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Jesse Joe
03-28-2007, 07:50 AM
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Tim McGraw, right, and Faith Hill announce their new concert tour during a press conference at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville March 7. The tour, labeled as the most successful concert tour in country music history, kicks off June 6 in Omaha, Neb. and comes to Moncton's Magnetic Hill Sept. 1.
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Faith and Tim pick Moncton

Published Wednesday March 28th, 2007
You-all can dust off thet cowboy hat, Moncton; the Hill's gonna rock agin.

The Times & Transcript has learned the city will host what is expected to be the biggest country-and-western tour in the world this year with country sweethearts Faith Hill and Tim McGraw headlining Country Rocks the Hill II on Saturday, Sept. 1.

The two hottest stars in country music today are said to be headlining seven big supporting acts for a show set for the Labour Day weekend, with tickets starting at $130 to go on sale April 13.

Supporting acts remained a mystery yesterday although they may be revealed at a news conference set for the Moncton Coliseum and Agrena Complex this morning if it turns out, as suspected, that it is to serve as the official announcement for the show.

According to sources the news conference will get a little help from the two biggest country acts in Metro this year, the Divorcees and Shirley Albert.

The Divorcees completed a national tour in December and are already booked to head out for more of the same through the summer, returning to Moncton from the west coast just in time for the Hill.

Albert, meanwhile, was nominated for Country Album of the Year at the 2007 East Coast Music Awards in Halifax this winter.

Word has it the Divorcees and Albert will be the opening acts for a show that starts at 2 p.m. and goes to about 10:30 p.m. barring encores.

The main act is set for about 8 p.m.

Details such as food concessions are in the hands of the promoters, who weren't confirming anything yesterday.

However, sources say the official beer is Budweiser, the official soft drink is Coca Cola and like last year, there will be designated parking, viewing and dining areas for VIP ticket holders.

Today's announcement signals the Metro area's emergence as the premier outdoor venue for music in Atlantic Canada, despite a drive from Halifax to compete for the business.

Halifax's World Trade Centre Inc. tried to wrest the Brooks & Dunn-led country show from Moncton last year and earlier in 2006 brought the Rolling Stones to Halifax, drawing about 25,000 people to its main outdoor site at the Halifax Commons, compared to the 80,000-plus who showed up at Magnetic Hill for the Stones in the summer of 2005.


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Halifax also submitted a last-minute bid this year to take the Hill/McGraw-led show from Moncton, even applying to the provincial government for a grant.

The grant, said by sources to be at least $100,000, was intended to be applied directly to Halifax's bid to the promoters in an attempt to undercut Moncton's bid.

Evidently it didn't work and it seems likely that, with Halifax still attempting to repair the ground at the Commons after it was damaged during the Stones show almost a year ago, Magnetic Hill's performance over the last two years made the difference.

Moncton has also taken a different approach to financing its re-entry into the outdoor music scene after several off again, on again attempts to use a sprawling natural amphitheatre located near the Magnetic Hill tourism facility, first used for the visit of Pope John Paul II to Moncton in 1984.

As soon as the Stones were confirmed in the spring of 2005 the city launched a modest investment strategy designed to improve Moncton's position in bidding for all shows by improving site infrastructure, rather than blowing public cash on undercutting the competition for one specific show.

That way the money stays here rather than just going to the promoters.

Thus, the city's entire investment this year is $250,000, set down in the 2007-08 capital works budget, so music-lovers can expect to see a gradually improving site at Magnetic Hill.

For example the city's initial investment in 2005 improved drainage and security fencing at the site and, as a bonus, TNA and DKD spent about $200,000 tamping gravel into the upper end of the site for a permanent concert pad, forgoing the ground problems currently plaguing the Halifax Commons.

This year's $250,000 is earmarked for improved parking, washrooms and backstage facilities.

Those are great for concertgoers, but they are also great for the bands, which tend to shy away from outdoor sites due to complex problems like security and surprisingly straightforward ones like simply having enough well-tamped parking space for the fleet of tractor-trailers that accompany the really big shows.

Country Rocks the Hill II is being put together by Halifax-based promoter Harold MacKay of Power Promotional Concepts, in partnership with Ron Sakamoto of Gold & Gold Productions of Lethbridge, Alberta. The same two partners put together the first Country Rocks the Hill show last summer with headliners Brooks & Dunn and Alan Jackson drawing 40,000 people to Metro.

Those promoters, along with the Stones 'A Bigger Bang' world tour promoter The Next Adventure of Toronto and Donald K. Donald of Montreal - TNA's partner for the Canadian leg of the tour that included Moncton -- took a lot of photographs and promotional material with them when they left.

That material ended up in the hands of band managers and record companies in places like Nashville, Toronto, New York and London and it appears that effort has produced a lot of global interest in Moncton as an outdoor site capable of accommodating the big shows and geographically located to draw people from a wider region.

For example most of the 80,000 draw for the Stones came from outside a metropolitan area with a total population barely exceeding 140,000.

However, much of Metro's attraction to the global music business is based simply on its reputation, having already proven over the past two years that it has the right attitude, public participation, volunteerism and other intangibles to pull off the big outdoor show.

According to Poll Star Magazine, the three biggest grossing world tours on the planet in 2006 were Barbra Streisand, the second year of the Stones A Bigger Bang tour and the first year of the McGraw/Hill Soul 2 Soul tour, which continues this summer including Moncton, which is the only outdoor venue for the Soul 2 Soul tour which has already sold out its six other Canadian stops, several of them with two shows.

That means after Labour Day Magnetic Hill will have hosted two of the top three biggest grossing tours on the planet in 2006.

Closer to home, if you haven't seen our local stars yet the Divorcees' next local stop is Riverview's Fox n' Hound April 7.

Albert is playing all over the province this spring but remains a regular at the Bayou in Shediac, where her next gig is April 13.

[ April 15, 2007, 10:46: Message edited by: Jesse-Joe. ]

charlene
03-28-2007, 09:40 AM
$130.00 a ticket..ludicrous..

AND governemnt grants (taxpayer money) to get them to the cities they're playing in.

Ludicrous. AND huge sponsors to boot.

I see Sakamoto is in the promotions business now-he used to be an entertainment writer..

Most successful tour - at those prices it's no wonder!

Jesse Joe
03-29-2007, 07:34 AM
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Greg Agnew/Times & TRanscript


Harold MacKay officially confirmed yesterday the Faith Hill and Tim McGraw Soul 2 Soul tour will come to Magnetic Hill Sept 1.





Faith & Tim concert set up for 50,000 fans



Concert promoter Harold Mackay and City of Moncton concert czar Ian Fowler have confirmed the big news first reported by the Times & Transcript yesterday: Country music superstars Tim McGraw and Faith Hill will play Moncton's Magnetic Hill concert site Saturday, Sept. 1.

The Labour Day weekend concert is certain to be the biggest country show ever held in Eastern Canada, as the husband and wife entertainers' Soul 2 Soul tour was outpaced only by The Rolling Stones and mega-diva Barbra Streisand as the top grossing concert tour in North America last year. This year, they are on track to be the number one draw.

Now country music's king and queen will make Country Rocks the Hill 2007 their only outdoor show this year. It will be their only stop east of Ontario and will come after the tour was originally supposed to end, a testament, said MacKay, to the appeal of putting on a concert in what has become the entertainment capital of Atlantic Canada.

The headliners will perform for two-and-a-half hours, following performances by seven country music acts yet to be named. Plans are for the day of music to start at 2 p.m. and wrap up at 10:30 p.m. MacKay said those acts have not yet been signed, though rising local country acts Shirley Albert and The Divorcees seem poised to at least open the show.

Both bands performed at a media conference yesterday to make the big announcement, an event that drew close to 200 people from across a broad spectrum of the community.

MacKay, the president of Power Promotional Concepts, said it's this kind of widespread community spirit and support that made Moncton carry the day in what, for weeks, has been seen as a choice between this city and Halifax.

"There's a vibe in this city that's hard to explain to people unless you've experienced it," MacKay said, "all the way from your city staff, to the politicians, the people on the street, the media. Everything that happens in this city has a whole different vibe than hundreds of other places. It's the reason you're successful."

MacKay emphasized the role of the media in capturing the community's enthusiasm. He singled out C-103/XL 96 for gathering 6,000 names on a petition to bring Hill and McGraw. He also thanked the Times & Transcript as "a newspaper that covers our events and other events in a tremendous fashion."

Holding up six pages of clippings from the newspaper's coverage of last year's Country Rocks the Hill, MacKay said, "I took several copies of those plus the ones they did for the Rolling Stones and the reaction we had in Nashville was outstanding."

MacKay joked that the Nashville powers-that-be were surprised by two things in the Times & Transcript's photo coverage of those two previous concerts - the lack of igloos and the massive throngs of people.

Praising the work of Ian Fowler, the city's general manager of recreation, parks, tourism and culture, Mackay said, "Ian's the guy who throws bullets, ducks bullets, and the guy you have all the fun with. It's been a long negotiating process and Ian represented your city very well."

MacKay said he and one of his partners, country music promoter Ron Sakamoto, 2006's international country music promoter of the year, leveraged the great success of last August's Country Rocks the Hill featuring Brooks and Dunn and Alan Jackson to get Hill and McGraw here.

MacKay also took time to dispel rumours about an August 18 show in Halifax. He explained that he had originally tentatively booked Moncton and Halifax for the Tim and Faith show on that date, "but now all other rumours you hear about concerts are null and void. The concert's going to happen here and it's going to be a big one."

Though the Magnetic Hill concert site could hold almost twice as many, "we're setting the hill up to do 50,000 people," Mackay said. "That's a huge number for us, a huge number for Nashville, and a huge number for Tim and Faith. We'd consider that a sold out show."

Landing such a major act is an obvious coup for the municipality, which has had its dominance of concert business threatened by Halifax and Charlottetown in the past year.

It also goes a long way to proving money spent on the Magnetic Hill site to land the Rolling Stones was a solid investment for the future, rather than money fed to a white elephant.

"Not too many councils would let a staff person lose three quarters of a million dollars on an event and then persevere and let us do two more." Fowler said to considerable and possibly nervous laughter.

By following up on the Stones with last year's country concert, the city managed to move the concert site into the black. Fowler predicted this summer's show would also end up on the positive side of the ledger. As well, he made a conservative estimate of $6 million in economic spin-offs for the community this year.

The city has set aside another $250,000 to upgrade the Magnetic Hill site this summer.

Tickets for the show go on sale Friday, April 13.

[ March 29, 2007, 07:39: Message edited by: Jesse-Joe ]

Jesse Joe
03-29-2007, 07:53 AM
Country Rocks tickets go on sale April 13

Tickets for Country Rocks the Hill 2007 will go on sale Friday. April 13 at 10 a.m.

There will be an opening special ticket price of $135, including taxes & service charges, for the first 25,000 fans.

After those first 25,000 sell (the tour's western Canadian dates each sold out in well under an hour and spawned extra shows), regular tickets will cost $165 including all taxes and fees. A limited number of VIP tickets are available for $215 tax and fees included.

VIP tickets promise prime stage viewing with access to the front of the stage, a souvenir Bud VIP chair to use and take home, VIP washrooms, and special food and beverage services. Unlike last year when minors weren't admitted, there will be no age restrictions on entrance to the VIP section.

Concert promoter Harold MacKay said the Magnetic Hill Concert Site will be configured to accommodate 50,000 people.

Tickets can be purchased in person at The Moncton Coliseum box office, on line at tickets.moncton.ca or by calling 1-888-720-5600.


Ticket Prices, $135.00, $165.00, & $215.00. Now that's really ludicrous Charlene... :eek:


I would pay that kind of money, to see John Mellencamp, front row centre. :rolleyes:


For Gordon Lightfoot our hero, it's priceless... ;)