Hamilton Journal News

Todd Rundgren finds way to ‘tour’ during COVID

- By George Varga The San Diego Union-Tribune

Connecting with his fans has never been a challenge for Todd Rundgren, who recently became a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominee for the third time in his storied career.

But connecting with fans for 25 concerts in 25 U.S. cities across four time zones, while performing all those concerts live from a single city with his nine-piece band, during a global pandemic? And gearing each of the 25 concerts to a different city, replete with backstage food catering featuring food specialtie­s from a different city each night?

That presents a challenge — make that a lot of challenges — even for a veteran maverick like Rundgren, who has been equally acclaimed as a solo artist, band leader, producer and all-around rock and pop visionary.

“When I do a tour, it’s a big deal for me, everybody involved and, I hope, the audience,” said Rundgren, whose “Clearly Human Virtual Tour” doesn’t so much set the bar higher as create a new bar altogether.

The tour began Feb. 12 in “Buffalo” and concludes Monday in “Seattle.” The quotation marks are used to denote the fact that each of these virtual tour dates actually feature Rundgren and his band performing livestream­ed concerts from the Chicago Theatre in Illinois.

The historic, 100-year-old venue has a capacity of 3,600. Because of COVID-19-related restrictio­ns in Chicago, the actual in-person attendance is limited to 30 fans at each performanc­e. That’s up from 19 when the virtual tour began a month ago.

Rundgren, who in the 1970s scored such Top 40 solo hits as “Can We Still Be Friends?” and “Hello It’s Me,” estimates he is investing about $1 million in the tour. He is producing it entirely himself and it is being livestream­ed by NoCap. Ticket prices range from $35 for one show to $149 for a fiveshow bundle, with a variety of other options, including online meet-and-greets with Rundgren.

For an extra $20 each, 150 fans per show can appear as a “virtual audience” on video panels set up in in front of the band — a move designed to foster real-time interactio­n. For staunch devotees, a handful of in-person tickets are available for each show, priced at $287.50 each, from clearlyhum­antickets.com. Attendees will need to provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken no more than 72 hours before the concert they attend.

All of this represents a major gamble for Rundgren, who has produced albums by Meat Loaf (the multiplati­num ”Bat Out of Hell”), Grand Funk Railroad (”We’re an American Band”), Patti Smith, Hall & Oates, XTC, New York Dolls and others. But creative gambles are nothing new for this seasoned risk-taker. He performed the first live interactiv­e TV concert back in 1978, created the first graphics tablet for Apple in 1979 and launched the first online direct artist subscripti­on service, “PatroNet,” in 1998.

‘No assurance’

“Well, I am a gambling person — I just don’t play in Las Vegas,” Rundgren said, speaking in a pre-virtual tour interview from his home in Kauai, Hawaii. “I’m doing these shows and hope they will succeed artistical­ly, first of all. And, secondly, that they won’t break me and that, in the end, I won’t lose money.

“It’s often a crap-shoot, even in non-pandemic times, because touring is a business that operates on the margins. In other words, all your profit usually ends up coming from just a couple of key shows. You can play 30 shows on a tour and most of that income goes to paying the bills. Only a couple of the shows pay your profits. And if you have two shows that fall through, there goes all your profit. If three shows get canceled, you are in the red.”

He chuckled.

“One of the upsides of doing this virtual tour is that

Recording artist Todd Rundgren performs with Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts on November 13, 2016 ,in Las Vegas, Nevada.

I won’t have any shows canceled, because I’ll be there for every show with my band in Chicago,” Rundgren continued.

“That was part of the basis for this virtual tour concept — the fact it’s getting more and more difficult to travel because of disruption­s and other climate-related things, like almost the entire state California being on fire last summer or half of Texas being underwater.

“But there is no assurance the audience will come out and that I don’t take a bath on this tour. So, it is a gamble from my standpoint. And we don’t have any track records of other virtual tours to look at as reference points. Other people have done one-off livestream­ed performanc­es. But doing 25 shows and narrowcast­ing them to specific cities and regions is not something anyone’s done before.”

A real bubble

A veteran of multiple world concert treks as a member of Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band, Rundgren has clearly done the work for his virtual tour.

He hired a director and four camera operators. Everyone in his band and production crew are regularly tested for COVID-19 by an on-site staff nurse. They are all living in a real, not virtual, bubble.

“We’ve more or less taken over two Residence Inns, one for the band and another for the crew,” Rundgren, 72, noted.

“Essentiall­y, everyone has an apartment with a full kitchen and a washer and dryer, so they can eliminate a lot of interactio­ns and contact with other people. Everyone goes from their room to the van, to the venue, and then back again. ...

“We don’t have any expectatio­ns, but maybe vaccines will become available to us at some time during our virtual tour and we’ll get vaccinated, which will set our minds at ease so we won’t have to be so paranoid. Until that happens, we have a stringent medical regimen in place.”

That regimen includes a provision to replace band members should any of them contract COVID-19 while in Chicago with Rundgren.

“We are fully aware of that potentiali­ty,” he said.

“The advantage is we don’t have to tear the stage set down every night and travel to 25 cities. Most times on tour, you perform for two hours and spend six to eight hours traveling to each show. We’ve eliminated the traveling, although — on balance — this is more difficult.

“We’re putting up local memorabili­a and the local newspaper for each show, and eating the food you would get there in that city. For us, each night is like self-hypnosis: ‘We’re not in Chicago, we’re in whatever locality the virtual tour is playing that night!’ ”

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