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Thread started 03/18/10 8:17am

djfine

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Prince: 2009's Second Highest Grossing Tour?

From NME.com:

"Prince is a canny businessman - his was 2009’s second-highest-grossing tour, generating $90.3 million in ticket sales. But thanks to lower production costs, his net take was larger than top grosser Madonna's. Prince took a reported eighty-five percent of the profits from the concerts, which earned an average $910,000 a night."

http://www.nme.com/photos...68116/10/1

Seems extradordinary given the amount he played last year!
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Reply #1 posted 03/18/10 8:27am

Milty

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it's mistaken for 2004 or 2007.
[Edited 3/18/10 8:27am]
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Reply #2 posted 03/18/10 8:34am

Genesia

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Milty said:

it's mistaken for 2004 or 2007.


Yup - he came second to Madonna in 2004. nod
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #3 posted 03/18/10 9:38am

thedance

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Prince was 1st, Madonna 2nd:



credits: pic is from: Rolling Stone.

wink


---
[Edited 3/18/10 9:41am]
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #4 posted 03/18/10 9:40am

thedance

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http://www.rollingstone.c...ney_makers

1. Prince
$56.5 MILLION

ON THE ROAD It rained green, not purple, for Prince in 2004. With $90.3 million in ticket sales, he returned to center stage after a decade in the commercial wilderness, scoring the year's second-highest-grossing tour. And thanks to low production costs, his net take was larger than top grosser Madonna's. (It took twenty-four trucks to haul around Madonna's mammoth tour, while Prince's bare-bones show needed only twelve.) Prince took a reported eighty-five percent of the profits from the concerts, which earned an average $910,000 a night -- and he'll command a higher percentage next time.
ON CD Prince sold 1.9 million copies of 2004's Musicology, but that figure is misleading: In a unique scheme, a ten-dollar CD surcharge built into his ticket prices meant that every concertgoer got a copy of the album, whether they wanted it or not. Nonetheless, free agent Prince strikes only one-album distribution deals with record companies (Columbia, in the case of Musicology), which means he earns more than two dollars per CD.
Last year's rank: NA



2. Madonna
$54.9 MILLION

ON THE ROAD High ticket prices may be agony for fans, but they put Madonna in second place on the list of top-earning musicians. Despite playing only fifty-six concerts in 2004, Madonna hauled in more money on the road than any other artist, charging as much as $300 a seat. She also demanded -- and got -- ninety-five percent of her shows' profits. The hefty prices helped her Re-Invention Tour draw in more than $2 million a night in North America, a profitable figure despite monumental production costs and weak sales in some cities.
ON CD Touring provided nearly all of Madonna's music-related revenue in 2004: Her most recent album, American Life, sold only 650,000 copies, and she has yet to earn back a $20 million advance on future CD sales from 2002.
ON THE SIDE Madonna's remarkably successful sideline as an author of children's books is helping her keep that pricey kabbalah water flowing: In total, her four tomes (Yakov and the Seven Thieves and The Adventures of Abdi were published last year) have sold more than 1.5 million copies.
Last year's rank: NA



3. Metallica
$43.1 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The band's Madly in Anger With the World Tour was the fourth-biggest in North America last year.
ON CD The members of Metallica don't need to lift a finger, or bang a head, to earn million-dollar-plus salaries. Credit goes to a shrewd mid-1990s renegotiation with Elektra Records by the band's management company and consistent sales for catalog albums. Metallica perennials the Black Album and Master of Puppets helped the band sell 1.4 million units from catalog alone in 2004. They earn close to three dollars for each CD -- which might help explain their aversion to file-trading.
ON THE SIDE Metallica haven't yet eked out a profit from the theatrical and DVD release of their soul-baring documentary, Some Kind of Monster, which they co-own with its directors. But it can't hurt their financial picture that they finally canned the $40,000-a-month therapist seen in the film.
Last year's rank: 5


4. Elton John
$42.9 MILLION

ON THE ROAD John made his debut as a Vegas entertainer in 2004, earning $18 million with an extravagant, David LaChapelle-designed show. He grossed another $91 million outside Vegas.
ON CD John and songwriting partner Bernie Taupin picked up substantial publishing revenue from airplay and cover songs, including Ray Charles' version of "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word," from 2004's Genius Loves Company.
Last year's rank: 22



5. Jimmy Buffett
$36.5 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Loyal Parrot Heads helped canny businessman Buffett gross almost $29 million in his latest lap around the nation's amphitheaters.
ON CD His first-ever country album, License to Chill, debuted at Number One (a first for Buffett) and sold an astounding 1.3 million copies. Buffett releases his CDs on his own label, keeping far more profits than most artists do.
ON THE SIDE His Margaritaville chain of retail stores, nightclubs and restaurants generates an eight-figure income.
Last year's rank: 17


6. Rod Stewart
$34.6 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The Great American Songbook is earning Stewart great American dollars: The rocker turned crooner grossed $37 million with his classics tour, plus $10 million for private gigs.
ON CD Publishing revenue from past hits amounts to more than $3 million a year, and his third standards album, Stardust: The Great American Songbook, Vol. 3, has sold 1.2 million copies.
Last year's rank: NA



7. Shania Twain
$33.2 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Man, she feels like an ATM machine! Raking in $63 million, Twain had the year's biggest county tour and the third-highest-grossing overall.
ON CD Twain sold more than 4 million discs, led by her greatest-hits collection.
Last year's rank: 8


8. Phil Collins
$33.2 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The solid success of Collins' farewell outing wasn't exactly against all odds: Charging close to eighty dollars a ticket, he played to more than 300,000 people in North America.
Last year's rank: NA



9. Linkin Park
$33.1 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The tireless sextet embarked on three separate tours in 2004 -- the Projekt Revolution package with Korn and Snoop Dogg, a U.S. solo outing and an overseas jaunt. The total haul: $35 million.
ON CD Meteora (2003) and last year's Collision Course -- the CD/DVD document of their MTV mash-up collaboration with Jay-Z -- each sold more than 1 million copies. Another CD, Live in Texas, sold another 440,000.
Last year's rank: NA


10. Simon and Garfunkel
$31.3 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Last year the reunited duo split a $1 million-per-night guarantee in the U.S. -- but distressed promoters by earning little more than that at most venues. The two had some impressive sellouts overseas, however, including a $4.5 million night in Hyde Park, London.
ON CD Catalog sales amounted to 500,000 copies last year, and Simon nabbed $4 million in songwriting income.
Last year's rank: 9


11. Van Halen
$30.2 MILLION

ON THE ROAD High hopes for the first Van Hagar tour in eight years led to guarantees of up to $1 million a night, but ticket sales fell short. So, even as it counts a $38 million 2004 gross, the band will have to settle for less upfront next time.
ON CD Catalog sales amounted to slightly fewer than 500,000 units in 2004; publishing royalties brought in nearly $2 million.
ON THE SIDE The band added to tour revenue by selling T-shirts and hats at the impressive rate of ten dollars per person.
Last year's rank: NA



12. Toby Keith
$27.7 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The king of ultra-patriotic country earned 44 million mostly red-state dollars in an election-year tour.
ON CD With help from "American Soldier," Keith sold 4 million albums in 2004.
Last year's rank: 6



13. Kenny Chesney
$27.4 MILLION

ON THE ROAD The rising country hunk grossed $49 million on tour, despite a rock-bottom forty-four-dollar ticket price. More than 1 million people attended his seventy-three U.S. gigs, making this tour second only to Prince in tickets sold.
ON CD Chesney's When the Sun Goes Down was the top-selling country album of the year, moving 3.1 million units.
Last year's rank: 27



14. The Eagles
$27.3 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Don Henley and Co. grossed about $26 million on a worldwide outing, with the band earning guarantees of up to $1 million. Want to hire the Eagles for your corporate party? That'll cost up to $2 million (they played five such events last year).
ON CD Take it easy? No way. The Eagles sold 1.1 million cds in 2004. And thanks to a contentious 1978 settlement with former manager David Geffen, they keep 100 percent of their publishing royalties -- which added up to $5 million-plus.
ON THE SIDE Even after paying $100 a ticket, concertgoers gobbled up an average of fifteen dollars each of Eagles merchandise -- double what most teen-pop acts collect.
Last year's rank: 3



15. Sting
$26.7 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Sting grossed $52 million on his 2004 world tour, and he kept ticket prices at a relatively low fifty dollars on average. He funnels the cash through his production company, Steerpike, which pays him around $34 million a year.
ON CD Sting's catalog sales -- even for Police classics -- are surprisingly low.
Last year's rank: NA


16. Usher
$25.8 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Usher made his real money on tour, with a nightly guarantee of $450,000 and forty-three U.S. dates. Fans bought so many tickets that promoters at AEG Live say their only disappointment was that they hadn't set up more shows.
ON CD Yeah! Usher's breakthrough smash, Confessions -- which sold 8 million copies -- scored him eight Grammy nominations and a profit of about $9 million.
Last year's rank: NA



17. David Bowie

$25.2 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Bowie earned $46 million on his largest-scale greatest-hits tour since 1990.
ON CD Catalog sales and publishing royalties added up to about $4 million, but Bowie won't see most of it: In 1997's offering of "Bowie Bonds," he gave up the profits from his pre-1990 work in exchange for $55 million in cash.
Last year's rank: NA



18. Eric Clapton
$25.1 MILLION

ON THE ROAD Clapton made the all-Robert Johnson disc Me and Mr. Johnson -- and grossed $35 million on the blues-packed accompanying tour.
ON CD Me and Mr. Johnson sold more than 550,000 copies in 2004, and Clapton moved about the same number of catalog albums.
Last year's rank: NA


19. 50 Cent
$24.9 MILLION

ON THE ROAD His Beg for Mercy Tour grossed $4 million.
ON CD Dr. Dre and Eminem's protege (who is co-signed to their record labels, Aftermath and Shady) is now out-earning both of them. 50 has earned $14 million in royalties from Get Rich or Die Tryin' since its 2003 release, and a record-contract renegotiation last year won him a reported extra $8 million payout. Not to mention the substantial royalties 50 earned on cds by artists on his G Unit label (such as, er, G Unit and G Unit member Lloyd Banks). Meanwhile, the Game's Number One debut gave 50 Cent's 2005 a strong start.
ON THE SIDE Reebok sold more than 1 million pairs of G Unit sneakers, netting 50 Cent at least $6 million in royalties.
Last year's rank: 34


(...)
[Edited 3/18/10 9:48am]
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #5 posted 03/18/10 9:44am

Genesia

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thedance said:

Prince was 1st, Madonna 2nd:



credits: pic is from: Rolling Stone.

wink


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This thread is about the highest grossing tour - not the artist who made the most money.

Madonna's tour was the highest grossing in 2004. Prince's take was higher, though - because his show was a lot less expensive.
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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