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Touring

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P!nk is hitting the road again in 2023 and this time she’s bringing along some very special friends. The singer announced the North American dates for her “Summer Carnival 2023” outing on Monday morning (Nov. 14), revealing that the 21-city tour will hit stadiums across the continent from July through October with special guests Brandi Carlile and brand new Rock and Roll Hall of Famers Pat Benatar & Neil Girlado on select dates and Grouplove and KidCutUp on all the shows.
The Live Nation-produced tour will kick off on July 24 in Toronto at the Roger Centre and hit Cincinnati, Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Detroit, Nashville, San Antonio, San Diego and Los Angeles before wrapping up on Oct. 9 at Chase Field in Phoenix. Tickets for the tour will go on sale to the general public starting Nov. 21 at 10 a.m. local time here.

The official announcement of the dates came after P!nk and Carlile playfully teased the tour in a fun viral video on Sunday night. In the clip, the pair sit next to each other on a couch, with both dressed to impress as P!nk apologizes for having to take an important call. Carlile then picks up her cell and the pair get down to business. “I was really afraid to ask you this question to your face,” Pink says. “Oh, I’m married,” Carlile reminds her.

“Yeah, you love your wife… will you come on tour with me?” P!nk asks. “F–k yeah!” Carlile responds excitedly. P!nk and Brandi warmed up earlier this month when they joined forces for a performance of Dolly Parton’s “Coat of Many Colors” at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, held Nov. 5 in Los Angeles.

The Summer Carnival will kick off on June 7, 2023 at University of Bolton Stadium, the first of several U.K. dates, followed by shows across continental Europe. P!nk has just released the upbeat anthem “Never Gonna Not Dance Again.”

Check out the North American dates below.

^ with Brandi Carlile | ! with Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo | GROUPLOVE + KidCutUp on all dates

July 24 – Toronto, ON @ Rogers Centre ^

July 26 – Cincinnati, OH @ Great American Ball Park ^

July 31 – Boston, MA @ Fenway Park !

Aug. 3 – New York, NY @ Citi Field ^

Aug. 5 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PNC Park ^

Aug. 7 – Washington DC @ Nationals Park !

Aug. 10 – Minneapolis, MN @ Target Field !

Aug. 12 – Chicago, IL @ Wrigley Field !

Aug. 14 – Milwaukee, WI @ American Family Field !

Aug. 16 – Detroit, MI @ Comerica Park ^

Aug. 19 – Fargo, ND @ FARGODOME ^

Aug. 21 – Omaha, NE @ Charles Schwab Field ^

Sept. 18 – Philadelphia, PA @ Citizens Bank Park ^

Sept. 22 – Nashville, TN @ GEODIS Park ^

Sept. 25 – San Antonio, TX @ Alamodome ^  

Sept. 27 – Houston, TX @ Minute Maid Park ^

Sept. 29 – Arlington, TX @ Globe Life Field ^

Oct. 3 – San Diego, CA @ Snapdragon Stadium ^

Oct. 5 – Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium !

Oct. 7 – Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ^

Oct. 9 – Phoenix, AZ @ Chase Field ^

Less than a year after the final coronavirus restrictions were dropped on concert capacity and attendance, the country’s largest two concert promoters are forecasting record sales in 2023 across a broad swath of building categories and genres. Although another promoter says he’s concerned the future is not nearly as bright for new acts.

Live Nation’s chair for global touring, Arthur Fogel, says his company has seen “absolutely no diminishment in sales” since the full-scale return of concerts and believes there is still significant growth opportunity for the company’s top-line touring acts to command record grosses.

Likewise, AEG Presents president for North America Rick Mueller says that ticket sales for shows already on sale in 2023 indicate record revenue and attendance at every capacity level in the concert space, “from [13,000-capacity] Forest Hills Stadium in Queens, N.Y., to the [500-capacity] Roxy in Los Angeles. We’re going to make a little more next year and work a lot harder for it,” he says, predicting that staffing and supply chain shortages will remain substantial challenges.

“I used to think oversaturation was the biggest threat to the industry, but I no longer believe that bears out,” Mueller adds. His counterpart at Live Nation, Fogel, agrees, noting that less than 1% of events promoted by Live Nation were canceled in 2022.

Neither executive believes economic headwinds from prolonged inflation will significantly diminish sales or lead to a short-term rollback on prices for big-ticket tours, like Bruce Springsteen’s 2023 Live Nation run. “The level of spending around the show hasn’t changed,” says Fogel.

He also says that the top 20 stadium and arena tours “at any given time” are now more diverse than ever, representing multiple genres across multiple demographics. For example, Bad Bunny’s El Último Tour del Mundo tour is the highest-grossing Latin outing in Billboard Boxscore history.

Independent promoter Jim Cressman, founder and owner of Canada’s Invictus Entertainment, says that Live Nation and AEG’s bullish outlook for 2023 is good news for the concert business but worries there’s not enough entry points for new fans or new bands.

“The added expenses that artists have because of inflation and rising energy costs make the economics very difficult for developing acts,” he says, echoing the complaints of indie managers. Cressman recommends that these artists connect early with sponsors to underwrite their tours. “Before the pandemic, sponsors provided a nice income bump,” he says. “Now, they’re critical to covering your costs.”

Forty-five years after it felt like the first time for Foreigner, the veteran rock troupe is planning to tour for the very last time.
The band, formed during 1976 by British guitarist Mick Jones, will launch its Historic Farewell Tour next July 6 in Alpharetta, Ga., with 32 U.S dates running through Sept. 3 in Holmdel, N.J. Loverboy will be opening. More legs, both domestic and overseas, are on tap through the end of 2024.

“Foreigner is a completely revitalized band with a whole new energy that has won the hearts of our fans all over the world, and I want to go out while the band is still at the top of its game,” Jones, 77, tells Billboard. “I had the idea that was to become Foreigner back in 1974, and I was 30 years old at the time. By the end of our farewell tour, over 50 years will have passed, and that’s a long time to be on the road.”

Kelly Hansen, Foreigner’s frontman since 2005, says that he and Jones had been discussing the move for a while. “It’s a very difficult decision to come to,” he notes, adding that maintaining the caliber of the band’s performance, and his is in particular, was a driving factor in the decision to pull the plug.

“This catalog of songs, it’s extremely challenging for a rock tenor vocalist like myself to sing,” explains Hansen, 61. “I never would have thought in a million years I’d be singing these songs in the keys at this age, and I don’t know how much longer I can do that at the level I need do. You can drop keys and do this and do that, but I’m more of an old school person. If I’m not doing it for real then I shouldn’t be doing it.

“We’re at an era in life where a lot of bands from the ’70s are right on the ragged edge of still being able to do shows. I see other musicians sometimes that I go, ‘Wow, that was disappointing,’ and I don’t want to be someone that other people say that about. I want to do this band the way it’s supposed to be, and when it’s not like that I don’t want to be doing it.”

Since its formation, Foreigner has released nine studio albums — five of them multi-platinum, plus the 1982 hits set Records — and sold more than 50 million records worldwide. It’s also notched nine top 10 singles on the Billboard Hot 100, including rock radio staples such as “Feels Like the First Time,” “Hot Blooded,” “Double Vision,” “Urgent” and the chart-topping power ballad “I Want to Know What Love Is.” More than two dozen members have been part of the roster over the years, and members of the first two lineups made a series of guest appearances with the current lineup during 2017 and 2018.

Jones, the last original member still active with Foreigner, has become something of a special guest at the band’s concerts, not attending every show due to health reasons and playing during the latter portion of the set. “Mick does all the shows he can do with us as his health allows, and we’re cognizant of that,” Hansen says. “I can’t say that doesn’t have an effect” on the farewell tour decision, “but that’s also a reality of life and time, so you take what you’re given and you make your decisions based on that.”

Foreigner has a number of concerts scheduled this month and also in the spring, prior to the farewell tour launch — including March and April residencies at the Venetian in Las Vegas. Hansen adds that while Foreigner is calling a halt to touring it may not go away entirely. “I’m sure there might be the odd or occasional things we do,” the frontman says. “You can never say never about things. But for me this (tour) is it. It’s not like one of these, like we’ve seen, ploys to get people out to shows.”

Both Hansen and Jeff Pilson, Foreigner’s bassist since 2004, say that Foreigner – whose last studio album, Can’t Slow Down, came out in 2009 — may release some new music in the near future, too. “There’s a whole bunch of stuff in different stages of completion, so that’s not outside the realm of possibility,” Hansen predicts. Pilson says that Jones has been writing material with Marti Frederiksen that he expects the band to work on at some point.

“There’s probably four I’m aware of that are close, and some other snippets,” Pilson says. “Chances are there won’t be a whole new (album). I can see some new songs being added to some kind of a package or some kind of a single. I definitely see some new material coming, hopefully within the next year. We don’t need new material, but it’s always nice to have.”

Tickets for The Historic Farewell Tour go on sale Nov. 18 via livenation.com. The group is again working with the Grammy Museum Foundation to recruit local choirs at each stop to perform with the band for “I Want to Know What Love Is” via foreignerchoirs.com. More information and updates will be posted to foreigneronline.com.

The full itinerary for the first leg of the tour:Thu July 6th Alpharetta, GA – Ameris Bank AmphitheatreSat July 8th West Palm Beach, FL – iTHINK Financial AmphitheatreSun July 9th Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union AmphitheatreTue July 11th Nashville, TN – Ascend AmphitheatreFri July 14th Rogers, AR – Walmart AMPTue July 18th Kansas City, MO – Starlight TheatreWed July 19th St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino AmphitheatreFri July 21st Indianapolis, IN – Ruoff Music CenterSat July 22nd Tinley Park, IL – Hollywood Casino AmphitheatreMon July 24th Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music CenterTue July 25th Toronto, ON – Budweiser StageFri July 28th Darien Center, NY – Darien Lake AmphitheaterSat July 29th Burgettstown, PA – The Pavilion at Star LakeTue August 1st Saratoga Springs, NY – Saratoga Performing Arts CenterWed August 2nd Wantagh, NY – Northwell Health at Jones BeachFri August 4th Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire PavilionSat August 5th Mansfield, MA – Xfinity CenterTue August 8th Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut CreekWed August 9th Charlotte, NC – PNC Music PavilionFri August 11th Dallas, TX – Dos Equis PavilionSat August 12th Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell PavilionMon August 14th Austin, TX – Moody CenterWed August 16th Denver, CO – Ball ArenaFri August 18th Salt Lake City, UT – USANA AmphitheaterSun August 20th Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin PavilionMon August 21st Irvine, CA – FivePoint AmphitheaterWed August 23rd Wheatland, CA – Toyota AmphitheaterThu August 24th Mountain View, CA – Shoreline AmphitheatreWeds August 30th Detroit, MI – Pine Knob Music TheaterFri September 1st Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun ArenaSat September 2nd Syracuse, NY – St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at LakeviewSun September 3rd Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center

Tyler Childers and his longtime band The Food Stamps will hit the road in 2023 for the Send in the Hounds Tour, which launches April 14 at New Orleans venue The Fillmore.

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They will bring a range of openers with them, including Charley Crockett, Drive-By Truckers, S.G. Goodman, Wayne Graham, Abby Hamilton, Elle King, Marcus King, John R. Miller, Miles Miller and Margo Price.

Pre-sale begins Wednesday, Nov. 16, and general on-sale begins Nov. 18 at tylerchildersmusic.com.

The tour takes its name from Childers’ recently released triple album Can I Take My Hounds to Heaven?, which arrived earlier this year on Hickman Holler Records/RCA Records. That project follows his previous acclaimed projects, including Purgatory, Country Squire, and Long Violent History.

See the full list of tour dates below:

April 14—New Orleans, LA: The Fillmore*

April 16—Georgetown, TX: Two Step Inn

April 20—Irving, TX: The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory†

April 22—Rogers, AR: Walmart AMP‡

April 24—Phoenix, AZ: Arizona Financial Theatre#

April 26—Santa Barbara, CA: Santa Barbara Bowl#

April 27—Berkeley, CA: The Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley#

April 30—Indio, CA: Stagecoach

June 6—Detroit, MI: Masonic Temple Theatre+

June 8—Chicago, IL: The Salt Shed^

June 9—Maryland Heights, MO: Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre St. Louis^

June 11—Cleveland, OH: Jacobs Pavilion+

June 14—Minneapolis, MN: The Armory~

June 15—Kansas City, MO: Starlight Theatre~

Aug. 2—New York, NY: Radio City Music Hall×

Aug. 3—New York, NY: Radio City Music Hall×

Aug. 5—Boston, MA: Leader Bank Pavilion

Aug. 6—Portland, ME: Thompson’s Point**

Aug. 10—Philadelphia, PA: The Met

Aug. 11—Columbia, MD: Merriweather Post Pavilion††

Aug. 13—Raleigh, NC: The Red Hat Amphitheater‡‡

Aug. 15—Charlotte, NC: Charlotte Metro Credit Union Amphitheatre##

Aug. 16—Charlotte, NC: Charlotte Metro Credit Union Amphitheatre##

Aug. 18—Wilmington, NC: Live Oak Bank Pavilion at Riverfront Park‡‡

Aug. 19—Charleston, SC: Credit One Stadium‡‡

Sept. 27—Morrison, CO: Red Rocks Amphitheatre‡‡

Sept. 28—Morrison, CO: Red Rocks Amphitheatre++

*with Wayne Graham†with John R. Miller and Wayne Graham‡with Charley Crockett and Wayne Graham#with Charley Crockett+with Miles Miller^with Marcus King and Miles Miller~with Marcus King×with Elle King**with Margo Price††with Drive-By Truckers and Abby Hamilton##with S.G. Goodman‡‡with S.G. Goodman and Abby Hamilton++with S.G. Goodman and Wayne Graham

Lorde is dishing about the reality of touring in 2022.
On Wednesday (Nov. 9), the “Solar Power” singer sent a newsletter to fans that included a “spiel” on the difficulties artists are facing on the road, highlighting “a storm of factors” that have led to this moment.

“Basically, for artists, promoters and crews, things are at an almost unprecedented level of difficulty,” she wrote. “Let’s start with three years’ worth of shows happening in one. Add global economic downturn, and then add the totally understandable wariness for concertgoers around health risks.”

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Lorde went on to cite crew shortages, overbooked trucks and tour buses and venues, the inflated prices of flights and hotel rooms and COVID-related costs, among other issues. She added that freight costs are “truly mindboggling,” with prices three times higher than they were pre-pandemic.

While Lorde counts herself lucky in the current touring market, she explained to her fans that this is not the case for most artists, stating, “for pretty much every artist selling less tickets than I am, touring has become a demented struggle to break even or face debt.”

“Ticket prices would have to increase to start accommodating even a little of this, but absolutely no one wants to charge their harried and extremely-compassionate-and-flexible audience any more f—ing money,” she wrote. “Nearly every tour has been besieged with cancellations and postponements and promises and letdowns, and audiences have shown such understanding and such faith, that between that and the post-COVID wariness about getting out there at all, scaring people away by charging the true cost ain’t an option. All we want to do is play for you.”

For some artists, Lorde continued, touring is financially unfeasible even if they sell out the entire run of dates, given the price of production and how much they’re willing to charge their fans. She cited this dilemma as a likely cause for the spate of recent tour cancellations due to mental health concerns.

“Understandably, all of this takes a toll — on crews, on promoters, and on artists,” she added. “You’ll notice a ton of artists cancelling shows citing mental health concerns in the past year, and I really think the stress of this stuff is a factor — we’re a collection of the world’s most sensitive flowers who also spent the last two years inside, and maybe the task of creating a space where people’s pain and grief and jubilation can be held night after night with a razor thin profit margin and dozens of people to pay is feeling like a teeny bit much.”

In 2022, acts like GAYLE, Shawn Mendes, Justin Bieber and Anuel AA have canceled tours to focus on their mental health. In addition, artists including Animal Collective and Santigold have called off their runs due to various economic issues, including those cited by Lorde.

The last year of touring has proven a difficult time for many artists, most prominently mid-tier and emerging acts — some of whom have gone public with their struggles. According to many independent promoters in the concert business, the live music industry is no longer enjoying the post-lockdown boon thanks to oversaturation in the market, high ticket prices and budget-conscious consumers. Among other myriad issues, tours are struggling to get tour buses, while many experienced drivers have left the touring sector during the pandemic. Items that used to be easy to come by — such as cymbals, in-ear monitors and lighting fixtures — have also been a struggle to procure for even major acts like Coldplay and Jack White.

Even with her rescheduled Solar Power tour selling well, Lorde wrote that she still feels the immense pressure and was even forced to cancel her March 3 show at Bowl of Brooklands in New Plymouth, New Zealand due to low ticket sales.

“I’m not immune to the stress — just a month ago I was looking at a show that was pretty undersold and panicking, only for it to sell the remaining 2000 tickets in ten days. Wild stuff,” she wrote. “I wanted to put all of this in your minds to illustrate that nothing’s simple when it comes to touring at the moment, and if your faves are confusing you with their erratic moves, some of this could be playing a part.”

It’s “Been So Long” since rhythm and blues singer Anita Baker has traveled to arenas, making fans swoon with her vocals — nearly 28 years, to be exact. Now, the eight-time Grammy winning superstar has announced a special run of live tour dates for 2023.

Produced by Live Nation, Baker will bring her tunes to 15 cities starting on Feb. 11 at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla., then making stops across the country in cities such as Atlanta, Baltimore and Houston before wrapping up the tour at California’s Oakland Arena on Dec. 23.

“Looking forward to some crazy, lovely, hang time with my fans, on tour in 2023!!” Baker said in a statement. “Gonna, bring some new music and some special guests, too.”

The tour commemorates Baker’s 40 years as an iconic artist in the music game since the release of her debut album, 1983’s The Songstress. The tour dates also mark the first time the Ohio native will be performing her classics live since winning back the right of her masters in 2021 with the help of Chance the Rapper.

After Baker released her first album, she rose to stardom in 1986 with the release of her platinum-selling second album, Rapture, which includes the Grammy-winning record “Sweet Love.” In addition to her eight Grammys, Baker has four platinum albums and two gold albums.

Tickets to see Baker are on sale Thursday (Nov. 17) at 10 a.m. on LiveNation.com.

Check out Anita Baker’s 2023 tour dates below:

Sat (Feb.11) – Hollywood, FL – Hard Rock Live*

Tue (Feb.14) – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena

Fri (Feb.17) – New Orleans, LA – Smoothie King Center

Wed (May.10) – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center

Fri (May.12) – Long Island, NY – UBS Arena

Sun (May.14) – Baltimore, MD – CFG Bank Arena

Fri (Jun.30) – Chicago, IL – United Center

Sun (Jul. 02) – Detroit, MI – Pine Knob Music Theatre

Sat (Nov. 18) – Greensboro, NC – Greensboro Coliseum Complex

Wed (Nov. 22) – Memphis, TN – FedEx Forum

Fri (Nov. 24) – Atlantic City, NJ – Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena*

Fri (Dec. 15)– Houston, TX – Toyota Center

Sun (Dec.17)– Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center

Fri (Dec. 22) – Los Angeles, CA – Crypto.com Arena

Sat (Dec. 23) – Oakland, CA – Oakland Arena

Karol G‘s $Trip Love tour has grossed $69.9 million and sold 410,000 tickets across 32 shows in North America (through the end of October), according to numbers reported to Billboard Boxscore. With those figures, the Colombian star has now earned the highest U.S.-grossing tour by a female Latin act.

With $Trip Love, the “Provenza” singer surpasses Jennifer Lopez‘s $50 million grossing It’s My Party World Tour in 2019. Meanwhile, Shakira grossed $28.2 million in 2018 with her El Dorado World Tour. This year, Rosalía’s Motomami world tour has grossed $28.1 million through the end of October.

The AEG-produced $Trip Love stint, which kicked off Sept. 6 at Chicago’s Allstate Arena and wrapped up Oct. 29 at Vancouver’s Rogers Arena, followed Karol’s Bichota Tour in 2021 — her first-ever headlining trek in the U.S. — which grossed $13.4 million and sold 192,000 tickets across 26 shows in North America.

Compared to her last tour, this one boasted a larger production scale. There was a heart-shaped stage, jumbo screens with a heart border, and a floating turquoise Ferrari that, when she rode it to sing “El Makinon,” brought her closer to her fans. On stage, Karol was joined by eight female dancers, four male dancers, two exotic dancers and, of course, her all-girl band.

After wrapping up the tour in North America, Karol G took to social media to write: “Thank you God for the conviction you have given me. Thank you to all the people that worked with me day and night to make this dream possible and to the artists who shared the stage with me during the tour. You made the show shine even more with your presence. We enjoyed this tour like we were little kids, but worked like machines. This is for my home, Colombia.”

Karol G, who is dropping a new song on Sunday (Nov. 13), is currently working on her forthcoming album, which will follow her chart-topping, Grammy-nominated 2021 set KG0516. The album scored Karol her first-ever No. 1 album on Billboard‘s Top Latin Albums chart.

Karol G is also slated to headline the 16th annual Calibash, taking place Jan. 21-22 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. She joins a previously billed group of headliners that includes Ozuna, Myke Towers and Farruko.

RIO DE JANEIRO — In 2020, the pandemic knocked down Brazil’s show business, causing the number of music-related events to plummet by 80% to about 15,000, from over 83,000 in 2019, according to Brazil’s office for collection and distribution of music copyrights (ECAD).  

While many artists pivoted to livestreams during the shutdown, Bete Dezembro and a group of fellow promoters and artist managers seized the moment to try to remake Brazil’s concert business — betting that once artists returned to the stage, concerts would be in much higher demand. “We had to reinvent ourselves,” Dezembro, owner of Fábrica de Eventos, an events promoter focused on Brazil’s northern music market, tells Billboard. 

In March of 2021, Dezembro — along with Augusto Castro, Léo Góes, Celso Almeida and Fernando Almeida — launched 4Even, Brazil’s first investment fund designed to turn music shows into a financial asset class. The gig-driven fund generates profit from buying shows from music artists and reselling them to private clients for higher prices.  

The idea was risky. At the time, it was unclear when live concerts would return or even when COVID-19 vaccines would be available in Brazil. “The financial market bought into this idea when it realized that the businesspeople who understand the music sector were the ones taking the risk,” says Dezembro. 

With 100 million reais ($18.8 million) of their own money, the five partners inaugurated 4Even’s portfolio by acquiring 192 show dates of Gusttavo Lima, a popular sertanejo act — which valued his shows at just under $100,000 apiece. (Sertanejo is Brazil’s version of American country music.) A year and a half later, 4Even is worth around $30.5 million, the fund managers say, with a portfolio of around 800 shows from at least nine Brazilian artists. 

The diverse list includes pagode performer Sorriso Maroto, dance music DJ Vintage Culture and sertanejo duo Jorge & Mateus, 4Even’s most recent acquisition. (4Even only negotiates for shows in Brazil.) 

Dezembro tells Billboard that five other Brazilian artists, who she would not name, are currently negotiating to sell shows to 4Even. 

While the live sector is rebounding, ECAD says the number of music-related events in 2022 through September, at about 40,000, is still less than half of the 2019 full-year level. That hasn’t stopped the 4Even fund from inspiring other investors. In August of 2021, Opus Entretenimento, a concert promotion and artist management company, and brokerage company XP inaugurated a show-driven investment fund they say is worth around $52 million. Seu Jorge, Alexandre Pires, Bruno & Marrone and Vintage Culture are among the artists who have sold shows to the XP OPUS fund.  

Nevertheless, some Brazilian music executives have reservations about the concert funds’ ability to be profitable. 

“I’m afraid that some of these funds may be valuing their assets a bit above their actual market value,” says Marcelo Soares, the CEO of Som Livre, a label owned by Sony Music Entertainment. “Some of them will eventually face financial losses. But I like that investment funds are discovering the music market.”  

Marcos Araújo, CEO of promoter Villa Mix, says high artist fees, which have been rising in Brazil for the biggest artists, could lead fund partners to squeeze consumers by raising ticket prices. “It’s a very difficult model,” says Araújo, who has managed Lima and other big acts like dance-music performer Alok. “The artist takes his money in advance and spends it on a jet, plane, ship, boat. His money runs out and he starts fighting with the fund. Because he wants more money.” 

Araújo told Billboard in mid-2020 that he was working to create his own gig-driven concert fund. He ultimately stopped trying to land enough investment after souring on the idea as too risky. “I was afraid artists couldn’t fulfill their agreements,” he says. 

Lima was the first to sell shows to 4Even, agreeing after fund partner Castro, who produces shows and manages artists from Central-Western Brazil, persuaded him that the fund could create financial security for artists. “The idea was that when the pandemic restrictions ended, there would be money in their account,” Castro tells Billboard. 

While any 4Even investor can pitch new artists for the fund, acquisitions must be agreed upon by all the partners. Lima, who will soon become one of the fund’s shareholders, informally proposed 4Even invest in Vintage Culture, whose budding international career was making his Brazilian dates scarcer. “As he has started performing abroad more often, he has less availability to perform in Brazil,” says Dezembro. “His future show dates would become more expensive, which would eventually profit the fund.”  

Vintage Culture performs live onstage during the second day of Lollapalooza Brazil Music Festival at Interlagos Racetrack on April 06, 2019 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Mauricio Santana/GI

According to João Fiuza, CEO of Brazilian fintech One7, which is responsible for the financial governance of 4Even, Lima is expected to become an official fund investor in November, entitling him to participate in all portfolio decisions. Until now, he has been informally advising on new assets. (Junior Marques, one of the artists who sold shows to 4Even, is managed by Balada Music, Lima’s music management company.) 

The recent wave of investigations into publicly funded music shows in Brazil — officials in 70 cities are suspected of agreeing to pay inflated fees to lure artists — has placed Lima under a negative spotlight, as his name was mentioned in many of the contracts under scrutiny. Dezembro says no Lima show that belongs to the fund has been canceled or devalued in the market since the investigations became public. 

The fund doesn’t resell shows to municipalities, which are the target of the ongoing “CPI do sertanejo” investigations — it sells to private clients, like rodeos, fairs and other events, she says. And all of Lima’s municipal shows were negotiated directly with his company, Balada Music, she says. (Fiuza says Lima’s 4Even-owned shows are selling at a higher price now than before the investigations.) 

Even though the fund resells shows for higher prices than they pay the acts, 4Even has seen a growing number of artists vying to join the portfolio to invest in their careers. The fund can be particularly helpful to emerging artists, who can use money earned from selling shows in advance to record one of their concerts, for example, says Fiuza.  

But most artists are signing with 4Even for the overall career-management opportunity. “If it were all about buying and reselling the shows, the fund wouldn’t be sustainable,” says Dezembro. “The stronger pillar of the fund is being able to place these artists in the biggest events of Brazil, on the best days, and at the most competitive [set times].” 

Additional Reporting by Alexei Barrionuevo 

Madison Square Garden Entertainment’s quarterly revenues surged by 36% to $401.2 million, an increase of nearly $107 million over last year, thanks to a packed calendar for its performance venues that included Harry Styles‘ 15 sold-out concerts at the company’s namesake venue in New York City.

However, those revenues were not enough to offset a total operating loss of $44 million and a 73% decline in adjusted operating income to $2.8 million, as expenses related to the return of live events and increased construction costs for MSG Sphere caused company-wide operating expenses to climb $88.1 million.

On a call with analysts on Wednesday, executives were optimistic saying that the company is moving into the lucrative holiday season– a boom time for MSG performances like Radio City Christmas Spectacular.

“This is expected to be the first full year of events at our venues since fiscal 2019,” James Dolan, executive chairman and chief executive, said. “The best months are coming up for our events business.”

Revenues from the company’s entertainment business quadrupled to $147.1 million in the first fiscal quarter of 2023, which ended Sept. 30. That is compared to $34.2 million last year.

Investors were not swayed by executives comments that the company hosted a record 1 million guests at events over the quarter. Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp’s stock was down 10.47% to $40.43 by 11 a.m. in New York.

Executives disclosed that the cost of building MSG Sphere, the state-of-the-art venue under construction in Las Vegas, rose again to $2.75 billion from $2 billion on higher costs from inflation and global supply chain issues. The project has rougly 8-9 months of construction remaining.

Dolan briefly commented on the proposed spin-off of the company’s live entertainment and MSG Networks business. If the plan is approved, he said, the venues and networks business would be named Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp, while the business encompassing MSG Sphere and Tao Group Hospitality, owner of TAO, Hakkasan, LAVO and Beauty & Essex, would be named MSG Sphere Corp.

MSG Entertainment’s board approved the plan in August, and it now faces review by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the plan, the new, publicly traded company would house MSG Entertainment’s venues — including Madison Square Garden, Radio City Music Hall, the Beacon Theatre and The Chicago Theatre — and MSG Networks, which broadcasts five basketball and hockey teams on MSG Network and MSG+. Also in that new company would be MSG Entertainment’s sports and entertainment booking business, the Radio City Rockettes and the Christmas Spectacular production and arena license agreements with the NBA Knicks and NHL Rangers.

Executives and analysts have said the spin-off could provide investors with more clarity on the company’s many businesses and a clearer choice between the type of investment they want to make. The venues and networks businesses have long-term track records as stable revenue generators, while the Sphere and Tao Group businesses are more speculative but provide an opportunity for higher returns.

Below is a greater breakdown of the company’s earnings for the quarter.

Q1 fiscal 2023 earnings for Entertainment division:

Revenues of $147.1 million, up $112.9 million from last year

Event related revenues rose $80.6 million

Arena license agreements with MSG Sports revenues rose $18.3 million

Suite license fee revenues rose $8.4 million

Direct operating expenses rose $65.5 million to $101.8 million from last year driven by expenses from events and arena license agreements with MSG Sports.

Selling, general, administrative costs rose 11% to $103.4 million on higher employee compensation, benefits.

Operating losses totaled $75.3 million for the quarter, a 34% improvement from the year-ago period when operating losses totales $114.7 million. Adjusted operating losses totaled $44.4 million.

Q1 fiscal 2023 earnings for MSG Networks division:

Revenues fell 13% to $122.5 million from last year on $19-million-decrease in affiliation fee revenues.

Direct operating expenses rose 10% to $75.4 million, driven by $5.9 million increase in rights fees and $1.1 million increase in other programming and production costs.

Selling, general and administrative expenses fell by 63% from a year ago to $17.8 million.

Q1 fiscal 2023 earnings for Tao Group division:

Revenues rose 11% to $132.7 million, including $7.5 from new venue openings.

Direct operating expenses rose 25% to $76.6 million driven by a $7.9-million-increase in employee compensation and related benefits.

Food and bevereage costs rose $4.1 milion on inflation, new venue openings

Greta Van Fleet postponed four more shows on their Dreams in Gold U.S. tour on Tuesday (Nov. 8) as singer Josh Kiszka continues to recover from a ruptured eardrum. After playing at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas on Saturday night, the band alerted fans that upcoming gigs in El Paso, Texas (Nov. 8), Tucson, Arizona (Nov. 9) and Anaheim (Nov. 11) and Sacramento, California (Nov. 12) have been postponed.

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“I just wanted to express how beautiful and how awe-inspiring these couple of shows have really been, truly. Also, unfortunately, they’ve been rather painful,” he said in a video message to fans announcing the postponements. “The last time I spoke with you, I had asked for your understanding; I was dealing with a ruptured eardrum. Unfortunately, while the eardrum continues to heal, it also has continued to cause me great deal of physical pain, which has made it very difficult to perform.”

Kiszka said he’d been fighting through the pain over the past week and trying to “push through” for each show, but he’d reached the point where, “I think I need a period of time for more healing. Unfortunately, that means rescheduling the shows for the rest of this month, which kills me to do this, especially on such a short notice. I’m truly sorry to everyone in El Paso, Tucson, Anaheim and Sacramento. This year has been an extremely humbling experience. I can’t begin to thank all of you enough for your seemingly endless support and understanding.”

Kiszka said the four postponements were a “truly disheartening setback.”

This is the second string of dates GVF have had to postpone due to the injury suffered by Kiszka at an Oct. 8 show in Bangor, Maine. At the time the singer said he’d been experiencing a “situation” in his left ear that’s “caused plenty of infections, tinnitus (ringing in the ear) and difficulty hearing.” At that time, the band postponed a series of shows due to the ear issue, pushing back gigs in Hollywood, Tampa and Jacksonville, Florida, as well as Raleigh, N.C. and Greenville, S.C.

The group said they will share the new date as soon as they are available; existing tickets will remain valid for the rescheduled gigs, with any refunds available at point of purchase. The band’s next scheduled tour date is Dec. 9 at the Mark G Etess Arena in Atlantic City, NJ.

Check out Kiszka’s message to fans below.