Poor KC Only Made $90 Million Last Year...

A place for members to talk about things outside of Virgin Islands travel.

Who was the biggest surprise on this list?

Kenny Chesney
2
9%
Neil Diamond
10
45%
Coldplay
0
No votes
Journey
10
45%
 
Total votes: 22

Cid
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Poor KC Only Made $90 Million Last Year...

Post by Cid »

I guess things ARE tough all over.....

Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen and the Police all trailed behind Madonna as the top concert earners on Billboard's list of Top 20 Moneymakers. The list compiles each act's touring revenue plus current and catalog album sales, along with the sale of other promotions and merchandise.

The Top 20 earners on Billboard's 2008 Moneymakers List are:
1. Madonna: $242,176,466
2. Bon Jovi: $157,177,766
3. Bruce Springsteen: $156,327,964
4. The Police: $109,976,894
5. Celine Dion: $99,171,237
6. Kenny Chesney: $90,823,990
7. Neil Diamond: $82,174,000
8. Rascall Flatts: $63,522,160
9. Jonas Brothers: $62,638,814
10. Coldplay: $62,175,555
11. The Eagles: $61,132,213
12. Lil Wayne: $57,441,334
13. AC/DC: $56,505,296
14. Michael Buble: $50,257,364
15. Miley Cyrus: $48,920,806
16. Taylor Swift: $45,588,730
17. Journey: $44,787,328
18. Billy Joel: $44,581,010
19. Mary J. Blige: $43,472,850
20. Kanye West: $42,552,402
Still waiting to return to St. John!
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Connie
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Post by Connie »

Journey surprised me because it doesn't even include the original singer.

I only wish I was a great singer in a band and I wouldn't even care if I was No. 50.
"Paradise...it's a state of mine"
Lex
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Location: northeast US

Post by Lex »

Journey? I didn't know any Journey fans then, much less now? Who are they? Bruce is the only one on the list who got any of my money. Madonna is a bigger earner than Bruce? Seems I'm well out of the mainstream.
Joshie
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Post by Joshie »

...
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loria
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Post by loria »

small bit of ND trivia---
did you know that he wrote red red wine (that the Ska band UB-40 made famous in the late 80's)
he also wrote the monkees 'i'm a believer'
< leaving on the 22nd of march...but too lame to figure out the ticker thing again!>
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Lulu76
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Post by Lulu76 »

I think it's hilarious that Taylor Swift made $45 million to KC's $90 million. Well, it's hilarious that a high school girl is nipping at KC's heels.

What's not hilarious is the state of country music. If you'll excuse me, I'm going to go drink whiskey and listen to Merle Haggard.

It's a sad day when KC's the "most country" artist on the list of top-earning performers.
bevm
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Location: Doylestown, Pa.

Post by bevm »

Hi Lex, I'm Bev and I'm a Journey fan. Now you know one! I saw them last summer with the Phillipino lead singer and if you close your eyes you'd swear it was Steve Perry. Check out Arnel Pineda on youtube. I saw K.C., AC/DC, and Journey on that list and AC/DC by far was the best! K.C.'s concerts are always the same. Heart was with Journey and Ann Wilson still has the pipes and Crash was drooling over Nancy.... :wink:
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Terry
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Post by Terry »

Excuse me...I didn't see our hometown boys on that list.

The Fray????

You are right the new dude with Journey is amazing!
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cypressgirl
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Post by cypressgirl »

The biggest surprise on the list is the Jonas Brothers at #9 with 62 mil. Do that many 10 year olds go to concerts??? :?
Cid
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Post by Cid »

I agree the new Journey guy is good. He's just enough Steve Perry and just enough himself. Great set of pipes....

Journey and Neil Diamond were the ones who surprised me the most. Neither has had a new album, (that I'm aware of) in years.

Most of the money in the music industry is made from tickets and merchandising. To be at the top of the revenue list without an album is impressive. That's a lot of expensive tickets and over-priced t-shirts! Of course, the Dead topped this list for years without any new material...RIP Jerry.
Still waiting to return to St. John!
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bevm
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Post by bevm »

Apparently so cypressgirl...go figure. :roll:
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loria
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Post by loria »

Cid wrote:I agree the new Journey guy is good. He's just enough Steve Perry and just enough himself. Great set of pipes....

Journey and Neil Diamond were the ones who surprised me the most. Neither has had a new album, (that I'm aware of) in years.
actually he had a critically acclaimed album in '08 'home before dark' and then he had some award thingy happen as well

not one of my faves, but his early stuff as a songwriter (and a singer) is super
i think he is coming into something of a renaissance.
< leaving on the 22nd of march...but too lame to figure out the ticker thing again!>
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verjoy
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Post by verjoy »

About 4 years ago, we were given 3 tickets to see ND in St Louis. The show was great, but he didn't sing my favorite song "Stones".
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hoosierdaddy
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Post by hoosierdaddy »

Neil Diamond still has a cult following. A couple of years ago in Grand Cayman my wife and I (not Neil Diamond fans) paid $50 each to see Nearly Neil Diamond. I was surprised how many women were there and completley overwhelmed that a Neil Diamond impersonator was preforming. It was Crazy.
jmq
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Post by jmq »

Anybody I know who went to the AC/DC shows were knocked out by them, as were the local critics when they came thru NJ/NY. Apparently, straight-ahead/get yer ya-yas out rock is not dead.

BonJovi does a very good show and the age range of his female fans is amazing to behold.

Does the fact that Coldplay does NOTHING for me make me old?

Clapton/Winwood are doing more tour dates. Considering trying to get tix to that. Always been a big Stevie Winwood fan and I’ve never seen Clapton. The 2 shows they did together last year at MSG got rave reviews.

Re Springsteen, for those like me who love “behind the scenes” stuff, this was a fun read…

SUPER BOWL JOURNAL by Bruce Springsteen

Dear Friends & Fans, a little glimpse from center stage:

I
Six Air Force Thunderbirds have just roared overhead at what felt like inches above our backstage area, giving myself and the entire E Street Band a brush cut. With 20 minutes to go, I'm sitting in my trailer trying to decide what boots to wear. I've got a nice pair of cowboy boots my feet look really good in, but I'm concerned about their stability. Two days ago we rehearsed in full rain on the field and the stage became as slick as an ice pond. It was almost impossible to stand on. It was so slick I crashed into Mike Colucci, our cameraman, coming off my knee slide, his camera the only thing that kept me from launching out onto the soggy turf. When Jerry the umpire in "Glory Days" did his bit, he came running out, couldn't stop himself and executed one of the most painfully perfect "man slips on a banana peel" falls I've ever seen. This sent Steve, myself and the entire band into one of the biggest stress-induced laughters of our lives that lasted all the way back to our trailers. (A few Advil and Jerry was okay.)

I better go with the combat boots I always carry. The round toes will give me better braking power than the pointy-toed cowboy boots when I hit the deck. I stuff my boots with two innersoles to make them as fitted as possible, zip them up snuggly around my ankles, stomp around in my trailer a bit and feel pretty grounded. Fifteen minutes…oh, by the way, I'm somewhat nervous. It's not the usual pre-show jitters, not "butterflies," it's not wardrobe malfunction anticipation anxiety, I'm talking about five minutes to beach landing, "Right Stuff" "Lord Don't Let Me Screw the Pooch in Front of 100 Million People" one of the biggest television audiences since dinosaurs first screwed on earth kind of semi-terror. It only lasts for a minute…I check my hair, spray it with something that turns it into concrete and I'm out the door.

I catch sight of Patti smiling. She's been my rock all week. I put my arm around her and away we go. They take us by golf cart to a holding tunnel right off the field. The problem is there are a thousand people there, tv cameras, media of all kinds and general chaos. Suddenly, hundreds of people rush by us in a column shouting, cheering…our fans! And tonight also our stage builders. These are "the volunteers". They've been here for two weeks on their own dime in a field day after day, putting together and pulling apart pieces of our stage over and over again, theoretically achieving military precision. Now it's for real. I hope they've got it down because as we're escorted onto the field, lights in the stadium fully up, the banshee wail of 70,000 screaming football fanatics rising in our ears, there's nothing there. Nothing…no sound, no lights, no instruments, no stage, nothing but brightly lit unwelcoming green turf. Suddenly an army of ants come from all sides of what seems like nowhere. Each rolling a piece of our lifeline, our earth onto the field. The cavalry has arrived. What takes us on a concert day 8 hours to do is done in five minutes. Unbelieveable. Everything in our world is there…we hope. We gather a few feet off the stage, form a circle of hands, I say a few words drowned out by the crowd and it's smiles all around. I've been in a lot of high stakes situations like this, though not exactly like this, with these people before. It's stressful, but our band is made for it…and it's about to begin…so happy warriors we bound up onto the stage.

II
The NFL stage manager gives me the three minute sign…two minutes…one…there's a guy jumping up and down on sections of the stage to get them to sit evenly on the grass field…30 seconds…they're still testing all the speakers and equipment…that's cutting it close! The lights in the stadium go down. The crowd erupts and Max's drumbeat opens "10th Avenue." I feel a white light silhouette Clarence and I for a moment. I hear Roy's piano. I give "C"'s hand a pat. I'm on the move tossing my guitar in a high arc for Kevin, my guitar tech, to catch and it's…"ladies and gentlemen, for the next 12 minutes we will be bringing the righteous and mighty power of the E Street Band into your beautiful home. So…step back from the guacamole dip. Put the chicken fingers down! And turn the TV ALL the way up!" Because, of course, there is just ONE thing I've got to know: "IS THERE ANYBODY ALIVE OUT THERE?!"

All I know is if you were standing next to me, you would be. I feel like I've just taken a syringe of adrenalin straight to the heart. Before we came out, I had two major concerns. One, something might go wrong beyond my control. That completely disappeared before we hit the stage. Tonight our fate is in the hands of many, so no sense for useless worry. Two, I was worried that I would find myself 'out' of myself and not in the moment. My old friend Peter Wolf once said 'the strangest thing you can do on stage is think about what you're doing." This is true. To observe oneself from afar while struggling to bring the moment to life is an unpleasant experience. I've had it more than once. It's an existential problem. Unfortunately, right in my wheel house. It doesn't mean it's going to be a bad show. It may be a great one. It just means it might take time, something we don't have much of tonight. When that happens, I do anything to break it. Tear up the set list, call an audible, make a mistake, anything to get "IN." That's what you get paid for, TO BE HERE NOW! The power, potential and volume of your present-ness is a basic rock and roll promise. It's the essential element that holds the attention of your audience, that gives force, shape and authority to the evening's events. And however you get there on any given night, that's the road you take. "IS THERE ANYBODY ALIVE IN HERE?!"…there better be.

I'm on top of the piano (good old boots). I'm down. One…two…three, knee drop in front of the microphone and I'm bending back almost flat on the stage. I close my eyes for a moment and when I open them, I see nothing but blue night sky. No band, no crowd, no stadium. I hear and feel all of it in the form of a great siren like din surrounding me but with my back nearly flat against the stage I see nothing but beautiful night sky with a halo of a thousand stadium suns at its edges. I take several deep breaths and a calm comes over me. I feel myself deeply and happily "IN."

Since the inception of our band it was our ambition to play for everyone. We've achieved a lot but we haven't achieved that. Our audience remains tribal…that is predominantly white. On occasion, the Inaugural Concert, during a political campaign, touring through Africa in '88, particularly in Cleveland with President Obama, I looked out and sang "Promised Land" to the audience I intended it for, young people, old people, black, white, brown, cutting across religious and class lines. That's who I'm singing to today. Today we play for everyone. I pull myself upright with the mike stand back into the world, this world, my world, the one with everybody in it and the stadium, the crowd, my band, my best friends, my wife come rushing into view and it's "teardrops on the city…"

III
During "Tenth Avenue" I tell the story of my band…and other things "when the change was made uptown"…. It goes rushing by, then the knee slide. Too much adrenalin, a late drop, too much speed, here I come Mike…BOOM! And I'm onto his camera, the lens implanted into my chest with one leg off the stage. I use his camera to push myself back up and…say it, say it, say it, say it…BLAM! BORN TO RUN…my story…Something bright and hot blows up behind me. I heard there were fireworks. I never saw any. Just the ones going off in my head. I'm out of breath. I try to slow it down. That ain't gonna happen. I already hear the crowd singing the last eight bars of "Born to Run" oh, oh, oh, oh…then it's straight into "Working on a Dream"…your story…and mine I hope. Steve is on my right, Patti on my left. I catch a smile and the wonderful choir, The Joyce Garrett Singers, that backed me in Washington during the Inaugural concert is behind us. I turn to see their faces and listen to the sound of their voices…"working on a dream". Done. Moments later, we're ripping straight into "Glory Days"…the end of the story. A last party steeped in merry fatalism and some laughs with my old pal, Steve. Jerry the Ump doesn't fall on his ass tonight. He just throws the yellow penalty flag for the precious 40 seconds we've gone overtime…home stretch. Everyone is out front now forming that great line. Out of the corner of my eye, I catch the horns raising their instruments high, my guitar is wheeling around my neck and on the seventh beat, I'm going to Disneyland. I'm already someplace a lot farther and more fun than that. I look around, we're alive, it's over, we link arms and take a bow as the stage comes apart beneath our feet. It's chaos again all the way back to the trailer. A toast…our families, friends, Jon, George, Brendan, Barbara, with Don Mischer, Ricky Kirshner, Glenn Weiss, Charles Coplin, and Dick Ebersol, the great team that put it altogether and the end of a good football game.

IV
The theory of relativity holds. On stage your exhilaration is in direct proportion to the void you're dancing over. A gig I always looked a little askance at and was a little wary of turned out to have surprising emotional power and resonance for me and my band. It was a high point, a marker of some sort and went up with the biggest shows of our work life. The NFL threw us an anniversary party the likes of which we'd never throw for ourselves (we're too fussy) with fireworks and everything! In the middle of their football game, they let us hammer out a little part of our story. I love playing long and hard but it was the 35 years in 12 minutes…that was the trick. You start here, you end there, that's it. That's the time you've got to give it everything you have…12 minutes…give or take a few seconds. The Super Bowl is going to help me sell a few new records, that's what I wanted because I want people to hear where we are today. It'll probably put a few extra fannies in the seats and that's fine. We live high around here and I like to do good business for my record company and concert promoters. But what it's really about is my band remains one of the mightiest in the land and I want you to know it, we want to show you…because we can.
By 3 am, I am back home, everyone in the house fast asleep and tucked in bed. I am sitting in the yard over an open fire, staring up again into that black night sky, my ears still ringing…"Oh yeah, it's alright."
When we come to place where the sea and the sky collide
Throw me over the edge and let my spirit glide
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