Report
The Purple Line / Apr. 3, 2008 at 4:30 pm

As of Thursday afternoon, Counting Crows tickets still available

By Chloe Benoist
At about midday, there was but one person standing in front of the Norris Box Office. Alex Campbell / NbN.

After frantic ticket sales for concerts last quarter, the box office booths in the Louis Room at Norris were surprisingly quiet Thursday morning. Students trickled in and out to buy tickets for A&O Productions’s last concert of the year, the A&O Ball, featuring Counting Crows and Wild Sweet Orange.

About half of the tickets for the April 10 event — more than 850 — had been sold as of 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, according to A&O Chairman Alex White. Barring a surge of interest before the Norris Box Office closes at 6 p.m., the $15 tickets will still be available Friday.

Weinberg senior John Szostak said he had expected more people to be there.

“I got here around 8:45. I just picked up a voucher though, and came back, because I realized the line wasn’t going to be that long,” he said.

Wendy Culp felt the same way.

“I’m really surprised they’re not sold out already,” the senior said while waiting in a fifteen-person line at 11 a.m.

During Winter Quarter, tickets for shows by B.J. Novak and Flight of the Conchords sold out within an hour. For the A&O Ball, each student was allowed to purchase up to two tickets, instead of the four or eight allowed for this year’s other shows.

The ticket includes transportation to Chicago’s Riviera Theatre, where the show will be held and which holds more people than Cahn Auditorium or Tech Auditorium.

“It’s so hard to predict beforehand how ticket sales are going to go, and so we learned from the past few months that it’s always better to be overprepared,” White said. A&O also set up more ticket booths this time and opened 30 minutes early.

For the Flight of the Conchords show in March, some students complained that people took advantage of the four-tickets-per-WildCARD rule to scalp tickets.

“We’re trying to cater to the student body. We thought we were acting in the students’ best interest to let one WildCARD buy four tickets, because then only one person has to go to Norris and wait in line,” White said. “But after people got kind of upset, we decided the people who want it most will wake up early and buy two tickets, and that will reduce scalping and ensure that the people who most want to go will go.”

White said A&O has been considering an event with Counting Crows for a while. A survey done by A&O two years ago showed that students were very interested in the band. Counting Crows recently released their fifth album, Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings, making the concert even more timely.

Landing the Counting Crows had a price. Although White declined to say how much it had cost A&O to secure the band, he said that this was A&O’s “second-biggest show after Kanye West, in terms of cost of the band and name recognition.” The money that A&O had saved with good deals with OK Go and Ben Kweller went toward the Counting Crows concert.

White said he was “thrilled” by the attention that has surrounded A&O events this year.

“A&O’s purpose is to unite the Northwestern community and the Northwestern campus. We’re having two opportunities to unite them, first through ticket sales, and then two weeks later, at the event itself, and there’s so much hype around the tickets that the event seems that much more special,” he said. “I’m proud of all A&O has done this year.”

Comments

  1. The reason there’s still tickets is because nobody ACTUALLY cares about Counting Crows. It’s just not an exciting group. People may like them, but no one goes crazy for them. Also, the 2 ticket limit is a big factor, but certainly the Flight of the Conchord turnout (WELL over 400 people TRIED to get tickets within only a couple of hours) proves that this isn’t the sole factor.

    Duh.

    April 5, 2008 at 2:14 am

  2. That’s probably why their new CD, Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings in number one in digital sales on both Amazon.com and iTunes. Nobody cares!

    This will be my 20th time seeing the band. Whether you expect it or not you are in for a fantastic show. Adam Duritz has one of the best voices in rock.

    John

    April 5, 2008 at 2:08 pm

  3. I kinda agree with “Duh.” I’d be surprised if these tickets sell out. Perhaps if this was 10 years ago, we might have their show sell out. I mean, it has been about 6 years since they released any studio recordings. A&O keeps boasting that this act is in “the top 10 of Northwestern Facebook profiles.” However, that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s going to be a sell out show. I know I have bands on my profile that I occasionally listen to, but wouldn’t necessarily go see. It’s going to be hard for A&O to match someone like Kanye again.

    I usually go to most concerts on campus, but this one - for me at least - is definitely passable.

    Their new album is in the top ten for both iTunes and Amazon, but not #1.

    Ryan

    April 5, 2008 at 4:32 pm

  4. Here’s where they stand on sales:

    4.3.08 Counting Crows #1 in Digital Sales

    Counting Crows skyrocketed into the Billboard Charts this week with the release of “Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings”.

    Congratulations on the following rankings!
    #1 Digital Sales
    #3 in overall Sales
    #4 on Triple A National Airplay for “You Can’t Count on Me”.

    John

    April 5, 2008 at 6:13 pm

  5. what’s this source?

    Ryan Gallagher

    April 5, 2008 at 9:52 pm

  6. John

    April 6, 2008 at 9:53 am

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