click on the link for a picture, but story follows (was wrong, 11:45am vs. 10:45)
http://www.telluridenews.com/articles/2012/01/10/news/doc4f0b9f0d9182b696659389.txtTelluride Bluegrass Festival locals passes sell out in less than three hours
By Kathrine Warren
Staff Reporter
Published: Tuesday, January 10, 2012 6:08 AM CST
At 5:30 a.m. on Monday, Darcie and Ginny Gordon set up two camp chairs in front of the Telluride Music Company. It was a chilly 15 degrees outside, but Darcie was determined to secure four-day passes to the Telluride Bluegrass Festival this summer.
“It was very cold, and we were kind of lonely,” Ginny said later in the day with a laugh. Darcie held down the fort while Ginny went back home to make breakfast. Soon enough they were joined by a few more people and by 9 a.m. a low-key line of 20 to 30 people was queued up in the bitter cold in front of the store.
Within a few hours, all of the 450 locals four-day passes that were available at the music store were snapped up. And with that, four-day passes to the festival are officially gone, signifying a record-breaking sellout for the summertime music festival. (Single-day tickets will be available later in the spring).
Dave and Karen Lamb, owners of the Telluride Music Company, said they opened the store an hour early at 9 a.m. because it was so cold outside. They sold their last ticket by 11:45 a.m. Tickets were priced at $180 (a $15 discount) and locals had to show proof of their 81435 residency. Locals were limited to two tickets each.
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Planet Bluegrass had bumped the locals sale to January from March this year in response to the searing pace of pass sales. All other four-day passes were sold out by last week.
“It’s not totally surprising, given that these are the only four-day passes left in the world,” said Planet Bluegrass’ Director of Communications Brian Eyster of Telluride’s sale.
It was another chapter in what has shaped up to be a year of historic ticket sales for the Bluegrass Festival. Discounted holiday tickets, which usually sell out in mid-January, sold out in two hours last month. The bluegrass.com webserver received more than four times more online users than its busiest day ever. And Planet Bluegrass had 50 percent more entries in its Town Park camping lottery than last year.
Last year four-day passes were sold out by the end of March, and the folks at Planet Bluegrass have been working since to adjust to the unprecedented ticket demands.
Locals passes have historically been released in March while merchant passes were up for grabs in early April. This year, Planet Bluegrass did away with the merchant pass program and made 250 more passes available for sale on Monday at the music company.
Karen Lamb said in past years they used to return leftover locals passes to the festival because they rarely sold out.
She said everyone on Monday was very grateful to be able to buy a pass. As the line died down, the last person in line got the last ticket.
“It wasn’t like we had a huge line of people that we had to say ‘go away,’” Lamb said. “That would have been hard.”
Eyster said Planet Bluegrass is not pushing the festival to new audiences this year and the unparalleled sell-out is due to a new “word of mouth frenzy about the festival.
“We’re on all these new radars that we’ve never been on before,” Eyster said.
Festival organizers would rather not sell out so early because festivarians and Telluride locals are being shut out of tickets since they’re accustomed to buying passes in May or June, he said.
Eyster said it’s been heartbreaking fielding calls from longtime festival patrons who did not get passes in time.
There’s still one more chance for people to get into Town Park during the summer solstice weekend in June, and that’s when single-day tickets are released.
Eyster said they will go on sale as soon as the festival confirms a daily schedule for the main headliners. Tickets will be $65 per day and sold online at bluegrass.com. (The Daily Planet will let readers know when those tickets are about to go on sale.)
Gordon said the new pace of ticket sales for the festival is concerning.
“I don’t know what the festival is going to do,” she said. “Telluride locals are the heart and soul of the festival. Planet Bluegrass needs to come up with a plan to allow a longer amount of time and more tickets for locals.”
The 2012 Telluride Bluegrass Festival is scheduled for June 21-24.