Quote from: Wolfman;221487Check out my pre-show article, The Super Bowl of Concerts. I\'ll have a new article up on deadline after each show! Enjoy!
http://www.melophobe.com/articles/the-super-bowl-of-concerts/
Nice jab at The Boss Wolf... But he did draw 90-100K in Dublin on 1/6/85 and 200-250K in Berlin on 7/19/88. Both shows, he was the only band and they were both one show, not a weekend festival... And for the US leg of the Born In The USA tour, he played 28 shows to a total of over 2 million people, that\'s more than 70K a show for what equates to the month of February... Do the research before you bash The Boss...
Quote from: Yoda;221683Quote from: Wolfman;221487Check out my pre-show article, The Super Bowl of Concerts. I\'ll have a new article up on deadline after each show! Enjoy!
http://www.melophobe.com/articles/the-super-bowl-of-concerts/
Nice jab at The Boss Wolf... But he did draw 90-100K in Dublin on 1/6/85 and 200-250K in Berlin on 7/19/88. Both shows, he was the only band and they were both one show, not a weekend festival... And for the US leg of the Born In The USA tour, he played 28 shows to a total of over 2 million people, that\'s more than 70K a show for what equates to the month of February... Do the research before you bash The Boss...
Easy there Debloc. You\'ve taken my comment out of context and are getting way too defensive. I am actually complimenting The Boss by citing him as an example of one of the greatest draws in America. On that note, I called Phish "The greatest live performance powerhouse in America" so comparing Bruce\'s draw in Europe isn\'t valid. I\'m sure you would concede that Phish could easily draw 70,000 a night right now, and that\'s with about 1/20th as many fans as Bruce. The article later states that Phish doesn\'t have nearly as many fans as a band like Bruce Springsteen. There\'s really nothing to get hung about.
And stating that Phish announced hiatus before Big Cypress??? :huh: Do the research before you bash The Wolf!
they could sell out 50k+ per night, and they could sell out a stadium tour easily, look at the demand for summer tour tix. They just don\'t want to play stadiums, which I am very happy about




Quote from: weekapaug19;221775they could sell out 50k+ per night, and they could sell out a stadium tour easily, look at the demand for summer tour tix. They just don\'t want to play stadiums, which I am very happy about
I guess that we\'ll never know...
Sweet ny times article right here:
Phish article
just took my excitement to the next level!
highlights:
"?We?re trying to create a format to keep playing for a long time,? Mr. Anastasio said backstage. "
"One of them, ?Stash,? breezed from a Latin-jazz-tinged melody to busy cacophony, and the band members grinned wider and wider as it ascended. Afterward the keyboardist Page McConnell exulted, ?That?s the best jam in five years.?"
regarding coventry:
?If there was ever a concert that represented a band smacking into a wall, that was it,? Phish?s drummer, Jon Fishman, said. ?I think that was one of the great train wrecks in live concert history.?
"And they resolved to be the version of Phish they prized most: the intently practiced, well-prepared Phish from the mid-90s. They started their Vermont rehearsals not with their countryish three-chord songs but with their intricate, suitelike songs that verge on progressive rock, like ?Split Open and Melt? and ?Foam.? Although Phish has recorded demo versions of 20 songs for its next album, only one is likely to be heard this weekend: ?Backwards Down the Number Line,? a fond birthday song that asks, ?Do you know why we?re still friends?? "
"Figuring out what to play for its first three reunion concerts became ?one of those exercises in overthought that Phish is known for,? Mr. Anastasio said. Band members went in a circle naming the songs they wanted to play, deducted some, consulted a list of every song Phish ever played, did some trading and eventually arrived at about 80 songs."
Tour-bound Phish asks judge to reel in bootleggers
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Phish is kicking off its reunion tour with a lawsuit against bootleggers in Virginia and across the country.
The Vermont-based rock band, which developed a cult following over two decades before splitting up, will perform for the first time since 2004 on Friday night at the Hampton Coliseum in southeastern Virginia. But first, the foursome will ask a judge to block the sale of bootleg T-shirts, posters and other merchandise at its upcoming concerts.
U.S. District Judge Raymond Jackson will consider the band\'s request for an injunction Thursday afternoon.
Phish says in court papers that it has had trouble with bootleggers in the past. The band wants police to seize any unlicensed Phish merchandise being sold at or near its concerts, beginning with its three performances this weekend in Hampton.
Phish also is seeking unspecified damages against the defendants, identified only as "John Does 1-100 and ABC Corporations 1-5" because the band can\'t determine who might try to peddle unlicensed goods.
"Because they are generally nomadic individuals without a business premises or other connection to the area, Bootleggers often flee the area permanently once they have sold Bootleg Merchandise," the band says in its complaint.
Phish says the company authorized to sell its merchandise first obtained orders authorizing the seizure of bootleg goods sold during a tour in 1994. Thousands of illegal items were seized then and during subsequent tours until Phish broke up in 2004, the band says, but the scofflaws routinely skipped out on court hearings.
The band or its individual members own federal trademarks for the names Phish, Phish Food, Oysterhead, Gamehendge, Waterwheel and Vida Blue, according to the complaint. Ben & Jerry\'s manufactures Phish Food ice cream under license, the band says, and more than 1 million T-shirts bearing Phish trademarks have been sold under other licensing agreements.
Phish has sold about 8 million albums since the 1980s but is more famous for live performances, which feature the band\'s freeform style and attract a Grateful Dead-like following. All the concerts on Phish\'s national reunion tour are sold out.