MOR316 wrote: » Never understood the fascination with this. It must be a bit weird from the audience's perspective. Watching some audience clips from the Roy Orbison one and it's peculiar I remember seeing a Freddie Mercury hologram on a TV show and there was a Michael Jackson hologram at some awards ceremony. All very strange. How is the performer mean't to make a connection with the audience? It may as well be a tribute act/band on stage
dragonfly! wrote: » :D:D:D Any idea of prices for this?
Zardoz wrote: » Wont be announced till next week but I'd expect them to be expensive. Think they were £45-£170 for the UK last year,so probably 99-170 euro here.
Billy Mays wrote: » I'd think twice before paying that tbh
MOR316 wrote: » Well, her Canadian shows are near $500 Canadian Dollars... The more expensive seats in the US are $250... So if we compare to Canada, it would be 300 quid here. If we compare to the US, the expensive seats will be 220 here
Duffy98 wrote: » Lewis Capaldi sold 65,000 tickets in 10 minutes here , the current state of music its a sad site indeed...
Zardoz wrote: » Its baffling really how popular that chap is. Most of the tickets were probably sold in the presale .
Zardoz wrote: » Billie Eilish announced a world tour ,playing Arenas . No Irish date as yet . Manchester Arena 2 nights ,Arena Birmingham 1 night and the O2 London 2 nights next July
Mushy wrote: » Playing some festivals around Europe. Wouldn't be surprised if was second act in Musgrave Park in Cork.
PsychoPete wrote: » Duffy98 wrote: » Lewis Capaldi sold 65,000 tickets in 10 minutes here , the current state of music its a sad site indeed... That's just what most single middle aged women are into these days
DavidLyons_ wrote: » A pished up, funnier Sheerin. Crap.
Exclamation Marc wrote: » The music snobbery in here is pathetic. He's not my cup of tea at all but he doesn't sell that many tickets by being awful. So maybe don't look down on people who bought tickets, it's a bit sad.
Furious-Red wrote: » I see Billie Eilish has announced a big tour and will be in Europe in July with no Irish Date which prob means she will headline Longitude
Exclamation Marc wrote: » The music snobbery in here is pathetic. He's not my cup of tea at all but he doesn't sell that many tickets by being awful.
BadTurtle wrote: » ...and 50 shades of grey didnt sell shedloads by being awful either. Err...actually. Theres plenty of precedent for genuinely poor music selling really well. Westlife, for example. You cant claim they're objectively good - even in the boy band/girl band manufactured pop arena they are dreadful, highly marketed muzak. You can claim theres no such thing as bad music all you want, but it's a ridiculous argument.
Exclamation Marc wrote: » Its bad music in your opinion but not in someone else's. Yet your music superiority and apparent genius gives your opinion more weight and legitimacy?? Pfff, that's the only thing that's ridiculous here.
Lithium93_ wrote: » Good music is good music depending on the person's tastes, which may not exactly jive with other people's ideas of good music.
BadTurtle wrote: » Right, right. So karaoke by a drunk who doesnt know the words is the same as a classically trained orchestra performing at the peak of its powers if they have the same views on YouTube. Fine, makes perfect sense.