The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Ticket sales hit at concert hall amid cash crisis

PERTH: City centre venue has only sold out once in a year

- ROSS GARDINER

Perth Concert Hall bosses have been told they have to start booking more popular acts after new figures showed the venue has hosted just one sold-out show since November.

The gig, by chart-topper Lewis Capaldi in May, was arranged by Perth Festival of the Arts and not by the concert hall’s operators Horsecross Arts.

The troubled arts charity brought in just under £650,000 through the sale of 31,382 tickets for feature performanc­es between April and September, a Freedom of Informatio­n request has revealed.

The figure was nearly £350,000 less than the total for the previous six months.

Around 40% of acts drew in less than a quarter of the venue’s 1,600 capacity audience.

The revelation comes just weeks after Perth and Kinross Council had to step in to bail out Horsecross after a spiralling cash crisis put staff wages at risk.

Alexander Stewart MSP said: (Horsecross) have to think about being more commercial and think about the future because the thought of losing our once thriving Perth art scene is simply not acceptable.”

Perth Concert Hall has hosted just one sold-out show since November, prompting fresh concerns about its management by Horsecross Arts.

The only act to fill the 1,600-capacity venue in that time was Lewis Capaldi in May – and that show was booked by Perth Festival of the Arts and not Horsecross itself.

The under-fire arts charity generated just under £650,000 through the sale of 31,382 tickets for feature performanc­es in the Mill Street hall’s Gannochy Auditorium between April and September, a Freedom of Informatio­n request has revealed.

The total plummeted by nearly £350,000 from the previous season.

Perth Festival of the Arts, run separately from Horsecross, generated more than a sixth of the auditorium’s revenue last season and made up around 14% of bookings over the six-month period.

The revelation comes just weeks after Perth and Kinross Council had to step in to bail out Horsecross after a spiralling cash crisis put staff wages at risk.

In August it emerged that the local authority had fast-tracked funding for Horsecross to ensure its 150-strong workforce got paid and appointed senior officials to try to get the business back on track.

The operators of Perth’s theatre and concert hall were told to turn around their performanc­e record and boost attendance figures in April, following serious concerns about poor financial management.

MSP Alexander Stewart said the latest attendance figures did not make good reading.

“Horsecross have to think about being more commercial and think about the future because the thought of losing our once-thriving Perth art scene is simply not acceptable,” he said.

Indie stars Ocean Colour Scene were the only act to come close to filling the Concert Hall, falling just short in July with their Scottish tour’s curtain-closer.

Seven other acts hit the 1,000 ticket mark, including Jimmy Carr, Jane MacDonald and UB40.

However almost 40% of the auditorium’s performers, including lunchtime concerts, drew in less than a quarter of the maximum capacity.

Folk stars from Scotland and Sweden, The Proclaimer­s and First Aid Kit, were the only other acts to draw in capacity crowds in the last year, both in late 2018.

Horsecross Arts said all of the available tickets had been snapped up for the next three nights in a row for Caputh comic Jim Smith’s trio of shows.

The organisati­on is also preparing for a confirmed full house when singer Jack Savoretti stops off in the Fair City in November.

Horsecross chairman Magnus Linklater said the team was looking at the positives.

“Perth Concert Hall had a busy summer with an exciting and eclectic range of concerts and events from big name stars to celebrated classical performers,” he said.

“We are looking forward with excitement to our traditiona­lly busy festive period with seasonal specials for music and theatre fans of all tastes and ages.”

“The thought of losing our oncethrivi­ng Perth art scene is simply not acceptable. MSP ALEXANDER STEWART

 ?? Picture: Kenny Smith. ?? The only act to fill the 1,600-capacity venue since November was Lewis Capaldi in May.
Picture: Kenny Smith. The only act to fill the 1,600-capacity venue since November was Lewis Capaldi in May.

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