Lessons From The Disney Music Block Party Cancellation

Again, slow to the punch am I this morning, as Bill has a nice update on the Disney Music Block Party Tour near-cancellation -- from the non-response from Disney (check out the disgruntled families here) to the Zapruder-like parsing of Gwyneth's crowd photos. (I admit to doing some of that myself from the other big photo dump -- see, for example, this shot near the end of the show.) It seems clear that in the absence of any other reason, poor ticket sales are the only explanation, as I've already speculated. Or, at least, ticket sales too poor for the lineup constructed. Now, without knowing the exact financial arrangements between Disney, AEG Live, and the artists, who knows where the breakeven point is. My (virtually entirely speculative) guess is that AEG Live was the one who was bearing the financial burden of the tour, that Disney was just lending its name in exchange for payment of some sort, and that if ticket sales were low, AEG Live was the one who decided to pull the plug. Disney, who worked with AEG Live to produce the wildly successful Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus/Jonas Brothers tour, may be loathe to tick off their producing partner by throwing them under the bus. Plus, it's not entirely clear that it's in Disney's best interest to show that the tour wasn't doing well -- clearly, if they're not selling many tickets, the number of ticked-off families is low, and they made a cruel calculation that it's better not to offer a statement to those families. Were it just Disney producing the show, they may have figured the show was just an elaborate form of advertising. [Note: Spurred by a comment below, I should make clear, though, that by "statement," I'm talking about a big public statement as to why the tour was cancelled. Somebody should be notifying ticketholders. I'm not sure to what extent Disney/AEG are doing so, and how their efforts compare to that on other cancelled shows/tours.] In the end, though, this is important, because with other kiddie entities looking to branch out (note: Kidzapalooza LA is now rescheduled for June 27), does this somehow put a damper in the multi-artist model? As Bill suggests, Disney/AEG may have spent too much money on headliners. Now, I find it somewhat hard to believe that the bands wouldn't be giving Disney some discount, seeing as all the bands either have Disney shows on the air or in development, or at least have massive integration. Still, DZ and TMBG aren't cheap, and I don't expect Ralph or the Movers are, either. (Choo-Choo Soul, I don't know about.) So, yes, lesson #1 -- you can't have a 4-pole tent. Lesson #2 -- go local. I realize that the whole point of the tour was to see these national faces familiar from TV. But it also means that there's no local artist with a substantial e-mail list to blast. It's pretty amazing what local artists can do, and, where appropriate, they could have included a local artist on the bill and probably easily generated more than their performance fee in additional ticket revenue. Lesson #3 -- go cheap. I'm pretty sure that Kidzapalooza and Austin Kiddie Limits is produced for less than just one date of the DMBP. As a result, you can also lower the ticket prices. Families were paying close to $50 for a single ticket after ticket fees. Family of four, $200 -- that's a big hit. Considering you can typically see DZ for $25 or less after charges, with the other artists even lower, the marginal benefit to a family to see all the artists and have all the activities, might not have been worth it. The Kansas City Jiggle Jam might very well be the perfect amalgamation of the first 3 lessons -- a couple headliners (Justin Roberts, TMBG), some popular local acts (Jim Cosgrove, Funky Mama), and an insanely low ticket price ($8 kids/$5 adults per day). Lesson #4 -- get a pay-or-play clause if you can. 'Nuff said. The trick for artists is to get heard in front of live audiences. High ticket prices are a barrier to doing so. Most artists are still at the point where low prices are the key. Any other thoughts?

Disney Music Block Party... Now, With Less Block

Gosh, I go to the trouble to set up a "Disney Music Block Party Tour" tag, and Gwyneth notes today that most of the tour dates have been cancelled. Only the Long Island show is still on. Just my luck. The ticket prices did seem a bit high (though you were getting a lot of music and other stuff for those prices), so perhaps attendance was an issue. Or maybe karma for not venturing west of the Mississippi. If I find out something else, I'll let you know... Update: This from AEG Live, via Disney -- "Due to unforeseen circumstances, The Disney Music Block shows at the (name of building) has been cancelled. We are sorry for any inconvenience and refunds are available at the point of purchase." Doesn't really answer much, does it?

What Does That Disney Music Block Party Tour Look Like?

TMBG_DMBP.jpgPhoto credit: faithdesired Seeing as I'm, you know, west of the Mississippi River and unwilling to travel the 2,000 miles to the nearest Disney Music Block Party show, I was pleased as punch to get an e-mail from a woman known on her Flickr page as faithdesired. She went to the Disney Music Block Party show in Columbia, Maryland (just outside DC) on Tuesday, July 29th and took a few pictures. Like, 110 of them. And did I mention that she actually does this for a living? Though usually not with a child on her hip. Not quite the Roger Miller/Ralph's World "can't change film with a kid on your back" line, though with a digital camera, that line's a bit of a puzzler now. She's let me post a couple pictures here, a nice one of the two Johns from They Might Be Giants, of course. (Plenty of other pics -- Choo Choo Soul, Raven-Symone, Ralph's World, and more, on her page.) A Dan Zanes picture, plus a second concert report, after the jump.