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The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday sued to break up Live Nation Entertainment, saying the big concert promoter and its Ticketmaster unit illegally inflated concert ticket prices, hurting ...
House of Blues Entertainment, LLC. is an American chain of live music concert halls and restaurants. It was founded by Isaac Tigrett, the co-founder of Hard Rock Cafe, and Dan Aykroyd, co-star of the 1980 film The Blues Brothers. [1] The first location opened at Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts on November 26, 1992 (Thanksgiving Day). [2] The chain has been a division of Live Nation ...
Why are concert tickets so expensive? There are five major players influencing ticket prices for that concert you've been waiting to see: the artists, the promoters who put on the shows, the ...
The Barnburners were a blues-based band that performed in Northeast Ohio clubs and released a 6-track album called The Rawboogie EP. [23] The album includes the Junior Kimbrough song "Meet Me in the City", which Auerbach later covered with The Black Keys on their Chulahoma tribute studio album.
In 2019, Live Nation acknowledged to Billboard that, while extremely rare, it has legally facilitated the transfer of concert tickets to the hands of resellers at the request of the artists ...
Severance Hall, also known as Severance Music Center, [ 1 ] is a concert hall in the University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, home to the Cleveland Orchestra. Opened in 1931 to give the orchestra a permanent home, the building is named for patrons John L. Severance and his wife, Elisabeth Huntingdon DeWitt Severance. [ 2 ] It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as ...
House of Yes: Live from House of Blues is a live album and video by the English progressive rock band Yes, released on 25 September 2000 by Eagle Records in the United Kingdom and by Beyond Music in the United States. It is a recording of the band's performance at the House of Blues at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas on 31 October 1999 during their world tour supporting their eighteenth studio album ...
"The argument is there’s too much control by one company over a substantial number of venues and concert shows. And of course, if there’s two arenas in one city, and one is owned by Live Nation.