Almost 2,000 extra Garth Brooks tickets are set to go on sale this Thursday ahead of the American superstar’s September concerts.
The Friends in Low Places crooner is giving fans a second shot at nabbing tickets as part of his five night run, which he says are set to be “the best seats in the house” to one of his shows.
As previously revealed by The Star, Garth is selling the remainder of his production tickets, which were allocated for fans who will be featured during the sweeping shots for his Netflix show.
Read More: Garth Brooks to release extra 1,500 tickets for his five concerts at Croke Park
Speaking to Ray D’Arcy on RTE Radio One today, Garth said: “You can’t come to Ireland without bringing every piece of camera film capturing any devices, audio, is because it's the place on the planet to play.
“So I don't know if you guys know this but it's, it's like heaven for players. So we brought everything we can to capture this.
"And so when you do you reserve some spaces, because there's gonna be people sitting behind cameras and then once you lay it out now that you know where people are going to be and what stage looks like, then all of a sudden there'll be some tickets that you held so you aren't in people's way that now ends up to be the best seats in the house.
“So it's, it's pretty cool. I love production releases because it gives the people who didn't get a chance to get them that waited and waited like everybody else but just didn't get the luck of the draw. Now it gives them a chance to get even better seats.”
The country music singer is due to play five-nights in Croke Park on September 9, 10, 11, 16 and 17.
The lucky punters will likely end up in some scenes of his Netflix special documented his road to Croke Park.
The tickets will go on sale at 8am from Ticketmaster.
Meanwhile, Garth told Moncrieff on Newstalk that this will be his last stadium show as he wants to give his band and crew a break to be with their families.
"I know, as guys, we're not supposed to say 'size matters' - but it does man.
"It's unbelievable to hear that many people sing The River, or that many people sing Friends in Low Places.
"It's just crazy - but the truth is the band and crew, I've never seen them this busy.
"But this is for every gig that you play, the crew's got seven days invested in and out of it.
"And then they've got to go to the next city and do the same thing: right now's a perfect example: these guys haven't been home in four months.
"I think you want to take your band and crew into consideration - this is the best time of their lives.
"They've got kids graduating high school, they have all the proud moments as parents.
"So we'll do our thing - and my thing has never been the amount of people, it's all been the sincerity of who's there."
'Start the grassroots all over again'
But he said the venue is not what makes the show.
"You can find that in dive bars, you can find it in arenas, you can find it in fairs.
"It would be nice to kind of just start the grassroots thing kind of all over again.
"Now what's fun about it is when you did this before, you had one single out - well now you have a whole catalogue of songs.
"And not just a catalogue of songs: a catalogue of songs that it's proven that people know every word to it".
Garth says it's important not to get caught up in awards and gold records.
"I think it's just getting the music to the people and how do you do it? That's it.
"The whole thing is sincerity... it doesn't matter if there's five people or 500,000, as long as the sincerity is there.
"What I love about that is it opens up all windows, all types - this dive bar has really opened my eyes to what music is all about.
"And it's all about how you feel when you're playing it.
"We get so caught up in doing this for a living and the gold records and the charts and all this stuff.
"It's so neat to be reminded that music has no price tag on it - that's a sweet, sweet thing when you get caught up in this business".
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