mardi 1 mai 2018

Dublin se prépare...

A 2 semaines du concert inaugural de la tournée 2018 des Rolling Stones, voici la vitrine d'un magasin Primark de Dublin...



7 commentaires:

MRROLLING a dit…

C'est un gag une boutique low coast pour faire la pub de la tournée la plus chère des Stones 😜

Nico1977 a dit…

Low coast !! Faut revoir ton anglais mmrolling...

Anonyme a dit…

Belle vitrine arty ! De bons designers embauchés par Jagger

Fab a dit…

À quand la photo de la vitrine du Tati de Marseille 😂😂😂😂

Anonyme a dit…

Ils vendent des couches Pampers ? :)

Thierry a dit…

Et pendant ce temps sortie du nouvel album des Rythm Kings de Bill Wyman. Même niveau que les quatre premiers.

Anonyme a dit…

Rolling Stones facing empty seats despite cut-price concert tickets

Nick Bramhill
April 30 2018

The Rolling Stones’ hopes of playing to a full stadium at Croke Park are starting to fade away after a heavily publicised discounted ticket promotion for their Dublin gig failed to attract fans.

A limited number of “lucky dip” tickets for Croke Park and the other 13 European venues on the forthcoming leg of the band’s No Filter tour were released a week ago.

Yesterday Croke Park, where the Rolling Stones open their tour on May 17 before playing eight gigs in the UK and five across the Continent, was the only venue to still have cut-price tickets marked available on the band’s official website.

The “lucky dip” tickets for the 82,000-capacity Irish gig are being sold in pairs and are priced at €54.65 each, plus service charge. For these tickets, concertgoers will only find out where they will be seated in the stadium when they pick up their passes on the night of the gig.

With less than three weeks to go until Mick Jagger and his bandmates arrive in Dublin, it is looking more and more likely that the gig — the biggest on the next leg of the tour — will have a large number of empty seats. Sluggish sales have led to heavy publicising of the Dublin show, with radio and television adverts and ticket giveaways.

Jagger has also given newspaper and TV interviews to try to promote the event. Hundreds of seated tickets were still available yesterday on the Ticketmaster site, with prices ranging from €90 to €136 for upper stands of the stadium, to €181 for lower stands.

Passes to the VIP pit area beside the stage are priced at €456 each.

The Rolling Stones, which was formed in London in 1962 and have since released 30 studio albums, last played in Ireland 11 years ago when they headlined Slane. The band, which consists of Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood, are being supported by an up-and-coming indie four-piece from Westmeath, called the Academic, at the GAA headquarters.

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/rolling-stones-fail-to-sell-discounted-tickets-for-dublin-concert-hl2kcpq30