2019 Woodstock tickets may cost less than previously announced, Woodstock co-founder and 50th anniversary festival organizer Michael Lang now says.

Woodstock 50 is scheduled for Aug. 16-18 at Watkins Glen International in Upstate New York with a lineup that includes Jay-Z, Santana, Miley Cyrus, The Killers, Chance the Rapper, John Fogerty, Janelle Monae, Dead & Company, Halsey, and Imagine Dragons. Original investor Dentsu Aegis Network attempted to “cancel” the three-day event after capacity was reduced to 75,000, but Lang won a court battle this week to continue with the show.

The Poughkeepsie Journal reports Lang appeared on SiriusXM this week to give an update after the partial victory in New York State Supreme Court. Dentsu doesn’t have to return $17.8 million to the festival account and doesn’t have to continue funding the event, but Lang says a new financial backer is lined up and will be announced soon.

“We have an amazing production partner coming in, we’ll announce in a week or so, which I think will surprise everybody. It’s been an unbelievable ride," Lang told SiriusXM Volume hosts Ni Carter and Lori Majewski on their satellite radio show “Feedback.”

Lang also said that Woodstock 50 tickets will cost less than $400 for three-day passes, with a limited number of one-day tickets also available. That’s a welcome change for fans -- prices and options have never been officially announced, but Lang previously said weekend passes would be $450 with no single-day admission.

An on-sale date will be announced soon, Lang told SiriusXM, with tickets possibly available in as little as two weeks.

Tickets were originally scheduled to go on sale April 22, but delayed due to a number of issues behind the scenes, including disagreements between Lang’s Woodstock team and Dentsu.

There were disputes over capacity (originally pushed for as much as 150,000), concerns over logistics at the Watkins Glen site (where Phish canceled its Curveball festival last year due to health concerns and a lack of drinking water), and the state Department of Health has yet to approve a mass gathering permit, which wasn’t submitted until April 15. Court filings Tuesday revealed a New York State Police trooper also complained about differing crowd estimates, expressed concerns about a proposed “kidstock” section encouraging children to attend, and worried a proposed pedestrian bridge would collapse.

But all Woodstock 50 performers have been paid in advance and remain under contract to perform, Lang says. The cost of booking the talent was around $23.5 million, court documents said, with as much as $30 million more needed to stage the festival just three months from today.

Similar organization issues plagued the first Woodstock festival, held Aug. 15-18, 1969, at Max Yasgur’s dairy farm in Bethel, N.Y., weeks after a previous site fell through. More than 400,000 people still came to see legendary performances by Richie Havens, Jefferson Airplane, The Who, Joan Baez, Jimi Hendrix, Santana, Joe Cocker, the Grateful Dead and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

The iconic concert was revisited in 1994 with a modern lineup of artists like Nine Inch Nails, Sheryl Crow, Metallica, Cypress Hill and Red Hot Chili Peppers in Saugerties, but Woodstock ’99 -- held at Griffiss Air Force Base in Rome, N.Y. -- was marred by riots, fires and allegations of sexual assault. Lang helped organize both anniversary events.

The original Woodstock site is planning its own anniversary celebration on the same weekend. The Bethel Woods Center for the Arts will host Arlo Guthrie and a screening of the “Woodstock” documentary on the field Thursday, Aug. 15; Ringo Starr, Guthrie, and The Edgar Winter Band on the pavilion stage Friday, Aug. 16; Santana with the Doobie Brothers on Saturday, Aug. 17; and John Fogerty on Sunday, Aug. 18. Guthrie, Winter, Santana and Fogerty all performed at the original Woodstock festival.