The Bruce Springsteen fanzine Backstreets will shut down after 43 years.
The periodical, which has been protecting the singer and his E Road Band since 1980, is ready to shutter attributable to disillusionment over Ticketmaster’s dynamic pricing mannequin and what has been described as a “fan freeze out”.
Writer and editor-in-chief Christopher Phillips wrote in an editorial: “After 43 years of publishing in a single type or one other, by followers for followers of Bruce Springsteen, it’s with combined feelings that we announce Backstreets has reached the tip of the street.
“We’re immensely happy with the work Backstreets has executed, and we’re endlessly grateful to the worldwide group of fellow followers who’ve contributed to and supported our efforts all these years, however we all know our time has come.
“For those who learn the editorial Backstreets revealed final summer season within the aftermath of the U.S. ticket gross sales, you have got a way of the place our heads and hearts have been: dispirited, downhearted, and, sure, disillusioned. It is not a sense we’re in any respect accustomed to whereas anticipating a brand new Bruce Springsteen and the E Road Band tour…
“There is no denying that the brand new ticket worth vary has in and of itself been a figuring out think about our outlook because the 2023 tour approached — definitely when it comes to the expertise that hardcore followers have been accustomed to for, as Springsteen famous, 49 years. Six months after the onsales, we nonetheless confronted this three-part predicament: These are live shows that we will hardly afford; that lots of our readers can’t afford; and {that a} good portion of our readership has misplaced curiosity in consequently.”
Bruce beforehand defended ticket costs for his excursions and insisted they had been aggressive.
He mentioned: “So this tour, we mentioned ‘Hey, the blokes are of their 70s. I’m 73. Do what all people else is doing who’re my friends. They mainly went out and there have been quite a lot of issues being executed and that’s what they did. Most of my tickets are completely inexpensive. There’s a very excessive vary.
“Let’s say this: I can set the worth of my tickets. I can’t set their worth — and so there are tickets that get valued at that amount of cash and go for that amount of cash the entire time and that cash will get sucked up by the ticket brokers. I mentioned, ‘Hey, let’s have the cash go to the blokes who’re sweating up on stage for 3 hours.’ If that’s controversial for you, I don’t know what to say.”