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Neil Young lays into Ticketmaster and questions the future of touring: "It’s over. The old days are gone"

 Neil Young
Neil Young

When we reported on Robert Smith and The Cure's stand against high Ticketmaster ticket fees recently, we wondered if more high-profile artists would also put pressure on the company. Step forward Neil Young, but it seems he's not optimistic about the sustainability of touring at all.

"It’s over. The old days are gone," Young wrote on his website under the heading 'Ticketmaster fees at 30%' while sharing a news article on The Cure's recent dealings with ticket sales and distribution giant "I get letters blaming me for $3,000 tickets for a benefit I am doing," said Young. "That money does not go to me or the benefit. Artists have to worry about ripped-off fans blaming them for Ticketmaster add-ons and scalpers. Concert tours are no longer fun. Concert tours not what they were."

Young has been reluctant to return to the road, previously citing Covid concerns, but this latest statement suggests a wider dissatisfaction with the business of touring. His last live appearance was a surprise two-song performance of Come A Time and Heart Of Gold at a rally to protect old-growth forests in Victoria, British Columbia.

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And it's not just ticket fees that are being questioned by artists this week – instrumental trio Russian Circles were just one of an increasing number of bands that have withdrawn their merchandise from sale at a venue ahead of a live performance. The US act cited unreasonable percentage cuts from a venue in Paris via a third-party company on 22 March that would have forced the band to charge more to fans or lose money.