Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Firadeoclus 2664 days ago
Musicians generally want to make money but, like most market participants, they're not short-term income maximisers.

Musicians are concerned with their reputation. They want to tour (though some don't) but not burn out and also need time to work on new material and recording. They want to play the best possible gig. That means sell-out performances with the most devoted fans, not the richest ones. It means venue matched to the type of music.

Venues and promoters are in similar positions. Auctioning tickets to the highest bidder could be short-term profitable but in the long term it's a disaster.

1 comments

The parent is working on legislation.

If you want that long list of things, and can get it, good for you. Does it then follow you can demand legislation to protect that?

Then there's the question of what a devoted fan is. Surely if they only wanted devoted fans they'd site the concert somewhere out of the way. The South pole perhaps? That would sort the touts.

Edit: And a final point, my experience as a fan would be much improved if I could reliably go out and buy say 4 tickets for me and my friends, any friends because i don't know which will be free, and if only 2 can make it, sell 1 to someone else that would like to go.