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Concerts

Jack Antonoff Goes Off on Corporations That ‘Monopolize’ the Concert Industry: ‘Chill the F–k Out’

"I've seen it from every level," the Bleachers frontman told Hayley Williams in conversation.

Jack Antonoff attends the "Honey Don't!" red carpet at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 23, 2025 in Cannes, France.

Jack Antonoff attends the "Honey Don't!" red carpet at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 23, 2025 in Cannes, France.

Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images

Jack Antonoff is frustrated with the concert industry, which he says has fallen victim to large corporations trying to “monopolize the whole f–king thing.”

In a musicians-on-musicians conversation with Hayley Williams published by Rolling Stone on Thursday (Oct. 16), the Bleachers frontman opened up about the way he’s seen live music change for the worse over the years. “I’ve seen it from every level,” he told the Paramore bandleader. “What f–ks me off is, why is drawing a few hundred people not an honest living?”


“You and your band can’t turn a profit, and then we have to watch the companies that own all these rooms and monopolize the whole f–king thing and post billions of earnings,” he continued. “Chill the f–k out, it’s working. Everyone wants to come. It’s not total anarchy.”

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In response, Williams pointed out how major corporations co-opting the live music landscape has led to financial issues for smaller venues. “[It’s] killing me,” she told Antonoff. “My favorite street in Nashville has been just obliterated.”

“It’s so simple to me, and there’s one answer that’s never going to happen, which is [the corporations] have to make a little less money,” Antonoff replied. “I want everyone in that room [at a show] to feel like a f–king human being from beginning to end. I want it to be the best night ever. The last thing I want people to think about is how they’re treated. I remember growing up — a bad security guard? They’d be gone. It would never happen. There was such protection over the literal vibe.”

Antonoff is far from the only musician who has spoken out against unfair music industry standards, but he is one of the most vocal. In 2022, he called out venues for taxing artist merch, pointing out on X, “This is literally the only way you make money when you start out touring.”

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At the Grammys the following year, he shared his feelings on dynamic ticket pricing. “If I can go online and buy a car and have it delivered to my house, why can’t I buy a f–king ticket at the price that the artist wants it to be?” he told reporters at the time. “And you know the reason why. And it’s not ’cause of artists.”

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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Courtney Love and Hole perform at Magazzini Generali on February 19, 2010 in Milan, Italy.
Getty Images

Courtney Love and Hole perform at Magazzini Generali on February 19, 2010 in Milan, Italy.

Rock

Courtney Love Clarifies Melissa Auf der Maur Gig Talk — ‘No Hole Reunion’

After seeming to tease a comeback by her entire group, Love said she and her former bassist will definitely play "some shows, new songs" together.

Rumors of a full Hole reunion are, apparently, slightly exaggerated. After Courtney Love appeared to tease news of getting her 1990s grunge pop band together for their first performance since a one-off gig in 2012 in a cryptic post on Tuesday (March 3), the frontwoman clarified things on Thursday (March 5).

Popping the speculative balloon, Love explained that the “Malibu” band that has been on hiatus since 2002 is not getting pulled out of mothballs after all, but that she is planning some shows with former bassist Melissa Auf der Maur. The update came in the form of Love commenting in a SPIN magazine Instagram post about the news, in which she wrote “no Hole reunion.”

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