Anger Management Tour

Last updated

Anger Management Tour
Tour by Limp Bizkit, Eminem, Papa Roach, Xzibit, D12, DMX, Godsmack, Sinnistar, Outkast, Ludacris, X-Ecutioners, Bionic Jive, 50 Cent, Cypress Hill, Obie Trice, Lil Jon, G-Unit, Stat Quo, Lil Scrappy, Pitbull
LocationNorth America • Europe • Asia
Associated album The Marshall Mathers LP , Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water , Infest , Restless , Awake , And Then There Was X (+ others)
Start dateOctober 19, 2000
End dateAugust 12, 2005
Legs7
No. of shows116 (+13 cancelled)
  • 20 in Europe (+12 cancelled)
  • 94 in North America (+1 cancelled)
  • 2 in Asia
Eminem tour chronology
Up in Smoke Tour
(2000)
Anger Management Tour
(2000–2005)
The Recovery Tour
(2010–2013)

The Anger Management Tour was a rap and rock music tour, founded and started in the fall of 2000 by Limp Bizkit, Papa Roach and, after the release of The Marshall Mathers LP , Eminem.

Contents

History

The first "Anger Management" outing took place in 2000. The tour began two days after the release of Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water on October 19, 2000. On the first leg Limp Bizkit and Eminem co-headlined with support from D12, Papa Roach and Xzibit. They played through November 21, 2000. Three dates were cancelled on October 24 (which got rescheduled for December 11), November 3 and 15 - in lieu of either Fred Durst's voice or what other issues occurred during the tour.

The second leg occurred from November 24 till December 19, 2000 with support from DMX, Godsmack and Sinnistar in tow. Limp Bizkit finished the leg as headliners as it was the only Anger Management tour where Eminem did not finish, and instead, Limp Bizkit headlined over him. In this leg, three further dates were cancelled on November 26 and December 13 and 14. Rapper DMX missed four shows on the tour including a stop on December 17, where there was an issue and had to cancel his performance.

The other acts continued the tour and on December 19, 2000, during the final show at Limp Bizkit's hometown in Jacksonville, Florida, DMX came out to perform an acapella sing-along to one of Limp Bizkit's songs during their set. Finally, at the end of the night, DMX gave a prayer to the audience, saying he will do better for the Lord and himself. During the concert at some point during Limp's set some fans stormed Limp Bizkit's tour bus and took all the band members clothes. Despite this, the tour ended on a high-note for Limp Bizkit, who were leading the charge of the Nu Metal wave at the time and had enjoyed great and tremendous success during this era.

The tour was supported by the acts' then-recent album releases which included Infest by Papa Roach and finally, Xzibit's soon-to-be released major label debut, Restless in December of that year. Both Eminem and Limp Bizkit had album releases they were supporting on this tour that had sold over a million copies in their first week.

Anger Management 2001 took place in Europe with Eminem headlining the first leg in February with support from OutKast, Xzibit and D12. Guest artists like Dr. Dre, Dido and Marilyn Manson appeared at select dates.

Limp Bizkit and Godsmack would finish the second leg during May and June 2001.

Eminem would headline future editions going forward.

The second tour took place in the summer of 2002. Eminem said "It's basically the same thing that it was the last Anger Management Tour without Limp Bizkit... Papa Roach are still cool though." Headlined by Eminem with support from Papa Roach, Ludacris, Xzibit, X-Ecutioners and Bionic Jive. The tour ran from July 18 to September 8, lasting 32 dates.

Anger Management 2003 took place in Japan and Europe with support from 50 Cent, Cypress Hill, D12, Xzibit and Obie Trice. During a stop in Milton Keynes, UK, fans grew restless and agitated at the prolonged 'stage changeovers' between artists and threw bottles of liquid (alcohol, water, and urine) at the stage.[ citation needed ] It was the last rock inclusion of the tour with Cypress Hill playing a mix of rap rock along with their hip hop tracks during their run of the tour.

The third tour took place in the summer of 2005. 50 Cent missed the tour's first two stops because of a scheduling conflict; he was tied up shooting his film debut. Ludacris filled in on those dates.[ citation needed ]

Artists

Eminem performing on the Anger Management Tour Eminem Live.jpg
Eminem performing on the Anger Management Tour
D12 performing on the Anger Management Tour D12 at the Anger Management Tour in 2005.jpg
D12 performing on the Anger Management Tour

Tour dates

1st edition

USA: Limp Bizkit, Eminem (until 21 November), Papa Roach (until 21 November), Xzibit (until 21 November), DMX (started 24 November), Godsmack (started 24 November), Sinisstar (started 24 November)

Europe 2001: Eminem, Xzibit, OutKast, D12 (February 2–10)

Europe 2001: Limp Bizkit, Godsmack (May 9 - June 16)

DateCityCountryVenue
North America
October 19, 2000 East Rutherford United States Continental Airlines Arena
October 20, 2000
October 21, 2000 Buffalo HSBC Arena
October 23, 2000 Worcester Worcester's Centrum Centre
October 26, 2000 Toronto Canada SkyDome
October 27, 2000 Montreal Molson Centre
October 29, 2000 Auburn Hills United States The Palace of Auburn Hills
October 30, 2000 Rosemont Allstate Arena
November 1, 2000 Milwaukee Bradley Center
November 2, 2000 Champaign Assembly Hall
November 3, 2000 Indianapolis Conseco Fieldhouse
November 5, 2000 Moline The MARK of the Quad Cities
November 6, 2000 St. Louis Savvis Center
November 8, 2000 Minneapolis Target Center
November 10, 2000 Denver Pepsi Center
November 13, 2000 Tacoma Tacoma Dome
November 14, 2000 Portland Rose Garden Arena
November 17, 2000 Daly City Cow Palace
November 18, 2000 Sacramento ARCO Arena
November 21, 2000 Anaheim Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim
November 24, 2000 Inglewood Great Western Forum
November 26, 2000 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
November 28, 2000 San Antonio Alamodome
November 29, 2000 Houston Compaq Center
November 30, 2000 Dallas Reunion Arena
December 2, 2000 New Orleans New Orleans Arena
December 3, 2000 Birmingham BJCC Arena
December 5, 2000 Columbus Value City Arena
December 6, 2000 Lexington Rupp Arena
December 7, 2000 Detroit Joe Louis Arena
December 9, 2000 Hartford Hartford Civic Center
December 10, 2000 Washington, D.C. MCI Center
December 11, 2000 Albany Pepsi Arena
December 13, 2000 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum
December 14, 2000 Greenville BI-LO Center
December 15, 2000 Charlotte Charlotte Coliseum
December 17, 2000 Tampa Ice Palace
December 18, 2000 Sunrise National Car Rental Center
December 19, 2000 Jacksonville Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Europe
February 2, 2001 Hamburg Germany Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
February 3, 2001 Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum
February 4, 2001 Stockholm Sweden Stockholm Globe Arena
February 5, 2001 Rotterdam Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy
February 6, 2001 Brussels Belgium Forest National
February 7, 2001 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
February 8, 2001 Manchester England Manchester Evening News Arena
February 9, 2001 London London Arena
February 10, 2001
North America
May 9, 2001 Mexico City Mexico Palacio de los Deportes
Europe Leg II
May 16, 2001 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall
May 22, 2001 Lisbon Portugal Pavilhão Atlântico
May 25, 2001 Assago Italy FilaForum di Assago
May 26, 2001
May 28, 2001 Paris FrancePalais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
May 29, 2001 Merksem Belgium Sportpaleis
May 31, 2001 Vienna AustriaWiener Stadthalle - Halle D
June 1, 2001NurembergGermany Rock im Park 2001
June 3, 2001 Nürburg Germany Rock im Park 2001
June 4, 2001LandgraafNetherlands Pinkpop 2001
June 6, 2001 London England Wembley Arena
June 7, 2001
June 9, 2001 Glasgow Scotland Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre
June 10, 2001ManchesterEnglandManchester Evening News Arena
June 12, 2001 Oberhausen Germany Arena Oberhausen
June 13, 2001 Bremen Germany Stadthalle
June 14, 2001 Hultsfred SwedenHultsfredfestivalen 2001
June 16, 2001 Seinäjoki FinlandProvinssirock 2001
2nd edition

USA: Eminem, Papa Roach, Ludacris, Xzibit, The X-Ecutioners and Bionic Jive (until 7 August)

Japan: Eminem, 50 Cent, D12, Obie Trice

Europe: Eminem, 50 Cent, Cypress Hill, Xzibit, D12

DateCityCountryVenue
North America
July 18, 2002BuffaloUnited StatesHSBC Arena
July 19, 2002Hartford ctnow.com Meadows Music Theatre
July 20, 2002 Scranton Ford Pavilion at Montage Mountain
July 21, 2002 Bristow Nissan Pavilion at Stone Ridge
July 22, 2002 East Rutherford Continental Airlines Arena
July 25, 2002 Camden Tweeter Center at the Waterfront
July 26, 2002 Wantagh Tommy Hilfiger at Jones Beach Theater
July 27, 2002 Mansfield Tweeter Center for the Performing Arts
July 30, 2002 Cleveland CSU Convocation Center
July 31, 2002 Noblesville Verizon Wireless Music Center
August 1, 2002RosemontAllstate Arena
August 2, 2002 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center
August 5, 2002 Nampa Idaho Center Arena
August 6, 2002TacomaTacoma Dome
August 7, 2002PortlandRose Garden
August 10, 2002 Wheatland AutoWest Amphitheatre
August 11, 2002 Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheatre
August 12, 2002 Fresno Selland Arena
August 15, 2002 Chula Vista Coors Amphitheatre
August 16, 2002 San Bernardino Blockbuster Pavilion
August 17, 2002 Las Vegas Thomas & Mack Center
August 20, 2002 Phoenix America West Arena
August 21, 2002 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum
August 22, 2002 Greenwood Village Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
August 24, 2002Maryland Heights UMB Bank Pavilion
August 25, 2002 Bonner Springs Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
August 31, 2002TampaIce Palace
September 1, 2002SunriseNational Car Rental Center
September 4, 2002 Atlanta HiFi Buys Amphitheatre
September 8, 2002Auburn HillsThe Palace of Auburn Hills
Asia
May 23, 2003 Chiba Japan Makuhari Event Hall
May 24, 2003
Europe
June 13, 2003 Essen Germany Georg-Melches-Stadion
June 15, 2003Hamburg AOL Arena
June 17, 2003 Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam Arena
June 18, 2003
June 19, 2003ParisFrancePalais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
June 21, 2003 Milton Keynes England National Bowl
June 22, 2003
June 23, 2003
June 24, 2003 Glasgow Scotland Hampden Park
June 26, 2003 County Kildare Ireland Punchestown Racecourse
June 27, 2003
3rd edition

Eminem, 50 Cent, Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz, G-Unit, D12, Obie Trice, Stat Quo, Lil Scrappy, Pitbull, Ludacris (replaced 50 Cent on first two shows)

DateCityCountryVenue
North America
July 7, 2005NoblesvilleUnited StatesVerizon Wireless Music Center
July 8, 2005Columbus Germain Amphitheater
July 11, 2005 Tinley Park Tweeter Center Chicago
July 12, 2005
July 14, 2005DenverPepsi Center
July 17, 2005 Auburn White River Amphitheatre
July 19, 2005 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose
July 20, 2005
July 22, 2005Chula VistaCoors Amphitheatre
July 23, 2005 San Bernardino Hyundai Pavilion
July 24, 2005Las VegasThomas & Mack Center
July 26, 2005Phoenix Cricket Pavilion
July 28, 2005Dallas Smirnoff Music Centre
July 29, 2005 Selma (San Antonio) Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
July 31, 2005AtlantaHiFi Buys Amphitheatre
August 1, 2005Tampa Ford Amphitheatre
August 2, 2005 West Palm Beach Sound Advice Amphitheatre
August 5, 2005BristowNissan Pavilion at Stone Ridge
August 6, 2005 Philadelphia Lincoln Financial Field
August 8, 2005New York City Madison Square Garden
August 9, 2005
August 10, 2005MansfieldTweeter Center
August 12, 2005Detroit Comerica Park
August 13, 2005
Cancellations and rescheduled shows

2013

In December 2012, it was confirmed that Eminem would finally perform at Slane Castle in Ireland on August 17, 2013, 8 years after cancelling the European part of the 2005 tour. [1]

DVD

Anger Management Tour
EminemAngerManagementTourDVDCover2005.jpg
DVD release of a 2002 performance.
Genre Hip hop/rap, dirty rap, hardcore rap, gangsta rap
DatesFall, Summer
Location(s)United States
Years active2000–2003, 2005
Founders Limp Bizkit, Eminem, Papa Roach, Ludacris, Xzibit, X-Ecutioners, Bionic Jive, 50 Cent, D12, Obie Trice

In 2002 a DVD of the 2001 Anger Management Tour Europe was released and contains backstage footage with D12, Xzibit, Marilyn Manson, and Dido.

All Access Europe was released on June 18, 2002.

Track list

  1. "Hamburg"
  2. "Oslo"
  3. "Stockholm"
  4. "Amsterdam"
  5. "Brussels"
  6. "Paris"
  7. "Manchester"
  8. "London"

In 2005 a DVD of the 2002 performance in Detroit, Michigan, was released and features behind-the-scenes footage as well as Eminem's performance in its entirety and special guests D12 and Obie Trice.

Eminem Presents the Anger Management Tour was released on July 4, 2005.

Track list

  1. "Square Dance"
  2. "Business"
  3. "White America"
  4. "Kill You"
  5. "When the Music Stops" (featuring D12)
  6. "Pimp Like Me" (featuring D12)
  7. "Fight Music" (featuring D12)
  8. "Purple Pills" (featuring D12)
  9. "Stan"
  10. "The Way I Am"
  11. "Soldier"
  12. "Cleanin' Out My Closet"
  13. "Forgot About Dre"
  14. "Drips" (featuring Obie Trice)
  15. "Superman" (featuring Dina Rae)
  16. "Drug Ballad" (featuring Dina Rae)
  17. "Just Don't Give a Fuck"
  18. "Sing for the Moment"
  19. "Without Me"
  20. "My Dad's Gone Crazy"

In 2007 a DVD of the 2005 performance in New York City's Madison Square Garden was released and features Eminem's performance shot by Showcase Network in its entirety, plus special guests D12, Obie Trice, and Stat Quo. In 2009, a BD of the same performance was released. This was the last performance to feature Proof before his death in 2006.

Eminem Live From New York was released on November 13, 2007.

Track list

  1. "Backstage Pt. 1"
  2. "Evil Deeds"
  3. "Mosh"
  4. "Business"
  5. "Rain Man"
  6. "Ass Like That"
  7. "Puke"
  8. "Kill You"
  9. "Like Toy Soldiers"
  10. "Git' Up" (featuring D12)
  11. "How Come" (featuring D12)
  12. "Rockstar" (featuring Bizarre of D12)
  13. "40 Oz" (featuring D12)
  14. "My Band" (featuring D12)
  15. "Backstage Pt. 2"
  16. "Stan"
  17. "The Way I Am"
  18. "Just Don't Give a Fuck"
  19. "Got Some Teeth" (featuring Obie Trice)
  20. "Stay 'Bout It" (featuring Obie Trice & Stat Quo)
  21. "The Setup (You Don't Know)" (featuring Obie Trice)
  22. "Like Dat" (featuring Stat Quo)
  23. "Cleanin' Out My Closet"
  24. "Mockingbird"
  25. "Just Lose It"
  26. "Backstage Pt. 3"
  27. "Lose Yourself" (featuring D12)

Related Research Articles

<i>Lovehatetragedy</i> 2002 studio album by Papa Roach

Lovehatetragedy is the third overall and second major label studio album by the American rock band Papa Roach. It was released on June 18, 2002.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Obie Trice</span> American rapper from Michigan

Obie Trice III is an American rapper. He signed with fellow Detroit rapper Eminem's Shady Records, an imprint of Interscope Records in 2000 to release his first two albums, Cheers (2003) and Second Round's on Me (2006). Both peaked within the top ten of the Billboard 200, while the former was supported by the singles "Got Some Teeth" and the Dr. Dre-produced "The Set Up ". Upon leaving the label, Trice formed his own record label, Black Market Entertainment to release his following albums, Bottoms Up (2012), The Hangover (2015) and The Fifth (2019).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">D12</span> American hip hop group

D12 was an American hip hop collective from Detroit, Michigan. Formed in 1996, the group achieved mainstream success with its lineup of de facto leader Eminem, Proof, Bizarre, Mr. Porter, Kuniva and Swifty McVay.

<i>... And Then There Was X</i> 1999 studio album by DMX

...And Then There Was X is the third studio album by American rapper DMX. The album was released on December 21, 1999, by The Island Def Jam Music Group, Def Jam Recordings, and Ruff Ryders Entertainment. The album was nominated for Best Rap Album at the 2001 Grammys.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Papa Roach</span> American rock band

Papa Roach is an American rock band from Vacaville, California, formed in 1993. The original lineup consisted of lead vocalist Jacoby Shaddix, guitarist Jerry Horton, drummer Dave Buckner, bassist Will James, and trombonist Ben Luther.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proof (rapper)</span> American rapper (1973–2006)

DeShaun Dupree Holton, known professionally as Proof, was an American rapper from Detroit, Michigan. During his career, he was a member of the groups 5 Elementz, Funky Cowboys, Promatic, Goon Sqwad, and D12. He was a close childhood friend of rapper Eminem, who also lived in Detroit. Proof was often a hype man rapper at Eminem's concerts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shady Records</span> American record label

Shady Records is an American record label founded by rapper Eminem and his manager Paul Rosenberg in 1999, following the commercially successful release of The Slim Shady LP that same year. The label's name comes from the last name of Eminem's alter ego, Slim Shady.

Making the Video is an MTV show consisting of half-hour episodes chronicling the process of filming various music videos. Usually the director outlines the concept of the video and the show often includes light-hearted and humorous moments. It always concludes with a premiere of the finished video. The show premiered on June 28, 1999, and ended in 2010.

<i>Cheers</i> (Obie Trice album) 2003 studio album

Cheers is the debut studio album by American rapper Obie Trice. It was released on September 23, 2003 by Shady Records and Interscope Records. Eminem served as the executive producer for this album. This album serves as his first release from Shady Records since being signed in 2000. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA.

Stanley Bernard Benton, better known by his stage name Stat Quo, is an American rapper and record producer. Benton worked his way to college and attended University of Florida, where he majored in economics and international business in 2000. He was contemplating law school, until veteran Southern rapper Scarface encouraged him to rap professionally. In February 2003, Stat Quo released his first installment of the Underground Atlanta Mixtapes and caught the attention of Aftermath Entertainment associate Mel-Man. When Stat Quo was in L.A. performing at Encore, Mel-Man invited him to Record One Studios where he met Dr. Dre. That night at Record One, Stat Quo recorded the song "The Future" with Dr. Dre and released it on the second volume of his Underground Atlanta mixtape in 2004. The tape made its way by a different route to Eminem and led to Stat Quo's record deal with Shady Records and Aftermath Entertainment. Stat Quo is currently managing Young Aspect, and formerly managed Lil Xan.

Kevin Bell, professionally known as DJ Head, is a hip-hop producer and DJ from Detroit, Michigan. He's best known for producing and co-producing songs for Eminem, Xzibit, Jay-Z, D12, Valid, Obie Trice, Bizarre, and as Eminem's original touring deejay from 1997 to 2002.

Luis Edgardo Resto is an American musician, songwriter, record producer, and keyboardist who has worked closely with rapper Eminem since his third major-label album The Eminem Show. He is of Puerto Rican descent and was raised in Garden City, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit.

<i>Beef II</i> 2004 American film

Beef II is a 2004 American documentary film and the sequel to the 2003 documentary Beef, which continued to document the history of rivalries in hip-hop and rap music. Like its prequel, the film was executive produced by Quincy Jones III (QD3), written by Peter Alton and Peter Spirer, and was this time narrated by actor Keith David.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">You Don't Know (Eminem song)</span> 2006 single by Eminem featuring 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks and Ca$his

"You Don't Know" is the lead single from the Shady compilation album Eminem Presents: The Re-Up. The song is performed by Eminem featuring artists 50 Cent, and Lloyd Banks, and features the new vocals from Cashis.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Rosenberg (manager)</span> American music manager

Paul Rosenberg is an American talent manager and former entertainment attorney from Detroit, Michigan.

<i>Farmclub.com</i> Television series

Farmclub.com is an American television show that aired on USA Network. It was broadcast from January 31, 2000, to June 15, 2001. The show's content featured "it" musical artists of the moment and promoted unsigned bands through national exposure and website interaction, with such featured moments as the return of N.W.A., in which Snoop Dogg substituted for the late Eazy-E.

<i>Eminem Presents: The Anger Management Tour</i> 2005 concert film

The Anger Management Tour is a concert film directed by Donn J. Viola, documenting American rapper Eminem's live concert at The Palace of Auburn Hills in Detroit as part of his second Anger Management Tour. The taped event, also featuring D12, Obie Trice and Dina Rae, was recorded on September 8, 2002 and released on June 28, 2005 via Aftermath Entertainment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Iron Fist Records</span> Record label

Iron Fist Global LLC is an American hip hop record label, founded in 2004 by DeShaun 'Proof' Holton. Cleveland '1st Born' Hurd is the current president and chief executive officer of the label, Khalid El Hakim is the vice-president and chief operations officer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lazarus (rapper)</span> American rapper

Kamran Rashid Khan, known professionally as Lazarus, is a Detroit-based American rapper, songwriter and physician of Pakistani descent. He is known for his singles "GODFLOW", "Break the Walls" and "Man on a Mission" along with his songs "Drug of Choice", "Open Heart Surgery", "Underdog", "MTBK" and "Decapitation Chamber" featuring Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Bizarre, Royce da 5'9", Bohemia and Ghostface Killah respectively.

<i>Live from New York City</i> 2005 Eminems concert film directed by Hamish Hamilton

Live from New York City is a concert film directed by Hamish Hamilton, documenting American rapper Eminem's live concert at the Madison Square Garden in New York City on August 8 and 9 as part of his third Anger Management Tour. The taped event, also featuring a supporting cast of D12, Obie Trice, Stat Quo and Alchemist, was originally premiered on Showtime on December 3, 2005. It was released on DVD on November 13, 2007 and on Blu-ray on October 19, 2009 via Eagle Rock Entertainment.

References