` Drummer Reveals Bret Michaels Wanted '$6 For Every $1'—Poison Tour Dead - Ruckus Factory

Drummer Reveals Bret Michaels Wanted ‘$6 For Every $1’—Poison Tour Dead

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Fans of the glam metal band Poison had high hopes for a 40th anniversary tour in 2026, envisioning packed arenas echoing with hits like “Every Rose Has Its Thorn.” The original lineup, together since 1983, seemed poised for a nostalgic triumph, but a bitter pay dispute shattered those plans, leaving promoters and supporters stunned.

Origins in the Shadows

Bobby Dall C C DeVille Bret Michaels and Rikki Rockett from left of L A s Poison You have to live up to the hype
Photo by Marsha Traeger Los Angeles Times on Wikimedia

Poison traces its roots to Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1983, where Bret Michaels, Bobby Dall, and Rikki Rockett formed the group initially as Paris. Seeking fame, they moved to Los Angeles, replaced their guitarist with C.C. DeVille, and hustled through the club circuit. Enigma Records eventually signed them, launching their rise amid the gritty ’80s glam metal scene.

Rise to Arena Stardom

Fans enjoying a live rock concert, capturing moments with cell phones.
Photo by Konstantin Mishchenko on Pexels

The band’s 1986 debut album, “Look What the Cat Dragged In,” ignited their breakthrough with tracks like “Talk Dirty to Me” and “I Want Action.” Their 1988 follow-up, “Open Up and Say… Ahh!,” cemented fame through the ballad “Every Rose Has Its Thorn.” Internal drama marked the era, including DeVille’s firing and rehiring, yet the core quartet endured, building pressure for a milestone celebration after four decades intact.

The Pay Dispute Unravels

Negotiations for the 2026 U.S. tour collapsed in January over Bret Michaels’ demand for $6 for every $1 going to the others, as revealed by drummer Rikki Rockett. In Los Angeles meetings, DeVille, Dall, and Rockett agreed to equal revenue splits from a lucrative arena offer, but Michaels’ position halted progress. Rockett described the ask as unworkable, saying it felt impossible to labor for someone else’s outsized gain, though he expressed no lasting resentment, comparing it to family friction.

Fan Fallout and Rival Gains

Energetic rock band performance with striking stage lights and silhouettes
Photo by Dustin Tray on Pexels

American audiences in cities like Los Angeles and New York now face empty slots where Poison’s shows were expected, disrupting the classic rock circuit reliant on reunion draws. Rivals such as Mötley Crüe and Def Leppard seize the opportunity with their own anniversary tours, while global fans in Europe and Australia lament the ripple effect on potential worldwide legs. Nostalgia events scramble to fill voids left by the rare intact ’80s lineup.

Looking Ahead Amid Fractures

Rikki Rockett with POISON at the Moondance Jam on July 11, 2008 in Walker, Minnesota.
Photo by PHOTO BY MATT BECKER wwwmelodicrockconcertscom matt melodicrockconcertscom on Wikimedia

Rockett plans to honor the debut album’s 40th through his side project Rocket Mafia, keeping some celebration alive without the full band. He holds faint hope for a 41st anniversary tour in 2027 if finances align, even teasing a last-resort singer swap, though industry observers doubt reconciliation given rock history and past tensions like DeVille’s ouster. Michaels remains publicly silent, thriving in his solo ventures, as no legal actions have surfaced despite contract risks. Rising costs, up 20% in fuel since 2020, underscore pressures on aging acts, where even splits often sustain operations. Poison’s standoff highlights how financial rifts test enduring bonds, raising questions about whether nostalgia can overcome such divides in classic rock’s later years.

Sources:
Blabbermouth Jan 2026 Poison tour cancellation report
Fox News Jan 2026 Bret Michaels pay demand coverage
Loudwire Jan 2026 Rikki Rockett interview
Page Six Jan 2026 Poison dispute reporting
Rolling Stone Jan 2026 40th anniversary tour analysis
Parade Jan 2026 Bret Michaels statement