I guess these are better then $312.01 Huh? Thanks J for point this out to
me on housequake.com

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB117944556343306910.html

It's Only Rock 'n' Roll -- at $15,000 a Seat

By HANNAH KARP and SAM SCHECHNER

This summer, promoters are offering a new service for VIP concert-goers:
eliminating the riffraff altogether.

A new five-concert series called "Social" will debut in East Hampton,
N.Y., in July, with a pass to all five shows costing $15,000. (Tickets
aren't available for individual shows.)

The series is a new extreme in the concert industry's increasing attempts
to woo big spenders. But it also reflects promoters' attempts to cash in
on demand that's pushed prices on ticket-resale sites like StubHub to the
stratosphere. This way, promoters can price tickets at the same level --
and keep the money for themselves.

The Social lineup is hardly cutting-edge -- it includes Prince, Billy
Joel, Dave Matthews, Tom Petty and James Taylor. (Bulldog Entertainment, a
two-year-old promotion company, says it sought mainstream artists with the
help of former Warner Bros. and DreamWorks record executive Michael
Ostin.) Then again, it's not just about music: At Social, artists will
exhibit, celebrity chefs will cook, parking will cost nothing and seating
will include daybeds, ottomans and Moroccan pillows. Social will be
marketed as a lifestyle, says Bulldog, to Wall Street executives, Hamptons
socialites and the ultrarich.

Of course, other music festivals have introduced luxuries for their VIPs,
though never with ticket prices like these: Lollapalooza now offers
cabanas on Lake Michigan and mint-infused cooling treatments; and in
Washington state, Sasquatch this year offered a $500 festival pass that
comes with hot showers and air-conditioned bathrooms.

The prices of Social, which work out to $3,000 a concert, may not go down
easily, some music-industry analysts say. Barbra Streisand's Las Vegas
show was last year's most expensive regular ticket in the U.S., at $1,000
a pop, concert-tracking company Pollstar says. Tickets for Alabama's
farewell tour also cost $1,000 but included meeting the band and an
autographed guitar. "You're definitely pushing the outer bounds with
this," says Gary Bongiovanni, editor in chief of Pollstar, "even with
prime rib and lobster."

But Joe Meli, Bulldog CEO, says prices are in line with the secondary
market. Tenth-row tickets to the Jimmy Buffett concert at New York's
Madison Square Garden this September, for example, are being offered for
$2,995 on StubHub. Though no one may be willing to pay that much, a buyer
from Omaha, Neb., did pay $11,000 for two front-row seats at Elton John's
60th Birthday Bash in March at Madison Square Garden.

Each of the musicians is likely to have a seven-figure payday for his
appearance, according to several managers of high-profile acts not
involved with the concert series. The stars' representatives either didn't
respond or declined to comment on their pay.

Mr. Meli says some of the 1,000 passes to all five concerts have already
been sold but declined to say how many, and also declined to say how many
tickets he needs to sell to break even.

The concert site, East Hampton's Ross School, will put its set fee from
Bulldog into its scholarship fund. But, says Mr. Meli, "We're not
obfuscating what we're doing by calling ourselves a charity."

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