- List of Avril Lavigne concert tours
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The following is a chronological list of Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne's concert tours. For Lavigne's promotional tours, see List of Avril Lavigne promotional tours.
Contents
Try to Shut Me Up Tour
Try to Shut Me Up Tour
Promotional poster for tourTour by Avril Lavigne Associated album Let Go Start date December 5, 2002 End date June 4, 2003 Legs 5 Shows 43 in North America
4 in Asia
19 in Europe
4 in AustraliaAvril Lavigne tour chronology Try to Shut Me Up Tour
(2002-03)Bonez Tour
(2004-05)The Try to Shut Me Up Tour is the debut concert tour by Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne. Beginning in December 2002, the tour support the singer's debut studio album, Let Go. The trek played 70 dates in North America, Asia, Europe and Australia. The concert was chronicled on the video set, My World. Filmed at the HSBC Arena in Buffalo, New York, the DVD features the full-length concert, music videos, a behind the scenes featurette and a live CD.
Opening acts
- Our Lady Peace (Europe)[1]
- Autopilot Off (North America—Leg 2, select dates)
- Gob(North America—Leg 2, select dates) (Australia)[2]
- Simple Plan (North American—Leg 2, select dates)[3]
- Swollen Members (North America—Leg 2, select dates)[4]
- Wakefield (North America—Leg 2, select dates)
Setlist
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "Nobody's Fool"
- "Mobile"
- "Anything But Ordinary"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Naked"
- "Too Much to Ask"
- "I Don't Give"
- "Basket Case"
- "My World"
- "I'm with You"
- "Complicated"
- "Unwanted"
- "Tomorrow"
- "Knockin' on Heaven's Door"
- "Things I'll Never Say"
Tour dates
Date City Country Venue North America[5][6] December 5, 2002[A] Buffalo United States HSBC Arena December 7, 2002 Baltimore Bohager's Nightclub December 12, 2002[B] New York City Madison Square Garden December 14, 2002 Atlanta The Tabernacle December 15, 2002[B] Miami American Airlines Arena December 17, 2002[C] Denver Pepsi Center December 19, 2002[B] Anaheim Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim December 20, 2002 Modesto State Theatre December 21, 2002[D] Tacoma Tacoma Dome January 6, 2003 Hartford Connecticut Expo Center January 12, 2003[E] Washington, D.C. Nation January 14, 2003 Columbus Veterans Memorial Auditorium January 15, 2003 Kansas City Kansas City Memorial Hall Asia[6] January 23, 2003 Suntec City Singapore Suntec Singapore Theatre January 27, 2003 Seoul South Korea Millennium Hall Europe[5][6] March 3, 2003 Copenhagen Denmark Vega Musikkens Hus March 4, 2003 Oslo Norway Rockefeller Music Hall March 6, 2003 Stockholm Sweden Annexet March 8, 2003 Brussels Belgium Ancienne Belgique March 9, 2003 Berlin Germany Columbiahalle March 10, 2003 Cologne Palladium Köln March 12, 2003 Munich Zénith March 13, 2003 Milan Italy Discoteca Alcatraz Milano March 14, 2003 Zurich Switzerland Volkshaus March 16, 2003 Hamburg Germany Congress Center Hamburg March 17, 2003 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall March 18, 2003 Paris France Zénith de Paris March 20, 2003 Birmingham England Birmingham Academy March 21, 2003 Manchester Manchester Apollo March 22, 2003 Glasgow Scotland Barrowland Ballroom March 24, 2003 Dublin Ireland Point Theatre March 25, 2003 London England Brixton Academy March 26, 2003 March 27, 2003 North America[6][7] April 9, 2003 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre April 10, 2003 Ottawa Corel Centre April 11, 2003 Montreal Bell Centre April 13, 2003 London John Labatt Centre April 15, 2003 Cleveland United States CSU Convocation Center April 16, 2003 Pittsburgh Petersen Events Center April 17, 2003 Indianapolis Conseco Fieldhouse April 19, 2003 Chicago UIC Pavilion April 20, 2003 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center April 21, 2003 Winnipeg Canada Winnipeg Arena April 23, 2003 Calgary Pengrowth Saddledome April 24, 2003 Edmonton Skyreach Centre April 26, 2003 Vancouver Pontiac Theatre April 27, 2003 Portland United States Veterans Memorial Coliseum April 28, 2003 Tacoma Tacoma Dome April 30, 2003 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose May 1, 2003 Long Beach Long Beach Arena May 2, 2003 Phoenix Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum May 4, 2003 Dallas Fair Park Coliseum May 5, 2003 San Antonio Freeman Coliseum May 6, 2003 Houston Reliant Arena May 8, 2003 Duluth Gwinnett Civic Center Arena May 9, 2003 St. Louis Savvis Center May 10, 2003 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills May 12, 2003 Fairfax Patriot Center May 13, 2003 Uniondale Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum May 15, 2003 Lowell Tsongas Arena May 16, 2003 May 17, 2003 Philadelphia First Union Spectrum May 18, 2003 Buffalo HSBC Arena Asia[8] May 27, 2003 Osaka Japan Zepp Osaka May 29, 2003 Tokyo Nippon Budokan Australia[8] June 1, 2003 Melbourne Australia Rod Laver Arena June 2, 2003 Sydney Sydney Entertainment Centre June 3, 2003 June 4, 2003 Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre - Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A This concert was a part of the "Kiss 98.5 Kissmas Bash[9]
- B These concerts were a part of the "Jingle Ball"[10]
- C This concert was a part of the "95.7 Kissmas Ball"[11]
- D This concert was a part of the "Kiss 106.1 Jingle Bell Bash"[12]
- E This concert was a part of the "Hot 99.5 Mess Fest"
March 3, 2003 Copenhagen, Denmark K.B. Hallen Moved to Vega Musikkens Hus March 23, 2003 Dublin, Ireland Olympia Theatre Moved to the Point Theatre Box office score data
Venue City Tickets Sold / Available Gross Revenue Connecticut Expo Center Hartford 6,058 / 6,058 (100%) $78,523[13] John Labatt Centre London 9,157 / 9,157 (100%) $221,673[14] CSU Convocation Center Cleveland 9,954 / 9,954 (100%) $241,545[15] Conseco Fieldhouse Indianapolis 9,193 / 12,852 (71%) $255,942[16] UIC Pavilion Chicago 8,853 / 8,853 (100%) $249,090[17] Winnipeg Arena Winnipeg 11,511 / 11,511 (100%) $272,141[15] Pengrowth Saddledome Calgary 13,723 / 13,723 (100%) $324,665[18] Skyreach Centre Edmonton 13,471 / 13,471 (100%) $319,270[18] General Motors Place Vancouver 14,872 / 14,872 (100%) $347,267[19] Tacoma Dome Tacoma 11,875 / 15,295 (78%) $305,025[16] HP Pavilion at San Jose San Jose 13,380 / 13,380 (100%) $399,205[19] Long Beach Arena Long Beach 12,713 / 12,713 (100%) $412,818[18] Gwinnett Civic Center Arena Duluth 10,306 / 10,306 (100%) $294,580[20] Savvis Center St. Louis 13,192 / 14,761 (89%) $352,443[20] The Palace of Auburn Hills Auburn Hills 15,78 / 15,781 (100%) $419,290[19] Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum Uniondale 14,327 / 14,327 (100%) $388,298[15] Tsongas Arena Lowell 15,024 / 15,024 (100%) $507,944[21] First Union Spectrum Philadelphia 13,657 / 13,657 (100%) $382,219[15] HSBC Arena Buffalo 7,827 / 11,000 (71%) $234,810[15] TOTAL 224,874 / 236,695 (95%) $6,006,748 Bonez Tour
Bonez Tour
Promotional poster for tourTour by Avril Lavigne Associated album Under My Skin Start date September 24, 2004 End date September 25, 2005 Legs 8 Shows 41 in Europe
67 in North America
21 in Asia
6 in Australia
3 in Africa
7 in South America
145 TotalAvril Lavigne tour chronology Try to Shut Me Up Tour
(2003-03)Bonez Tour
(2004-05)The Best Damn Tour
(2008)The Bonez Tour is the second concert tour by Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne. In support of her second studio album Under My Skin, the tour began in the fall of 2004. Playing over one hundred shows in Europe, the Americas, Asia, Australia and Africa. The performances in 2004 ranked 97th on Pollstar's "Top Tours of 2004", earning over $5 million dollars.[22] The tour was recorded at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Japan for the DVD set, Live at Budokan: Bonez Tour. The DVD featured the full concert with behind the scenes footage. The video was certified Gold in Japan.
Opening acts
- Bowling for Soup (Europe—Leg 1, select dates)
- Simple Plan (Europe—Leg 1, select dates) (Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Taguig)
- Nailpin (Europe—Leg 1, select dates)
- The Glitterati (Europe—Leg 2, select dates)
- Butch Walker (North America, select dates)[23]
- American Hi-Fi (North America—Leg 1, select dates)
- Rooster (North America—Leg 1, select dates)
- Gavin DeGraw (North America—Leg 2, select dates)[24]
- Not By Choice (North America—Leg 2, select dates)
- Tweak (Africa)[25]
- Tolidos (Mexico)
- Gufi (Chile)
- Daniela Herrero (Argentina)[26]
- Leela (Brazil)[27]
Setlist
2004Europe
- "He Wasn't"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "Freak Out"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Who Knows"
- "Together"
- "I'm with You"
- "Forgotten"
- "Mobile"
- "Unwanted"
- "Naked"
- "Fall to Pieces"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- Encore
- "Song 2"
- "Complicated"
- "Slipped Away"
North America- "He Wasn't"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "Take Me Away"
- "Things I'll Never Say"
- "Unwanted"
- "Mobile"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Together"
- "Forgotten"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Who Knows"
- "Freak Out"
- "I'm with You"
- "Tomorrow"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- Encore
- "Song 2"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "Complicated"
Asia
- "He Wasn't"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "Take Me Away"
- "Freak Out"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "Unwanted"
- "Anything But Ordinary"
- "Who Knows"
- "I'm with You"
- "Naked"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Together"
- "Forgotten"
- "Tomorrow"
- "Fall to Pieces"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- Encore
- "Complicated"
- "Slipped Away"
Africa/Australia- "Losing Grip"
- "Unwanted"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "Mobile"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- "Things I'll Never Say"
- "I'm with You"
- "Who Knows"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Take Me Away"
- "He Wasn't"
- "American Idiot"
- "Together"
- "Forgotten"
- "Tomorrow"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- Encore
- "Song 2"
- "Complicated"
Europe/The Americas- "Sk8er Boi"
- "Unwanted"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- "Mobile"
- "I'm with You"
- "Fall to Pieces"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Together"
- "Forgotten"
- "Tomorrow"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Who Knows"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Take Me Away"
- "He Wasn't"
- Encore
- "All the Small Things"
- "Song 2"
- "Complicated"
- Notes
- "American Idiot" was performed in Santiago and Buenos Aires, in lieu of "All the Small Things".
Tour dates
- Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A This concert was a part of the "KIIS-FM Jingle Ball"[40]
- B This concert was a part of the "107.9 The End's Jungle Ball"[41]
- C This concert was a part of the "Kiss 106.1 Jingle Bell Bash"[42]
- D This concert was a part of the "KDWB 101.3's Jingle Ball"[43]
- E This concert was a part of the "KRBE 104.1's Jingle Jam"[44]
- F This concert was a part of the "Cornetto Free Music Festival"[45]
- G This concert was a part of "Zulu Rocks"[46]
- H This concert was a part of the "Curitiba Rock Festival"[27]
Box office score data
Venue City Tickets Sold / Available Gross Revenue The Palace of Auburn Hills Auburn Hills 7,582 / 10,435 (73%) $261,198[47] Air Canada Centre Toronto 14,632 / 14,632 (100%) $475,470[48] Pacific Coliseum Vancouver 11,730 / 11,730 (100%) $375,648[49] Corel Center Ottawa 10,475 / 12,712 (82%) $410,004[50] Air Canada Centre Toronto 14,028 / 14,749 (95%) $543,287[51] MTS Centre Winnipeg 11,080 / 11,780 (94%) $428,828[52] Rexall Place Edmonton 10,989 / 11,990 (92%) $423,058[53] Auditorio Coca-Cola Monterrey 7,673 / 12,202 (63%) $405,565[54] Estádio do Pacaembu São Paulo 34,437 / 45,000 (76%) $835,887[55] TOTAL 122,626 / 145,230 (84%) $4,158,945 The Best Damn Tour
The Best Damn Tour
Promotional poster for tourTour by Avril Lavigne Associated album The Best Damn Thing Start date March 5, 2008 End date October 6, 2008 Legs 4 Shows 55 in North America
33 in Europe
22 in Asia
110 TotalAvril Lavigne tour chronology Bonez Tour
(2004-05)The Best Damn Tour
(2008)Black Star Tour
(2011-12)The Best Damn Tour is the third concert tour by Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne. Supporting her third studio album, The Best Damn Thing, the tour played over 100 concerts in North America, Europe and Asia. The trek was recorded at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto for a live DVD set entitled, The Best Damn Tour: Live in Toronto.
Background
The tour was announced on November 6, 2007.[56] Lavigne performed a private concert at the West Hollywood nightclub, Whisky a Go Go, where she announced her tour produced by Live Nation.[57][58] The singer stated the tour would be "bright" and "colorful" in contrast to her previous shows. Lavigne told the press she felt her previous tours were "stagnant" and "dark".[59] She continued to say she wanted her upcoming trek to be a big flashy production, with a party theme.[60] She would also try to attempt to sing her latest single, "Girlfriend", in different languages. Commenting on her tour announcement, Lavigne elaborated:
"We finally get to go out [on tour] after a year of promo, a lot of hard work, so I'm excited to go out and play live. There's gonna be dancing; it's going to be really upbeat. I'm taking my show to the next level. It's still gonna be very me, and rock-influenced … but it's also gonna be diverse. It's going to open with a bang and dancers, and in the middle of the set [we're] coming down and doing acoustic stuff and me performing by myself. Being that it's my third album, I feel like I'm a lot better now. And I've got, like, 10 singles to play now, which makes it so much easier and so much better. When you play the hits onstage, it's the most exciting part of the show. And I have more to work with now … I have slower songs, songs like 'Sk8r Boi' and 'Girlfriend,' which are more upbeat. There's a lot to it. It's definitely not going to be boring."[57]
The tour premiered in Victoria, British Columbia on March 5, 2008. On the same day, Kohl's launched Lavigne's clothing line, Abbey Dawn.[61] The tour faced slight controversy when the political group, Parti se-Islam Malaysia protested the concert. The group felt that Lavigne's "punk" image were not suitable of children and was not appropriate during Merdeka.[62] The concert was initially cancelled but resumed according to plan a few days later.[63] The tour faced additional troubles when Lavigne was forced to cancel the remaining nine show on her North American leg. The singer cited laryngitis for the cancellations while news outlets cite poor ticket sales.[64] The singer posted an apology on her website and stated if possible, she would make the dates.
Opening acts
- Boys Like Girls (North America—Leg 1)
- Jonas Brothers (Europe, select dates) (North America—Leg 2, select dates)[65]
- Demi Lovato (North America—Leg 2, select dates)[66]
- Duke Squad (Montreal)[67]
- The Midway State (Sudbury, Toronto)
- illScarlett (Saint John, Moncton, Halifax, St. John's)[68]
- Silverstein (Japan)[69]
- Ai Otsuka (Tokyo)[69]
- Puffy AmiYumi (Tokyo)[69]
Setlist
- "Untitled I" (Video Introduction)
- "Girlfriend"
- "I Can Do Better"
- "Complicated"
- "My Happy Ending"
- "I'm with You"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- "Untitled II" (contains elements of "Unwanted" and "Bleed It Out") (Dance Interlude)
- "When You're Gone"
- "Innocence"
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Hot"
- "Losing Grip"
- "Untitled III" (contains excerpts from ""Bad Reputation") (Video Interlude)
- "Everything Back But You"
- "Runaway"
- "Hey Mickey"
- "The Best Damn Thing"
- "I Don't Have to Try"
- "He Wasn't"
- Encore
- "Girlfriend" (Dr. Luke Remix)
- "Sk8er Boi"
Source:[70]
Tour dates
- Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A This concert was a part of "Musikfest"[75]
- B This concert was a part of "Toms River Fest"[76]
- C This concert was a part of the "Shenzhen International Summer Music Festival"
- D This concert was a part of the "Lijiang Snow Mountain Music Festival"[77]
- Cancellations and rescheduled shows
April 30, 2008 San Diego, California Cox Arena at Aztec Bowl Cancelled[78] May 2, 2008 Phoenix, Arizona Cricket Wireless Pavilion Cancelled[78] May 3, 2008 Anaheim, California Honda Center Cancelled[78] May 4, 2008 Los Angeles, California Gibson Amphitheatre Cancelled[78] May 6, 2008 Santa Barbara, California Santa Barbara Bowl Cancelled[78] May 7, 2008 San Jose, California HP Pavilion at San Jose Cancelled[78] May 9, 2008 Spokane, Washington Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Cancelled[78] May 10, 2008 Everett, Washington Comcast Arena Cancelled[78] June 30, 2008 Helsinki, Finland Hartwall Areena Moved to Helsinki Ice Hall July 8, 2008 Prague, Czech Republic T-Mobile Arena Moved to O2 Arena September 1, 2008 Seoul, South Korea Jamsil Arena Moved to Melon-AX Hall Box office score data
Venue City Tickets Sold / Available Gross Revenue Target Center Minneapolis 5,657 / 8,312 (68%) $195,643[79] Agganis Arena Boston 3,606 / 4,683 (77%) $157,428[80] Bell Centre Montreal 9,104 / 9,636 (94%) $472,144[81] John Labatt Centre London 8,968 / 8,968 (100%) $461,080[82] Patriot Center Fairfax 4,964 / 6,691 (74%) $218,484[83] Philips Arena Atlanta 6,016 / 8,347 (72%) $171,294[84] Carling Academy Glasgow Glasgow 4,800 / 4,839 (~100%) $261,386[85] Manchester Evening News Arena Manchester 9,938 / 11,000 (90%) $540,414[85] LG Arena Birmingham 9,477 / 10,000 (95%) $515,176[85] Cardiff International Arena Cardiff 3,695 / 3,800 (97%) $201,476[85] Plymouth Pavilions Plymouth 2,000 / 2,000 (100%) $108,192[85] Windsor Hall Bournemouth 4,657 / 5,662 (82%) $252,121[85] The O2 Arena London 13,535 / 15,000 (90%) $787,493[85] Verizon Wireless Amphitheater Maryland Heights 17,956 / 20,606 (87%) $687,270[86] Verizon Wireless Music Center Noblesville 18,817 / 24,249 (78%) $647,086[86] Hersheypark Stadium Hershey 29,130 / 29,130 (100%) $1,782,950[87] New England Dodge Music Center Hartford 21,830 / 21,830 (100%) $801,643[87] Riverbend Music Center Cincinnati 14,924 / 20,319 (73%) $648,323[87] Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre Charlotte 18,647 / 18,647 (100%) $777,974[87] Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion Raleigh 19,355 / 19,914 (97%) $685,949[87] Sudbury Community Arena Sudbury 4,332 / 4,400 (68%) $224,312[88] Molson Amphitheatre Toronto 12,500 / 12,500 (100%) $429,580[89] Harbour Station Saint John 3,855 / 4,283 (90%) $194,089[87] Moncton Coliseum Moncton 3,702 / 4,324 (86%) $187,414[87] Halifax Metro Centre Halifax 6,297 / 7,735 (81%) $313,627[87] Mile One Centre St. John's 11,475 / 12,249 (94%) $577,039[88] TOTAL 269,237 / 299,124 (90%) $12,299,587 Critical reception
The tour received mixed reviews from music critics in the United States and Canada. Mike Devlin (Times Colonist) gave the premiere concert in Victoria, British Columbia two and a half out of five stars. He says, "Granted, it was the opening night of her world tour—which includes 15 dates in Canada—but the so-billed Best Damn Tour wasn’t even the Somewhat OK Damn Tour; it was just plain disappointing. And with tickets in the range of $60, the 75-minute concert clocked in just shy of one dollar per minute. Methinks some parents are feeling the sting right about now". [70] Mike Ross (Jam!) gave the show at Rexall Place three and a half out of five stars. He explains, "I had the knives out last night, but was sadly disappointed that the show at Rexall Place wasn't as bad as I expected it to be. There is precedent: Last time through town, back in ought-five, Lavigne couldn't rock, couldn't sing and couldn't communicate with an audience".[90]
Jason MacNeil (Jam!) felt the show at the Air Canada Centre was one of the best concerts in 2008. He elaborates, "However, when Lavigne strapped on a guitar, as she did during 'My Happy Ending', she appeared to be in her comfort zone, strumming along as hordes of glowsticks and camera flashes dotted the arena. Later on when she sat behind a pink piano for 'When You're Gone', she looked quite at ease".[91]Miriam Ramierez (The Monitor) gave a positive review of the show at the Dodge Arena. She writes, "The excitement was hard to contain and any inkling of a struggling tour was put in the backburner here in the Rio Grande Valley. These kids were ready to party no matter what. I tried so hard to nit pick-tried so hard to find any slip up. And any which way she sang it was on point, full of energy (genuine or not) and super entertaining".[92]
Personnel
- Stage Director: Jamie King
- Assistant Stage Director: Carla Kama
- Tour Manager: Dan Cleland
- Choreographers: Lindsey Blaufarb, Craig Hollaman and Jamie King
- Assistant Choreographer: Sofia Toufa
- Production Manager: Dale Lynch
- Lighting Director: Brent Clark
- Musical Director: Jim McGorman
- Video Screen Director: William Crooks
- Crew[93]
- FOH Engineer: Jim Yakabuski
- Monitor Engineer: Matthew Peskie
- System Engineer: Matt Blakely and Evan Hall
- Video Screen Engineer: Daniel Deshara
- Monitor System Technician: Shawn Shuell
- PA Technician: Marco Giappesi, James Marcelek and Kevin Simmerman
- Drum Technician: Ian O'Neill
- Guitar Technician: Brian Kutzman
- Director of Security: Derick Henry
- Security: Matt Lavigne and Jon Zivcovic
- Costume: Leah Smith
- Wardrobe Supervisor: Louise Kennedy
- Wardrobe Assistant: Amie Darlow
- Hair/Makeup: Gabriel Panduro
- Band[94]
- Drums: Rodney Howard
- Guitar: Steve Fekete
- Bass: Al Berry
- Keyboards: Steve Ferlazzo
- Supporting vocals: Lindsay Blaufarb, Jim McGorman and Sofia Toufa
- Dancers: Lindsay Blaufarb, Jesse Brown, Jaime Burgos III, Sara Von Gillern, Caitlin Lotz and Sofia Toufa
Black Star Tour
Black Star Tour
Promotional poster for tourTour by Avril Lavigne Associated album Goodbye Lullaby Start date April 30, 2011 End date February 9, 2012 Legs 5 Shows 15 in Asia
21 in North America
9 in South America
13 in Europe
58 TotalAvril Lavigne tour chronology The Best Damn Tour
(2008)Black Star Tour
(2011)The Black Star Tour is the fourth concert tour by Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne. Visiting Asia, the Americas and Europe, the tour promoted the singer's fourth studio album, Goodbye Lullaby.
Opening acts
- Sonica (Venezuela)[95]
- Cirse (Argentina)[96]
- Lawson (UK)
- Evan Taubenfeld (Canada)
- The New Cities (Canada)
- The Cab (Canada)
- Vienna (Belgium)
- MakeBelieve (The Netherlands)
Setlist
- "Untitled I" (contains excerpts from "Bad Reputation") (Video Introduction)
- "Black Star"
- "What the Hell"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "He Wasn't"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- "Untitled II" (Video Interlude)
- "Alice"
- "Fix You"
- "When You're Gone"
- "Stop Standing There"
- "Wish You Were Here"
- "Nobody's Home"
- "Untitled III" (contains elements of "Unwanted", "Freak Out" and "Losing Grip") (Instrumental Interlude)
- "Girlfriend"
- "My Happy Ending" (contains excerpts from "Airplanes")
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Smile"
- "I'm with You
- Encore
- "Hot"
- "Complicated"
- Notes
- "Keep Holding On" and "I Love You" were performed at select concerts.
- During her concert at the Citibank Hall, Lavigne performed "Everybody Hurts".
Europe[98]- "Untitled I" (contains excerpts from "Bad Reputation") (Video Introduction)
- "Black Star"
- "What the Hell"
- "I Can Do Better"
- "Sk8er Boi"
- "He Wasn't"
- "I Always Get What I Want"
- "Untitled II" (Video Interlude)
- "Alice"
- "When You're Gone"
- "Stop Standing There"
- "Wish You Were Here"
- "Untitled III" (contains elements of "Unwanted", "Freak Out" and "Losing Grip") (Instrumental Interlude)
- "Girlfriend"
- "My Happy Ending" (contains excerpts from "Airplanes")
- "Don't Tell Me"
- "Smile"
- "I'm with You"
- "I Love You"
- Encore
- "Hot"
- "Complicated"
Tour dates
- Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A This concert was a part of the "China Valley International Music Festival"[108]
- B This concert was a part of "Atlantis Live"[109]
- C This concert was a part of the "Rays Summer Concert Series"[110]
- D These concerts were a part of the "Summer Sonic Festival"[111]
- E This concert is a part of "Q102's Jingle Ball"
- F This concert is a part of "Y100's Jingle Ball"[112]
- G This concert is a part of "XL 106.7's XLent Xmas"[113]
Box office score data
Venue City Tickets Sold / Available Gross Revenue Terraza del C.C.C.T. Caracas 2,217 / 6,000 (37%) $510,884[114] Explanada del Monumental Lima 5,193 / 10,000 (52%) $348,633[114] Movistar Arena Santiago 8,844 / 14,320 (62%) $439,345[115] Estadio Malvinas Argentinas Buenos Aires 6,658 / 6,680 (99%) $462,151[116] Credicard Hall São Paulo 13,347 / 14,108 (95%) $980,009[115] Citibank Hall Rio de Janeiro 7,725 / 7,784 (99%) $591,976[115] Chevrolet Hall Belo Horizonte 5,186 / 5,500 (94%) $386,743[117] Nilson Nelson Gymnasium Brasília 5,038 / 9,000 (56%) $397,879[117] Rexall Place Edmonton 5,484 / 9,047 (61%) $200,017[118] Moncton Coliseum Moncton 1,988 / 2,580 (78%) $ 95,285[118] Halifax Metro Centre Halifax 3,320 / 3,493 (95%) $162,175[119] John Labatt Centre London 4,934 / 5,716 (86%) $199,784[119] Air Canada Centre Toronto 6,383 / 6,383 (100%) $297,092[114] Bell Centre Montreal 3,809 / 4,790 (79%) $185,384[118] TOTAL 78,138 / 102,821 (76%) $5,162,072 External links
See also
List of Avril Lavigne promotional tours
References
- ^ Carmichael, Amy (28 January 2003). "Our Lady Peace launches latest tour". The Hamilton Spectator (Hamilton, Ontario: Metroland Media Group): p. D08.
- ^ Farber, Jim (15 May 2003). "SURLY & JUST A LITTLE GIRLY AVRIL'S NEWEST FANS: REBELS WITHOUT A CAR". Daily News. Archived from the original on 13 October 2011. http://www.webcitation.org/62PBc0Zdq. Retrieved 13 October 2011.
- ^ Zitz, Michael (8 May 2003). "Simple Plan: Punk gone nice". The Free Lance–Star (Fredericksburg, Virginia: The Free Lance–Star Publishing Company): p. 8. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=f_AyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mwgGAAAAIBAJ&dq=avril%20lavigne%20simple%20plan&pg=4109%2C2181078. Retrieved 13 October 2011.
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Avril Lavigne Studio albums and singles Under My Skin"What the Hell" · "Smile" · "Wish You Were Here"DVDs Other songs and singles "Breakaway" · "Keep Holding On" · "All Because of You" · "I Will Be" · "I Don't Wanna" · "Wavin' Flag" · "Alice" · "Dancing Crazy"Films Related articles Categories:- Avril Lavigne
- Lists of concert tours
- 2003 concert tours
- 2004 concert tours
- 2005 concert tours
- 2008 concert tours
- 2011 concert tours
- 2012 concert tours
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