Concert residency

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A concert residency[1][2][3][4][5] (also known as musical residency or simply residency) is a series of concerts, similar to a concert tour, but only performed at one location.[6][7] Pollstar Awards defined residency as a run of 10 or more shows at a single venue.[8] An artist who performs on a concert residency is called a resident performer.[9][10] Concert residencies have been the staple of the Las Vegas Strip for decades, pioneered by singer-pianist Liberace in the 1940s and Frank Sinatra with the Rat Pack in the 1950s.

According to Billboard, Celine Dion's A New Day... is the most successful concert residency of all time, grossing over US$385 million ($439.37 million in 2021 dollars)[11] and drawing nearly three million people to 717 shows. This commercial success was credited for changing and revitalizing Las Vegas residencies, which were once known as where singers go when their careers are in decline. Céline Dion is further recognized as the "Queen of Las Vegas".[12][13][14]

History

According to The Guardian, the concept of a concert residency was established by pianist and singer Liberace with a 1944 debut in Las Vegas.[15] Nearly ten years later, Liberace had his own show at the Riviera Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, which reportedly earned "Mr. Showtime" around $50,000 per week. After years of pursuing other projects in Los Angeles, he returned to Vegas residency and earned around $300,000 a week until he died of AIDS in 1987.[16] CeeLo Green held his 2013 residency, CeeLo Green Presents Loberace, as a tribute to Liberace.[17][18]

The Sands Hotel and Casino (1959), where Frank Sinatra was its headlining resident performer.

Liberace's 1944 debut was followed by Frank Sinatra with the Rat Pack, and Elvis Presley.[15] In April 1956, Presley began a two-week concert residency at the New Frontier Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, following the release of his self-titled debut album. His shows were poorly received by the conservative, middle-aged hotel guests[19]—"like a jug of corn liquor at a champagne party," wrote a critic for Newsweek.[20] From 1969 to 1976, Presley performed 837 consecutive sold-out shows at the Hilton Las Vegas, which has since been renamed the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino.[21]

Kurt Melien, vice president of entertainment at Caesars Palace, explained that "Historically, Vegas residencies were more a loss leader event – famous artists playing in small showrooms just to draw in the gambling crowds."[22] In the live music world, Las Vegas used to be known as the place where singers went to die, where they could earn a crust in their twilight years entertaining tourists on the Strip alongside magicians like David Copperfield, or Siegfried & Roy.[22] Music journalist Jim Farber stated, "There used to be a certain element of cheesiness to playing in Vegas. I talked to Cher about that, and she referred to it as an 'elephant graveyard where talent goes to die' — and she was speaking of herself."[23]

Celine Dion revitalized residencies in the 21st century, with the success of her A New Day... residency (2003–2007). Her residency introduced a new form of theatrical entertainment, a fusion of song, performance art, innovative stage craft, and state-of-the-art technology. She managed to popularize the Las Vegas residency as a desirable way for top artists to essentially tour in place, letting their fans come to them. Kurth Meline explained, "Celine was a pioneer without question. Twenty years ago, we couldn't have got someone the stature of Britney Spears to appear in Vegas. Stars like her would never have considered it if Celine hadn't paved the way. She changed the face of modern Vegas." Dion returned to Las Vegas with her second residency, Celine, and performed her record-breaking 1000th show on October 8, 2016.[24]

During the 2010s, many other major performers have followed and accepted residency offers.[25] These include a variety of performers from EDM DJs such as Tiesto and Calvin Harris, [26] rock bands such as Def Leppard and Aerosmith,[27] to hip hop acts such as Drake and Cardi B.[28][29] By 2017, a tenth of Forbes Celebrity 100 had signed a residency contract in Las Vegas.[30]

Venue

Las Vegas has become the center of concert residencies for decades.[1] New York City has also grown as a destination residency, beginning with Billy Joel at the Madison Square Garden in 2014.[31] American rock band Phish also performed 13-shows residency at the same venue, from July 21 to August 6, 2017. Bruce Springsteen held his 2017–18 residency, Springsteen on Broadway, at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York City.[1] In August and September 2007, O2 Arena in London held 21 Prince shows.[32] From January to March 2009, Luis Miguel played a run of 25 shows at Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City. Michael Jackson had scheduled 50 concerts in 2009 at The O2 Arena in London, but they were cancelled due to his death.

Boxscore

File:Caesars Palace Las Vegas 01.jpg
Celine Dion's residencies at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace generated $681 million, more than any other acts in history.

One of the most successful residencies in history was Elvis Presley's 636 consecutive shows at the International and Las Vegas Hilton from July 1969 through December 1976.[33] However, the boxscore data for his residency is unavailable. According to Billboard, Celine Dion's A New Day... is the most successful concert residency of all time, grossing over US$385 million ($439.37 million in 2021 dollars)[11] and drawing nearly three million people to 717 shows.[34] Her second residency, Celine, is the second most successful one, generating $296 million from a total of 427 shows between 2011 and 2019. These two residencies made Dion the highest-grossing resident performer of all time.[35]

Following Celine Dion, Elton John has become the second most successful concert resident performer, whose The Red Piano residency grossed a reported $169 million between 2004 and 2009.[36] Another top-selling residency was Britney Spears's Britney: Piece of Me, which began in December 2013 and ended on December 31, 2017,[37] grossing over U$137 million.[38]

Outside of Las Vegas, Bruce Springsteen grossed over $113 million with 236 shows of his New York residency Springsteen on Broadway.[39][40] Billy Joel has grossed nearly $130 million with his ongoing monthly residency at the Madison Square Garden since 2014.[41]

List of residencies with over $100 million gross
Rank Actual gross Adjusted gross
(in 2024 dollar)
Artist Residency title Venue Year(s) No. of
shows
Average gross
per show
Ref.
1 $385 million $439.37 million Celine Dion A New Day... The Colosseum at Caesars Palace 2003–2007 714 0.53 million [34]
2 $296 million $296 million Celine 2011–2019 427 0.65 million [35]
3 $169 million $186.41 million Elton John The Red Piano 2004–2009 248 0.68 million [36]
4 $137 million $137 million Britney Spears Britney: Piece of Me Zappos Theater 2013–2017 248 0.55 million [38]
5 $131 million $131 million Elton John The Million Dollar Piano The Colosseum at Caesars Palace 2011–2018 189 0.69 million [42]
6 $129.9 million $129.9 million Billy Joel Billy Joel in Concert Madison Square Garden 2014– 59 2.2 million [41]
7 $113 million $113 million Bruce Springsteen Springsteen on Broadway Walter Kerr Theatre 2017–2018 236 0.48 million [40]
8 $101.9 million $101.9 million Jennifer Lopez Jennifer Lopez: All I Have Zappos Theater 2016–2018 120 0.85 million [42]

References

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External links