Last edited by lowlight10; 05-01-2018 at 04:08 PM.
Let the anxiety begin. If true, I’m willing to make a generous offer to whoever can pick me up a ticket if I can’t make it to the box office.
I don’t believe this at all. Someone please show me the last time a band booked a tour with no online ticket sales.
“Let’s exclude anyone who can’t take time off from work or who doesn’t have that day off and the ability to get to a specific venue super early from being able to see us for an entire tour unless if they want to go to a festival” just makes zero sense and I’ll be stunned if this happens
There was a Foo Fighters tour a couple of years where you had to visit the venue to purchase tickets. I remember because I did it and that stadium is a fucking nightmare to get to.
Soooo... how do people that not live in the cities that these shows are going to be taking place buy tickets? What if you are traveling out of city/state/country to see a show... this better not be true.
hope it's not true. that would be so fucked up.
The only show like that I've ever gone to was Tool in 2001 at a pre-tour small venue Lateralus release party type show. Tickets were only available in-person at TM vendors and on the phone (both of which were futile). Ended up having to use eBay and meet some guy in a Target parking lot to exchange cash for substantially marked up tickets. Super not looking forward to going through all that again..
I really don't understand why they would do this, it would punish any of us who don't live in a major city or a major city that they'll be playing in. I feel like out of all the information supposedly leaked so far that's the hardest to buy into.
Yeah, as someone who can only carpool/bus/fly out to NIN shows, "order at the venue" does not work for me. I think the closest venue I've seen NIN would be Erie, over 100 miles away.
Please don't let that part be true.
Let's hope it's miscommunication. It's possible the person meant that tickets will be "will call only."
So, this is a theatre tour? Very interesting. And as far as I can tell, the Wang and Orpheum do not have removable Orchestra seats. So, all reserved seating?
i mean, isn't that how it used to be? before ticketmaster, if you wanted to get into a show, you had to go to the venue to buy tickets. how did people manage that when they were following the grateful dead around? because they did it.
I used to have to go camp at Macy's for tickets. They had a Ticketwhore box office. You could risk calling on the telephone and it crashing constantly. I can remember getting together with neighbors and using our cordless phones like it was yesterday. A battle kids today will never have to fight.
ok this is getting drifty, but: i will never forget my brother and I waiting in the parking lot of some store -Target maybe? Anyway, this was in 98 and we waited all night in my dad's old pickup to get good seats for Page and Plant. Goofily, we were both on a few hits of acid.
And the funny part was that we were listening to the Heart's Filthy Lesson cassette single over and over, in silence. At some point we just kept rewinding " Nothing to be Desired. " We listened to just that track, without speaking, for about 3 hours. All it says is "There's NOTHING to be desired" repeatedly and then " MIND changing. Change your MIND changing. Change your MIND changing " repeatedly. It was nuts.
Back in topic: I hate to say it, but having to get your tickets at the venue wouldn't surprise me one bit. It's not so different from Trent's vinyl statement and desire to return to a purer time. Maybe he WANTS local folk to be the ones at the shows.
Personally I hope that either none of this is true, or if it is true, it's a warm up type thing that will be followed up with larger venues.
Last edited by elevenism; 05-02-2018 at 12:16 AM.
It's "how it used to be" and isn't "how it is" for a reason.
I mean, it used to be if you wanted to talk to someone in another country, you had to write them a letter. Then, technology happened, and the internet connected everyone, and I can video chat with my best friend from college who moved to the UK. Sure, she could make me write letters, but why?
sorry, y'all. i was not, in any way, implying it was a better system to have to go to a venue to buy a ticket. i was just trying to discuss whether or not that's how it was in the old days. i didn't start going to concerts until after ticketmaster had existed for a bit and i was curious about how it worked before that.
Ah you're getting the same treatment as the EU it seems!
I imagine the catchment area of people who can attend a venue to buy tickets vs the catchment area of people who would need to buy a ticket offline but can drive somewhere for a weekend to see their favourite band is very different. Especially in the US where there are sometimes vast expanses of fuck all between settlements.
Just curious, how cheap/expensive are domestic flights in US?
Let's say you're in Detroit and want to catch a show 1,000 miles away (New Orleans, Dallas etc). This is roughly the trip I'm undertaking to catch the Amsterdam show. How much would it cost?