Ronny83 Posted June 30, 2005 at 10:41 AM Posted June 30, 2005 at 10:41 AM U2 leads the pack in concert tickets By Edna Gundersen, USA TODAY With 26 sold-out U.S. shows and $45.3 million in ticket receipts, U2 is the runaway leader in music's 2005 road race. Celine Dion's Las Vegas spectacle is second, with $38.4 million for 72 shows, according to Billboard figures compiled through June 23.Elton John is No. 3 after earning $31.2 million for 36 shows. The rest of the top 10, with grosses (in millions):Kenny Chesney ($25.1), The Eagles ($23.3),Josh Groban ($16.5), Motley Crue ($15.9), Cher ($13.7),George Strait ($13.5) and Yanni ($10.4). Midway through the year and the crucial summer season, tour grosses are lagging behind 2004, which saw flat revenues and falling attendance. An upward spike is expected with the second leg of U2's Vertigo Tour and outings by the Rolling Stones andPaul McCartney. "Promoters are cautiously optimistic," says Ray Waddell, Billboard's senior touring editor. "There are some tough sells out there, but I haven't heard of any across-the-board losers." Sales are soft for jam bands, but Coldplay,Toby Keith, Green Day and such value-priced combos asJohn Mellencamp andJohn Fogerty are kindling confidence. And if every tour sells out, U2 will still prevail in the USA and overseas with a global take of $300 million.Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/u...nconcerttickets Quote The Celine Dion Italian fanbase - CelineDionItalia.com
Bellamy Posted June 30, 2005 at 02:06 PM Posted June 30, 2005 at 02:06 PM that's good news. but why Celine earns $38.4 million for 72 shows, while Elton earns $31.2 million for 36 shows. Quote Please support the forum by ordering everything through our special Amazon.com link Click here. Thank you!
CSCfan Posted July 7, 2005 at 01:10 PM Posted July 7, 2005 at 01:10 PM Concert Sales Down in '05, Ticket Price Up http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/ap/20050706/capt.ny10807060339.people_dion_ny108.jpg By ALEX VEIGA, AP Business Writer 1 hour, 3 minutes ago LOS ANGELES - North American concert attendance declined nearly 12 percent in the first half of 2005 despite the first drop in average ticket prices in a decade. Fans purchased 14.5 million tickets to the top 100 concert tours from January to June, according to Pollstar, the industry trade magazine. The tours generated $730.9 million in gross receipts, a decline of 17.2 percent from last year. The decline in receipts and number of tickets sold comes after years of escalating concert prices turned off many fans, said Gary Bongiovanni, Pollstar's editor in chief. "We've been constantly raising ticket prices and last year we saw a real push back from the public," Bongiovanni said. "I guess that's what it took to see an overall reduction in prices." The average ticket price for the top 100 tours in North America between January and June was $50.27, down 6.1 percent from $53.55 last year. "We had record revenues last year, yet the promoters, the people who are in the business, were losing their shirts because they were paying their artists so much money they couldn't make a profit," Bongiovanni said. "The upward spiral of ticket prices finally caught up with us. ... That forced the artists to take less money." Major acts such as U2 had no problem getting fans to pay several times the average ticket price in some cases. The average ticket to the Irish supergroup's "Vertigo 2005" tour was $96.94, but some seats went for as high as $160, not including fees. "The big acts can work to get away with that," Bongiovanni said. "For the right act, people will pay a lot of money for a good seat." U2's tour, which is slated to return to North America in the fall, led all other concert tours with $48.4 million in gross receipts, according to Pollstar. But country crooner Kenny Chesney, who married Academy Award winner Renee Zellweger in May, sold more tickets than any other act during the period — some 610,000. The average ticket to Chesney's concerts cost $57.39. Tours by Elton John, the Eagles, Motley Crue, Cher and Jimmy Buffett were among the top 10, according to sales receipts. The No. 2-grossing concert series never left Las Vegas. Celine Dion's stage show took in $43.9 million with an average ticket price of $136.70. Despite the downward trends in the year's first half, high-profile tours slated to hit North America in the fall by artists such as the Rolling Stones and Paul McCartney have sold well. Many of those tickets, and for U2's fall tour, were sold in the first half of the year and are not tallied until the shows occur. Still, Bongiovanni said: "It's not like the Rolling Stones sapped all the money out of the market. That hasn't had a negative effect on all of the other shows that came before." Yahoo.com Quote »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»» MATHIAS ««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzPrxI0AIDY
Bellamy Posted July 12, 2005 at 09:13 AM Posted July 12, 2005 at 09:13 AM Kenny Chesney's current Somewhere In The Sun tour is the third-highest-grossing tour in North America this year, falling behind U2 and Celine Dion, despite his low ticket cost, which average less than $60 per ticket. Chesney has played to 610,000 people this year already, while U2 drew just over 499,000 and Dion sold just over 321,000 tickets.Source: http://launch.yahoo.com/read/news/21629280 NASHVILLE, TN Tuesday Jul.12.2005 /netmusiccountdown.com/ -- So far this year, Kenny Chesney has played to 610,000, making him the overall Number One seat filling ticket seller of the year. That means he's drawn more fans to his shows than U2 (499,109) and Celine Dion (321,169). Note: U2 and Dion are the #1 and #2 gross dollars champs so far this year because their per ticket price is much higher than Chesney's average $60 dollars per ticket price.Source: http://www.netmusiccountdown.com/inc/news_...cle.php?id=8455 so Celine had sold out 321,169 tickets this year. consider it's a small theater, that's quite a lot. Quote Please support the forum by ordering everything through our special Amazon.com link Click here. Thank you!
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