A Head Full of Dreams Tour
A Head Full of Dreams Tour[1] was the seventh concert tour undertaken by British alternative rock band Coldplay, launched in support of their namesake seventh studio album A Head Full of Dreams. Marking the band's return to large-scale venues, after the brief and intimate Ghost Stories Tour, the tour visited stadiums and arenas across five continents. A Head Full of Dreams Tour boasted extensive laser light and pyrotechnic visuals similar to the Mylo Xyloto Tour, and also saw a reappearance of the Xylobands as a central part of the show's visual design.
Tour by Coldplay | |
Promotional poster for the tour | |
Associated album | A Head Full of Dreams Kaleidoscope |
---|---|
Start date | 31 March 2016 |
End date | 15 November 2017 |
No. of shows | 122 |
Attendance | 5.39 million |
Box office | $523 million |
Coldplay concert chronology |
The tour consisted of eight legs, with a total of 122 shows across: Latin America, where they performed for the first time since the Viva la Vida Tour, Europe, North America, where they embarked on their very first stadium tour of the United States, Oceania, and Asia. The first show of the tour was held at the Estadio Ciudad de La Plata in La Plata, Argentina, on 31 March 2016 and concluded at the same venue on 15 November 2017. Grossing $523,033,675, the tour is currently the fifth highest-grossing concert tour in history.[2] A live album, Live in Buenos Aires, covering the tour, which was recorded during the last show in La Plata,[3] as well as a concert film, Live in São Paulo, filmed around the world was released in November 2018.[4]
Promotion
In November 2015, Coldplay announced the Latin American and European legs of the "A Head Full of Dreams Tour" through their official website, with 28 stadium shows confirmed across 14 countries in Europe and Latin America the next year.[5] On 7 December 2015, a fourth and final date at Wembley Stadium, on Wed, 15 June 2016 was announced by the band.[6] The following day, while being interviewed on The Late Late Show with James Corden, the band announced that the tour would also visit Asia and North America.[7]
On 7 April 2016, Coldplay announced 12 new arena dates in the United States.[8] On 29 May 2016, the band will play a homecoming gig in Exeter in England as part of BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend.[9][10] They have also been announced as the first headliners at Glastonbury 2016, performing on Sunday 26 June. This will be the fourth time they've headlined the festival and sets a record for the most number of times a headliner has played.[11] It was also announced that this would be their only festival performance in 2016. However, two more festivals are now on their tour agenda. While nothing has been announced nor confirmed as of yet, Coldplay has expressed an interest to visit less-visited countries during concert tours, such as India, Bangladesh, Nepal and a large amount of Asia, as well as Africa. No dates have been set currently.[12] Further tour dates will be announced after the release of dates of Leg 2 in Europe. On 6 October 2016, it has been confirmed on Twitter that they will visit the United States again and Canada in the Summer of 2017. On 15 November 2016, the band posted a teaser on Facebook announcing an Asian leg in 2017 that would visit Singapore, Philippines, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan.[13] A week later, Thailand was included in the leg.[14] On 16 March 2017, Coldplay announced extra North American dates in Toronto, Edmonton, and Pasadena.[15]
On 25 August 2017, the Houston concert scheduled that night at NRG Stadium was originally postponed due to Hurricane Harvey. However, on 29 September, Coldplay decided to cancel the concert due to scheduling conflicts with the venue. As compensation, the band announced that ticket holders will receive priority access for the next time they play in Houston.[16]
Opening acts
For each of the main tour dates, two supporting acts, the first billed as the "opener", and the second as the "main support", performed before the concert.
British folk and soul singer-songwriter Lianne La Havas served as the tour's main supporting act for all the shows during the Latin America leg, the Oceania leg and a majority of the European leg of the tour. Her appearances on the tour follow her own 10-month tour in support of her July 2015-released album Blood, which had ended two weeks before the start of the A Head Full of Dreams Tour.[17] It marked the first stadium shows of Havas' career, and her first performances in Latin America.[18][19] The opening acts during the Latin America leg featured local talent, including Argentinian singer and plastic artist Hana Ciliberti, and Mexican pop rock artist Ximena Sariñana, who performed at the shows in Mexico City.[20]
Canadian R&B and pop artist Alessia Cara performed as a supporting act on the A Head Full of Dreams Tour, serving as the opener on a majority of the shows during the European leg and as the main support during the North American leg.[21] Cara, who turned 21 years old during the tour, had launched into mainstream success in 2015 with "Here",[22][23] and had been performing her first concert tour in the months trailing the A Head Full of Dreams Tour, in support for her debut studio album Know-It-All.[24] Cara, however, skipped three dates on the tour. Swiss artist Lea Lu occupied the opening slot during the show of 11 June in Zurich, Switzerland,[25] while British rock band Reef will perform during the tour's final two London shows.[26] In lieu of La Havas' absence during the show of 11 June in Zurich and the show of 3 July in Stockholm, Sweden, British recording artists Foxes and Birdy served as main support respectively.[27]
Australian musician Jess Kent performed as the main support for the Oceanian leg and did so again for the Asian leg, starting with the show of 31 March 2017 in Singapore.[28] Japanese rock band Radwimps opened the show of 19 April in Tokyo.[29]
For the 2017 European leg, English duo AlunaGeorge performed as the main support during the Munich, Lyon, Hanover, Brussels, and Dublin shows, while Swedish singer Tove Lo, whom Coldplay has collaborated with for a song called "Fun", served the remainder of the leg as the main support with the exception of the Gothenburg and Cardiff shows, where Danish band Mew and English band Embrace served, respectively. The opener for the leg was Lyves, with the exception of the German shows, where native singer Femme Schmidt performed. For the 2017 North American leg, AlunaGeorge performed as the main support for the August dates with Ethiopian-English singer Izzy Bizu opening, while Tove Lo served as the main support for the September and October dates with Alina Baraz opening.[30]
English singer Dua Lipa, whom frontman Chris Martin has collaborated with for a song called "Homesick" from her self-titled debut album, performed as the main support for the tour's final leg in Brazil and Argentina in November 2017. English musician Jon Hopkins, a frequent collaborator of the band since Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, will also perform as the leg's opener.[31]
Concert synopsis
I think we're just about at the point in our career where we can get through a concert without playing anything shit. Only now. If we put all our amazing songs together that covers about 20 minutes. Then fill the rest with just pretty good ones.
Similar to the Mylo Xyloto Tour, the A Head Full of Dreams Tour is typically split into five parts; an introduction on the main "A-stage", a performance on the "B-stage", a second set on the A-stage, a set on the outward "C-stage", and finally an encore on the A-stage. Songs played on the A-stage are accompanied by the show's full laser light and pyrotechnic visuals, while performances on the B-stage are not accompanied by such, and songs played on the C-stage are strictly acoustic performances.
Shows typically feature over 20 songs on the setlist, many of which played differently from the recorded versions of the songs, usually combined with intros and outros from other tracks. For example, "Paradise", which closes the opening set of the show, is played with a remix of the song by Tiësto as an outro, while "Fix You" is played with the instrumental background from "Midnight". A majority of the songs played during the tour come from the namesake album A Head Full of Dreams, and from the band's previous studio album, Ghost Stories, though songs from the band's earlier discography, such as Mylo Xyloto and A Rush of Blood to the Head are routinely played and shuffled across the setlist between shows. Frontman Chris Martin expressed satisfaction with the setlist, stating that the band were "enjoying playing really old songs", and that the tour "will finally have a setlist where we feel good about it from start to finish."[33]
Apart from the band's own songs, covers of songs by other artists were also performed, with "Heroes" by David Bowie being a staple on the setlist in 2016, during the middle of the second A-stage set. The cover is a tribute to the late Bowie, whose death in January 2016 had been massively publicized by both the media and music fans alike. According to Martin, he and Bowie were good friends, claiming that Bowie even had assigned the nickname of "Sticky Martinez" to him.[34] The relationship between the band and Bowie musically, however, was not as profound; Bowie had earlier rejected a collaboration for Lhuna, a charity single released by the band in 2008 featuring Australian singer-songwriter Kylie Minogue, after deeming the song was simply "not one of [their] best".[35] Prior to the start of the tour, Martin also took to covering Bowie's songs, such as "Life on Mars?" on The Howard Stern Show and The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon in the weeks following Bowie's death.[36][37] The band also occasionally plays "'Til Kingdom Come"/"Ring of Fire", a combination between the X&Y song and the classic Johnny Cash song, which the band had initially conceived for the Twisted Logic Tour and also appeared in the setlist during the Viva la Vida Tour and Mylo Xyloto Tour. Occasionally, impromptu moments, usually during "A Sky Full of Stars" may also lead to an additional song being performed, as was the case during the band's performance of 5 April at the Estadio Nacional de Lima in Peru, where Chris Martin sang "Happy Birthday to You" for his son Moses.[38] Following the death of musician Prince in April 2016, the band covered several of his songs as tributes: "Raspberry Beret",[39] "Sometimes It Snows in April" with Lianne La Havas,[40] and "Nothing Compares 2 U" with James Corden.[41] Following the death of musician Tom Petty in October 2017, the band covered his song "Free Fallin' as tribute, with Peter Buck at Portland and Corden at Pasadena; they also dedicated to him their song "Everglow".
Another staple of the setlist is a segment of the show known as the "Fan Dedication Song", where a song is requested by fans attending particular concerts on the tour, through social media service Instagram, for the band to play during their C-stage set.[42] The segment was described by Martin as being similar to a photo booth, stating, "we'd ask people to give us a reason why they want us to play that song so there is a purpose behind why we play it."[33][43]
Set list
This set list is from the concert on 10 April 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. It does not represent all shows throughout the tour.[44]
- "O mio babbino caro" (intro)
- "A Head Full of Dreams" (contains an excerpt from The Great Dictator)
- "Yellow"
- "Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall"
- "The Scientist"
- "Birds" (contains excerpt from "Oceans")
- "Paradise" (contains elements of the "Tiësto Remix")
- "Everglow"
- "Princess of China"
- "Magic" (contains excerpt from "Army of One")
- "Clocks"
- "Midnight"
- "Charlie Brown"
- "Hymn for the Weekend"
- "Fix You" (contains elements of "Midnight")
- "Heroes"
- "Viva la Vida"
- "Adventure of a Lifetime"
- "Kaleidoscope"
- "Parachutes"
- "Shiver"
- "A Message"
- Encore
- "Amazing Day"
- "A Sky Full of Stars"
- "Up & Up"
- "O (Part 2)" (outro)
- “Lovers in Japan” and “Don’t Panic” were performed during the first leg in Europe; the latter was officially added to the set list later in the tour.
- On 5 June 2016, “In My Place” was performed as a fan request. Additionally, “Princess of China” was not featured on the set list.[45]
- “Always in My Head” was added to the set list during the first North American leg.[46]
- “Us Against the World” and Bruce Springsteen’s “Jersey Girl” were performed on 16 June 2017.[47]
- “Shiver” was not performed on 31 March 2017.[48]
- “Trouble” was performed as a fan request on 21 August 2017. Additionally, an improvised “Toronto Song” was played.[49]
Reception
Tickets for the first two legs were put on sale on Friday 27 November 2015 (which was also Black Friday). Their two Wembley Stadium dates quickly sold out, prompting a third, and later a fourth, to be added.[50] In addition to London dates being popular, shows were added in Mexico City, La Plata, Barcelona, Manchester, Zürich, Amsterdam, Brussels, Copenhagen, Singapore, Taipei, Seoul, and São Paulo.
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Leg 1 — Latin America[51] | ||||||
31 March 2016 | La Plata | Argentina | Estadio Ciudad de La Plata | Lianne La Havas Hana |
97,069 / 97,069 | $6,619,890 |
1 April 2016 | ||||||
3 April 2016 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional de Chile | Lianne La Havas Maria Colores |
60,787 / 60,787 | $4,539,380 |
5 April 2016 | Lima | Peru | Estadio Nacional del Perú | Lianne La Havas Gala Brie |
43,720 / 43,720 | $4,828,810 |
7 April 2016 | São Paulo | Brazil | Allianz Parque | Lianne La Havas Tiê |
46,563 / 46,563 | $4,093,280 |
10 April 2016 | Rio de Janeiro | Estádio do Maracanã | 59,669 / 59,669 | $4,645,550 | ||
13 April 2016 | Bogotá | Colombia | Estadio El Campín | Lianne La Havas Elsa y Elmar |
41,376 / 41,376 | $4,792,820 |
15 April 2016 | Mexico City | Mexico | Foro Sol | Lianne La Havas Ximena Sariñana |
195,192 / 195,192 | $11,231,300 |
16 April 2016 | ||||||
17 April 2016 | ||||||
Leg 2 — Europe[52] | ||||||
24 May 2016 | Nice | France | Stade Charles-Ehrmann | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara |
53,566 / 53,566 | $3,367,270 |
26 May 2016 | Barcelona | Spain | Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys | Lianne La Havas | 111,261 / 111,261 | $9,734,130 |
27 May 2016 | ||||||
29 May 2016[lower-alpha 1] | Exeter | England | Powderham Castle | N/A | N/A | N/A |
1 June 2016 | Gelsenkirchen | Germany | Veltins-Arena | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara |
55,048 / 55,048 | $4,650,320 |
4 June 2016 | Manchester | England | Etihad Stadium | Lianne La Havas
Alessia Cara |
109,492 / 109,492 | $10,676,300 |
5 June 2016 | ||||||
7 June 2016 | Glasgow | Scotland | Hampden Park | 48,526 / 48,526 | $4,547,280 | |
11 June 2016 | Zürich | Switzerland | Letzigrund | Foxes | 89,254 / 89,254 | $11,808,300 |
12 June 2016 | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara | |||||
15 June 2016 | London | England | Wembley Stadium | Lianne La Havas | 303,985 / 303,985 | $28,810,200 |
16 June 2016 | ||||||
18 June 2016 | ||||||
19 June 2016 | ||||||
23 June 2016 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Amsterdam Arena | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara |
104,511 / 104,511 | $8,759,000 |
24 June 2016 | ||||||
26 June 2016[lower-alpha 2] | Pilton | England | Glastonbury Festival | N/A | N/A | N/A |
28 June 2016 | London | Kensington Palace | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara | |||
29 June 2016 | Berlin | Germany | Olympiastadion | 68,047 / 68,047 | $5,540,960 | |
1 July 2016 | Hamburg | Volksparkstadion | 43,860 / 43,860 | $3,808,980 | ||
3 July 2016 | Stockholm | Sweden | Friends Arena | Birdy Alessia Cara |
53,575 / 53,575 | $3,970,140 |
5 July 2016 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Telia Parken | Lianne La Havas Alessia Cara |
96,511 / 96,511 | $9,182,590 |
6 July 2016 | ||||||
Leg 3 — North America[54] | ||||||
16 July 2016 | East Rutherford | United States | MetLife Stadium | Alessia Cara Foxes |
100,763 / 100,763 | $10,749,394 |
17 July 2016 | ||||||
20 July 2016 | Indianapolis | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | 12,667 / 12,667 | $1,460,006 | ||
21 July 2016 | St. Louis | Scottrade Center | 13,960 / 13,960 | $1,547,633 | ||
23 July 2016[lower-alpha 3] | Chicago | Soldier Field | N/A[lower-alpha 3] | 95,323 / 95,323 | $10,215,572 | |
24 July 2016 | Alessia Cara Foxes | |||||
27 July 2016 | Louisville | KFC Yum! Center | 13,755 / 13,755 | $1,520,726 | ||
28 July 2016 | Columbus | Nationwide Arena | 15,530 / 15,530 | $1,933,346 | ||
30 July 2016 | Foxborough | Gillette Stadium | 54,952 / 54,952 | $6,530,260 | ||
1 August 2016 | Buffalo | First Niagara Center | 15,100 / 15,100 | $1,878,324 | ||
3 August 2016 | Auburn Hills | The Palace of Auburn Hills | 15,436 / 15,436 | $1,731,667 | ||
4 August 2016 | Pittsburgh | Consol Energy Center | 14,360 / 14,360 | $1,614,917 | ||
6 August 2016 | Philadelphia | Lincoln Financial Field | 54,497 / 54,497 | $5,530,866 | ||
20 August 2016[lower-alpha 4] | Pasadena | Rose Bowl | Alessia Cara Bishop Briggs Stargate |
120,062 / 120,062 | $10,914,898 | |
21 August 2016 | Alessia Cara Bishop Briggs | |||||
23 August 2016 | Glendale | Gila River Arena | 14,427 / 14,427 | $1,776,867 | ||
25 August 2016 | Tulsa | BOK Center | 13,234 / 13,234 | $1,578,961 | ||
27 August 2016 | Arlington | AT&T Stadium | 52,538 / 52,538 | $5,679,031 | ||
29 August 2016 | Denver | Pepsi Center | 15,664 / 15,664 | $1,902,639 | ||
31 August 2016 | Salt Lake City | Vivint Smart Home Arena | 15,645 / 15,645 | $1,871,968 | ||
1 September 2016 | Las Vegas | T-Mobile Arena | 15,898 / 15,898 | $2,124,032 | ||
3 September 2016 | Santa Clara | Levi's Stadium | 52,404 / 52,404 | $5,990,660 | ||
4 September 2016[lower-alpha 5] | Philadelphia | Benjamin Franklin Parkway | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
Europe[58] | ||||||
11 November 2016 | London | England | London Palladium | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Asia[59] | ||||||
19 November 2016[lower-alpha 6] | Mumbai | India | MMRDA Grounds | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Leg 4 — Oceania[60] | ||||||
3 December 2016 | Auckland | New Zealand | Mount Smart Stadium | Jess Kent | 39,644 / 39,644 | $3,752,610 |
6 December 2016 | Brisbane | Australia | Suncorp Stadium | 49,604 / 49,604 | $4,723,300 | |
9 December 2016 | Melbourne | Etihad Stadium | 103,482 / 103,482 | $8,920,530 | ||
10 December 2016 | ||||||
13 December 2016 | Sydney | Allianz Stadium | 97,356 / 97,356 | $8,813,130 | ||
14 December 2016 | Jess Kent Lianne La Havas | |||||
Leg 5 — Asia[1][61] | ||||||
31 December 2016 | Abu Dhabi | United Arab Emirates | du Arena | N/A | 31,285 / 31,285 | $4,301,291 |
31 March 2017 | Singapore | Singapore National Stadium | Jess Kent | 102,508 / 102,508 | $12,517,500 | |
1 April 2017 | ||||||
4 April 2017 | Manila | Philippines | Mall of Asia Concert Grounds | 34,813 / 34,813 | $7,189,520 | |
7 April 2017 | Bangkok | Thailand | Rajamangala Stadium | 62,068 / 62,068 | $8,133,360 | |
11 April 2017 | Taoyuan | Taiwan | HSR Taoyuan Station Plaza | 72,212 / 72,212 | $11,821,800 | |
12 April 2017 | ||||||
15 April 2017 | Seoul | South Korea | Seoul Olympic Stadium | 99,837 / 99,837 | $10,132,000 | |
16 April 2017[lower-alpha 7] | ||||||
19 April 2017[lower-alpha 8] | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | Radwimps | 42,817 / 42,817 | $6,513,740 |
Leg 6 — Europe[1][64][65] | ||||||
6 June 2017 | Munich | Germany | Olympiastadion | AlunaGeorge Femme Schmidt |
62,548 / 62,548 | $6,044,640 |
8 June 2017 | Lyon | France | Parc Olympique Lyonnais | AlunaGeorge Lyves |
50,901 / 50,901 | $4,051,740 |
11 June 2017 | Vienna | Austria | Ernst-Happel-Stadion | Tove Lo Lydes |
56,246 / 56,246 | $5,597,950 |
14 June 2017 | Leipzig | Germany | Red Bull Arena | 47,233 / 47,233 | $4,471,280 | |
16 June 2017 | Hanover | HDI-Arena | AlunaGeorge Femme Schmidt |
46,223 / 46,223 | $4,670,110 | |
18 June 2017 | Warsaw | Poland | PGE Narodowy | Tove Lo Lyvdes |
57,615 / 57,615 | $3,827,680 |
21 June 2017 | Brussels | Belgium | King Baudouin Stadium | AlunaGeorge Lyvdes |
100,489 / 100,489 | $8,686,710 |
22 June 2017 | ||||||
25 June 2017 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Ullevi | Mew Lyvdes |
128,981 / 128,981 | $9,399,310 |
26 June 2017 | ||||||
30 June 2017 | Frankfurt | Germany | Commerzbank-Arena | Tove Lo Femme Schmidt |
87,833 / 87,833 | $9,018,910 |
1 July 2017 | ||||||
3 July 2017 | Milan | Italy | Stadio Giuseppe Meazza | Tove Lo Lyves |
117,307 / 117,307 | $8,613,840 |
4 July 2017 | ||||||
6 July 2017[lower-alpha 9] | Hamburg | Germany | Barclaycard Arena | N/A | N/A | N/A |
8 July 2017 | Dublin | Ireland | Croke Park | AlunaGeorge Lyvdes |
80,398 / 80,398 | $8,970,100 |
11 July 2017 | Cardiff | Wales | Principality Stadium | Embrace Lyves |
122,851 / 122,851 | $11,685,000 |
12 July 2017 | ||||||
15 July 2017 | Saint-Denis | France | Stade de France | Tove Lo Lyves |
235,611 / 235,611 | $19,884,200 |
16 July 2017 | ||||||
18 July 2017 | ||||||
Leg 7 — North America[67] | ||||||
1 August 2017 | East Rutherford | United States | MetLife Stadium | AlunaGeorge Izzy Bizu |
54,501 / 54,501 | $7,861,460 |
4 August 2017 | Foxborough | Gillette Stadium | 52,188 / 52,188 | $6,263,906 | ||
6 August 2017 | Landover | FedExField | 48,380 / 48,380 | $4,823,333 | ||
8 August 2017 | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | 35,731 / 35,731 | $3,967,516 | |
9 August 2017 | ||||||
12 August 2017 | Minneapolis | United States | U.S. Bank Stadium | 47,472 / 47,472 | $4,325,230 | |
14 August 2017 | Omaha | CenturyLink Center Omaha | 13,009 / 13,009 | $1,434,880 | ||
15 August 2017 | Kansas City | Sprint Center | 12,971 / 12,971 | $1,736,224 | ||
17 August 2017[lower-alpha 10] | Chicago | Soldier Field | 52,726 / 52,726 | $6,026,402 | ||
19 August 2017 | Cleveland | Quicken Loans Arena | 15,963 / 15,963 | $2,302,868 | ||
21 August 2017 | Toronto | Canada | Rogers Centre | 94,857 / 94,857 | $8,655,294 | |
22 August 2017 | ||||||
28 August 2017 | Miami Gardens | United States | Hard Rock Stadium | 47,866 / 47,866 | $6,446,966 | |
22 September 2017[lower-alpha 11] | Las Vegas | T-Mobile Arena | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
23 September 2017 | Seattle | CenturyLink Field | Tove Lo Alina Baraz |
49,031 / 49,031 | $5,181,106 | |
26 September 2017 | Edmonton | Canada | Rogers Place | 27,940 / 27,940 | $3,003,657 | |
27 September 2017 | ||||||
29 September 2017 | Vancouver | BC Place | 43,896 / 43,896 | $5,015,505 | ||
2 October 2017 | Portland | United States | Moda Center | 14,965 / 14,965 | $2,121,648 | |
4 October 2017 | Santa Clara | Levi's Stadium | 48,341 / 48,341 | $5,265,835 | ||
6 October 2017[lower-alpha 12] | Pasadena | Rose Bowl | 64,442 / 64,442 | $6,051,529 | ||
8 October 2017[lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 13] | San Diego | SDCCU Stadium | 54,279 / 54,279 | $5,955,986 | ||
Leg 8 — Latin America[1][72] | ||||||
7 November 2017[lower-alpha 14][lower-alpha 15] | São Paulo | Brazil | Allianz Parque | Iza Jon Hopkins |
96,549 / 96,549 | $10,456,435 |
8 November 2017[lower-alpha 14] | Dua Lipa Jon Hopkins | |||||
11 November 2017 | Porto Alegre | Arena do Grêmio | Dua Lipa Jon Hopkins Tati Portella |
50,229 / 50,229 | $5,910,139 | |
14 November 2017 | La Plata | Argentina | Estadio Ciudad de La Plata | Dua Lipa Jon Hopkins Oriana Sabatini |
98,197 / 98,197 | $7,589,239 |
15 November 2017 | ||||||
Total | 5,389,586 / 5,389,586 (100%) |
$523,033,675 [74] | ||||
The tour grossed $137.2 million in the first half of 2016 from 29 shows.
[75]
The tour grossed $308 million in 2017 from 68 shows.
[76]
Cancelled shows
Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
25 August 2017 | Houston | United States | NRG Stadium | Hurricane Harvey[16] |
Notes
- The 29 May 2016 show at Powderham Castle in Exeter was part of BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend 2016.[53]
- The 26 June 2016 show at Worthy Farm in Pilton was part of Glastonbury Festival 2016.
- The 23 July 2016 show at Soldier Field in Chicago was cut short due to inclement weather. Additionally, opening acts Alessia Cara and Foxes cancelled their performances due to the weather conditions.[55]
- The 20 August 2016 show at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena was live streamed on YouTube by Globe Telecom in the Philippines.[56]
- The 4 September 2016 show was part of the Budweiser Made in America Festival.[57]
- The 19 November 2016 show was part of the Global Citizen Festival.
- During the performance of "Yellow", Coldplay observed a 10-second silence to commemorate the victims of the MV Sewol ferry disaster. The 16 April 2017 show at the Olympic Stadium in Seoul coincided with the disaster's third anniversary.[62]
- The 19 April 2017 show at the Tokyo Dome was recorded for an upcoming live album.[63]
- The 6 July 2017 show at the Barclaycard Arena in Hamburg was part of the Global Citizen Festival.[66]
- The 17 August 2017 show at Soldier Field in Chicago was live streamed on the Samsung Gear VR.[68]
- The 2 September 2017 show at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas was part of the iHeartRadio Music Festival.[69]
- The proceeds from these shows went towards the relief efforts for the Central Mexico earthquake.[70]
- Part of 8 October 2017 show at the SDCCU Stadium in San Diego will be broadcast live at a benefit concert in Mexico City for the relief efforts for the Central Mexico earthquake.[71]
- The shows on 7 and 8 November 2017 at Allianz Parque in São Paulo were filmed for an upcoming concert film documenting the tour.[4]
- The 7 November 2017 show at Allianz Parque in São Paulo was delayed by an hour and 20 minutes due to the delayed arrival of pyrotechnic equipment.[73]
References
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- Finn, Timothy (16 August 2017). "Coldplay unleashes a visual feast during spectacular show at a sold-out Sprint Center". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 20 August 2017.
- Ortega, Rodrigo (7 November 2017). "Coldplay faz show especial com música nova e diz que escolheu SP para gravar filme da turnê". Globo.com (in Portuguese). Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- "First legs of 2016 tour announced – extra dates added!". Coldplay.com. 27 November 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
- "Fourth Wembley Stadium show announced". Coldplay.com. 7 December 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- Garcia, Pia (10 December 2015). "Coldplay brings 'A Head Full of Dreams' to Asia". CNN Philippines. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
- "Extra U.S. dates announced - Coldplay".
- "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2016".
- "Radio 1 to take Coldplay home for the weekend". BBC Media Centre.
- "Coldplay announced as First Glastonbury 2016 Headliner". Glastonbury.
- Coldplay [@coldplay] (18 April 2016). "We will try to come to as many places as we can over this tour. Love, Coldplay" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- "Coldplay teases Filipino fans with Asian tour". CNN Philippines. 14 November 2016. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
- Wira, Ni Nyoman (24 November 2016). "Coldplay adds Bangkok to their upcoming Asian tour". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
- "Coldplay announce extra North American headline dates". Vaunter. 16 March 2017. Archived from the original on 17 March 2017. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
- "Update on the Houston show". Coldplay. 29 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
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