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Oasis!!
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1richardkennerleyFull Member
Will be considerably cheaper to see, more likely to turn up and probably sound better too.
It’s not the point though is it? It’s also cheaper to just watch some footage on YouTube of when they were in their prime.
Someone up there said about some other band who can play the guitar better. I don’t think anyone who attends any of these gigs will be there to critique the guitar playing, or really cares how Liam’s voice is. It’s about being there in that moment, being with your mates at what is, despite all the negativity on here, a culturally massive event, singing along in a huge crowd and having a good day out.
I mean, I don’t go on the football threads bollocking on about how I’d rather poke my eyeballs out than watch a game, or how it’s considerably cheaper to watch it on telly than actually go to the match, or why do people spend so much travelling the world to follow their team when they could just catch the best bits on match of the day.
4EdukatorFree MemberI loved the first few years of Oasis, some great tunes and vids. The Whatever vid with the orchestra more or less defined cool at the time. Then they started having helicopters fly around and the message wasn’t so upbeat. I lost interested but smiled everytime a Crédit Agricole advert with Whatever as it’s theme tune came on in following years. Then junior got into guitar and his favourite band was Oasis, I found some Youtubes to help him learn the tunes and learned them myself while I was at it. Oasis tunes are a buskers best friend, DLBIA, Whatever, Maybe and Wonderwall work in every country I’ve played them.
The High Flying Birds work for me too, Noel downtunes or uptunes the guitare and gives the classics a slightly different feel, all good.
The ticket issue is disappointing but I hope the shows live up to the expectations of those of you who go. I won’t be going but would chose Dublin if I did.
For those who missed or didn’t understand the first time around try this, what’s not to like?
1mattyfezFull MemberJust listened to a great show on virgin radio, its not live for catch-up yet, but well worth a listen:
7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Oasis Special with Stu Elmore
The worst kept rock n roll secret was revealed earlier this week when the Gallagher Brothers announced Oasis are reforming for a series of live dates next year. Stu Elmore, celebrates the long awaited reformation of one this country’s greatest bands, with contributions from Liam and Noel along with the story of the making of Oasis debut album ‘Definitely Maybe’ – Produced and presented Pete Mitchell which was originally broadcast on Virgin Radio in 2019.hammy7272Free MemberGreat video. I remember listening to Oasis for the first time when I was 14 or 15 I think. Just fantastic timing for me and it shaped mine and mates lives.
4CougarFull MemberMy nephew got tickets for the first Cardiff gig, he said hotel rooms were about £400 a night per person and Air B&Bs were charging a grand a night, we’ve got a 5M bell tent so he’ll be glamping for free in our garden.
I’ve got a 3M tent for the Scotch gig…
dmortsFull MemberFrom a Whatsapp chat I heard Edinburgh tickets were showing as available….at 00:45am this morning. Out of interest I checked, and it offered me a single seated ticket priced at around £480, located in the upper tiers. Obviously not mad enough to buy that so can’t verify if it was really available. Given the turmoil Ticketmaster’s systems had been through prior, there’s a chance it was…..
I once witnessed a friend managing to buy Glastonbury tickets around 30 mins after they had supposedly sold out, as in after the press release had gone out announcing all sold.2ads678Full MemberI honestly think the majority of people have bought tickets because of FOMO.
The marketing guys have done an amazing job. Never gave anyone a chance to really think about it.
1dyna-tiFull MemberI just cant get over how much tickets cost for these type of gigs.
WattyFull MemberTurn that around dyna . . . Noel to Liam ‘I can’t believe how much these mugs are willing to pay’, Liam to Noel ‘ker-f@@ken-ching bro’
(emoji big of a bag of money)
SuperScale20Free MemberI hope they are happy ripping off there fans, avoid resellers but dynamic pricing is alright. Lets only release a few dates make everyone go crazy and pay over the price.
montylikesbeerFull MemberIts an absolute disgrace that ticket prices self adjust to rip people off.
As for OASIS, I saw them in 1998 at the Reebok Stadium and was not impressed.
zilog6128Full MemberIts an absolute disgrace that ticket prices self adjust to rip people off.
one of the justifications I saw was that it discourages touts by equalising the price with tickets on the resale market. I mean, that may be true, but how exactly does that help the consumer?!
And people are lapping it up. It’s like the plot of a South Park episode!!
the-muffin-manFull Memberone of the justifications I saw was that it discourages touts by equalising the price with tickets on the resale market. I mean, that may be true, but how exactly does that help the consumer?!
It doesn’t – the ticket companies and artists have realised how much people are prepared to spend and will fleece them for every penny.
Silverstone now do the same for the British GP and general weekend tickets were £500+ this year.
The only thing that will stop it is if people stop buying.
2jamesoFull Member£500 for a ticket to see a sea of phones held up in front of you as everyone films them playing Wonderwall.
CougarFull MemberI just cant get over how much tickets cost for these type of gigs.
This is an outlier, but ‘big’ gigs have been shooting up in price of late. I saw Simple Minds last year, IIRC that was £70/head which I felt was on the upper end of what I was willing to pay.
By way of comparison, £300 will net you a five day camping pass for three full days’ Download festival.
johndohFree MemberI saw Simple Minds last year, IIRC that was £70/head which I felt was on the upper end of what I was willing to pay.
Yeah, Kiss toured last year (maybe it was the year before, time flies) and tickets were around £120. Not a chance I am going to pay that sort of money – I’d have been okay with £70-ish, just like other bands such as Iron Maiden were charging at the same time. But Gene Simmons is possibly the greediest man in music.
4martinhutchFull MemberI’ve got a 3M tent for the Scotch gig…
Home taping is killing music.
CougarFull Memberthe ticket companies and artists have realised how much people are prepared to spend and will fleece them for every penny.
…
The only thing that will stop it is if people stop buying.
I wonder idly whether online booking has made it too easy, especially for scalpers. When I was younger, if you wanted a gig ticket you nipped out to the venue’s box office in your lunch break. There were no queues because you had weeks in which to buy them, and it was impossible for flippers to go “I’ll have five thousand tickets please.” Because that’s the reason why you are at position 32,767 in the queue three seconds after sale opens, half of them are a bot farm.
simondbarnesFull MemberThis is an outlier, but ‘big’ gigs have been shooting up in price of late. I saw Simple Minds last year, IIRC that was £70/head which I felt was on the upper end of what I was willing to pay.
I saw them for free when I was on holiday at Le Mans 24 this year 🙂
PrinceJohnFull MemberGlastonbury gets a bad rep for it’s ticket cost – but last year I paid £350, got 5 days camping, & saw, QOTSA, Foo Fighters, Arctic Monkeys, GnR, Alt J, Loyle Carner, Leftfield, The Pretender’s, Raye, The Hives, Texas, Warpaint, Editors (the most unexpectedly brilliant live band), Fatboy Slim & more.
PrinceJohnFull MemberUgh they just had some knob on the radio justifying the surge pricing, saying it discourages ticket touts as the tickets find their market price… **** off you just want a bigger piece of the pie.
johndohFree MemberGlastonbury gets a bad rep for it’s ticket cost – but last year I paid £350
Yeah, I paid £365 this year and I think it is very good value – not only for the bands, but for the whole experience. And I like that on-site food and drink isn’t massively overpriced like in many big arenas.
1gobuchulFree MemberFree Market Economics.
Supply and Demand.
If people think it’s worth it, they will pay it.
What was that stupid energy drink that was selling for an absolute fortune last year?
I don’t get it when people complain about holiday prices during the school holiday periods. Of course they will cost more.
15labFree Memberfestivals are cheap because the audience is generally skint under-25 year olds who don’t have the money to pay for more.
bands with middle-aged fans have always been expensive, because your audiecne is rich(er) folk who want a nice sit down and a reminisce.
you could pay £300+ to watch a video of abba playing ffs
fingerbangFree Memberjust go and watch Katy J Pearson tour her new album in Nov/Dec you fools
the-muffin-manFull MemberWhat was that stupid energy drink that was selling for an absolute fortune last year?
Prime – and it’s less than a quid in most corner shops now.
kelvinFull MemberSuch a fuss… if you like Oasis live, Liam was pretty much delivering that all the time… if you wanted to see “what happens next” Noel’s solo stuff moved on in interesting directions… a reunion gig doesn’t offer that much. Is it all about sharing the fun and love in the crowds that it’ll draw in?
2mashrFull MembergobuchulFree Member
Free Market Economics.Supply and Demand.
If people think it’s worth it, they will pay it.
Indeed, and everybody knew about that demand in advance of ticket sales. So why should someone with a slower internet connection (therefore ending up further back in the queue) end up paying significantly more than someone with a faster one? Because Oasis/Ticketmaster have acted like *****s.
2johndohFree Memberfestivals are cheap because the audience is generally skint under-25 year olds who don’t have the money to pay for more.
You’ve never been to Glastonbury have you?
sirromjFull MemberFree Market Economics.
Supply and Demand.
How about as a percentage of your monthly pay, say 25% in this case?
6PrinceJohnFull Memberfestivals are cheap because the audience is generally skint under-25 year olds who don’t have the money to pay for more.
Tell me you’ve not been to a festival, without telling me you’ve not been to a festival.
5labFree MemberYou’ve never been to Glastonbury have you?
Tell me you’ve not been to a festival, without telling me you’ve not been to a festival.
I went to reading 10 years on the trot, glasto twice, download 4 times, rock am ring 3 times and a few others. I haven’t been to an old person festival, sure, but in my experience the majority of crowds at the UKs biggest festivals (which are also the cheap ones) is young. I haven’t been to glastonbury in over a decade – maybe the crowd has aged?
edit: looks like the bands have, based on this article – https://www.theguardian.com/music/2022/jun/24/cream-teas-rocknroll-older-revellers-glastonbury – perhaps its same for the crowd
2johndohFree Memberbut in my experience the majority of crowds at the UKs biggest festivals (which are also the cheap ones) is young.
In my experience this is not the case at all – at Glastonbury there is always a very wide range of age groups and diversity. This year we were camping next to a couple in their early 60s, I got chatting to a couple from Barnsley who were even older (I was disappointed they hadn’t gone to see Barnsley’s own ‘Bar Steward Sons of Val Doonican’), I spent most of Friday afternoon at the front of the Pyramid stage chatting to a bloke of my age who was there with his wife. I am 57 and went with my 59 year old brother.
I know that Reading > Leeds can have a younger audience (because it has become a ‘rite of passage’ for kids completing their GCSEs) but I watched some on iPlayer and there was still a wide mix of ages of people.
And if you think ‘skint under-25s’ can afford a weekend festival ticket + travel, food and drink, then I think your idea of what a ‘skint under-25’ is, is way out of whack.
1PrinceJohnFull MemberI don’t get it when people complain about holiday prices during the school holiday periods. Of course they will cost more.
This is also just as wrong – the fact it’s cheaper for parents to pay the fines than the inflated costs proves it. The price should be the price. **** capitalism.
BillOddieFull MemberThis is also just as wrong – the fact it’s cheaper for parents to pay the fines than the inflated costs proves it.
That tells me the fines aren’t high enough.
IdleJonFree MemberChanged days. I saw the Stones at Glasgow Apollo in 1982. The gig wasn’t announced until the week before. I was in my flat a mile away from the box office when they announced it on Radio Clyde. By the time I walked up the queue vwas so long the stalls were sold out. I ended up front balcony.
Tickets were £6.50.
Do you remember how much you were earning per day? I started work as Xmas Saturday staff in 1984 and was earning under a tenner per day, iirc. If I’m right, your Stones ticket works out at about 6 hours work – NLW is now about £11 per hour, so roughly £60-70 by today’s standard. You won’t see the Stones these days for that price but you’ll see an awful lot of well known bands for much, much less. Gigs aren’t expensive these days, but some, like Oasis or Taylor Swift are.
fasgadhFree MemberHome taping etc.
Pipped – now I have to pay treble for being too late to the joke.
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