Wednesday, October 14, 2020
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The live sector was built by an eclectic group of giants,
Damon Runyonesque characters from all over who built the foundations of the behemoth that ruled the earth before the shutdown, and who ultimately paved the way for
Live Nation:
Don Law,
Ron Delsener,
Jack Boyle,
Brian Murphy,
Irv Zuckerman,
Bill Graham,
Larry Magid,
Jules Belkin and
Cecil Corbett.
Robert F.X. Sillerman bought
Michael Cohl’s concert promotion company,
The Next Adventure, in 1999, which revolutionized the business by giving
the Rolling Stones $67m for the 1989
Steel Wheels global tour, thus ensuring all of the promoters bought out by Sillerman of all Cohl’s huge artist tours. This changed the landscape of the concert promotion business forever and set the precedent for today. Sillerman’s roll-up of the above-mentioned top concert promoters, meanwhile, transformed a regional concert promotion business in North America—known as
SFX in the ’90s—into an asset that would be sold to
Clear Channel in 2000 for north of $4 billion.
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Clear Channel spun off its entertainment division as
Live Nation in 2005, with
Michael Rapino—who promoted concerts for
LaBatt’s beer in his native Canada before first working with Cohl—as boss. Under his command it has become the juggernaut we know today, fueled not only by its massive event promotion and stratospheric ticket sales but also by unprecedented deals with artists like
U2,
Madonna,
Metallica, Coldplay,
Rod Stewart,
Drake,
Maroon 5,
Jay-Z’s
Roc Nation and the rest of the
Artist Nation roster. In 2019, LN reported its ninth straight year of record growth; but for events out of anyone’s control, it would certainly be celebrating a 10th.
AEG, comprised of
Concerts West,
Goldenvoice,
The BoweryPresents,
Festival Productions,
Madison House Presents and
Zeromile, became a similarly behemoth presence on the music landscape, under the guidance of
Jay Marciano. Marciano was leading
Universal Concerts when it was absorbed by
House of Blues, and stayed with the company to run its booking operation; leveraged to the hilt by the purchase, HOB was run by a hedge fund—and the joy ran out of it for Marciano, who went to AEG as a consultant with the title of Chief Strategy Officer. He then left after two years to run the
Madison Square Garden/Radio City Music Hall operation, only to return when
Tim
Leiweke hired him in 2011 to run the European operation. He became head of AEG Presents in 2013 and in the ensuing years has helped the company double its total venues. Between its high-profile venues such as
Staples Center and the
O2 arenas,
Mercedes Benz Arenas (Berlin and Shanghai),
Accor Arena, T-Mobile Arena and
L.A. Live, plus festivals such as
Hyde Park,
Coachella,
Stagecoach,
Electric Forest,
Rock en Seine,
New Orleans Jazz Fest,
Firefly,
Hangout Festival and
Camp Flog Gnaw, it’s the promoter of choice for
the Rolling Stones,
Elton John,
Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, Justin Bieber,
Celine Dion, Carrie Underwood,
Luke Combs and
Kenny Chesney, among others.
We would be remiss if we didn’t mention that
Irving Azoff had a hand in the expansion of both companies—and the live sector in general. The deal to merge his
Front Line Management and
Ticketmaster with Live Nation was transformative.
Live Nation and AEG did massive yearly ticket sales pre-shutdown —and many big artists were earning 90% of that revenue. But the tables have turned and the landscape is undergoing another metamorphosis, where—for now—the rights holders also hold all the cards.