The most expensive summer music tickets
Want to see your favorite artists? Be prepared to pay big bucks
![]() | Madonna tuned up for her current U.S. tour with a performance at the Coachella Music Festival in April. |
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Once again the Material Girl is living up to her nickname. When her 15-week tour kicks off in Inglewood, Calif., on May 21, Madonna will be asking her fans to shell out up to $375 a person to watch her strut her stuff on stage. She won't be the only aging star asking such high prices. Tickets to comeback kid Barry Manilow's tour cost the same amount on the high end and, if the rumors are right, Barbra Streisand could go on stage in front of people who paid as much as $2,500 apiece to be there.
None of the three biggest-grossing acts from last year, The Rolling Stones ($162 million), U2 ($138.9 million), and Paul McCartney ($77.3 million) are planning a blockbuster U.S. tour this year. Their absence leaves the door open to other top-tier acts, like Madonna, Manilow and the king of Margaritaville, Jimmy Buffett, who will charge upwards of $150 for some premium seats.
Madonna's last two tours — "Drowned World Tour" in 2001 and "Re-Invention World Tour" in 2004 — grossed a combined $200 million, and this year, her promoters are going for even more. According to Britain's Daily Telegraph, this tour, though only half the size of the Stones or U2 of last year, is expected to gross upwards of $190 million due to higher ticket prices.
Golden circle
The top acts around the world have been charging high prices for some time. Though Streisand, who brought in a reported $2,500 a head for "Golden Circle" tickets when she played the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on New Year's Eve 1999-2000, and the Rolling Stones, who charged up to $450 per seat in last summer's tour, are still the priciest, more artists are getting a bigger premium from their ticket sales. And they're doing what they can to keep the money in their own hands, and out of the scalpers'.
Across the board, it seems, people are willing to pay a premium for quality live entertainment. In New York's theater district, the recent phenomenon of "premium tickets" for Broadway shows has caught on in recent years, beginning with the producers behind "The Producers." The model is simple: Producers and event promoters set aside a group of tickets and mark up the price for the die-hard fans, those with disposable incomes, or corporations that purchase large blocks of tickets for clients, says Sam Craig the director of the Media & Entertainment program at the NYU Stern School of Business.
Pushing the envelope
For Broadway shows, sporting events, and increasingly for concerts, these premium tickets have found a market. While ticket sales for Broadway shows are up 4 percent, revenue is up 12 percent in 2006 for just this reason, says Alan Cohen, a spokesman for the League of American Theatres, with one big difference. "The producers are now capturing the revenue, instead of scalpers," says Cohen, because premium tickets are available up until the last minute.
The same is true for concert promoters, who have a lot more tools for evaluating demand than they once did. If tickets to a given show are popping up on eBay and Craigslist.com, two of the most popular sites for scalpers to sell their wares, then promoters know that demand for a higher price exists. Thus, they can push the envelope more courageously.
Promoters and concert organizers need to be careful not to alienate too many fans with their exorbitant prices, however, or their concerts will stop selling out. "The sky is not the limit — it's about getting demand and supply in equilibrium," says NYU's Craig.
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