The Lost Highway Tour was a worldwide concert tour by American rock band Bon Jovi in support of their 10th studio album, Lost Highway. It took place from October 2007 to July 2008. Originally planned as a 2008 greatest hits tour, the tour was changed to promote Lost Highway after the album's worldwide success, reaching No. 1 in several countries when released in June 2007.
World tour by Bon Jovi | |
Location | North America, Asia, Oceania, Europe |
---|---|
Associated album | Lost Highway |
Start date | October 25, 2007 |
End date | July 15, 2008 |
Legs | 7 |
No. of shows | 99 in Total |
Box office | US $210.7 million ($298.17 in 2023 dollars)[1] |
Bon Jovi concert chronology |
Immediately after the album's release, the band performed a string of promotional summer concerts in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, United Kingdom and Japan. The tour began proper in October 2007 with ten concerts that would mark the opening of New Jersey's Prudential Center, before doing a tour of Canada and then tours of Japan, Australasia, the United States and Europe in 2008.[2] Bon Jovi also played their first concert in New Zealand in 12 years as part of the tour.[3]
The Lost Highway Tour is a finalist for the Billboard 2008 Touring Awards for Top Tour, Top Draw, and Top Manager.[4]
Background
editDuring the opening concert in Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on October 25, 2007, Jon Bon Jovi announced that the band was starting a world tour with 10 shows in Prudential Center. The next day, record company Island confirmed through official press release on their web site Jon's statement and also announcing that band will visit Canada, United States, Japan, New Zealand, England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, among other countries. Label also announced dates for Canadian, Japanese and United States concerts on same day. Jon's world tour announcement, interview and concert footage was available for free to the media to download at 12:01 AM EST on Friday, October 26, 2007, through Bon Jovi's profile on The NewsMarket's official website.[5] To mark the launch of the world tour, video album Lost Highway: The Concert (2007) was screened in over 100 movie theaters for one night only on November 6, 2007.[6] MaxMouth has partnered with AEG Live to produce the premier Web TV series "On the Road with Bon Jovi" and filmed all Bon Jovi concerts in Prudential Center in Newark from October 25 to November 11, 2007. They released five webisodes that premiered independently on several biggest web portals, including maxmouth.com. "On the Road with Bon Jovi" also included exclusive interviews and performances by My Chemical Romance, Big & Rich, Gretchen Wilson, Daughtry and All American Rejects, who appeared as supporting acts during 10 night stands. Once each webisode premiered, it was reverted to Bon Jovi's official website and remained inside custom co-branded MaxMouth & Bon Jovi video player.[7]
Bon Jovi also performed for the first time in Australia since 1995. Tickets for Australian concerts went on sale in morning of November 15, 2007, and tickets for Sydney and Melbourne were sold in couple of minutes. Due to the overwhelming demand, second and final show was added at Sydney's Acer Arena on January 22, 2008.[8] Since three concerts at Air Canada Centre on December 6, 2007, December 7, 2007, and March 10, 2008, quickly sold out, Bon Jovi also added a fourth concert for March 12, 2008 and fifth for March 13, 2008, making them the first act to ever play five concerts on the same tour at Air Canada Centre.[9][10]
Tour highlights
editThe Lost Highway Tour has seen the band perform songs rarely heard live since the These Days Tour, for example "Hey God", "I Believe", "Lie to Me", "This Ain't a Love Song" and "Always" in its original version. At several of the band's summer stadium shows, the band was known to play extremely long setlists, some of them running nearly three hours, totaling approximately 26 songs, including encores that sometimes had as much as seven songs.
The band also spontaneously played "Stick to Your Guns", from the New Jersey album for the first time in twenty years at the Amsterdam gig, after Jon Bon Jovi noticed seventeen banners held up in the front row with the lyrics to the song printed on them.[11] The band played at Rock in Rio in Lisbon on May 31, 2008, making it their first concert in Portugal since 1995. The band played a free concert in Central Park, New York City, to 60,000 fans in conjunction with Major League Baseball and Bank of America, as part of MLB All Star Game week.
Lead guitarist Richie Sambora took the lead for one song at most shows with either "I'll Be There for You", "These Days" and occasionally "Stranger in This Town". Keyboardist David Bryan also sang solo very rarely with "In These Arms", on which rhythm guitarist Bobby Bandiera also took the lead guitar solo.
Bon Jovi have also performed "Dry County" frequently.
It has also been announced both during concert and on the official band website that a live DVD from the last two nights of the tour at Madison Square Garden will be released.
Before the band was set to perform at the Bank Atlantic Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, there was a bomb threat at the stadium. The band finally took the stage at about 9:00 p.m.[12]
A fan jumped on top of Jon at the concert at Punchestown in Ireland just before the bridge of "In These Arms", and it took four security guards to take her off.[13]
Set list
edit- Lost Highway
- Born to Be My Baby
- You Give Love a Bad Name
- Summertime
- Raise Your Hands
- Runaway
- I'll Sleep When I'm Dead/Jumpin' Jack Flash
- Whole Lot of Leavin'
- In These Arms
- Any Other Day
- We Got It Going On
- It's My Life
- Keep the Faith
- I'll Be There for You (Richie Sambora on lead vocals)
- (You Want To) Make a Memory
- Someday I'll Be Saturday Night
- Blaze of Glory
- Who Says You Can't Go Home
- Have a Nice Day
- Bad Medicine/Shout
- Livin' on a Prayer
Encore:
Personnel
edit- Bon Jovi
- Jon Bon Jovi – lead vocals, acoustic guitar, rhythm guitar, maracas, tambourine
- Richie Sambora – lead guitar, talk box, backing vocals, co-lead vocals on "I'll Be There for You"
- David Bryan – keyboards, backing vocals
- Tico Torres – drums, percussion
- Additional personnel
- Hugh McDonald – bass, backing vocals
- Bobby Bandiera – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
- Lorenza Ponce – violin, viola, tambourine, backing vocals
- Kurt Johnston – pedal steel guitar, banjo, mandolin, Dobro, backing vocals
Tour grossings
editThe first 22 shows grossed 41.4 million dollars, placing their tour at No. 11 on the list for top-grossing tours of 2007. The band's second North American leg of 38 shows grossed $56.3 million in ticket sales according to Pollstar making it the number one concert draw in North America for the first half of 2008. Bon Jovi's 10-night run to open the new Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey was the No. 1 Grossing event in 2007 and the No. 6 Grossing event "of all time" in North America. The band's 5-night stand at Toronto's Air Canada Centre set the record for the most number of shows in one tour at that venue, beating the previous record of 4 held by the band, as well as U2, The Spice Girls, and The Police. The third leg of the tour the band played to over 966,000 fans. On the fourth leg of Europe they played to over 1 million concert goers in 22 shows. The combined gross of the tour's first, second and third legs was $129 million, with $16.4 million from the Newark shows and $112.4 million from the remaining shows placing them first on Billboards midyear touring chart.
The tour was the highest-grossing tour of 2008 in Billboard's rankings. The tour grossed $210,650,974 and sold 2,157,675 tickets in total.[14] In Pollstar's calculus for North America, the Lost Highway Tour had the fifth-highest gross for 2008 at $70.4 million.[15]
Supporting acts
editFor the run at the Prudential Center in New Jersey, the support acts were My Chemical Romance, Big & Rich, Gretchen Wilson, Daughtry, and The All-American Rejects, with each support act playing two of the ten dates. Hedley opened for Bon Jovi during the Canadian leg of the tour, forcing them to postpone their headlining Canadian tour until early 2008. Daughtry opened for Bon Jovi during the second North American leg of the tour. The Feeling supported Bon Jovi at four of the summer dates in the United Kingdom, with Biffy Clyro supporting on the first night at Twickenham. Kid Rock and Razorlight opened for Bon Jovi at Punchestown, Ireland, with local Irish band DC Tempest. Switchblade opened for Bon Jovi in Bristol, UK. In Australia, local bands Front Counter (Melbourne), OohLaLa (Sydney), and The Violet Flames (Perth) won the support slot through a radio contest. New Zealand band The Valves were the support act in Christchurch
Tour dates
editDate | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America | ||||||
October 25, 2007 | Newark | United States | Prudential Center | 138,322 / 140,000 | $16,379,070 | |
October 26, 2007 | ||||||
October 28, 2007 | ||||||
October 30, 2007 | ||||||
November 1, 2007 | ||||||
November 3, 2007 | ||||||
November 4, 2007 | ||||||
November 7, 2007 | ||||||
November 9, 2007 | ||||||
November 10, 2007 | ||||||
November 14, 2007 | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | 31,525 / 31,525 | $3,246,160 | |
November 15, 2007 | ||||||
November 17, 2007 | Ottawa | Scotiabank Place | — | — | ||
November 19, 2007 | London | John Labatt Centre | 9,762 / 9,762 | $1,173,749 | ||
December 6, 2007 | Toronto | Air Canada Centre | — | — | ||
December 7, 2007 | ||||||
December 9, 2007 | Winnipeg | MTS Centre | — | — | ||
December 10, 2007 | Saskatoon | Credit Union Centre | — | — | ||
December 12, 2007 | Edmonton | Rexall Place | — | — | ||
December 13, 2007 | Calgary | Pengrowth Saddledome | — | — | ||
December 15, 2007 | Vancouver | General Motors Place | 31,143 / 31,143 | $2,963,969 | ||
December 16, 2007 | ||||||
Japan | ||||||
January 11, 2008 | Nagoya | Japan | Nagoya Dome | 12,113 / 12,113 | $1,061,623 | |
January 13, 2008 | Tokyo | Tokyo Dome | 60,549 / 60,549 | $5,272,912 | ||
January 14, 2008 | ||||||
January 16, 2008 | Osaka | Osaka Dome | 23,426 / 23,426 | $2,052,026 | ||
Oceania | ||||||
January 19, 2008 | Melbourne | Australia | Sidney Myer Music Bowl | 13,147 / 13,147 | $1,829,807 | |
January 21, 2008 | Sydney | Acer Arena | 35,632 / 35,632 | $4,162,237 | ||
January 22, 2008 | ||||||
January 25, 2008 | Perth | Subiaco Oval | 28,790 / 28,790 | $3,300,500 | ||
January 27, 2008 | Christchurch | New Zealand | AMI Stadium | 29,526 / 33,271 | $3,465,730 | |
North America | ||||||
February 18, 2008 | Omaha | United States | Qwest Center | 16,977 / 16,977 | $1,271,660 | |
February 20, 2008 | Auburn Hills | The Palace of Auburn Hills | 19,743/ 19,743 | $1,661,602 | ||
February 21, 2008 | Milwaukee | Bradley Center | 17,076 / 17,076 | $1,352,436 | ||
February 23, 2008 | Chicago | United Center | 54,818 / 54,818 | $4,893,109 | ||
February 24, 2008 | ||||||
February 26, 2008 | ||||||
February 28, 2008 | Washington, D.C. | Verizon Center | 18,255 / 18,255 | $1,674,063 | ||
March 2, 2008 | Philadelphia | Wachovia Center | 37,440 / 37,440 | $3,253,717 | ||
March 3, 2008 | ||||||
March 5, 2008 | Pittsburgh | Mellon Arena | 30,475 / 30,475 | $2,295,530 | ||
March 7, 2008 | Uncasville | Mohegan Sun Arena | 18,791 / 18,791 | $2,349,195 | ||
March 8, 2008 | ||||||
March 10, 2008 | Toronto | Canada | Air Canada Centre | 56,011 / 56,011 | $5,614,674 | |
March 12, 2008 | ||||||
March 13, 2008 | ||||||
March 15, 2008 | Pittsburgh | United States | Mellon Arena | (look above) | (look above) | |
March 16, 2008 | Greensboro | Greensboro Coliseum | 22,115 / 22,115 | $1,295,963 | ||
March 18, 2008 | Saint Paul | Xcel Energy Center | 32,733 / 32,733 | $2,987,235 | ||
March 19, 2008 | ||||||
March 31, 2008 | Denver | Pepsi Center | 16,738 / 16,738 | $1,386,228 | ||
April 2, 2008 | San Jose | HP Pavilion at San Jose | 28,343 / 28,343 | $2,358,420 | ||
April 4, 2008 | Anaheim | Honda Center | 32,131 / 32,131 | $2,456,470 | ||
April 5, 2008 | ||||||
April 8, 2008 | San Jose | HP Pavilion at San Jose | (look above) | (look above) | ||
April 9, 2008 | Los Angeles | Staples Center | 16,205 / 16,205 | $1,515,282 | ||
April 11, 2008 | Glendale | Jobing.com Arena | 16,852 / 16,852 | $1,478,803 | ||
April 12, 2008 | Las Vegas | MGM Grand Garden Arena | 15,063 / 15,063 | $2,230,573 | ||
April 14, 2008 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 17,076 / 17,076 | $1,537,464 | ||
April 15, 2008 | Oklahoma City | Ford Center | 15,811 / 15,811 | $1,152,442 | ||
April 17, 2008 | Kansas City | Sprint Center | 32,131 / 32,131 | $2,456,470 | ||
April 19, 2008 | Fargo | Fargodome | 25,065 / 25,065 | $1,575,979 | ||
April 20, 2008 | Des Moines | Wells Fargo Arena | 15,277 / 15,277 | $1,173,472 | ||
April 22, 2008 | Kansas City | Sprint Center | (look above) | (look above) | ||
April 24, 2008 | Nashville | Sommet Center | 16,420 / 16,420 | $1,502,217 | ||
April 26, 2008 | Sunrise | BankAtlantic Center | 18,307 / 18,307 | $1,554,550 | ||
April 27, 2008 | Tampa | St. Pete Times Forum | 18,061 / 18,061 | $1,501,956 | ||
April 30, 2008 | Atlanta | Philips Arena | 32,964 / 32,964 | $2,851,856 | ||
May 1, 2008 | ||||||
UAE / Europe | ||||||
May 20, 2008 | Abu Dhabi | United Arab Emirates | Emirates Palace | 15,291 / 15,291 | $1,714,313 | |
May 22, 2008 | Gelsenkirchen | Germany | Veltins-Arena | 38,918 / 38,918 | $3,350,126 | |
May 24, 2008 | Munich | Olympiastadion | 70,473 / 70,473 | $6,089,353 | ||
May 25, 2008 | Leipzig | Zentralstadion | 34,084 / 34,084 | $2,837,203 | ||
May 28, 2008 | Hamburg | HSH Nordbank Arena | 28,947 / 28,947 | $2,392,643 | ||
May 29, 2008 | Stuttgart | Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion | 36,768 / 36,768 | $2,952,905 | ||
May 31, 2008 | Lisbon | Portugal | Rock in Rio Lisboa | 48,831 / 48,831 | $3,993,759 | |
June 1, 2008 | Barcelona | Spain | Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys | 46,255 / 46,255 | $4,046,421 | |
June 3, 2008 | Frankfurt | Germany | Commerzbank-Arena | 37,187 / 37,187 | $2,985,360 | |
June 4, 2008 | Ebreichsdorf | Austria | Magna Racino | 47,598 / 47,598 | $4,397,906 | |
June 7, 2008 | Kildare | Ireland | Punchestown Racecourse | 46,171 / 46,171 | $4,729,571 | |
June 11, 2008 | Southampton | England | St. Mary's Stadium | 30,284 / 30,284 | $2,669,609 | |
June 13, 2008 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Amsterdam Arena | 34,512 / 34,512 | $2,817,625 | |
June 14, 2008 | Brussels | Belgium | King Baudouin Stadium | 31,041 / 31,041 | $2,517,796 | |
June 16, 2008 | Helsinki | Finland | Olympiastadion | 44,376 / 44,376 | $4,594,027 | |
June 18, 2008 | Oslo | Norway | Ullevaal Stadion | 30,612 / 30,612 | $3,399,884 | |
June 19, 2008 | Auning | Denmark | Gammel Estrup | 28,657 / 28,657 | $3,023,070 | |
June 21, 2008 | Glasgow | Scotland | Hampden Park | 39,756 / 39,756 | $3,564,277 | |
June 22, 2008 | Manchester | England | City of Manchester Stadium | 57,235 / 57,235 | $4,607,410 | |
June 24, 2008 | Coventry | Ricoh Arena | 31,295 / 31,295 | $2,874,196 | ||
June 25, 2008 | Bristol | Ashton Gate | 23,431 / 23,431 | $2,567,812 | ||
June 27, 2008 | London | Twickenham Stadium | 92,852 / 92,852 | $8,916,065 | ||
June 28, 2008 | ||||||
North America | ||||||
July 6, 2008 | Sarnia | Canada | Sarnia Bayfest | 15,443 / 15,443 | $1,369,622 | |
July 7, 2008 | Auburn Hills | United States | The Palace of Auburn Hills | 16,036 / 16,036 | $1,314,545 | |
July 9, 2008 | Boston | TD Banknorth Garden | 30,141 / 30,141 | $2,585,289 | ||
July 10, 2008 | ||||||
July 12, 2008[B] | New York City | Central Park | n/a | n/a | ||
July 14, 2008 | Madison Square Garden | 36,536 / 36,536 | $4,079,017 | |||
July 15, 2008 |
- B This concert was for the MLB All Star Game"
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
- ^ "Official tour press release". Island Def Jam. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ "Bon Jovi to play one-off Christchurch show". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 2007-10-22.
- ^ "Billboard Touring 2008". Billboard. Archived from the original on 2009-10-26. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
- ^ "Bon Jovi: Lost Highway World Tour". Island. 2007-10-26. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Bon Jovi's 'Lost Highway' found in movie theaters". LiveDaily. Archived from the original on January 2, 2010. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
- ^ "New Web TV Series 'On the Road with Bon Jovi' to Premiere on MaxMouth". PRWeb. Archived from the original on September 8, 2008. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
- ^ "Bon Jovi tickets sell out in minutes". Herald Sun. Archived from the original on December 23, 2007. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
- ^ "More Bon Jovi". Toronto Star. 2007-12-03. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
- ^ "Bon Jovi adds fifth show at ACC". Toronto Star. 2008-01-21. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
- ^ "#82- 2008/06/13 - Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam, Netherlands - bjtourss Webseite!". bjtours.jimdo.com. Archived from the original on 2019-02-17.
- ^ "#66 - 2008/04/26 - BankAtlantic Center, Sunrise, Florida, USA - bjtourss Webseite!". bjtours.jimdo.com. Archived from the original on 2019-02-18.
- ^ "#80 - 2008/06/07 - Punchestown Racecourse, Kildare, Ireland - bjtourss Webseite!". bjtours.jimdo.com. Archived from the original on 2019-02-17.
- ^ "Top 25 Tours 2008" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-07. Retrieved 2011-03-22.
- ^ "Madonna biggest 2008 North American tour attraction". Yahoo! News. Reuters. 2008-12-30. Archived from the original on January 1, 2009. Retrieved 2008-12-31.