> A market with too few sellers gives those sellers price control.
There isn't a set amount of supply. Artists could (and do) easily add dates, increasing supply. Many events are bought by brokers and then end up selling below cost because a date was added, and there's just not enough demand to be able to charge premiums on the face value (which is almost never the purchase cost, because of additional fees during checkout).
People usually overestimate how much the brokers affect the ability to get tickets, and how many events that happens on. There are many things that contribute to low supply and high demand, but brokers are convenient villains to point to. Artists have full control over this, and they can often easily solve the problem by playing larger venues or multiple dates, but they don't because that might cut into profits if the venue doesn't sell out.
There isn't a set amount of supply. Artists could (and do) easily add dates, increasing supply. Many events are bought by brokers and then end up selling below cost because a date was added, and there's just not enough demand to be able to charge premiums on the face value (which is almost never the purchase cost, because of additional fees during checkout).
People usually overestimate how much the brokers affect the ability to get tickets, and how many events that happens on. There are many things that contribute to low supply and high demand, but brokers are convenient villains to point to. Artists have full control over this, and they can often easily solve the problem by playing larger venues or multiple dates, but they don't because that might cut into profits if the venue doesn't sell out.