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The Red Tour was the third concert tour by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, launched in support of her fourth studio album, Red (2012). The tour started on March 13, 2013, at CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska and concluded on June 12, 2014, at Singapore Indoor Stadium in Singapore. The tour was attended by 1.7 million people and grossed $150.2 million in revenue, becoming the highest-grossing country tour of all time upon its completion. The Red Tour received generally positive reviews from music critics. It won Top Package at the Billboard Touring Awards.
Tour by Taylor Swift | |
Location |
|
---|---|
Associated album | Red |
Start date | March 13, 2013 |
End date | June 12, 2014 |
No. of shows | 86 |
Supporting acts |
|
Attendance | 1.7 million |
Box office | $150.2 million ($193.31 million in 2023 dollars)[1] |
Taylor Swift concert chronology |
Background and development
editOn October 22, 2012, Swift released her fourth studio album, Red.[2] The album incorporates elements from different genres, namely dance-pop, indie pop, dubstep, Britrock, and arena rock.[3][4][5] To develop and produce the album, Swift collaborated with other musicians and artists, such as Max Martin, Shellback,[6] Gary Lightbody and Jacknife Lee.[7]
On October 25, 2012, in partnership with ABC News, on the primetime TV special All Access Nashville with Katie Couric – A Special Edition of 20/20, Swift announced that she would launch a North American stadium and arena tour in early 2013 in support of her fourth studio album, Red (2012).[8]
Swift told Billboard: "Of course, you know the tour will be a big representation of this record". She further stated, "I'm so excited to see what songs the fans like the most and which ones jump to the forefront, because that's the first step. We always see which songs are really the passionate songs and the ones the fans are freaking out over the most, and those are the ones that are definitely in the set list. I can't wait for that."[9] Swift used Lenny Kravitz's version of "American Woman" as her entrance song.[10] She sang a cover of The Lumineers's "Ho Hey" nightly, intertwined with her own "Stay Stay Stay".[11]
On May 24, 2014, BEC-Tero, who had been acting as a promoter for the Bangkok stop of the show, announced that the show had been canceled due to the current political unrest in the area. Swift took to Twitter to express her sadness over the cancellation, stating, "I'm so sad about the concert being canceled... sending my love to the fans in Thailand."[12]
Stage design
editThe stage for the Red tour is when Swift really started getting creative with her stage designs and therefore, add a more evolved look to her live shows. In fact, the shape of the Red Tour stage is very unique, it is in a U shape, with two pits, divided by a catwalk within the U stage. This permitted for fans to feel closer to Taylor during the show and have many interactions.
The main stage catwalk also had a crane that Swift went on during "Treacherous" and "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" for the show encore.
There was also a B stage at the back of the venue, with a round-shaped platform that lifted up. Swift would perform the surprise song of the set on this stage.
During the shows in Asia, the stage was modified with several changes, including:
- The U stage was completely removed and replaced by a standard T-shaped catwalk
- The overhead screen above the stage was removed, and there was only one back screen, not three.
- The lighting was reduced.
- The crane at the catwalk, the lifting platform on B stage and floating constellation during "Sparks Fly" were removed.
Critical reception
editThe tour received positive reviews from music critics, with many citing Swift's atmospheric performances as a specific area of praise. Writing for Rolling Stone, Rob Sheffield praised Swift's "emotional excess [and] musical reach", stating that "...[n]o other pop auteur can touch her right now."[13] Rebecca Nicholson of The Guardian gave a five-star review, describing Swift as "staggeringly nice" and a "consummate crowd pleaser".[14] Digital Spy contributor Emma Dibdin noted that the tour combined "whimsical spectacle with Swift's trademark emotional intimacy" and that it "capitalises on exactly what makes Swift such a powerful figure for her audience, the sincere blend of aspirational and relatable."[15] In a more negative review, Rebecca Ford of The Hollywood Reporter stated that the intros before specific songs that, while "an appropriate fit for the audience," felt long and "brought down the energy of the show." Ford also mentioned that while Swift's voice "has gotten stronger over the years... [it] still has a habit of faltering or being too soft to hear over the band."[16]
Accolades
editYear | Organization | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | Billboard Live Music Awards | Top Package | Won | [17] |
Concert Marketing and Promotion | Nominated | |||
2013 MTV Europe Music Awards | Best Live Act | Nominated | ||
2013 Teen Choice Awards | Choice Summer Tour | Nominated |
Records
editSwift became the first solo female artist in 20 years to headline a national stadium tour in Australia, the last being Madonna with The Girlie Show in 1993.[20] Swift performed to a crowd of over 40,900 fans at the Sydney Football Stadium in Sydney, Australia, becoming the first female artist in history to sell out the stadium since it opened in 1988.[21]
The Red Tour also became the highest-grossing tour by a country artist in history at the time, bringing in $150 million and surpassing the prior record held by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill's co-headlining Soul2Soul II Tour, which earned $141 million.[22]
Set list
editThis section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. (October 2024) |
The set list below is the common set list and does not represent every show of the tour.[23]
- "State of Grace"
- "Holy Ground"
- "Red" (contains excerpts from "Starlight")
- "You Belong with Me"
- "The Lucky One"
- "Mean"
- "Stay Stay Stay" (contains excerpts from "Ho Hey")
- "22"
- Surprise song
- "Everything Has Changed" (with Ed Sheeran)
- "Begin Again"
- "Sparks Fly"
- "I Knew You Were Trouble"
- "All Too Well"
- "Love Story"
- "Treacherous"
- Encore
Notes
edit- "Stay Stay Stay" was removed from the set list since the second show in Philadelphia on July 20, 2013, but it was performed again during the first show in Kansas City on August 2, 2013.
- "Everything Has Changed" was removed from the set list after the North America leg, which concluded in Nashville on September 21, 2013.
- "Begin Again" was removed from the set list after the Oceania leg, which concluded in Melbourne on December 14, 2013.
- The 60s pop remix version of "You Belong with Me" was removed from the set list after the North American leg, which concluded in Nashville on September 21, 2013. As a result, an acoustic version of "You Belong with Me" replaced the surprise song for the Australia and New Zealand leg of the tour, and then was rotated with other songs as surprise songs during the European and Asian leg of the tour.
- However, the 60s pop remix version of "You Belong with Me" was performed again during shows in London.
- As the result of stage reduction during the Asia leg, "Treacherous" were removed from the set list.
Surprise songs
editThe following songs were performed by Swift in between "22" and "Everything Has Changed":
- "White Horse": During the second show in Omaha[24] and the first show in Edmonton[25]
- "Should've Said No": During the first shows in St. Louis,[26] Atlanta[27] and Foxborough,[28] and the show in East Rutherford[29]
- "Cold as You": During the second show in St. Louis[30]
- "Tim McGraw": During the first show in Toronto,[31] and the shows in Charlotte[32] and Wichita[33]
- "Forever & Always": During the show in Columbia[34]
- "Starlight": During the first show in Newark[35] and the second show in Glendale[36]
- "The Story of Us": During the second show in Newark[37]
- "You're Not Sorry": During the third show in Newark,[38] the first show in Orlando[39] and the show in Tacoma[40]
- "Today Was a Fairytale": During the show in Miami[41]
- "Our Song": During the second shows in Orlando[42] and Kansas City;[43] the shows in Lexington,[44] Columbus,[45] Arlington,[46] Salt Lake City[47] Pittsburgh,[48] Sacramento[49] and Raleigh;[50] and the first show in Nashville[51]
- "Fifteen": During the second shows in Atlanta,[52] Los Angeles,[16] Nashville[53] and London;[54] the shows in Jakarta[55] and San Diego;[56] and the fourth show in Los Angeles[57]
- "The Best Day": During the show in Cleveland[58] and the second show in Washington[59]
- "Mine": During the shows in Indianapolis[60] and Saitama[61]
- "Ours": During the shows in Detroit[62] and Des Moines,[63] the first show in Los Angeles,[64] and the third show in London[65]
- "Enchanted": During the shows in Louisville,[66] Denver,[67] Portland[68] and Kuala Lumpur,[69] and the third show in Los Angeles[70]
- "Never Grow Up": During the first show in Washington[71]
- "Fearless": During the shows in Houston,[72] Chicago,[73] and Pasay;[74] the second shows in Edmonton[75] and Foxborough;[76] and the first[15] and fourth shows in London[77]
- "Safe and Sound": During the show in Austin[78] and the first show in Philadelphia[79]
- "Haunted": During the first show in Glendale[80]
- "Highway Don't Care": During the second show in Toronto[81]
- "Long Live": During the show in Vancouver,[82] the fifth show in London,[83] and the first show in Singapore[84]
- "I Almost Do": During the first show in Omaha and the show in Tampa.[85]
- "Hey Stephen": During the show in Tulsa[86]
- "Speak Now": During the show in Fargo[87]
- "Tell Me Why": During the first show in Saint Paul[88]
- "Sad Beautiful Tragic": During the second show in Saint Paul[89] and the third show in Nashville[39]
- "Change": During the show in Greensboro[90]
- "Last Kiss": During the show in Charlottesville[91]
- "Teardrops on My Guitar": During the shows in San Antonio[39] and Winnipeg,[92] and the second show in Singapore[93]
Special guests
editSwift surprised fans throughout the tour with special guests, with whom she performed a duet.
- March 19, 2013 – St. Louis: "Hey Porsche" with Nelly[94]
- March 28, 2013 – Newark: "Everybody Talks" with Tyler Glenn of Neon Trees[95]
- March 29, 2013 – Newark: "Drive By" with Pat Monahan of Train[96]
- April 19, 2013 – Atlanta: "Both of Us" with B.o.B[97]
- July 13, 2013 – East Rutherford: "My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)" with Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy[98]
- July 27, 2013 – Foxborough: "You're So Vain" with Carly Simon[99]
- August 19, 2013 – Los Angeles: "Want U Back" with Cher Lloyd and "Brave" with Sara Bareilles[100]
- August 20, 2013 – Los Angeles: "Closer" with Tegan and Sara[101]
- August 23, 2013 – Los Angeles: "Anything Could Happen" with Ellie Goulding[102]
- August 24, 2013 – Los Angeles: "Jenny from the Block" with Jennifer Lopez[103]
- August 27, 2013 – Sacramento: "The Last Time" with Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol[104]
- September 19, 2013 – Nashville: "I Don't Want This Night to End" with Luke Bryan[105]
- September 20, 2013 – Nashville: "What Hurts the Most" with Rascal Flatts[106]
- September 21, 2013 – Nashville: "I Want Crazy" with Hunter Hayes[107]
- February 1, 2014 – London: "Lego House" with Ed Sheeran[108]
- February 2, 2014 – London: "Money on My Mind" with Sam Smith[109]
- February 4, 2014 – London: "Breakeven" with Danny O'Donoghue of The Script[110]
- February 7, 2014 – Berlin: "I See Fire" with Ed Sheeran[111]
- February 10, 2014 – London: "Next to Me" with Emeli Sandé[112]
- February 11, 2014 – London: "Burn" with Ellie Goulding[113]
Tour dates
editDate (2013) | City | Country | Venue | Opening act | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 13 | Omaha | United States | CenturyLink Center Omaha | Ed Sheeran Brett Eldredge |
27,877 / 27,877 | $2,243,164 |
March 14 | ||||||
March 18 | St. Louis | Scottrade Center | 28,582 / 28,582 | $2,346,203 | ||
March 19 | ||||||
March 22 | Charlotte | Time Warner Cable Arena | 14,686 / 14,686 | $1,162,733 | ||
March 23 | Columbia | Colonial Life Arena | 12,490 / 12,490 | $996,114 | ||
March 27 | Newark | Prudential Center | Ed Sheeran Florida Georgia Line |
38,065 / 38,065 | $3,565,317 | |
March 28 | ||||||
March 29 | ||||||
April 10 | Miami | American Airlines Arena | Ed Sheeran Brett Eldredge |
12,808 / 12,808 | $1,010,175 | |
April 11 | Orlando | Amway Center | 25,617 / 25,617 | $2,054,128 | ||
April 12 | ||||||
April 18 | Atlanta | Philips Arena | 25,471 / 25,471 | $2,048,023 | ||
April 19 | ||||||
April 20 | Tampa | Tampa Bay Times Forum | 14,080 / 14,080 | $1,132,095 | ||
April 25 | Cleveland | Quicken Loans Arena | 15,336 / 15,336 | $1,247,605 | ||
April 26 | Indianapolis | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | 13,573 / 13,573 | $1,082,042 | ||
April 27 | Lexington | Rupp Arena | 17,003 / 17,003 | $1,342,699 | ||
May 4 | Detroit | Ford Field | Ed Sheeran Austin Mahone Brett Eldredge |
48,265 / 48,265 | $3,969,059 | |
May 7 | Louisville | KFC Yum! Center | Ed Sheeran Florida Georgia Line |
15,135 / 15,135 | $1,246,491 | |
May 8 | Columbus | Nationwide Arena | 14,267 / 14,267 | $1,155,170 | ||
May 11 | Washington, D.C. | Verizon Center | Ed Sheeran Brett Eldredge |
27,619 / 27,619 | $2,489,205 | |
May 12 | ||||||
May 16 | Houston | Toyota Center | 12,467 / 12,467 | $961,422 | ||
May 21 | Austin | Frank Erwin Center | Ed Sheeran Florida Georgia Line |
11,916 / 11,916 | $935,631 | |
May 22 | San Antonio | AT&T Center | 13,974 / 13,974 | $1,105,253 | ||
May 25 | Arlington | AT&T Stadium | Ed Sheeran Austin Mahone Florida Georgia Line |
53,020 / 53,020 | $4,589,266 | |
May 28 | Glendale | Jobing.com Arena | Ed Sheeran Joel Crouse |
26,705 / 26,705 | $2,239,370 | |
May 29 | ||||||
June 1 | Salt Lake City | EnergySolutions Arena | 14,007 / 14,007 | $1,139,360 | ||
June 2 | Denver | Pepsi Center | 13,489 / 13,489 | $1,076,069 | ||
June 14 | Toronto | Canada | Rogers Centre | Ed Sheeran Austin Mahone Joel Crouse |
87,627 / 87,627 | $7,863,310 |
June 15 | ||||||
June 22 | Winnipeg | Investors Group Field | 33,061 / 33,061 | $3,175,430 | ||
June 25 | Edmonton | Rexall Place | Ed Sheeran Joel Crouse |
25,663 / 25,663 | $2,379,870 | |
June 26 | ||||||
June 29 | Vancouver | BC Place Stadium | Ed Sheeran Austin Mahone Joel Crouse |
41,142 / 41,142 | $3,974,410 | |
July 6 | Pittsburgh | United States | Heinz Field | 56,047 / 56,047 | $4,718,518 | |
July 13 | East Rutherford | MetLife Stadium | 52,399 / 52,399 | $4,670,011 | ||
July 19 | Philadelphia | Lincoln Financial Field | 101,277 / 101,277 | $8,822,335 | ||
July 20 | ||||||
July 26 | Foxborough | Gillette Stadium | 110,712 / 110,712 | $9,464,063 | ||
July 27 | ||||||
August 1 | Des Moines | Wells Fargo Arena | Ed Sheeran Florida Georgia Line |
13,368 / 13,368 | $1,075,576 | |
August 2 | Kansas City | Sprint Center | 26,412 / 26,412 | $2,093,172 | ||
August 3 | ||||||
August 6 | Wichita | Intrust Bank Arena | Ed Sheeran Casey James |
12,231 / 12,231 | $983,882 | |
August 7 | Tulsa | BOK Center | 10,949 / 10,949 | $868,955 | ||
August 10 | Chicago | Soldier Field | Ed Sheeran Austin Mahone Casey James |
50,809 / 50,809 | $4,149,148 | |
August 15 | San Diego | Valley View Casino Center | Ed Sheeran Casey James |
10,872 / 10,872 | $948,541 | |
August 19 | Los Angeles | Staples Center | 55,829 / 55,829 | $4,734,463 | ||
August 20 | ||||||
August 23 | ||||||
August 24 | ||||||
August 27 | Sacramento | Sleep Train Arena | 12,795 / 12,795 | $1,138,103 | ||
August 30 | Portland | Moda Center | 13,952 / 13,952 | $1,084,760 | ||
August 31 | Tacoma | Tacoma Dome | 20,348 / 20,348 | $1,584,049 | ||
September 6 | Fargo | Fargodome | 21,073 / 21,073 | $1,661,578 | ||
September 7 | Saint Paul | Xcel Energy Center | 28,920 / 28,920 | $2,320,937 | ||
September 8 | ||||||
September 12 | Greensboro | Greensboro Coliseum | 13,650 / 13,650 | $1,109,253 | ||
September 13 | Raleigh | PNC Arena | 13,941 / 13,941 | $1,088,612 | ||
September 14 | Charlottesville | John Paul Jones Arena | 12,689 / 12,689 | $997,216 | ||
September 19 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 41,292 / 41,292 | $3,336,545 | ||
September 20 | ||||||
September 21 | ||||||
November 29 | Auckland | New Zealand | Vector Arena | Neon Trees | 30,799 / 30,799 | $3,100,290 |
November 30 | ||||||
December 1 | ||||||
December 4 | Sydney | Australia | Allianz Stadium | Guy Sebastian Neon Trees |
40,930 / 40,930 | $4,096,060 |
December 7 | Brisbane | Suncorp Stadium | 38,907 / 38,907 | $3,895,810 | ||
December 11 | Perth | nib Stadium | 21,827 / 21,827 | $2,364,080 | ||
December 14 | Melbourne | Etihad Stadium | 47,257 / 47,257 | $4,547,250 |
Date (2014) | City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 1 | London | England | The O2 Arena | The Vamps | 74,740 / 75,775[a] | $5,829,240[a] |
February 2 | ||||||
February 4 | ||||||
February 7 | Berlin | Germany | O2 World | Andreas Bourani | 10,350 / 10,350 | $755,006 |
February 10 | London | England | The O2 Arena | The Vamps | [a] | [a] |
February 11 | ||||||
May 30 | Shanghai | China | Mercedes-Benz Arena | — | 12,793 / 12,793 | $1,864,934 |
June 1 | Saitama | Japan | Saitama Super Arena | CTS | 20,046 / 20,046 | $1,837,147 |
June 4 | Jakarta | Indonesia | MEIS Ancol | Nicole Zefanya | 8,130 / 8,130 | $1,481,473 |
June 6 | Pasay | Philippines | Mall of Asia Arena | Meg Bucsit | 9,775 / 9,775 | $1,511,662 |
June 9 | Singapore | Singapore Indoor Stadium | Imprompt-3 | 16,344 / 16,344[b] | $2,524,080[b] | |
June 11 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | Putra Indoor Stadium | IamNeeta | 7,525 / 7,525 | $998,608 |
June 12 | Singapore | Singapore Indoor Stadium | Imprompt-3 | [b] | [b] | |
Total | 1,701,898 / 1,702,933 (98%) |
$150,184,971 |
Cancelled show
editDate (2014) | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
June 9 | Pak Kret[c] | Thailand | IMPACT Arena | Political unrest[12] |
Notes
editReferences
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External links
editMedia related to Red Tour at Wikimedia Commons