Harry Styles: Live on Tour
World tour by Harry Styles | |
Location | North America • Europe • Oceania • South America • Asia |
---|---|
Associated album | Harry Styles |
Start date | 19 September 2017 |
End date | 14 July 2018 |
Legs | 9 |
No. of shows | 89 |
Supporting acts | |
Box office | $63,103,783 (80 dates) |
Harry Styles concert chronology |
Harry Styles – Live on Tour[1] (stylized as Harry Styles – ʟɪᴠᴇ ᴏɴ ᴛᴏᴜʀ) was the first worldwide concert tour by English singer Harry Styles in support of his self-titled debut album (2017). The tour was announced on 28 April 2017 and additional dates were added on 8 June. The two-part tour began with intimate venues in 2017 and continued on to arenas in 2018. The tour started on 19 September 2017 in San Francisco and concluded on 14 July 2018 in Inglewood, comprising 89 shows.
Background
[edit]In June 2016, it was confirmed that Styles had signed a recording contract as a solo artist with Columbia Records.[2] In April 2017, Styles released his debut single, "Sign of the Times",[3] and his self-titled debut album on 12 May 2017.[4]
The tour dates for 2017 were announced on 28 April 2017 via Twitter and his website.[5] Tickets went on sale on 5 May. The tour was sold-out in seconds due to the relatively small sizes of the venues.[6] Styles elected to play smaller venues for his first shows to allow fans the opportunity for a more intimate live experience.[6] On 6 June, MUNA was announced as the supporting act for his 2017 North American and European dates.[7] On 8 June, Styles added 56 new dates in Europe, Asia, Australia, Latin America, and North America for 2018, revisiting many of the previous stops and playing larger venues. The opening acts for the tour were announced the same day, with Kacey Musgraves in the U.S. and Canada, Warpaint in Asia, and Leon Bridges in Latin America.[8] Due to high demand, additional seats were added in a 360 setup for the North American stops in 2018.[9] On 29 November, Mabel and The Preatures were announced as the opening acts for Europe and Australia respectively.[10] Styles exclusively wore custom Gucci designed by Alessandro Michele for his stage outfits in 2017.[11][12] In addition to Gucci, Styles also wore custom Calvin Klein 205W39NYC designed by Raf Simons,[13] as well as Alexander McQueen, Harris Reed,[14] Givenchy, and Saint Laurent outfits on tour in 2018.[15]
Critical reception
[edit]Eve Barlow of Billboard stated, "He was made to be the frontman. [...] His Jagger-meets-David Cassidy persona shines out on the swaggering "Only Angel" and "Woman".[16] Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone marvelled at Styles' "ugly enthusiasm", writing, "A year into his solo rebirth, he's earned his stripes as a master of every rock & roll move, wearing the tradition like it's a coat he had tailored just for him." Sheffield continued that Styles is "the ultimate fusion of Mick Jagger’s yin and Paul McCartney’s yang [...] to the point where encountering them at peak strength in the same star can get bewildering".[17] Writing for Los Angeles Times, August Brown lauded the show as "one of the best arena rock shows of the last few years", taking particular note of the stage production which was "classy and minimal, relying on the strength of the songs and Styles’ charm as a live performer."[18] Sabrina Barr of The Independent praised Styles for his "undeniably impressive vocal range", adding, "Most performers can only dream of having the charisma and star quality that Harry Styles naturally exudes."[19]
The Irish Times's Louise Bruton wrote that Styles "proves his superstar status easily but he maintains a sincere level of modesty throughout the entire show, making him more personable than a lot of his pop star peers", and praised his vocals on slower songs, calling him "very much in a league of his own".[20] Matt Miller of Esquire complimented Styles' sensitivity in regards to inclusivity ("aggressively inclusive" according to Rolling Stone) after seeing "teens carrying rainbow hats, shirts, and even one pride flag attached to a Black Lives Matter sign in the front row", saying "[Styles reminds] us that youths are here, they're aware, and they actually care."[21]
Commercial performance
[edit]According to Billboard, tickets for the 2017 shows sold out in seconds across 29 markets.[6] Globe’s pre-sale for the concert at Mall of Asia Arena in Manila broke Coldplay’s record of six minutes by selling out in 52 seconds.[22] The second of the two final shows at The Forum in Inglewood, California, tallied more than 17,000 paid tickets and beat the record for the most paid tickets for a single show since the venue reopened in 2014. Additionally, record amounts of merchandise were sold in over 50 venues in North and South America, Australia, and Europe, according to Live Nation.[23]
Pollstar's 2018 Mid-Year report ranked the tour at No. 13 on the Top 100 Worldwide Tours list and No. 20 on Top 100 North American Tours list in terms of gross, and No. 8 on Top 100 Tours list for number of tickets sold worldwide.[24] Styles was the third top-selling touring act of Summer 2018 in the U.S.,[25] fifth in Canada and Argentina,[26][27] and eighth in Brazil on StubHub.[28]
Philanthropy
[edit]The tour raised a total of $1.2 million in charity donations from ticket and merchandise sales for 62 charities around the world, and registered hundreds of new voters in the U.S. via the non-profit organisation HeadCount.[23] Styles also partnered with the environmental non-profit Reverb,[29] and engaged in a major effort for water conservation that saved the equivalent of 10,000 single-use water bottles by fans, and 3,200 by the band and crew, and recycled more than 6,500 gallons of water from buses, offices, dressing rooms and other backstage areas.[23] Styles released two T-shirts in celebration of Pride, with his phrase, 'Treat People With Kindness' as well as all proceeds going to support GLSEN's work ensuring safe and inclusive schools for LGBTQ youth.[30]
Set list
[edit]2017
[edit]This set list is representative of the show on 19 September 2017 in San Francisco. It is not intended to represent all concerts for the 2017 tour.[31]
- "Ever Since New York"
- "Two Ghosts"
- "Carolina"
- "Stockholm Syndrome"
- "Sweet Creature"
- "Only Angel"
- "Woman"
- "Meet Me in the Hallway"
- "Just a Little Bit of Your Heart"
- "What Makes You Beautiful"
- "Kiwi"
Encore
- "From the Dining Table"
- "The Chain"
- "Sign of the Times"
2018
[edit]This set list is representative of the show on 11 March 2018 in Basel. It is not intended to represent all concerts for the 2018 tour.[32]
- "Only Angel"
- "Woman"
- "Ever Since New York"
- "Two Ghosts"
- "Carolina"
- "Stockholm Syndrome"
- "Just a Little Bit of Your Heart"
- "Medicine"
- "Meet Me in the Hallway"
- "Sweet Creature"
- "If I Could Fly"
- "Anna"
- "What Makes You Beautiful"
- "Sign of the Times"
Encore
- "From the Dining Table"
- "The Chain"
- "Kiwi"
Notes
[edit]- Styles performed "Girl Crush" by Little Big Town during the show in Nashville and the second show in Tokyo in 2017.[33][34]
- Styles performed "Story of My Life" by One Direction during his 2017 shows in New York City,[35] Boston,[36] Washington D.C.,[37] Atlanta,[38] and Dallas.[39]
- Kacey Musgraves appeared on stage to perform "You're Still the One" by Shania Twain with Styles during his 22 June 2018 concert in New York City.[40]
- Styles performed "Girl Crush" by Little Big Town, and the final song "Kiwi" three consecutive times during the last show of the tour in Inglewood.[18][41]
Shows
[edit]Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America[42][43][44][45] | ||||||
19 September 2017 | San Francisco | United States | SF Masonic Auditorium | Muna | 3,188 / 3,198 | $199,408 |
20 September 2017 | Los Angeles | Greek Theatre | 5,727 / 5,867 | $380,961 | ||
25 September 2017 | Nashville | Ryman Auditorium | Muna Cam |
2,302 / 2,362 | $142,624 | |
26 September 2017 | Chicago | Chicago Theatre | Muna | 3,553 / 3,553 | $297,764 | |
28 September 2017 | New York City | Radio City Music Hall | 5,942 / 5,942 | $501,793 | ||
30 September 2017 | Boston | Wang Theatre | 3,531 / 3,531 | $259,878 | ||
1 October 2017 | Washington, D.C. | DAR Constitution Hall | 3,186 / 3,287 | $221,005 | ||
4 October 2017 | Toronto | Canada | Massey Hall | — | — | |
5 October 2017 | Upper Darby | United States | Tower Theater | — | — | |
8 October 2017 | Atlanta | Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre | — | — | ||
10 October 2017 | Irving | The Pavilion | 4,077 / 4,077 | $289,072 | ||
11 October 2017 | Austin | Moody Theater | 2,622 / 2,646 | $205,129 | ||
14 October 2017 | Phoenix | Comerica Theatre | — | — | ||
Europe[46][47][48] | ||||||
25 October 2017 | Paris | France | Olympia | Muna | — | — |
27 October 2017 | Cologne | Germany | Palladium | — | — | |
29 October 2017 | London | England | Eventim Apollo | 10,375 / 13,589 | $635,398 | |
30 October 2017 | ||||||
1 November 2017 | Manchester | O2 Apollo Manchester | — | — | ||
2 November 2017 | Glasgow | Scotland | SEC Armadillo | 2,919 / 2,919 | $179,580 | |
5 November 2017 | Stockholm | Sweden | Fryshuset | — | — | |
7 November 2017 | Berlin | Germany | Tempodrom | 3,546 / 3,549 | $256,146 | |
8 November 2017 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | AFAS Live | 5,974 / 5,974 | $340,762 | |
10 November 2017 | Milan | Italy | Discoteca Alcatraz | — | — | |
Asia[47] | ||||||
19 November 2017 | Shanghai | China | Mercedes-Benz Arena | — | — | — |
23 November 2017 | Singapore | The Star Performing Arts Centre | 4,862 / 4,862 | $424,718 | ||
Oceania[49][50] | ||||||
26 November 2017 | Sydney | Australia | Enmore Theatre | Maddy Jane[51] | 2,446 / 2,446 | $210,708 |
30 November 2017 | Melbourne | Forum Theatre | 1,973 / 1,973 | $164,929 | ||
2 December 2017 | Auckland | New Zealand | Spark Arena | 7,575 / 8,787 | $525,464 | |
Asia[47] | ||||||
7 December 2017 | Tokyo | Japan | Ex Theater Roppongi | — | 3,600 / 3,600 | $290,787 |
8 December 2017 | ||||||
Europe[52] | ||||||
11 March 2018 | Basel | Switzerland | St. Jakobshalle | Mabel[10] | 6,725 / 6,725 | $560,383 |
13 March 2018 | Paris | France | AccorHotels Arena | 12,422 / 13,811 | $859,867 | |
14 March 2018 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Ziggo Dome | 13,105 / 13,105 | $916,022 | |
16 March 2018 | Antwerp | Belgium | Sportpaleis | 12,156 / 12,156 | $856,747 | |
18 March 2018 | Stockholm | Sweden | Ericsson Globe | 8,578 / 8,578 | $711,071 | |
19 March 2018 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Royal Arena | 10,580 / 10,580 | $971,088 | |
21 March 2018 | Oslo | Norway | Oslo Spektrum | 9,307 / 9,307 | $653,261 | |
24 March 2018 | Oberhausen | Germany | König Pilsener Arena | 10,591 / 10,814 | $717,474 | |
25 March 2018 | Hamburg | Barclaycard Arena | 10,422 / 11,894 | $755,658 | ||
27 March 2018 | Munich | Olympiahalle | 11,267 / 11,267 | $801,337 | ||
30 March 2018 | Barcelona | Spain | Palau Sant Jordi | 10,338 / 10,338 | $729,427 | |
31 March 2018 | Madrid | WiZink Center | 12,108 / 12,108 | $882,525 | ||
2 April 2018 | Milan | Italy | Mediolanum Forum | 10,374 / 10,374 | $741,138 | |
4 April 2018 | Bologna | Unipol Arena | 12,660 / 12,660 | $916,473 | ||
5 April 2018 | Mannheim | Germany | SAP Arena | 9,015 / 9,015 | $641,605 | |
7 April 2018 | Birmingham | England | Genting Arena | 12,771 / 12,771 | $943,165 | |
9 April 2018 | Manchester | Manchester Arena | 13,478 / 13,478 | $1,002,200 | ||
11 April 2018 | London | The O2 Arena | 29,572 / 32,869 | $2,088,620 | ||
12 April 2018 | ||||||
14 April 2018 | Glasgow | Scotland | SSE Hydro | 10,546 / 10,546 | $803,026 | |
16 April 2018 | Dublin | Ireland | 3Arena | 12,612 / 12,612 | $970,530 | |
Oceania[52] | ||||||
21 April 2018 | Perth | Australia | Perth Arena | The Preatures[10] | 9,256 / 9,256 | $896,310 |
24 April 2018 | Melbourne | Hisense Arena | 8,929 / 8,929 | $752,987 | ||
27 April 2018 | Sydney | Qudos Bank Arena | 14,263 / 14,532 | $1,323,240 | ||
28 April 2018 | Brisbane | Brisbane Entertainment Centre | 10,658 / 10,658 | $989,211 | ||
Asia[52] | ||||||
1 May 2018 | Pasay | Philippines | Mall of Asia Arena | Warpaint[53] | 10,130 / 10,130 | $747,330 |
3 May 2018 | Singapore | Singapore Indoor Stadium | 3,378 / 3,378 | $490,952 | ||
5 May 2018 | Hong Kong | HKCEC Hall 5BC | 4,097 / 4,097 | $501,478 | ||
7 May 2018 | Bangkok | Thailand | Impact Arena | 2,893 / 2,893 | $352,604 | |
10 May 2018 | Kobe | Japan | World Memorial Hall | 4,754 / 4,754 | $616,143 | |
12 May 2018 | Chiba | Makuhari Event Hall | 8,908 / 8,908 | $1,078,067 | ||
South America[52] | ||||||
23 May 2018 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | DirecTV Arena | Leon Bridges[54] | 9,523 / 9,523 | $827,872 |
25 May 2018 | Santiago | Chile | Movistar Arena | 12,370 / 12,370 | $1,140,297 | |
27 May 2018 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Jeunesse Arena | 12,244 / 12,244 | $802,257 | |
29 May 2018 | São Paulo | Espaço das Américas | 7,200 / 7,200 | $672,817 | ||
North America[55][56] | ||||||
1 June 2018 | Mexico City | Mexico | Palacio de los Deportes | Leon Bridges | 33,943 / 33,943 | $1,962,719 |
2 June 2018 | ||||||
5 June 2018 | Dallas | United States | American Airlines Center | Kacey Musgraves[57] | 16,461 / 16,461 | $1,306,002 |
7 June 2018 | Houston | Toyota Center | 14,238 / 14,238 | $1,163,261 | ||
9 June 2018 | Sunrise | BB&T Center | 16,678 / 16,678 | $1,302,904 | ||
11 June 2018 | Duluth | Infinite Energy Arena | 12,007 / 12,007 | $1,071,691 | ||
12 June 2018 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 18,543 / 18,543 | $1,265,101 | ||
14 June 2018 | Hershey | Hersheypark Stadium | 15,468 / 15,468 | $1,111,493 | ||
15 June 2018 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | 16,959 / 16,959 | $1,370,303 | ||
16 June 2018 | Toronto | Canada | Air Canada Centre | 17,390 / 17,390 | $1,391,932 | |
18 June 2018 | Boston | United States | TD Garden | 16,146 / 16,146 | $1,273,432 | |
21 June 2018 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | 36,353 / 36,353 | $2,806,112 | ||
22 June 2018 | ||||||
24 June 2018 | Washington, D.C. | Capital One Arena | 15,894 / 15,894 | $1,308,830 | ||
26 June 2018 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | 15,894 / 15,894 | $1,283,454 | ||
27 June 2018 | Indianapolis | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | 15,566 / 15,566 | $1,126,959 | ||
30 June 2018 | Chicago | United Center | 18,286 / 18,286 | $1,432,559 | ||
1 July 2018 | Saint Paul | Xcel Energy Center | 16,914 / 16,914 | $1,375,043 | ||
3 July 2018 | Denver | Pepsi Center | 13,636 / 13,636 | $1,097,362 | ||
6 July 2018 | Vancouver | Canada | Rogers Arena | 14,134 / 14,134 | $1,105,785 | |
7 July 2018 | Seattle | United States | KeyArena | 13,535 / 13,535 | $1,118,751 | |
9 July 2018 | Sacramento | Golden 1 Center | 14,565 / 14,565 | $1,209,501 | ||
11 July 2018 | San Jose | SAP Center | 14,632 / 14,632 | $1,171,338 | ||
13 July 2018 | Inglewood | The Forum | 33,698 / 33,698 | $2,700,031 | ||
14 July 2018 | ||||||
Total | 807,810 / 816,469 (99%) | $63,103,783 |
Personnel
[edit]Band[58]
- Harry Styles – lead vocals
- Mitchell Rowland – guitar, vocals
- Clare Uchima – keyboard, vocals
- Sarah Jones – drums, vocals
- Adam Prendergast – bass, vocals
References
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- ^ a b c Aswad, Jem (19 July 2018). "Harry Styles Tour Tally: Nearly 1 Million Tickets Sold, $1.2 Million in Charity Donations (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on 20 July 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^ Pollstar. "2018 Mid-Year Special Features; Top Tours, Ticket Sales, Business Analysis". Pollstar. Archived from the original on 17 July 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
- ^ Mercuri, Monica (30 May 2018). "Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran Dominate StubHub's Top Summer Tours of 2018: Exclusive". Billboard. Archived from the original on 20 July 2018. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
- ^ StubHub. "StubHub Reveals The Top 10 Canada Music Tours Of Summer 2018". Canada Newswire. Cision. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
- ^ "Phil Collins y Rod Stewart, los favoritos de los argentinos". Uno (in Spanish). 6 July 2018. Archived from the original on 27 August 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
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- "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. 2 May 2017. Archived from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
- "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. 8 November 2017. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. Archived from the original on 21 February 2018. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
- "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. Archived from the original on 1 March 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
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- "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Archived from the original on 28 December 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
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- "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Archived from the original on 19 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Archived from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
- "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Archived from the original on 5 July 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
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- "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Archived from the original on 26 September 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
- ^ Sodomsky, Sam (8 June 2017). "Harry Styles Tour Openers: Warpaint, Kacey Musgraves, Leon Bridges". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 11 June 2017. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
- ^ Spanos, Brittany (29 September 2017). "Inside Harry Styles' intimate first solo tour". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 20 May 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- 2017 concert tours
- 2018 concert tours
- Harry Styles concert tours
- Concert tours of North America
- Concert tours of Europe
- Concert tours of Oceania
- Concert tours of South America
- Concert tours of Asia
- Concert tours of the United States
- Concert tours of Canada
- Concert tours of Mexico
- Concert tours of the United Kingdom
- Concert tours of France
- Concert tours of Germany
- Concert tours of Ireland
- Concert tours of Italy
- Concert tours of Sweden
- Concert tours of the Netherlands
- Concert tours of China
- Concert tours of Singapore
- Concert tours of Australia
- Concert tours of New Zealand
- Concert tours of Japan
- Concert tours of Switzerland
- Concert tours of Belgium
- Concert tours of Denmark
- Concert tours of Spain
- Concert tours of the Philippines
- Concert tours of Thailand
- Concert tours of Argentina
- Concert tours of Chile
- Concert tours of Brazil