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ROlling
Stone September 18, 2003
Ticketmaster
Under Attack: String Cheese Incident Take on the Ticketing
Giant
Almost
a decade after Pearl Jam stood before Congress and called
for an investigation of Ticketmaster, a new band has taken
up the cause. Jam band String Cheese Incident have sued the
concert-ticketing giant for alleged antitrust violations,
hoping to succeed where Pearl Jam failed in scaling back hefty
service charges.
At
issue is whether the Boulder, Colorado, group can sell tickets
directly to its fans or whether it must go through Ticketmaster,
which has exclusive contracts with most major U.S. venues.
Ticketmaster service charges are high - $IO.IO for $32.50
tickets to the band's upcoming Red Rocks shows. String Cheese
want to be able to sell tickets directly and to set more affordable
prices. (Through the band's SCI Ticketing, service charges
are $4 for the $32.50 ticket.)
"There
was a massive disconnect from when we would set a ticket price
and what people would see on their tickets," says Mike Luba,
a partner in SCI Ticketing and cofounder of Madison House
Inc., String Cheese's management company. "People are fucking
sick of it. We got sick of it, and that's why we did this."
Since
early 2002, the band claims, Ticketmaster cut direct artist-to
fan ticket sales to eight percent, and in some cases to zero.
"SCI Ticketing has been providing a better service at a cheaper
cost to the fans for some time," bassist Keith Moseley says.
'We've come to a point where Ticketmaster is not allowing
us to get tickets available to our shows. Our supply of tickets
has essentially dried up to the point where we can barely
stay in business."
Ticketmaster,
a Los Angeles company that sold 95 million tickets for entertainment
events last year, announced plans to countersue. In a statement,
the company dubs the lawsuit "frivolous" and accuses SCI Ticketing
of "trying to step in for a 'free ride' on the many benefits
and services Ticketmaster provides."
In
an interview with ROLLING STONE, Ticketmaster chairman Terry
Barnes elaborates. "SCI Ticketing puts the venues in a tough
position: 'Break your contract with Ticketmaster or the band
is not going to do the show,'" he says. "If this is all about
doing for the good of the fans, why would you put a building
in that position? This really is about the money."
Antitrust
expert John Solow, a University of lowa economics professor,
calls SCI Ticketings suit "more than a plausible claim" and
adds, "This is not something that should be laughed at." But
Barnes cites the U.S. Justice Department's 1995 decision not
to proceed with a Pearl Jam-prompted investigation. Today,
the band regularly plays Ticketmaster venues.
"We
have nothing but massive respect for Pearl Jam," Luba says.
"It's better to try to do the right thing and fail rather
than just go along and accept what's going on."
For
years, according to the lawsuit, Strung Cheese Incident negotiated
with concert promoters to receive a fifty percent allotment
of face-value tickets before every show. The band created
SCI Ticketing to sell them to fans - as the Grateful Dead,
Dave Matthews Band and Phish have done for years. Matthews'
manager, Coran Capshaw, has parlayed the ten percent ticket
allotments many bands receive from Ticketmaster into the band's
ticketing service, MusicToday. "We're supporters of artist-to-fan
ticketing," he says.
In
the early Eighties, the Grateful Dead pioneered this practice
by negotiating with Ticketmaster to sell a portion of the
tickets directly to fans, says former publicist Dennis McNally.
"The band's objection has always been a discomfort with the
corporate nature of it all and that there tends to be real
heavy-handedness with an unwillingness to negotiate," says
McNally, who continues to represent Grateful Dead Records.
"In terms of rights, who's got a better right to sell String
Cheese's tickets than String Cheese?'
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