It’s a marvelous night for a moondance, if you can spare seven grand for you and your date.
A pair of “dynamically priced” seats in front of the stage were among the handful of tickets left Monday morning a couple of hours after tickets went on sale for Van Morrison’s two-night stand Oct 12 and 13 at Jimmy’s Jazz & Blues Club in Portsmouth.
By 9 a.m., only four tickets remained for the Saturday show. The best pair — right in front of the stage — were priced at $3,102.50 each (plus more than $500 in added fees per ticket.) The cheaper pair, not quite as exclusive, were $2,502.50. Only two remained for the Sunday show, at $2,250.
Lucky fans who had not already bought tickets through the club’s in-house pre-sales had a shot at 140 tickets reserved for the general public sale that started at 5 a.m. Average ticket price were about $300, and were as low as $100 for seats in an upstairs bar, according to Suzanne Bresette, who books shows for Jimmy’s.
The Morrison shows are the most expensive at the 312-seat music and dining venue since it opened in 2021 on Congress Street, where it previously hosted jazz icon Herbie Hancock, another high-price booking.
“We believe that the opportunity to see Van Morrison in a small, intimate venue such as Jimmy’s would be in high demand,” Bresette said Monday. “And so that is why we had confidence that we could charge the necessary ticket price.”
The necessary price to secure the booking with the Irish singer included setting aside some tickets that are commanding Taylor Swift-style prices.
“Van Morrison’s team required that a certain number be put on as dynamic pricing,” she said, referring to Ticketmaster’s variable pricing that is based on demand.
Tickets for the Morrison shows hit even loftier heights on the secondary market. The most expensive seats on StubHub were $8,861 each — or about $12,000 after fees.
A fantabulously expensive night to make romance.