You two.
Just get it over with and have sex.
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Withplaying in the background.![]()
Add a couple of months if you are in Brazil.
i like Cradle Of Filth, so what of it? Sure, downhill over the years but in their heyday they were leading the way for black metal on so many different levels. lyrically, visually, etc.
I get the joke, but I fail to see how anyone could maintain an erection with that playing in the background.
True. But I suspect a fair amount are either taking reasonable losses, breaking even, or barely making a few dollars, in the hopes of growing their audience. I think bands like In Flames demonstrated that an audience can be built here, if you're willing to put the hard work in.Quite a lot or otherwise they wouldn't be doing it. It's not a charity.
True. But I suspect a fair amount are either taking reasonable losses, breaking even, or barely making a few dollars, in the hopes of growing their audience. I think bands like In Flames demonstrated that an audience can be built here, if you're willing to put the hard work in.
The Obelisk: Are there any plans to come back to the U.S. to tour?
Alan Averill: Since we toured the U.S. the last time, we've been offered three or four tours, but it comes back to the recession and the whole thing in Ireland. It's made the liberties we can perhaps take with work a couple years ago almost negligible now. They're just not there. It's almost impossible to find the same space in time to do. It's made it very difficult. And don't forget, touring [there] is like a hiding to nothing, because the dollar is so weak against the euro. When people go home and they have kids… Like on that last tour, MOONSORROW were playing for nothing. They were playing for $400 a night. You play to 1,200 people in Montreal, and someone hands you $400, which is the price of, what, 32 tickets? But there you go. I don't think people realize that when they see the band that it's such a relative sacrifice that you make, especially when venues are taking 30 percent of your t-shirt sales and stuff... Every venue takes between 20 and 30 percent of your merch and there's nothing you can do. They have someone to stand there with a clicker, clicking the t-shirts they sell. Nothing you can do about it, it's just become part of what touring America is. If you add import tax, printing costs, 20-30 percent gone and how strong the Euro is against the dollar, if we don't sell a t-shirt for more than $15, we are basically giving them away. Seeing as we had one for $12 on that tour, we might as well just give them away to people outside.
That's interesting.A band the size of Decapitated, Behemoth, or Hammerfall would probably not come out too badly either. I'd guess they gross about 5-10 grand a night in the states + about 200 a night in merch.
Thanks for posting it. It was Alan's comments I was thinking about when I wrote my initial response.Alan from Primordial talked about the financial issues of touring the States a while back here:
A band the size of Decapitated, Behemoth, or Hammerfall would probably not come out too badly either. I'd guess they gross about 5-10 grand a night in the states + about 200 a night in merch.
I'm no promoter, but I'm pretty confident that there's no way in hell either of those 3 bands are making 5-10K per show plus merchandise.
Ehhh... he's actually pretty accurate as far as I know. Maybe on the lower end, but still within the range.
Yeah it'd be tough. Even with Jasonic's dashing good looks.