Unbreakable World Tour (Janet Jackson tour)

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Unbreakable World Tour
Tour by Janet Jackson
Janet Unbreakable World Tour.png
Promotional poster for the tour
Associated album Unbreakable
Start date August 31, 2015 (2015-08-31)
End date March 26, 2016 (2016-03-26)
Legs 2
Number of shows <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Janet Jackson concert chronology

The Unbreakable World Tour is the seventh concert tour by American recording artist Janet Jackson. It is in support of her eleventh studio album Unbreakable (2015). In addition to Live Nation and Rhythm Nation, the tour is also sponsored by Nederlander Concerts, Jam Productions, Another Planet Entertainment, Bamp and Tommy Meharey.[1]

Background

In August 2014, producer and engineer Ian Cross, who worked on her last three studio albums, confirmed to Barefoot Sound[2] that he was working on Jackson's new album, stating they worked in recording studios in Qatar, Paris and Middle East. After his declarations, Jackson herself responded to the rumor, neither confirming nor denying the works: "If there is a new project, you'll hear it from my lips", she tweeted.[3] [4] On April 22, 2015, she tweeted, "Letting go doesn't mean you stop", after a fan created a mock Missing Persons poster of Jackson, which had begun circulating the internet, prompting Jackson to retweet it herself, adding to further speculation of a new album.[5]

On May 15, 2015, Jackson announced a new album and world tour.[6] She will release her forthcoming eleventh album in the fall of 2015 through her own record label, Rhythm Nation, distributed by BMG Rights Management.[7] Later in June 2015, the first 36 dates of the Unbreakable World Tour in North America were announced.[8] Pre-sale tickets were made available exclusively to American Express and Citibank cardholders prior to general admission tickets going on sale on June 22, 2015.[9] Jackson's forthcoming album was also made available for pre-order, along with vinyl copies of the album's lead single "No Sleeep."[10]

Jackson enlisted designer Giuseppe Zanotti to create custom shoes for the tour. In an interview with Women's Wear Daily Zanotti stated that "Janet will be dancing a lot on stage as well as singing, so I wanted her to be very comfortable and able to move around easily ... The shoe has to be light but practical and provide support to her feet.”[11] Zanotti also noted Unbreakable will be the first tour in which he makes custom designs for the entire cast.[11]

In December 2015, Jackson announced that the upcoming second North American leg of the tour that was start to set in January 2016 would be postponed due to needing surgery. All dates were rescheduled except for one date in Lexington, Kentucky, as the venue would go through renovations.

In March 2016, the European leg of the tour was postponed. On April 6, 2016, Jackson announced that due to family planning, she is postponing all remaining dates of the tour. She stated: "Please, if you can try and understand that it's important that I do this now. I have to rest up, doctor's orders. But I have not forgotten about you. I will continue the tour as soon as I possibly can."[12] According to concert promoter Live Nation, the tour will resume in 2017 and tickets will be honored with rescheduled dates; refunds will also be available.[13][14]

Commercial reception

According to Forbes, Jackson's absence since her previous tour coupled with the social media campaign to have her return to recording music and performing generated high ticket prices, averaging $167.20 on the secondary market.[9] The most expensive shows for the first leg of the tour include The Forum in Inglewood, California and the Chicago Theatre, while the Delta Classic Chastain Park Amphitheater in Atlanta, Georgia will host the least expensive show on the tour.[9]

According to sales reports from Live Nation, "88 percent of the tickets on the trek’s first leg (Aug. 31 to Nov. 15) were purchased two weeks after going on sale; nearly 80 percent of the tickets for the second leg (Jan. 12 to March 9) were gone in two days."[15] Due to immediate sell-outs, additional concert dates were added to the Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu, Hawaii and at the Chicago Theatre.[16][17] The tour also set a record for the fastest sell-out in the history of Sands Bethlehem Event Center in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, selling 2,400 tickets within 30 minutes.[18]

According to StubHub, a ticket resale site, the Unbreakable World Tour ranked the tenth most popular concert tour of the fall of 2015.[19]

At the end of 2015, the tour placed at number 74 on Pollstar's "2015 Year-End Top 200 North American Tours" list, grossing $15 million from 33 shows with a total attendance of 179,340.[20]

Critical reception

Writing for E!, Zach Johnson wrote that "Janet Jackson made a welcome return to the stage" for the tour's opening concert at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver. She started the concert with a new song, "Burn It Up", featuring rapper Missy Elliot. The remainder of the setlist included new material from Unbreakable as well as numerous classic songs from her catalog.[21] Jon Pareles of The New York Times observed that songs on the setlist were arranged by "persona and tempo. She was the woman taking charge (funk), the joyfully loyal lover (upbeat pop), the ballad singer, the woman left lonely (midtempo R&B), the party girl (dance-club beats), the rocker (with guitar up front) and, in the end, the idealist." He complimented her vocal technique, stating it was "never as delicate as she could make it sound. The rock songs included "Scream" as a duet with the voice of Michael Jackson; she belted it with a raw urgency." He noted that as the concert neared its end, Jackson focused the show on socially conscious messages, including "Rhythm Nation" and a new song from Unbreakable, "a ballad that marched its way toward an anthem, part U2 and part trance music ... It was the virtuous Janet Jackson, the one that was always there."[22] Fish Griwkowsky of the Edmonton Journal said the show "was a dazzling concert, an energetic temple of love with few hits left unturned", adding that "Jackson is ready for the world again".[23]

Setlist

The following setlist is obtained from the debut concert held at Rogers Arena, in Vancouver, Canada. It does not represent all shows during the tour. Lewis Corner of Digital Spy reported: "The mammoth 32-song set includes every single best song she's ever recorded, as well as a few new ones to give fans an idea of what they can expect from her upcoming record."[24]

  1. "Video Introduction" (contains elements from "Funny How Time Flies (When You're Having Fun)", "Nasty", "Rock with U", "Every Time", "Rhythm Nation", and "Scream")
  2. "Burnitup!" (contains elements of "Lose Control")[25]
  3. "Nasty" (contains elements of "I Don't Fuck with You") / "Feedback" / "Miss You Much" / "Alright" / "You Want This" (Medley)
  4. "Control" / "What Have You Done for Me Lately" / "The Pleasure Principle" (Medley)
  5. "Escapade" / "When I Think of You" / "All for You" (Medley)
  6. "All Nite (Don't Stop)"
  7. "Love Will Never Do (Without You)"
  8. DJ Intermission*
  9. "After You Fall"
  10. "Again" / "Come Back to Me" / "Let's Wait Awhile" / "I Get Lonely" (Medley)
  11. "Any Time, Any Place" (contains elements of "Poetic Justice")[26]
  12. "No Sleeep"
  13. "Got 'til It's Gone"
  14. "That's the Way Love Goes" (contains elements of "Classic Man")
  15. "Together Again" (DJ Premier 100 in a 50 Remix) / "Together Again"
  16. "The Best Things in Life Are Free"
  17. "Throb"
  18. "Black Cat"
  19. "If"
  20. "Scream" / "Rhythm Nation" (Medley)
  21. "Shoulda Known Better"
  22. "Unbreakable"
Notes
  • "Night" was performed for the first time in Honolulu.[27]

Shows

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, amount of available tickets and gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
North America[28][29][30][31][32]
August 31, 2015 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena N/A N/A
September 2, 2015 Calgary Scotiabank Saddledome
September 4, 2015 Edmonton Rexall Place
September 5, 2015 Grande Prairie Revolution Place
September 7, 2015 Saskatoon SaskTel Centre
September 8, 2015 Winnipeg MTS Centre
September 11, 2015 Grand Rapids United States Van Andel Arena 8,621 / 9,102 $568,915
September 12, 2015 Cincinnati PNC Pavilion N/A N/A
September 15, 2015 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 13,239 / 13,239 $772,816
September 17, 2015 Raleigh United States Walnut Creek Amphitheatre N/A N/A
September 18, 2015 Charlotte PNC Music Pavilion
September 20, 2015 Miami American Airlines Arena
September 23, 2015 Orlando Amway Center 8,906 / 9,067 $736,342
September 24, 2015 Tampa Amalie Arena 7,702 / 8,811 $689,610
September 26, 2015 Atlanta Delta Classic Chastain Park Amphitheater N/A N/A
September 27, 2015 Nashville Ascend Amphitheater
September 29, 2015 Memphis FedExForum
September 30, 2015 New Orleans Smoothie King Center
October 13, 2015 San Francisco Bill Graham Civic Auditorium 10,172 / 10,172 $1,131,847
October 14, 2015
October 16, 2015 Inglewood The Forum 12,676 / 12,676 $1,410,660
October 17, 2015 San Diego Viejas Arena N/A N/A
October 19, 2015 Phoenix Comerica Theatre
October 21, 2015 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl 8,839 / 8,839 $849,456
October 22, 2015
October 30, 2015 Omaha CenturyLink Center Omaha N/A N/A
November 1, 2015 Minneapolis Target Center 8,879 / 10,395 $466,275
November 3, 2015 Chicago Chicago Theatre 10,451 / 10,451 $1,436,172
November 4, 2015
November 6, 2015
November 12, 2015 Honolulu Blaisdell Arena N/A N/A
November 13, 2015
November 15, 2015
Asia[33][34][35]
November 19, 2015 Osaka Japan Intex Osaka N/A N/A
November 21, 2015 Saitama Saitama Super Arena
November 22, 2015
March 26, 2016[lower-alpha 1] Dubai United Arab Emirates Meydan Racecourse
Total 89,575 / 92,752
(96.7%)
$8,062,093

Cancelled shows

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason
January 30, 2016 Lexington United States Rupp Arena Arena reform[36]
March 30, 2016 Birmingham England Barclaycard Arena Scheduling difficulties[37]
March 31, 2016 London The O2 Arena
April 2, 2016 Dublin Ireland 3Arena
April 4, 2016 Glasgow Scotland The SSE Hydro
April 5, 2016 Manchester England Manchester Arena
April 10, 2016 Paris France AccorHotels Arena
April 11, 2016 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
April 13, 2016 Hamburg Germany Barclaycard Arena
April 14, 2016 Frankfurt Festhalle Frankfurt
April 16, 2016 Düsseldorf Mitsubishi Electric Halle
April 18, 2016 Berlin Max-Schmeling-Halle
April 20, 2016 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena
April 22, 2016 Kaunas Lithuania Žalgirio Arena
April 23, 2016 Tallinn Estonia Saku Suurhall
April 25, 2016 Helsinki Finland Hartwall Arena
April 27, 2016 Stockholm Sweden Hovet
April 28, 2016 Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum
April 30, 2016 Copenhagen Denmark Forum Copenhagen
May 2, 2016 Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome
May 3, 2016 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis
May 14, 2016[lower-alpha 2] Las Vegas United States T-Mobile Arena Pregnancy[39]
May 19, 2016 Concord Concord Pavilion
May 21, 2016 Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl
May 23, 2016 Tucson Tucson Arena
May 24, 2016 Albuquerque Isleta Amphitheater
May 26, 2016 Austin Frank Erwin Center
May 28, 2016 Lafayette Cajundome
May 29, 2016 Birmingham Legacy Arena
May 31, 2016 Little Rock Verizon Arena
June 2, 2016 Moline iWireless Center
June 4, 2016 Rosemont Allstate Arena
June 5, 2016 Milwaukee BMO Harris Bradley Center
June 7, 2016 Toledo Huntington Center
June 8, 2016 Louisville KFC Yum! Center
June 10, 2016 Norfolk Scope Arena
June 11, 2016 Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall
June 14, 2016 Hershey Giant Center
June 15, 2016 Rochester Blue Cross Arena
June 17, 2016 Montreal Canada Bell Centre
June 18, 2016 London Budweiser Gardens
June 21, 2016 Manchester United States Verizon Wireless Arena
June 22, 2016 Providence Dunkin' Donuts Center
June 24, 2016 Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center
June 25, 2016 Wantagh Nikon at Jones Beach Theater
June 29, 2016 Salt Lake City Vivint Smart Home Arena
July 1, 2016 Denver Pepsi Center
July 3, 2016 Portland Moda Center
July 5, 2016 Seattle KeyArena
July 7, 2016 Sacramento Sleep Train Arena
July 8, 2016 Anaheim Honda Center
July 11, 2016 San Antonio AT&T Center
July 13, 2016 Houston Toyota Center
July 15, 2016 Dallas American Airlines Center
July 16, 2016 Tulsa BOK Center
July 18, 2016 Kansas City Sprint Center
July 20, 2016 St. Louis Chaifetz Arena
July 22, 2016 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse
July 23, 2016 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills
July 25, 2016 Columbus Value City Arena
July 26, 2016 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center
August 4, 2016 Sunrise BB&T Center
August 5, 2016 Jacksonville Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena
August 7, 2016 Atlanta Philips Arena
August 9, 2016 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center
August 10, 2016 Winston-Salem LJVM Coliseum
August 12, 2016 Columbia Colonial Life Arena
August 14, 2016 Baltimore Royal Farms Arena
August 15, 2016 Brooklyn Barclays Center
August 17, 2016 Newark Prudential Center
August 18, 2016 Boston TD Garden
August 20, 2016 Bethlehem Sands Events Center
August 21, 2016 Hartford XL Center
August 24, 2016 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center
August 26, 2016 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
August 28, 2016 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena

References

Notes

  1. The March 26, 2016, concert in Dubai, United Arab Emirates at Meydan Racecourse is a part of Dubai World Cup.[35]
  2. The concert of May 14, 2016 in Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena was originally planned to take place on October 9 & 10, 2015 at the The AXIS, but was rescheduled due to being on vocal rest.[38]

Citations

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External links