Tuesday, May 17, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 05/17/2022 - Can't Buy Me Ducats, Taylor Hawkins' Final Days, Road to Eurovision, Harry Styles, Arthur Russell...

There's only a handful of guys in our profession that still play this intense high-energy, Nineties rock music. We both had to strike that balance of 'We never want to complain,' but there are real, specific things about what we do that's really f***ing challenging and really difficult... It's like we have to be able to sort of run a marathon every time we hit the stage.
Open in browser
Tuesday May 17, 2022
REDEF
Jazz drummer Jonathan Barber at Zankel Hall, New York, March 16, 2019. "Poetic," his third album with his band Vision Ahead, is out now (self released).
(Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"There's only a handful of guys in our profession that still play this intense high-energy, Nineties rock music. We both had to strike that balance of 'We never want to complain,' but there are real, specific things about what we do that's really f***ing challenging and really difficult... It's like we have to be able to sort of run a marathon every time we hit the stage."
- Matt Cameron, Pearl Jam drummer, on the late Taylor Hawkins
rantnrave://
Can't Buy Me Ducats

Should it cost 700 bucks to treat your parents—huge BEATLES fans who've never been to a concert before—to the worst seats in the house at a PAUL MCCARTNEY stadium show? Standard supply-and-demand arguments say why not. Simple inflation analysis comes to a similar conclusion—as with anyone else currently on tour, McCartney's crew's gas and electricity prices went up just like yours did. A Southern California writer, musician and adjunct college instructor who wanted to surprise his BEATLE fan parents who've never been to a concert with tickets to McCartney's show at SOFI STADIUM last week says, and I quote, "What the f***?" And with apologies to an industry fighting back from a devastating two-year shutdown, peopled mostly by artists and workers who don't have Paul McCartney bank accounts, RYAN RITCHIE's open letter to McCartney hits home because it gets at the uniquely personal nature of this particular case of supply and demand run wild.

Agents and promoters will explain to anyone who asks—they have in fact been explaining for several years—that the ticket resale market has made clear what people are willing to pay for tickets and they'd be remiss in their jobs if they didn't do their best to get that price on behalf of the artists they work for. Which is a not unreasonable explanation, and which doesn't mean every seat for every concert has to cost hundreds of dollars—but does mean there's a good chance it's going to cost in the hundreds of dollars to take your parents to a Paul McCartney show or your kids to a BAD BUNNY show and sit close enough that you can actually see. Ritchie, who says he "grew up going to five-dollar punk shows where the musicians were two feet away from me and my friends," counters with an argument that boils down to, OK, but what if you just charged less?

Live music supply and demand, as Ritchie is aware, is different than other supply and demand. If you can't afford that $3,000 handbag, you might not be happy but you'll have other options, maybe for $300, maybe for $30. If you can't swing that island vacation in a prime week, you might be able to to find a deal a few weeks earlier or later. Similar off-price options don't for your favorite artists don't exist like that. There aren't backup BILLIE EILISHes. What does exist is someone to be angry at and write an open letter to. If that Broadway musical staring IDINA MENZEL is out of your range, you're probably not going to complain to her because you understand she isn't the one setting the prices. If DODGERS tickets exceed your weekly salary, you'll be mad at baseball but not at MOOKIE BETTS. But concerts, rightly or wrongly, come with someone you can blame. And it's someone with whom you have a bond. Artist-fan relationships are personal and one-to-one. You're not buying a ticket to LIVE NATION or to TICKETMASTER or to UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP. You're buying a ticket to Paul McCartney. You've probably had the relationship for years, and he probably wants it to keep going.

What if the real the equation isn't the supply-and-demand binary? What if it's more like supply and demand and relationships? Bloomberg's LUCAS SHAW reported on Friday, the day of McCartney's SoFi Stadium show, that COLDPLAY "has gone in the opposite direction" of skyrocketing prices, with its fans' wallets in mind. The average ticket price on Coldplay's current tour, he reported, is a purposeful $77.80, well below what other top current touring acts are charging and even below what Coldplay itself was charging a few years ago. And there's demand. Playing stadiums in Mexico and Central America, the band sold more tickets than any other act in March and April and grossed more than anyone but Bad Bunny, whose average ticket goes for more than twice as much. "The relative affordability," Shaw wrote, "has been good for business." (The tour is sustainable, too.)

Ritchie, for his part, remains a huge McCartney fan, like his parents: "There's pretty much nothing you could do to get me to stop loving you and your music." But there's also nothing Macca can do do get him to fork over that 700 bucks, which would have covered three cheap seats, parking and other basic extras. Me, I could direct Ritchie to any number of $10 or $15 or $20 shows featuring fantastic live bands, but he's a musician who grew up on affordable punk shows; he doesn't need me for that. And none of them would be Paul McCartney anyway.

(And don't get me started on airline-like dynamic pricing, which I've written about before and I'll write about again. There's a reason people hate airlines. A lot of reasons, to be fair. But that's one of them.)

By the Numbers

BILLBOARD's 21 Under 21 (artists, that is, including OLIVIA RODRIGO, LIL TECCA, TATE MCRAE and it's kind of amazing that BILLIE EILISH, whose Interscope debut came out five years ago, still qualifies)... POLLSTAR's Impact 50 (live music execs, that is, led by C3 PRESENTS' CHARLES ATTAL, AMY CORBIN and CHARLIE WALKER, who manage a portfolio of 31 festivals including LOLLAPALOOZA, which the trade mag says was "a bellwether, lighting a path forward for how events could safely return" as the live event industry emerged from lockdown)... 40 years of the WIRE (the magazine, that is)... 70 years of the RIAA (the platinum anniversary, literally, that is).

Rest in Peace

Prog-rock passenger RICKY GARDINER, who was the principal guitarist on David Bowie's "Low" and Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" and co-wrote several songs on Iggy's album. Gardiner was also a founder of the Scottish prog band Beggars Opera.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
tickets to my downfall
Rolling Stone
Inside Taylor Hawkins' Final Days as a Foo Fighter
By Andy Greene
The legendary drummer went all-out for the band he loved. But in the months before he died on tour, Hawkins told multiple friends he "couldn't f***ing do it anymore"
VICE
Kalush Orchestra: On the Road With Ukraine's Winning Eurovision Entry
By Michael Segalov
We followed the Eurovision 2022 winners on their long, hard journey from war-torn Ukraine to victory in Turin.
NPR
40 years ago, the Falkland-Malvinas War transformed Latin rock
By Fi O'Reilly
When English-language music was banned in 1982, Spanish-language groups found an opportunity.
The Guardian
40 years of the Wire magazine: 'Music deserves intelligent treatment. If that's elitist, so be it'
By Daniel Dylan Wray
From free jazz to doomy drones, outsider artists have always found a home in the Wire. Its creators reflect on upending the orthodoxy, coining genres - and their hatred of big-name rivals.
Apple Music
Harry Styles: Apple Music 'Harry's House' Interview
By Zane Lowe and Harry Styles
Apple Music's Zane Lowe joins Harry to discuss his new album 'Harry's House', and more. 
The New Yorker
How the South Dakota Symphony Became One of America's Boldest Orchestras
By Alex Ross
The South Dakota Symphony Orchestra, the musical pride of Sioux Falls, has an annual budget of $2.3 million, which is microscopic by the standards of America's leading orchestras. The Chicago Symphony spends more than that each year on Riccardo Muti's salary.
Billboard
The RIAA Celebrates 70 Years -- And Its Success Setting the Foundation for Streaming
By Cathy Applefeld Olson
The Recording Industry Association of America's chairman/CEO Mitch Glazier reflects on how the trade organization has helped labels navigate a changing business for seven decades.
Trapital
Kendrick Lamar and the Future of pgLang
By Dan Runcie
Is this venture a vehicle so he can own, earn, and create on his terms? Or is he building an empire?
Slate
Why a New Kendrick Lamar Song Is His Most Controversial in Years
By Miles Marshall Lewis
The Pulitzer-winner's "Auntie Diaries" deploys one of his favorite strategies for a good cause, but the result has been polarizing.
Streaming Machinery
'MusicLinks'
By G.C. Stein
Sharing music recommendations could be a much easier, efficient and richer experience.
two tickets to paradise
Crush Material
On Arthur Russell and 'Virtuous Art'
By Alexandra Molotkow
In the throes of a crush, other people can appear very distorted, which tends to feel like a violation, even if nobody else even knows or cares. There are antidotes for this, and Arthur Russell's music is a good one.
The New Yorker
Jack Antonoff's Gift for Pop-Music Collaboration
By Andrew Marantz
When his band releases an album, the world responds politely. When he produces one by Lorde or Lana Del Rey or Taylor Swift, the world wobbles on its axis.
The Cadence
Napster Enters The Web3 Chat
What Y2K music brands could bring To Web3.
Rolling Stone
Young Thug Carried the Weight of Atlanta on His Shoulders. Now, It Could Crush Him
By Jeff Ihaza
Seemingly overnight, Atlanta's most prominent rap label went from triumph to tragedy.
Pitchfork
Lil Keed Had More to Give
By Alphonse Pierre
What was most exciting is how far he pushed the boundaries of his delivery; he wailed and whimpered and bellowed like a wolf in the forest, switching it up freely from line-to-line.
The Guardian
More than 100 UK festivals sign up to tackle sexual violence
By Mark Brown
Reading, Leeds and Latitude festivals among those to commit to updated charter of best practice.
Kreative Kontrol
Kreative Kontrol: Bob Dylan Center's Mark Davidson & Parker Fishel
By Vish Khanna, Mark Davidson and Parker Fishel
Bob Dylan Center curators Mark Davidson and Parker Fishel discuss their exciting jobs, Bob Dylan's vast and exciting archive of music, manuscripts, films, and more.
InsideHook
Kevin Morby Made a Pandemic Record Worth Celebrating
By Mike Conklin
"This is a Photograph" is the result of a quarantine spent thinking about the nature of time and what we do with it.
Billboard
20 Questions With The Linda Lindas: Teen Punk Rockers Talk Asian Representation in Music, 'Growing Up' & More
By Anna Chan
"Bethany Cosentino from Best Coast is our band mom — or "momager" — and she's always telling us how important it is to take care of our mental health. So sometimes we take breaks and go to Color Me Mine together!"
what we're into
Music of the day
"So Tired You Can't Stop Dreaming"
Quelle Chris ft. Navy Blue
"Deep cuts heal the listener." From "Deathfame," out now on Mello Music Group.
Music | Media
SUBSCRIBE
Suggest a link
"REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask 'why?'"
Jason Hirschhorn
CEO & Chief Curator
HOME | ABOUT | SETS | PRESS
Redef Group Inc.
LA - NY - Everywhere
Copyright ©2021
UNSUBSCRIBE or MANAGE MY SUBSCRIPTION

No comments:

Post a Comment

22 spring outfit ideas to fight fashion-decision fatigue

Your Horoscope For The Week Of May 13 VIEW IN BROWSER ...