25 July 2025
WE ALWAYS HAVE TO MAKE THINGS COMPLICATED (THE OFFICIAL UNOFFICIAL)
22 July 2025
THE WAITING ROOM
(in case you wonder why)
Once the last Left of the Dial tickets are sold, you can sign up for our waiting list.
The one thing we’ve learned from organising shows and festivals, is that the very minute you sell the final ticket, someone will call you in total disbelieve that they can’t buy a ticket anymore. Despite all warnings and numerous low-ticket alerts, they are completely taken by surprise that events actually sell out and that there’s no secret stash of tickets especially for people like them.
So, to be clear, when Left of the Dial is sold out, that’s it. Hate to say I told you so, no more tickets.
You might wonder: then why on earth sign up for a waiting list?
We fully understand that it doesn’t make much sense to have a waiting list for a very much and definitely sold-out festival, so please allow us to explain.
All bands get a couple of guest list spots for friends or family. Sometimes they want to bring more people who are important to them, so we always reserve a number of tickets they can buy. If a band doesn’t need these, the tickets go back on sale.
We do this every year, you just wouldn’t normally notice. But this is the first time it looks like Left of the Dial will sell out before the lineup is complete, so we can’t yet say how many artists will use their reserved tickets.
It’s possible we’ve set aside too many. And if that’s the case, we’ll let everyone on the waiting list know.
We’re not clairvoyant though, so we can’t promise anything.
Big love,
The fugazis of Left of the Dial
5 July 2025
SIZE SHOULDN'T MATTER
(attendees versus attendances)
More true than ever: you can easily skip this post and not miss any essential festival information. It’s just another one of those weekend long-reads about something probably only we care about.
We’ve always felt that ‘but everybody does it’ is a bad excuse for anything, but apparently sometimes it’s an unavoidable one.
Although tickets aren’t selling extremely fast at the moment, it looks like we’ll have a sold-out festival in October. This means we will have sold 4,000 three-day passes. Sure, that’s nothing compared to the size of the crowd a huge summer festival draws, but to us it’s kind of mind-blowing that so many individuals have already spent their hard-earned money to see mainly pretty much completely unknown bands in October.
However, we already know that by the end of the festival, we’ll send out a press release with a much higher number of attendees. Or rather: attendances.
We don’t know about other countries, but here in the Netherlands it’s become pretty standard not to count festival attendees, but attendances.
For example, Left of the Dial has sold 4,000 tickets to people who’ll attend the festival over three nights. That’s 12,000 attendances already. Each band brings some guests, we have volunteers who work one night and attend as punters the next, and a bunch of journalists come to Rotterdam to report on the festival... That easily brings the total to 15,000. Then we have Bands on a Boat, the music conference, the free daytime events... we could very well end up with over 20,000 attendances over the weekend.
Why on earth do we go to the trouble of counting in this odd way, you might wonder?
In the Netherlands, many festivals receive some form of funding. So do we. Less than Jeff Bezos earns in a minute, but still, Left of the Dial wouldn’t be possible without this financial assistance. Other festivals may also have sponsor deals, and both kinds of support are easier to secure if you manage to draw a sizable crowd. Usually bigger is better and generates more money.
So, as much as we feel that crowd size doesn’t matter, we’re sort of forced to join the whole attendees-versus-attendances hoopla. If only to be compared fairly to other festivals.
In other
words: everybody does it, so we do too.
But we felt
the least we could do was be honest about it.
Big love,
The mathematical magicians of Left of the Dial