[Dixielandjazz] Electronic Dance Concerts. . . The new rage??
Stephen G Barbone
barbonestreet at earthlink.net
Thu Apr 5 08:07:28 PDT 2012
Flash!!!!! Top DJs for these events earn $ 1 million for these
events. Here's an idea, lets start producing Electronic OKOM Dance
Concerts! That's where the young audience is going. <grin>
Cheers
Steve Barbone
www.myspace.com/barbonestreetjazzband
Electronic Dance Concerts Turn Up Volume, Tempting Investors
by Ben Sisaro - NY Times - Apr 4
One Friday afternoon last month, 60,000 tickets at $100 and up went on
sale for a major music festival at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford,
N.J., before the headliners had even been announced.
It sold out in three hours.
The festival with the fervent following was the Electric Daisy
Carnival, a two-day event next month dedicated to the concert
industry’s new favorite genre: electronic dance music. Long considered
a marginal part of the music business that subsisted in clubs and semi-
legal warehouse raves, dance has now moved squarely into the
mainstream, with a growing circuit of festivals and profit margins
that are attracting Wall Street.
For an industry increasingly reliant on aging headliners — like Bruce
Springsteen, Madonna and the Rolling Stones — the appeal of a genre
with fresh stars and a huge young audience is undeniable.
“If you’re 15 to 25 years old now, this is your rock ‘n’ roll,” said
Michael Rapino, the chief executive of Live Nation Entertainment, the
world’s largest concert promoter.
Two weeks ago, 165,000 fans went to the Ultra Music Festival in Miami
to revel in the pulsating bass and wave glow sticks in the dark.
Similar numbers have turned out for events in Los Angeles, Las Vegas
and Dallas. With the boom, artist fees have exploded. Top D.J.’s like
Deadmau5, Tiësto and Afrojack can earn well over $1 million for a
festival appearance and $10 million for a Las Vegas nightclub
residency, talent agents say.
Having developed on the margins, electronic dance music — high-energy
waves of mechanized sound that, at its best, creates a communal
experience for a sea of strangers — is dominated by a network of
independent promoters.
They include Insomniac, which presents Electric Daisy Carnival; Hard
Events, another nationwide promoter; Ultra, whose namesake festival in
Miami has expanded to Brazil, Argentina and Poland; and Made Event,
behind the Electric Zoo festival in New York.
Their success has attracted a clutch of potential investors from
inside and outside the music world. The insiders include Live Nation
and A.E.G. Live, the two biggest corporate promoters.
The outsiders include Ron Burkle, the supermarket magnate who made an
unsuccessful bid last year for the Warner Music Group, and the media
mogul Robert F. X. Sillerman, according to people involved in
investment talks who declined to be identified discussing private
agreements.
Mr. Sillerman — who transformed the concert industry in the 1990s by
consolidating regional rock promoters into what is now Live Nation —
declined to comment for this article, as did a representative of Mr.
Burkle.
For new investors, getting into the dance business may not all be a
party. Determining the value of the promoting companies is difficult,
and there are particular risks whenever putting on a musical bacchanal
for tens of thousands.
At the Electric Daisy Carnival in Los Angeles two years ago, a 15-year-
old girl died of a drug overdose; at the same event in Dallas the next
year, a 19-year-old man died and more than two dozen were hospitalized
for drugs, alcohol and heat-related illnesses.
Pasquale Rotella, the chief executive of Insomniac, the company behind
those raves, has also been implicated in a corruption scandal in Los
Angeles. Last month, he and five others were indicted on charges
related to the embezzlement of $2.5 million from the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum. In a statement, his company maintained that the
charges against him were “completely baseless and flat-out wrong, both
on the law and on the facts.”
The investment talks may be only in the exploratory phase. But for a
musical genre that not long ago was mostly associated with secret
locations and drugs, it is a startling development, as are the amounts
of money involved. According to the people involved in the talks,
offers to buy the biggest promoters have ranged from about $20 million
to $60 million.
“It feels like the dot-com era,” said Joel Zimmerman, an agent at
William Morris Endeavor who books many of the top dance acts. “There’s
a little bit of a gold rush going on, with outsiders looking in.”
Electronic dance music, or E.D.M. for short, has been common in one
form or other for decades, but only in recent years has its audience
become big enough to sustain large-scale touring. Last December,
Swedish House Mafia became the first D.J. act to headline Madison
Square Garden. (D.J.’s do not spin records so much as command
computerized sound systems, playing snippets of songs and using them
to create their own protracted rhythms.)
This summer acts like Avicii and Kaskade are touring in some of the
same arenas and theaters where fans can see Coldplay and James Taylor.
While record sales for dance music are relatively low — even the
biggest recent albums, like David Guetta’s “Nothing But the Beat,”
rarely sell more than 300,000 copies — the sound has infiltrated pop
radio through acts like Lady Gaga, Rihanna and Katy Perry. At the
Grammy Awards in February, Skrillex won three prizes and Mr. Guetta
and Deadmau5 (pronounced like “deadmouse”) jammed with the Foo
Fighters, L’il Wayne and Chris Brown.
The big dance festivals have built themselves into valuable brands,
able to sell tickets on their name alone and the immersive audio-
visual spectacle they present. One big company could bring together a
handful of promoters and find economies of scale.
“I have been approached by all the big boys you can imagine,” said
Gary Richards, the founder of Hard Events. “I’ve been working in this
for 20 years and nobody cared. Now it’s so massive that everybody
wants a piece of it.”
Yet a marriage between D.J.’s and billionaire investors may be
difficult. Live music is a risky and low-margin business for
promoters. Pricing tickets too high or too low, for example, can sink
an otherwise successful venture. Dance music also faces the perennial
fad question: will its popularity stick this time or blow over as it
did in the 1990s, when it was called electronica?
How much the promoters need, or even want, outside money is also
unclear. Some say outside capital is necessary to expand to new
markets, but others have built powerful organizations on their own.
Adam Russakoff, Ultra’s director of business affairs, said his company
was profitable, debt-free and has no outside investment. The company
handles its own ticketing and makes licensing deals for its events
overseas.
And then there is simple culture clash. Many dance music promoters and
managers are suspicious of big money and the corporate ways of the
mainstream concert business. In an interview, Mr. Rotella said he has
been approached by many potential investors but was worried of what
might become of immersive, multifaceted events like Electric Daisy.
“You don’t want this to turn into what the concert business is today,”
he said, “where you just sell people tickets and they come to the show
and sit in their seat. There’s not a lot of soul behind that. What we
do is more of an experience.”
Mr. Richards agreed, saying that the big investors he spoke with did
not understand the market.
“You can’t just franchise this like McDonald’s,” he said.
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