July 16, 2024
Episode

The Las Vegas Residency

The Las Vegas Residency
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This episode memo was brought to you by DICE.

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Today’s episode is about the Las Vegas concert residency. From Liberace to the Sphere, we’ve come a long way. To break it all down, I’m joined by Tati from MIDiA Research.

You can listen to the episode here or read below for a few highlights from our talk.

My heart will go on to sin city

Liberace’s residency crawled, so that Celine Dion’s residency could walk, so that the modern pop star residencies could run.

Celine Dion changed Las Vegas the way that Spider-Man (2002) changed Hollywood. It approached an opportunity that many thought was risky and opened doors for a new generation. Before Spidey, superhero movies were in an awkward spot after the mess that was 1997’s Batman & Robin. Similarly, Las Vegas residencies were seen as the place where an artist’s career went to die. But their breakthrough impact was like an economic stimulus package for their respective fields.

A New Day… grossed around $530,000 per show for over 700 shows in its three-year run for several thousand fans per night.

It was the perfect timing for Celine too. She wasn’t a heritage act like Wayne Newton. But Celine was still at a different stage in her career. It was no longer 1998 when “My Heart Will Go On” was the biggest song in the world. She leaned into the Vegas opportunity before others did. She had the early-mover advantage on her side. The only other shows in town were male crooners who were old enough to be her father.

One of the reasons Celine’s first residency did so well is because she was the only show in town for the (relatively) younger crowd. There was less supply of superstar musicians for Vegas tourists to choose from. Now, a music fan could have gone to Las Vegas on February 2, 2024, and had their choice between shows by Adele, Bruno Mars, U2, and Christina Aguilera, plus all of the artists who made surprise appearances at club shows, pool parties, private events, and more.

Celine’s attraction was also validated by Caesars Palace, where she performed both of her residencies at The Colosseum. From The Daily Beast:

“Our very best customers are planning trips to see Celine,” says Caesars President Gary Selesner. “You can go in any bar anywhere in the world—Tanzania, Shanghai—and that song [‘My Heart Will Go On’] will be playing.”

Caesars Palace and other casinos love residencies because these customers increase “the drop.” Here’s a piece from a friend of the pod, Zack O’Malley Greenburg, from a 2013 article he wrote while at Forbes:

“Any star’s fee to play Las Vegas is fair because, bluntly, the casino promoters are not particularly concerned with who is on stage or in the ring,” says lawyer Bernie Resnick. “What casinos care about is whether the presence of the star will increase their nightly gambling profits, known as the ‘drop.’ If the star significantly increases the drop, the casino is justified in sparing no expense to stage a spectacular event.”

Celine Dion’s two residencies have grossed over $681 million in total. The drop for Caesars Palace was likely in the billions. The broader impact for the city overall might need another comma to track the full impact. Since artists like Adele and U2 now gross millions per Vegas show, the demand will continue to grow.

The Vegas lifestyle

Here’s a 2003 quote from Celine Dion when she started her initial Las Vegas residency:

“I can actually lead a pretty normal life in Las Vegas,” she told The Mail on Sunday in 2003. “Yes, I will be a performer, but I’ll also be a wife and mother…During the day I will be with my family, then I will perform and then go home to my bed and my husband. I will cook and clean and make cookies for my boy. It’s perfect.”

It’s quite similar to Adele’s rationale in 2021 for starting her residency in Vegas. From The Guardian:

“It adds up to an obvious choice for Adele. Las Vegas is fairly close to her home base of Los Angeles, where she co-parents her son Angelo with her ex-husband Simon Konecki, and she has said, even on stage, that she is not well suited to touring vast venues.”

And while Celine’s first residency was a five-night-a-week commitment that required her to move to Vegas, Weekends with Adele is a weekend drive from Los Angeles. She does her shows and then heads back to the family during the week. There’s a lot for the modern pop star to enjoy.

But even though the Vegas concert residency life has opened up for acts much younger in their career, it is a position that still needs to be earned.

The Vegas residency is close to the bottom of an artist’s funnel. If music streams are at the top for awareness, and festival runs are in the middle to build interest, then a Vegas residency is as big of a commitment as there is. It’s a high-priced ticket item where fans travel to an expensive city and book their weekend around the artist’s show.

This is how music tourism works. The big music stars first build their fanbase by being a tourists in your city and performing for your community. Then, if the artist grows that fanbase enough, those fans may eventually come to see them in a set location. And since you—the fan—likely have more money than you had when you first became a fan, you’re more willing to pay up for an expensive show and all the glitz and glamour that surround it.

Adele had done several tours for over a decade before she started her Vegas residency. Celine Dion had toured nearly every year of her 1990s commercial peak leading up to A New Day residency. These artists built the fanbase, then the fanbase came to them.

How residencies work in other cities

Vegas is far from the only city for artists to do residencies. Billy Joel has had a residency at Madison Square Garden for a decade. Last year, Harry Styles did 15 shows at MSG as well. Michael Jackson had planned to do an extensive residency in 2009 at O2 in London before he passed away.

Other cities, from Riyadh to Abu Dhabi, to Miami to Los Angeles, will likely put their name in this mix. But Vegas has the agglomeration of entertainment and excess, compressed in a compact area, designed to capture your attention.

A Vegas residency can attract the impromptu high roller who’s up $5,000 from blackjack and wants to go all out that night. A bachelorette party likely has a few people who show up a day or two early. If they’re looking for something fun to do before the rest of the party shows up, a Vegas residency is perfect. It’s an easy city to fly to, with plenty of cheap flights, and a short trip from your hotel to the airport. As Tati called out in our episode, Vegas has become everything that Warren Beatty dreamed of in Bugsy.

Listen to the episode for more on:

– the economics of the Sphere
– Vegas’ changing demographics
– the economics for Vegas hotels

Our Chartmetric stat of the episode:

A few months before Usher first announced his first Las Vegas residency in May 2020, his average Chartmetric Artist Rank was #132 out of all the artists in the world. Today, he’s #44, with an upcoming performance in that same city on the biggest artist stage in entertainment, the Super Bowl halftime show.

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Dan Runcie
Founder of Trapital
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Hip-hop mirrors the business world in a lot of ways. While I’ve always thought and known that, it’s great to see those ideas brought to life by someone so knowledgeable about both of those things. Huge fan of Trapital.
PPLS CHAMP
Looking forward to future episodes of Trapital. I’ve been following the newsletters for awhile and always learn something new that’s relevant to hip hop and business. Great job getting the nuggets of info from Matthew Knowles on the 1st episode, can’t wait until the next one!
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Samu Rast
A good friend of mine put me on this podcast and it took me some time to tap in, but once I did, I couldn’t stop listening! Dan has a talent for pulling out the narratives between lines, connecting it to the culture and then making it make sense. I’m a loyal subscriber and am thankful for the podcast!
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I am a real estate investor and came across this podcast after a recommendation from a friend who shares my loves for both hip hop and business. Often, those two interests have such polar opposite “voices” - but Dan’s podcast brings those two together for me. The result is magical. Great guests, too!
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As a guy who came up in NYC during the late 90s / early 2000s rap scene, I appreciate the history revisited by Dan, who obviously has an authentic and unique perspective on the culture. But he’s not only a hip hop historian; he’s also a visionary of art, technology and culture who curates other trend setters from across the globe. Salute!
Mrkamal
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I stumbled upon this podcast by learning about Dan / Trapital via LinkedIn. I listen to A LOT of podcasts and I decided to give it a listen. First, Dan has a calm and authentic demeanor, which are great qualities. When he’s talking to his guests it’s very conversational and easy flowing. I’m a former music industry vet so the topics are right up my alley.
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