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词条 American Idols Live! Tour 2010
释义

  1. Performers

  2. Show overview

  3. Set list

  4. Additional notes

  5. Tour dates

  6. Rescheduled and canceled shows

  7. Response

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Infobox concert tour |
| concert_tour_name = American Idols LIVE! Tour 2010
| image = Tour2010 press 210x280.jpg
| image_caption =Top row: Siobhan Magnus, Lee DeWyze
Middle row: Didi Benami, Andrew Garcia, Casey James, Tim Urban
Bottom row: Michael Lynche, Crystal Bowersox, Katie Stevens, Aaron Kelly
| artist = American Idol
| start_date = July 1, 2010
| end_date = August 31, 2010
| number_of_shows = 44
| last_tour = American Idols LIVE! Tour 2009
(2009)
| this_tour = American Idols LIVE! Tour 2010
(2010)
| next_tour = American Idols LIVE! Tour 2011
(2011)
}}

The American Idols LIVE! Tour 2010 was a summer concert tour in the United States and Canada that featured the Top 10 contestants of the ninth season of American Idol. The 44 date tour started in Auburn Hills, Michigan, on July 1, and ended in Indianapolis, Indiana, on August 31.[1][2]

The tour was sponsored by M&M'S Pretzel Chocolate Candies.[3] The tour was promoted by Live Nation for the first time after a seven-year stint with AEG Live.[4] The show was produced and directed by Raj Kapoor who was also responsible for the 2008 and 2009 Idols tour shows.[5]

Performers

Lee DeWyze (Winner) Crystal Bowersox (2nd place)
Casey James (3rd place) Michael Lynche (4th place)
Aaron Kelly (5th place) Siobhan Magnus (6th place)
Tim Urban (7th place) Katie Stevens (8th place)
Andrew Garcia (9th place) Didi Benami (10th place)

Show overview

The show repeated the format of the last two season where each performer presented a mini-concert, starting from the tenth-place finisher and ending with the winner.

Set list

  • Didi Benami - "Lay It On Me" (Kyler England) and "Terrified" (Katharine McPhee)
  • Andrew Garcia - "Straight Up" (Paula Abdul) and "Sunday Morning" (Maroon 5)
  • Katie Stevens - "Here We Go Again" (Demi Lovato) and "Fighter" (Christina Aguilera)
  • Tim Urban - "Better Days" (Goo Goo Dolls) and "Viva la Vida" (Coldplay)
  • Siobhan Magnus - "Paint It, Black" (The Rolling Stones), "Spiderwebs" (No Doubt) and "Stockholm Syndrome" (Muse)
  • Aaron Kelly - "Somebody Like You" (Keith Urban), "Walking in Memphis" (Marc Cohn), and "Fast Cars and Freedom" (Rascal Flatts)
  • Benami, Garcia, Stevens, Urban, Magnus, and Kelly - "The Climb" (Miley Cyrus)
Intermission
  • Michael Lynche - "This Woman's Work" (Kate Bush), "Ready for Love" (India.Arie) and "My Love" (Justin Timberlake)
  • Casey James - "I Got Mine" (The Black Keys), "Don't!" (Shania Twain) "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" (Bryan Adams) with Michael Lynche and "It's All Over Now" (The Rolling Stones)
  • Crystal Bowersox - "What's Up?" (4 Non Blondes), "Come to My Window" (Melissa Etheridge), "Up to the Mountain" (Patty Griffin) and "Piece of My Heart" (Janis Joplin).
  • Lee DeWyze - "Beautiful Day" (U2), "Rocket Man" (Elton John), "Hallelujah" (Leonard Cohen), "Treat Her Like a Lady" (Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose), and "Use Somebody" (Kings of Leon)
  • Group song: It's My Life (Bon Jovi), "My Life Would Suck Without You" (Kelly Clarkson)

Additional notes

  • Crystal Bowersox sang "People Get Ready" by The Impressions in place of "Up to the Mountain" in Atlantic City.
  • Crystal Bowersox sang "Holy Toledo" instead of "Up to The Mountain" in her home town show in Toledo, OH.

Tour dates

DateCityCountryVenuePercentage
July 1, 2010Auburn HillsUnited StatesThe Palace of Auburn Hills96.2%
July 2, 2010MilwaukeeSummerfest
July 3, 2010Grand RapidsVan Andel Arena
July 5, 2010HamiltonCanadaCopps Coliseum
July 7, 2010WantaghUnited StatesNikon at Jones Beach Theater
July 9, 2010BridgeportArena at Harbor Yard
July 10, 2010Atlantic CityMark G. Etess Arena
July 11, 2010PhiladelphiaWells Fargo Center52.5%
July 13, 2010UncasvilleMohegan Sun Arena89.5%
July 14, 2010ManchesterVerizon Wireless Arena
July 15, 2010HersheyGiant Center64.8%
July 17, 2010AlbanyTimes Union Center
July 18, 2010MansfieldComcast Center
July 20, 2010NewarkPrudential Center87.3%
July 21, 2010BurgettstownFirst Niagara Pavilion
July 23, 2010BristowJiffy Lube Live
July 24, 2010Baltimore1st Mariner Arena
July 25, 2010CharlotteVerizon Wireless Amphitheatre
July 27, 2010ColumbusNationwide Arena
July 28, 2010KnoxvilleThompson–Boling Arena
July 29, 2010Virginia BeachVirginia Beach Amphitheater
July 31, 2010LexingtonRupp Arena
August 1, 2010DuluthArena at Gwinnett Center
August 3, 2010SunriseBankAtlantic Center
August 4, 2010TampaSt. Pete Times Forum69.3%
August 7, 2010The WoodlandsCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion39.0%
August 8, 2010TulsaBOK Center
August 9, 2010DallasAmerican Airlines Center55.5%
August 12, 2010PhoenixUS Airways Center
August 13, 2010Los AngelesStaples Center
August 14, 2010Mountain ViewShoreline Amphitheatre
August 16, 2010San DiegoViejas Arena
August 17, 2010AnaheimHonda Center38.2%
August 18, 2010SacramentoARCO Arena
August 20, 2010SeattleKeyArena80.3%
August 21, 2010PortlandRose Garden73.3%
August 23, 2010Greenwood VillageComfort Dental Amphitheatre
August 25, 2010St. LouisScottrade Center
August 26, 2010Des MoinesWells Fargo Arena
August 27, 2010MinneapolisTarget Center80.8%
August 28, 2010ChicagoUnited Center
August 29, 2010ToledoHuntington Center83.1%
August 30, 2010CincinnatiRiverbend Music Center
August 31, 2010IndianapolisConseco Fieldhouse

Rescheduled and canceled shows

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}Rescheduled[2]
  • Bridgeport, Connecticut moved from September 13 to July 9
  • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania moved from September 14 to July 21 at First Niagara Pavilion.
  • Des Moines, Iowa moved from August 31 to August 26
  • Minneapolis, Minnesota moved from August 29 to August 27
  • Chicago, Illinois moved from August 30 to August 28
  • Toledo, Ohio moved from September 2 to August 29
  • Cincinnati, Ohio moved from September 3 to August 30
  • Indianapolis, Indiana moved from September 4 to August 31
{{col-2}}Canceled[2]
  • Omaha, Nebraska on August 26
  • Kansas City, Missouri on August 27
  • Winnipeg, Manitoba on September 7
  • Toronto, Ontario on September 9
  • Buffalo, New York on September 10
  • Cleveland, Ohio on September 11
  • Portland, Maine on September 16
{{col-end}}

Response

The season 9 tour performed significantly worse than the last few years of the tour. Of the limited number of shows that reported their tour receipts to Billboard, the number of ticket sold averaged 6057 per show with an average revenue of $277,814 per show. While this average number of ticket sold is around two-third of the previous two seasons, the average revenue was less than half of those seasons due to ticket price reduction and special offers. The ticket price this year averaged $45.87, down by around 25% from the previous two seasons.

The total gross was reported by Pollstar to be $9.6 million,[6] only around a third of the previous two seasons, making this tour the second lowest-grossing tour after the first season tour which had only 30 shows.

References

1. ^'American Idols Live! 2010' Tour Dates Announced
2. ^American Idol Live Tour adjusts schedule and disappoints fans in Kansas City
3. ^{{cite news|last=Olson |first=Elizabeth |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/22/business/media/22adco.html |title=A Campaign for M&Ms With a Salty Center? Sweet |publisher=Nytimes.com |date=2010-06-21 |accessdate=2011-08-06}}
4. ^American Idol Tour Shifts To Live Nation
5. ^Raj Kapoor Director/Producer/Video Content Producer
6. ^[https://www.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2011-03-30-idoltour30_ST_N.htm Make it to Idols Live tour: Check!]

External links

  • Idol Stages
{{s-start}}{{succession box|title=American Idols LIVE! Tour|before=Season 8 (2009)|after=Season 10 (2011)|years=Season 9 (2010)}}{{s-end}}{{Commons category|American Idols LIVE! Tour 2010}}{{American Idol 9}}{{American Idol}}

2 : American Idol concert tours|2010 concert tours

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