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Thread: FIFA World Cup 2026

  1. #21
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    Even at 15K to 20K indoor venues, if you're at the back the artists are mere dots. Larger dots than from the back of a 60L stadium but still dots.

    1986, Feijenoord stadium. Decent seats. Unknown Irish rock band on first. They were good. Next up, the Pretenders. The stadium was full but 3/4 had their backs to the stage, chatting away, chigging on their beers, not interested in what was going on on the stage as they'd all come for the headline act. In no time at all, Chrissie had the entire stadium in her hand. Brilliant performance. Next up the headliner, U2. Absolute chuffin' garbage. The 5 people I was with all thought it was brilliant and said so in the car on the way back to Amsterdam. I disagreed and told them everything that had been poor in the performance. The following Thursday, the new issue of Nieuw Revu came out and 'er indoors bought a copy to read the music critic's view on the show. She came homem showed me the article and asked if I'd written the article. Every single thing I'd mentioned was im there. For me, a crap U2 took some of the shine off an outstanding Pretenders concert. I don't get caughht up in the "hysteria", it's the music I'm there for and I do get carried away by the quality of the music. Dancers, light shows, whatever... all well and good but if the music's crap then the music's crap.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by ramAnag View Post
    A sensible post and one I very much agree with. It is difficult to argue with those for whom the simplistic, but ultimately immoral, law of supply and demand overrides everything else, but personally I think there is a great deal of sense in what you’ve written.

    What you say about sitting too far away and being better off watching on TV, a sentiment echoed by MA, is very true, imo. Sitting in the ‘Gods’ in 60,000 + seater stadia for either sporting events or gigs seems to me a bit of a waste of money.
    This is well illustrated in the case of cricket. Attendance at a decent day of Test cricket is one of my favourite pastimes. The food is extortionate but you can get round that and 70-100 or so quid for six plus hours of entertainment isn’t that bad, and yet every time a wicket is taken or a decision questioned one ends up looking at the big screen for verification which says it all really.

    Even in indoor venues holding 10-15k one is heavily reliant on the big screens which leads one to wonder…are we just paying for the atmosphere, to be able to say, ‘I was there’? If so, I suspect the atmosphere and the ‘I was there’ factors might both be somewhat lacking at the forthcoming World Cup.
    I suspect RA that you and I may be considered "naive idealists" and I'd accept that on this occasion I am an ideallist, but despite the widespread cynicism that seems to hold sway, there are many examples of people and organisations that do have a genuinely ethical stance in how they operate, however it would seem that FIFA is not such an organisation.

  3. #23
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    As bad if not worse than the live event business model (Promoter and artiste extort from punter) is the music streaming model, where Streaming entity (equiv to promoter) and punter extort from the artiste. Spotify and the like pay an absolute pittance to the artistes that they need to sustain their business model and I refuse to use them, if I like a band or artiste I'll buy a physical copy (usually vinyl) of their music (most of which these days come with a free or heavily discounted download code anyway, not of interest to me but I know people that use them) and bugger the cost which is usually quite high due to low production runs. I tried to explain the economics of it to a bunch of twenty-somethings (Gen z's?) a few years ago and those who understood basically weren't bothered that all but the big acts get insufficient to sustain themselves. Being capitalist about that situation, I guess they could stop being musicians and get a proper job

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andy_Faber View Post
    As bad if not worse than the live event business model (Promoter and artiste extort from punter) is the music streaming model, where Streaming entity (equiv to promoter) and punter extort from the artiste. Spotify and the like pay an absolute pittance to the artistes that they need to sustain their business model and I refuse to use them, if I like a band or artiste I'll buy a physical copy (usually vinyl) of their music (most of which these days come with a free or heavily discounted download code anyway, not of interest to me but I know people that use them) and bugger the cost which is usually quite high due to low production runs. I tried to explain the economics of it to a bunch of twenty-somethings (Gen z's?) a few years ago and those who understood basically weren't bothered that all but the big acts get insufficient to sustain themselves. Being capitalist about that situation, I guess they could stop being musicians and get a proper job
    So it seems like there's a limited supply of ?45 tickets available for world cup for each team qualified

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andy_Faber View Post
    As bad if not worse than the live event business model (Promoter and artiste extort from punter) is the music streaming model, where Streaming entity (equiv to promoter) and punter extort from the artiste. Spotify and the like pay an absolute pittance to the artistes that they need to sustain their business model and I refuse to use them, if I like a band or artiste I'll buy a physical copy (usually vinyl) of their music (most of which these days come with a free or heavily discounted download code anyway, not of interest to me but I know people that use them) and bugger the cost which is usually quite high due to low production runs. I tried to explain the economics of it to a bunch of twenty-somethings (Gen z's?) a few years ago and those who understood basically weren't bothered that all but the big acts get insufficient to sustain themselves. Being capitalist about that situation, I guess they could stop being musicians and get a proper job
    I am in full agreement with that, refuse to use spotify, never have and never will. I do buy downloads direct from the artists, but my preference is Cd or vinyl. There are so many talented artists out there who haven't a hope in hell of making enough to sustain themselves.

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geoff Parkstone View Post
    So it seems like there's a limited supply of ?45 tickets available for world cup for each team qualified
    I belive in the first release its 8,000?

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by swaledale View Post
    I belive in the first release its 8,000?
    I read 10% of the allocation per team. So, if an FA has 4K tickets for a game, then 400 will be at 45GBP. The rest will be the already advertised extortionate price.

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by swaledale View Post
    I am in full agreement with that, refuse to use spotify, never have and never will. I do buy downloads direct from the artists, but my preference is Cd or vinyl. There are so many talented artists out there who haven't a hope in hell of making enough to sustain themselves.
    I feel I need clarification on this one from either yourself, Andy or both. I have an extensive collection of both vinyl and CDs but cannot remember the last time I bought either.
    I use Spotify a lot, not least because I listen to a lot of music when driving via my phone and because it provides instant access to otherwise mystery tracks that may appear in soundtracks etc.

    Didn’t realise it is such a ‘bad’ thing to do, but - serious question - the notable likes of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell apart,
    most major artists have no hesitation in linking themselves with Spotify and the vast majority of smaller performers (largely in the 500-700 GBP per performance bracket) I come into contact with via Live and Local also seem to happily advertise their wares via Spotify.

    I may be being naive about this, but don’t up and coming artists benefit greatly from the exposure provided by Spotify?
    Last edited by ramAnag; 17-12-2025 at 10:04 AM.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by ramAnag View Post
    I feel I need clarification on this one from either yourself, Andy or both. I have an extensive collection of both vinyl and CDs but cannot remember the last time I bought either.
    I use Spotify a lot, not least because I listen to a lot of music when driving via my phone and because it provides instant access to otherwise mystery tracks that may appear in soundtracks etc.

    Didn’t realise it is such a ‘bad’ thing to do, but - serious question - the notable likes of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell apart,
    most major artists have no hesitation in linking themselves with Spotify and the vast majority of smaller performers (largely in the 500-700 GBP per performance bracket) I come into contact with via Live and Local also seem to happily advertise their wares via Spotify.

    I may be being naive about this, but don’t up and coming artists benefit greatly from the exposure provided by Spotify?
    Not greatly, financially from Spotify streams. It might up their exposure a little but that may not necessarily see them selling more records/CDs, merchandise or get more booking or larger payouts from those bookings.

    Spotify pays roughly $3,000 to $5,000 for 1 million streams, based on an average rate of $0.003 to $0.005 per stream, but the actual artist payout varies wildly due to label deals, distribution cuts, listener location, and user type (free/premium). Artists usually get a fraction of this total pool after splits with distributors, publishers, and labels, with independent artists earning more than those on major labels. (Source AI)

  10. #30
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    I use Spotify all the time, even to listen if I have the physical media.

    Must be a decade or more I bought a Cd, likewise with Blu-ray for video.

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