Depeche Mode’s Global Spirit Tour To Return To UK And Ireland In November
After European and North American Tours, Depeche Mode to Return for Four Arena Shows in UK and Ireland
Following an incredible, sold-out homecoming show on Saturday night at London Stadium, Depeche Mode are excited to announce that they will return to the UK and Ireland for four indoor shows in November of 2017. The tour of Ireland and the UK will kick off November 15 at Dublin’s 3Arena before continuing to Manchester, Birmingham and London.
November 15 – Dublin, Ireland – 3Arena
November 17 – Manchester, UK – Manchester Arena
November 19 – Birmingham, UK – Barclaycard Arena
November 22 – London, UK – O2 Arena
Tickets for all four shows go on sale this Friday, June 9. Visit Depeche Mode’s tour page for ticket details.
Hi
Due to the corrupt systems that allow non DM fans to get access to tickets before genuine fans. My daughter who is 12 really wants to go to one of the London shows but I already know that I will have no fair chance of being able to get a seated ticket near the stage. In recent years I have been at my pc ready to purchase the tickets possible on time but at 1 minute past there is no availabilit availability. My daughter is too young to stand and it would not be safe. What can I do? There was a fair system put in place for fans in America. What aboutus. I have been going since 1982 but now it’s just so hard to get the right tickets.
I’m in the US. LosAngeles to be exact.
I can assure you that the system was not fair
and basically a way to get DM Devotees
to purchase CDs and LPs to bump up their
“spot” for sales on line. They also used fans to
promote on social media this apparent “spot.”
When it came time to purchase I was told I was
in top 50 tickets in LA. Yet when it came time to
purchase I was locked out first 10 minutes of
Ticketmaster sales. And any decent-somewhere
near the front” were either taken or $900 a ticket.
That’s great that dome DM fans can afford it but c’mon.
I’ve been a DM lover for 33 years now and the concert
Ticket buying turned horrible in late 90s. It sucks.
I guess I’m sharing to let you know there’s never a
fair method put in place- only ways you’re used…
And I especially don’t blame the band at all.
Depeche Mode do so much on the side for their fans, sometimes
it boils down to just finding the right lottery ticket to buy. *sigh*
If you don’t already have the new album, I’ll send you
and your daughter a copy of the deluxe CD if you’d like it.
PM me here on twitter @ereynoldsla.
I’m in the US. LosAngeles to be exact.
I can assure you that the system was not fair
and basically a way to get DM Devotees
to purchase CDs and LPs to bump up their
“spot” for sales on line. The marketing company that
controled the sales also used fans to
promote on social media this apparent “spot” they’d “win”
A lot of us thought maybe we’d get VIP since we were in top 50.
When it came time to purchase I was told I was
in top 50 tickets in LA. Yet when it came time to
purchase I was locked out first 10 minutes of
Ticketmaster sales. And any decent-somewhere
near the front” were either taken or $900 a ticket.
That’s great that dome DM fans can afford it but c’mon.
I’ve been a DM lover for 33 years now and the concert
Ticket buying turned horrible in late 90s. It sucks.
I guess I’m sharing to let you know there’s never a
fair method put in place- only ways you’re used…
And I especially don’t blame the band at all.
Depeche Mode do so much on the side for their fans, sometimes
it boils down to just finding the right lottery ticket to buy. *sigh*
If you don’t already have the new album, I’ll send you
and your daughter a copy of the deluxe CD if you’d like it.
PM me here on twitter @ereynoldsla.
Apologies for posting twice.
I was trying to edit to be clear that ticket sales are
Outside marketing entities that them blame Ticketmaster
When we don’t get through in a matter that is timely.
Anyway let me know if you want CD. Cheers and bravo for raising your daughter with AWESOME and inspiring music 🎶👍🏽❣️
Yes, a ticket system was set in place for the US fans this time around, but quite honestly, I think it failed. Especially in big cities such as Los Angeles and New York. Fans bought crazy amounts of albums for a better spot in line without an equal positive outcome when tickets went on sale. It worked for some fans, but not for the majority I believe. So, how much was the actual ticket price for each fan when all was said and done? Who was the beneficiary of this marketing ticket system in the end? There are other better methods available. Steve, I wish you good luck this Friday!
The tickets for the London Stadium show didn’t seem too hard to get? I got standing ticket (with unreserved seating) and wasn’t the day of release. The seating was a free for all, but to be honest if you are there early enough you can get a great seat, the reserved seats are all really far away from stage anyway, wherever you sit you will be relying on screens to get a good look at the band.