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Reel Big Fish Tickets



These are the dates we have for Reel Big Fish

 
Reel Big Fish tickets

Viagogo

However you can buy Reel Big Fish tickets now through Gigantic's ticket resale partner, viagogo. Where we don't have tickets to sell directly, we recommend viagogo for safe and secure access to the tickets you want.

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Why have Gigantic partnered with viagogo?

We'd love to have tickets to sell to everyone who visits us, but it's not always possible. Sometimes we don't get an allocation of tickets to sell. Sometimes we sell out in next to no time. We recognize that people will still want to go and see their favourite bands, and will try to get tickets wherever they can.

Unfortunately there are some unscrupulous people out there who take advantage of this, and take people's money (often lots of it) for fake or non-existent tickets. We've seen people's heartbreak at gigs first hand, but don't just take our word for it. In a survey by the Office Of Fair Trading, 1 in 12 ticket buyers admitted to being caught out by scam ticket websites, losing an average of £80 each*.

viagogo offers a safe and secure alternative. It's Europe's largest online ticket exchange, allowing fans to buy and sell tickets directly. viagogo guarantees that you'll get the tickets you ordered in time for the event, or your money back in full.

* Online survey of 3,000 UK consumers. Research data released 10 September 2009.

What will tickets cost?

The ticket price is set by the seller. For sold out shows, ticket prices will reflect demand, so they're likely to be higher than the face value. But there are also bargains to be had!


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REEL BIG FISH BIOGRAPHY

Reel Big Fish is a southern California ska punk band who broke into the mainstream in the mid to late 1990s.

Their debut album, Everything Sucks, was an underground hit and led to a deal with Mojo Records, an indie label. Turn the Radio Off established the band in the underground music scene, and they began touring throughout the USA. After the single Sell Out began breaking into the mainstream, including MTV, the album made an appearance on the charts. The ska revival was short-lived, however, and 1998's Why Do They Rock So Hard? did not lead the group to the mainstream.

Reel Big Fish released Cheer Up in 2002, which begins a movement into harder rock and pop sounds, with much less ska than the previous albums. The song Where Have You Been? was aimed at a wider audience, trying to drop the less popular ska sound, but was met with little mainstream success, despite the video. Their second most recent album was We're Not Happy Until You're Not Happy and again, not quite a ska album as a whole, but seeing RBF continue in their brand of rock with horns. It's apparent on the album that they are having fun with what they're doing.

Read more at: http://www.last.fm/music/Reel+Big+Fish/+wiki.




       



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