Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
2005-9-12 London, ON
2006-5-09 Toronto
2007-8-03 (ed w/ ben harper) chicago / 2007-8-05 chicago
2008-8-12 (ed solo) toronto
2009-10-08 (ed solo) Albany
2011-9-11 Toronto / 2011-9-12 Toronto
2013-7-16 London, ON / 2013-7-19 Chicago / 2013-10-12 Buffalo
2016-5-11 Toronto, On / 2016-5-13 Toronto, On
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
Obviously not a popular thought. $500 makes the good seats a luxury item and not a “10C low number” or “lucky on ticketmaster” thing.
Lots of bands/pop singers do this. PJ certainly could do this with their popularity and with their fanbase being at an age where financial security is there. Im against it tho. Removes a lot of the fun.
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
Since they never come to Louisville KY, my only choice to travel to see them. That's the fact for a lot of folks.
If people want to be really close at a PJ show then either try for GA and go for the rail or go to a festival appearance and claim your spot at 11am (or buy VIP+ or whatever the festival sells). At some festivals you can almost be on stage with the highest VIP ticket. Just try for that.
$500 good seats for regular arena shows is pretty silly.
They haven't been in Ireland for a decade, so we travel to see them. If I don't want to go and see them, I won't spend the money. That's just business.
Dublin 2006 Dublin 2010 Madrid 2018 Werchter 2022 London 1 2022 London 2 2022 Krakow 2022
Those of us who can afford $500 concert tickets can also afford to take some Ls every now and then.
I want to give this cat a trophy for seemingly being the most sensible person on the forum.
1993 - Toronto 1996 - Toronto 1998 - Barrie 2000 - Toronto 2003 - Buffalo, Toronto 2005 - Hamilton, Toronto 2006 - Toronto I, Toronto II 2008 - EV solo Toronto I 2010 - Buffalo, Newark 2011 - Toronto I, Toronto II, Hamilton 2013 - London, Chicago, Buffalo, Brooklyn I, Brooklyn II, Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II 2014 - Detroit 2016 - Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II, New York I, New York II, Ottawa, Toronto I, Toronto II, Chicago I, Chicago II 2018 - Boston I, Boston II
Play more shows. The band wouldn’t have outrageous demand if they actually toured.
This keeps getting suggested. It's not a real thing. New album aside, for all intents and purposes, the band is semi-retired.
1993 - Toronto 1996 - Toronto 1998 - Barrie 2000 - Toronto 2003 - Buffalo, Toronto 2005 - Hamilton, Toronto 2006 - Toronto I, Toronto II 2008 - EV solo Toronto I 2010 - Buffalo, Newark 2011 - Toronto I, Toronto II, Hamilton 2013 - London, Chicago, Buffalo, Brooklyn I, Brooklyn II, Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II 2014 - Detroit 2016 - Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II, New York I, New York II, Ottawa, Toronto I, Toronto II, Chicago I, Chicago II 2018 - Boston I, Boston II
Play more shows. The band wouldn’t have outrageous demand if they actually toured.
This keeps getting suggested. It's not a real thing. New album aside, for all intents and purposes, the band is semi-retired.
I agree. I'm just thankful they are still alive, still together, and still playing shows at all. There are plenty of bands that aren't. People have no sense of gratitude or perspective. I'd love a summer DMB style tour, don't get me wrong, but I'm thankful as hell for the chance to see them in Baltimore this spring.
The obvious solution is 50+ shows per year... but that ain’t happening.
this is a truism. when they toured in 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006 if you wanted to get in a show at face value you would have to try real hard to pay more than face.
Bottom line, if you can spend $500 on a ticket, you would have been wise enough to have held a tenclub member # and applied to get into one of the easy obvious shows to win, ie any show other than Baltimore or MSG, and been willing to travel.
Exactly. Somehow I have tickets to 8 shows this year so far and all at face value. 7 I got through 10c and one 10c through a friend. Tickets aren’t scarce unless referring to 1 particular show in NYC (and you can pay $$$ and get in).
You got seven shows through the lotto on one 10C membership?
3 Euro shows, 4 US lottery wins (west coast), and then a friend won tickets to a show.
Bottom line, if you can spend $500 on a ticket, you would have been wise enough to have held a tenclub member # and applied to get into one of the easy obvious shows to win, ie any show other than Baltimore or MSG, and been willing to travel.
Exactly. Somehow I have tickets to 8 shows this year so far and all at face value. 7 I got through 10c and one 10c through a friend. Tickets aren’t scarce unless referring to 1 particular show in NYC (and you can pay $$$ and get in).
You got seven shows through the lotto on one 10C membership?
3 Euro shows, 4 US lottery wins (west coast), and then a friend won tickets to a show.
Ah, I see. I wasn't considering the success of scoring tix to Euro shows in the context of this discussion since it was a separate lottery. Enjoy your shows!
Any lottery that I have ever taken part in, I have been successful. Granted, I think that may only be 2, but still, you just have to try and hope for the best. Where there's a will there's a way. I always knew if I was unsuccessful that I would find a way to get to the shows by hook or by crook.
Dublin 2006 Dublin 2010 Madrid 2018 Werchter 2022 London 1 2022 London 2 2022 Krakow 2022
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
you can't be freaking serious when you say this, there is nowhere they cater more to than large cities since 2008.
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
you can't be freaking serious when you say this, there is nowhere they cater more to than large cities since 2008.
I can't ever recall hearing them "rattle off from the stage all the small cities they've played over the years" even once, let alone enough times for me to think that they like doing it.
The closest I have ever seen them come to doing something like that is when they maybe reminisce briefly about the first time they came to the city or the country that they're in. But most of the time I find that to be a welcome nostalgia trip, and am always impressed by what they remember.
Dublin 2006 Dublin 2010 Madrid 2018 Werchter 2022 London 1 2022 London 2 2022 Krakow 2022
Just love it when being luckier and smarter in choosing is kicking the shit out of those that think money is so important. Never have and probably never will see pj play where I live, Abq. Should I cry or bitch? No. I get off my poor ass and travel at minimum 7 hours driving. So these complainers are not only rich, but really, really lazy. They appear to need to be spoon fed everything and don't understand sacrifice. If pj could have done it this way from the start, they would have. Our band wants us to see them play. Most bands don't give a fuck who is in the audience as long as they get paid. VERY GRATEFUL AND FAITHFUL!
Soldier Field 7-11-95, Alpine Valley 6-26-98, United Center 6-29-98, Riverport Amphitheater (St. Louis)7-2-98, MGM Grand Arena 10-22-00, Sprint Center (Kansas City)5-3-10, Adams Event Center (Missoula)9-30-12, Wrigley Field 7-19-13, Jobing.com Arena (Phoenix)11-19-13, Moda Center (Portland)11-29-13, Spokane Arena 11-30-13, Pepsi Center (Denver)10-22-14, Gila River Arena (Phoenix)5-9-22, Moody Center (Austin)9-18-23, Moody Center 9-19-23, Rogers Arena (Vancouver)5-4-24, Rogers Arena 5-6-24, MGM Grand 5-16-24, MGM Grand 5-18-24, Wrigley Field 8-29-24, Wrigley Field 8-31-24
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
you can't be freaking serious when you say this, there is nowhere they cater more to than large cities since 2008.
Oh, come on, just 2 years ago they played the downright miniscule markets of Seattle, Chicago, and Boston. No, wait, that's not right... Surely, they played small venues, right? Hmmm...
"I'm a lucky man, to count on both hands the [shows I've done]. Some folks just have one, others they got none..."
I can't ever recall hearing them "rattle off from the stage all the small cities they've played over the years" even once, let alone enough times for me to think that they like doing it.
The only thing I can think of even remotely close would be Ed saying a bunch of small Mass cities that he knows before Small Town in Boston in 2010. At most he'll talk about smaller venues they've played over the years in that particular city/state.
Hell no. I would rather miss 20 shows because of bad luck and great prices than be forced to pay 500 to get in the building.
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
If you play the lottery right, you win well more often than once a decade. If you are insistent on only hitting shows in NYC, that's the chance you take.
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
Since they never come to Louisville KY, my only choice to travel to see them. That's the fact for a lot of folks.
Comparatively the most shows NY ever got was 0.3 This tour is a rounding error lower at 0.1
But they always round down to zero shows unless they play 5 here. Being ten times the size as the average city they play in, it's a fact of life the first 30 years of their career.
But my point was low cost. In this region that almost never happens.
Comments
To about a quarter of the country there never is such a thing as great prices for a majority of the fans.
Either you pay to travel, pay the scalpers, or pay front row prices to sit on the ceiling. Or win a lottery once a decade if you're lucky.
Cincinnati 2014
Greenville 2016
(Raleigh 2016)
Columbia 2016
Dublin 2010
Madrid 2018
Werchter 2022
London 1 2022
London 2 2022
Krakow 2022
2006-5-09 Toronto
2007-8-03 (ed w/ ben harper) chicago / 2007-8-05 chicago
2008-8-12 (ed solo) toronto
2009-10-08 (ed solo) Albany
2011-9-11 Toronto / 2011-9-12 Toronto
2013-7-16 London, ON / 2013-7-19 Chicago / 2013-10-12 Buffalo
2016-5-11 Toronto, On / 2016-5-13 Toronto, On
The context is great prices.
Even if I had the availability to take a few days to travel whenever a tour drops, that costs hundreds of dollars to travel plus the value of the days taken. That's very expensive. I've done and enjoyed it, but it comes at a steep cost.
They love their small markets, I get that. They like to rattle off from the stage all the small cities they have played over the years..
But that brings winners and losers. If you live among the masses, a fair face value ticket without spending huge amounts of money is not a realistic occurence.
Dublin 2010
Madrid 2018
Werchter 2022
London 1 2022
London 2 2022
Krakow 2022
1996 - Toronto
1998 - Barrie
2000 - Toronto
2003 - Buffalo, Toronto
2005 - Hamilton, Toronto
2006 - Toronto I, Toronto II
2008 - EV solo Toronto I
2010 - Buffalo, Newark
2011 - Toronto I, Toronto II, Hamilton
2013 - London, Chicago, Buffalo, Brooklyn I, Brooklyn II, Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II
2014 - Detroit
2016 - Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II, New York I, New York II, Ottawa, Toronto I, Toronto II, Chicago I, Chicago II
2018 - Boston I, Boston II
Sucks when you can't have what you want.
1996 - Toronto
1998 - Barrie
2000 - Toronto
2003 - Buffalo, Toronto
2005 - Hamilton, Toronto
2006 - Toronto I, Toronto II
2008 - EV solo Toronto I
2010 - Buffalo, Newark
2011 - Toronto I, Toronto II, Hamilton
2013 - London, Chicago, Buffalo, Brooklyn I, Brooklyn II, Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II
2014 - Detroit
2016 - Philadelphia I, Philadelphia II, New York I, New York II, Ottawa, Toronto I, Toronto II, Chicago I, Chicago II
2018 - Boston I, Boston II
"...I changed by not changing at all..."
#1- Saw a thread on Reddit the other day titled: "Old heads should stop going to shows"
http://www.hi5sports.org/ (Sports Program for Kids with Disabilities)
http://www.livefootsteps.org/user/?usr=3652
Dublin 2010
Madrid 2018
Werchter 2022
London 1 2022
London 2 2022
Krakow 2022
http://www.hi5sports.org/ (Sports Program for Kids with Disabilities)
http://www.livefootsteps.org/user/?usr=3652
Dublin 2010
Madrid 2018
Werchter 2022
London 1 2022
London 2 2022
Krakow 2022
I can't ever recall hearing them "rattle off from the stage all the small cities they've played over the years" even once, let alone enough times for me to think that they like doing it.
Dublin 2010
Madrid 2018
Werchter 2022
London 1 2022
London 2 2022
Krakow 2022
VERY GRATEFUL AND FAITHFUL!
Oh, come on, just 2 years ago they played the downright miniscule markets of Seattle, Chicago, and Boston. No, wait, that's not right... Surely, they played small venues, right? Hmmm...
Hartford 10.02.96 | Mansfield 2 09.16.98 | Mansfield 1 08.29.00 | Mansfield 1 07.02.03 | Mansfield 3 07.11.03 | Boston 2 05.25.06 | Tampa 04.11.16 | Fenway 1 08.05.16 | Fenway 2 08.07.16 | Fenway 1 09.02.18 | Fenway 2 09.04.18 | Baltimore 03.28.20 | Hamilton 09.06.22 | Toronto 09.08.22 | Nashville 09.16.22 | St Louis 09.18.22 | Baltimore 09.12.24 | Fenway 1 09.15.24 | Fenway 2 09.17.24
"He made the deal with the devil, we get to play with him.
He goes to hell, of course. We're going to heaven."
"...I changed by not changing at all..."
At most he'll talk about smaller venues they've played over the years in that particular city/state.
Comparatively the most shows NY ever got was 0.3 This tour is a rounding error lower at 0.1
But they always round down to zero shows unless they play 5 here. Being ten times the size as the average city they play in, it's a fact of life the first 30 years of their career.
But my point was low cost. In this region that almost never happens.