Neil Young is heading to the AVA at Casino del Sol on Oct. 6 and if you weren't paying close enough attention when the show was announced last week, you missed out on snagging a reserved seat ticket when they went on sale Saturday.
You can still get a spot in the pit — that standing-room-only space in front of the stage where you are so close to the 1970s rocker you stand a good chance of being splashed by the band's sweat — but it will cost you dearly: Pit tickets are $150 a pop, which explains why there are still 41 left as of Tuesday afternoon.
There are plenty of $50 lawn seats and a handful — by that we mean a total of 30 — reserved seats left. Click here to buy and browse.
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Neil Young + Promise of the Real are coming here months after the release of "The Monsanto Years," an album that continues the 70-year-old Canadian-born rocker's quest for harmony on the planet.
The fact he's selling out so early should surprise no one. It's been 30 years since Young was last in Tucson, according to an archive of his set lists on Sugar Mountain, a digital compilation of Young's setlists dating back decades.
Apparently Young has played just two Tucson shows in his career that goes back to the early 1960s. His first was in 1973, post-Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, when he was setting out and establishing himself as a solo artist.

