and the tickets I got on the official day of sale, at noon, were literally the last row.
that could be all that was available, or you had bad ticket mojo that day. just because that's what you got doesn't mean that's all that was available to the public.
For the Nick Cave shows this summer, my observation is that literally half of the venue was sold before the "official" sale. Then why not sell all tickets at the "pre-sale" and call it a "sale"?
because then it wouldn't be a pre-sale. pre-sale = who can get in on it is somehow limited (need a password, info sent only to a certain mailing list, etc). it has nothing to do with what quantity of tickets are sold.
If it is the first two rows for the biggest fans, OK, but NOT half of the venue.
why not? there are no rules about a presale. i dunno, but seth seems to know a thing or two about running a concert production company and getting people to buy his tickets. i say we let seth do as he has done up until now