concerts. A band/act regardless of how high profile should be sold on the strength of two things; popular demand and value for money based on the length/effort of the show (which would encompass the back catelogue and present material base).


Ok, this makes sense but the problem I have is who converts "popular demand" to euros. The promoter or the artist? And of the two who's to say if they're €30 or €40 off the mark? Nobody.

Maybe I am being naive Parton, I don't know much about this business. Thats why I start these threads, I know there's a few posters here who know far more about this kind of thing than I do.
PARTON
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5/29/2007 2:43 AM
"who converts "popular demand" to euros"

Well this is the problem isnt it? I mean I know U2 get alot of stick and rightly so at times, but I recall paying 35 pounds for slane in 2001...and saw a full day of quality live performers for it.

I believe that there is alot of hype generated in the media, propped up by the people behind the media..I.E the promoters coupled with peoples almost effortless willing to part with money in this country mean that MCD, AIKEN et all can convert demand to euros....
Does anyone on this board genuinely feel they should pay the same amount of money for The Killers as BOB Dylan? Regardless of taste...purely based on value for the fan?

Brandon Flowers complained of throat illness and cancelled last minute leaving alot of my friends disappointed as a result. He performed two days later at the VH1 awards in LA.... Why didnt the Irish protest or complain to the cusomer affairs dept? Cos we dont mind...we are too feckin easy parting with our cash...

I believe its a consumer issue that perhaps doesnt really belong on this board. The Italians as I have said were admirable but ultimately irrelevant in that Madonna will still get away with charging a 100 lids on the "aul one does arobics again" tour next year...... This is an economic problem in this country...most of these acts then show up and play the cd for an hour and head of..no encores....nothing...

I agree with your sentiments and can fully understand the frustration people have at ticket prices....but sure then night clubs in this town charge 20 notes in to hear a horrible mix on an I-Pod...so maybe consumers are their own worst enemy in the way they fill these venues without question...

PS:my old man told me that thirty years ago when everyone was broke ye could spend yer money on a pricey concert and get three hours of solid performance out of an artist..nowadays they charge by the fookin hour and dont do any overtime....who do the artists/promoters remind ye of?

Punchbowl
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5/29/2007 4:19 AM
I love the Italians. People power...

A year of two ago in a Village in central Spain (I was there to partake in some bull running) the local council upped the price of cigarettes. The locals simply refused to buy them.. What happened?? They soon reduced the prices...

There was time when Irish people stood up like this, but then again, that was before euro 88..

Thanks Jack
PeterQuaife
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5/29/2007 6:23 AM
exactly, dont pay, stay away. i would never dream of paying anything more than 35-40 sterlings for a gig, doesnt matter who they are.....But when a price is so high, it becomes a status symbol for those with small weeners to talk about, much like tix for the england game at croke park

BTW, caught Ray Davies last week, 2 hours of great tunes from a legend backed by an awesome band, 3 encores, autograhps, handshakes for one and all, a smile, a tonnage of groovy mooves....it was superb, and @ 23 sterlings, top vfm

See you @ the EP, €220, a bargain!

PQ
Unicron
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7/15/2007 3:56 AM
I was driving home from Liffey Valley last night and the traffic down towards Celbridge was f**king nuts. Backed up to Woody's in Lucan and it took 40 minutes to get from the shopping centre to the Spa Hotel, I'm willing to bet that there were lots of people who didn't get to the gig on time.
Peejay
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7/16/2007 8:36 AM
Oh dear. What a cock-up. Dozens of punters stuck in their cars while Babs wowed the rest.
Ally
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7/16/2007 9:18 AM
couldn't be arsed reading the whole of this thread... but 500 quid - who cares really?... excessive of course but only if you compare it to going to other gigs... if you compare it to certain opera and other arts "events"... (which is the way she obviously looks at it, however many miles she is off the mark), tix are probably priced about evens...

...how did it go anyway?.... wouldn't have minded seeing her myself actually...
Norman Schwarzkopf
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7/16/2007 9:47 AM
My dear mother reports that it was wonderful. The sun shone just in time, she was plenty banter-full and even brought out hubby James Brolin for a wave!!! That silver fox! She's really just a down-to-earth yeshiva girl underneath it all.....

Programmes cost 35euro.......
Ally
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7/17/2007 7:29 AM
Posted By Norman Schwarzkopf on 16 Jul 2007 9:47 AM


Programmes cost 35euro.......




haha... that is the funniest thing i've heard all day...

...this is my view: for tickets that price, she should be perfoming at la fenice in venice or the opera house in new york or whatever... you get my drift... i'd accept the ticket (and programme) prices then because it will have been pitched in a certain way... but a muddy field with thousands of others with portaloos and food stalls and rows that apparently didn't even exist is shoddy indeed...
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