Tour by Travis Scott | |
Location | North America |
---|---|
Associated album | Utopia |
Start date | October 11, 2023 |
End date | September 13, 2024 |
Legs | 2 |
No. of shows | 46 |
Supporting acts |
|
Attendance | 525,255 |
Box office | $71,228,692 |
Website | www |
Travis Scott concert chronology |
The Circus Maximus Tour, also branded and promoted as Utopia Tour Presents Circus Maximus, is the ongoing fourth concert tour by American rapper and singer Travis Scott, in support of his fourth studio album, Utopia (2023). Fellow American singer Teezo Touchdown served as the opening act for the first leg of the tour. Don Toliver opened at the first show of leg two in Chicago, with Chase B, Scott's live DJ, as the opening act in Toronto, Sheck Wes in Boston, and Detroit rappers Babyface Ray, Skilla Baby, and Veeze opening in Milwaukee and the remaining shows. The Circus Maximus tour is Scott's first concert tour in five years and his first tour since the 2021 Astroworld Festival crowd crush at his headlining performance at NRG Park in his hometown of Houston, Texas. [1] The tour started on October 11, 2023, at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, and ends on September 13, 2024, Rock in Rio festival, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
This set list is representative of the show in Charlotte, North Carolina on October 11, 2023. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour. [2]
This set list is representative of the show in Chicago, Illinois on January 3, 2024. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.
Date (2023) | City | Country | Venue | Opening act | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 11 | Charlotte | United States | Spectrum Center | Teezo Touchdown | 15,702 / 15,702 | $1,576,716 |
October 13 | Raleigh | PNC Arena | 15,292 / 15,292 | $1,740,793 | ||
October 17 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 27,497 / 27,497 | $3,588,066 | ||
October 18 | ||||||
October 20 | Kansas City | T-Mobile Center | 15,835 (97.01%) | $1,683,603 | ||
October 22 | Denver | Ball Arena | 14,929 (92.51%) | $1,845,501 | ||
October 25 | Phoenix | Footprint Center | 29,312 / 29,312 | $3,737,225 | ||
October 26 | ||||||
October 29 | Las Vegas | MGM Grand Garden Arena | 10,312 (90.27%) | $1,464,624 | ||
October 31 | Oakland | Oakland Arena | 31,184 / 31,184 | $3,981,574 | ||
November 1 | ||||||
November 5 | Inglewood | SoFi Stadium | 49,735 / 49,735 | $7,941,151 | ||
November 8 | Seattle | Climate Pledge Arena | 15,903 / 15,903 | $2,440,315 | ||
November 10 | Vancouver | Canada | Rogers Arena | 16,401 / 16,401 | $2,107,129 | |
November 12 | Portland | United States | Moda Center | 15,599 (99.05%) | $1,974,532 | |
November 15 | Salt Lake City | Delta Center | 13,740 / 13,740 | $1,756,616 | ||
November 18 | Tulsa | BOK Center | 13,924 (82.14%) | $1,801,301 | ||
November 21 | Austin | Moody Center | 22,089 / 22,089 | $3,157,157 | ||
November 22 | ||||||
November 27 | Miami | Kaseya Center | 17,340 / 17,340 | $2,769,317 | ||
December 1 | Atlanta | State Farm Arena | ||||
December 2 | ||||||
December 4 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 12,823 (86.28%) | $1,630,072 | ||
December 6 | Baltimore | CFG Bank Arena | 10,881 / 10,881 | $1,545,411 | ||
December 8 | Pittsburgh | PPG Paints Arena | ||||
December 10 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | ||||
December 12 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | ||||
December 18 | Brooklyn | Barclays Center | 32,118 / 32,118 | $3,757,972 | ||
December 19 | ||||||
December 21 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | 17,703 / 17,703 | $3,533,062 | ||
December 23 | Boston | TD Garden | 31,583 (97.41%) [lower-alpha 1] | $4,572,513 | ||
December 26 | Newark | Prudential Center | 16,576 / 16,576 | $2,734,071 | ||
December 29 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | 35,665 / 35,665 [lower-alpha 2] | $5,079,733 |
Date (2024) | City | Country | Venue | Opening act | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 3 [lower-alpha 3] | Chicago | United States | United Center | Don Toliver Chase B | ||
January 6 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | |||
January 9 | Montreal | Bell Centre | 19,634 / 19,634 | $2,358,001 | ||
January 12 | Boston | United States | TD Garden | Sheck Wes | ||
January 14 | University Park | Bryce Jordan Center | ||||
January 17 | Milwaukee | Fiserv Forum | Veeze Skilla Baby Babyface Ray | 9,181 (88.94%) | $915,975 | |
January 20 | St. Paul | Xcel Energy Center | ||||
January 22 | Chicago | United Center | ||||
January 24 | Columbus | Schottenstein Center | ||||
January 28 | Miami | Kaseya Center | ||||
January 31 | Orlando | Kia Center | 14,279 (88.38%) | $1,536,262 | ||
July 7 [lower-alpha 4] | Ebreichsdorf | Austria | Magna Racino | |||
September 13 [lower-alpha 5] | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Barra Olympic Park | |||
Total | 525,255 | $71,228,692 |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
October 14, 2023 | Raleigh | United States | PNC Arena | Unknown |
November 13, 2023 | Portland | Moda Center | ||
January 3, 2024 | Louisville | KFC Yum! Center |
Nightcrawler is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men. Created by writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum, he debuted in the comic book Giant-Size X-Men #1. By the time of his creation, there was already another Marvel character with the same name, but with a hyphen (Night-Crawler), which was later changed to Dark-Crawler to avoid confusion.
Help! I'm A Fish is a 2000 animated science fantasy musical film directed by Stefan Fjeldmark, Greg Manwaring and Michael Hegner, and written by Stefan Fjeldmark, Karsten Kiilerich, John Stefan Olsen and Tracy J. Brown. It stars the voices of Alan Rickman, Terry Jones and a then-unknown Aaron Paul.
The This Is Us Tour was the eighth concert tour by American boy band, the Backstreet Boys. The tour promotes their seventh studio album, This Is Us (2009). The tour reached Europe, Asia, Australasia and the Americas. The tour was the second and final concert tour that the band had performed as a quartet before the original member Kevin Richardson returned on April 29, 2012.
The Share My World Tour was the first headlining concert tour by American recording artist Mary J. Blige. It was launched in support of her multi-platinum third studio album Share My World (1997), and also contained material from her first and second studio albums What's the 411? (1992) and My Life (1994). The eight-month tour began on September 2, 1997, in the United States and continued through May 3, 1998. Concerts were held in North America and Europe.
The Elusive Chanteuse Show was the eighth headlining concert tour by American singer-songwriter Mariah Carey. It was launched in support of her fourteenth studio album, Me. I Am Mariah... The Elusive Chanteuse (2014). The tour began in Tokyo, Japan on October 4, 2014 and concluded in Brisbane, Australia on November 16, 2014.
The following list is a discography of production by Travis Scott, an American rapper from Houston, Texas. It includes a list of songs produced, co-produced and remixed by year, artist, album and title.
Rodeo is the debut studio album by American rapper Travis Scott. It was released on September 4, 2015, through Grand Hustle Records and distributed by Epic Records. The album features guest appearances from Quavo, Future, 2 Chainz, Juicy J, Kacy Hill, The Weeknd, Swae Lee, Chief Keef, Kanye West, Justin Bieber, Young Thug, Toro y Moi, and Schoolboy Q, while production was provided by Scott himself, alongside WondaGurl, Allen Ritter, Mike Dean, Metro Boomin, Frank Dukes, and Sonny Digital, among others.
Jacques Bermon Webster II, known professionally as Travis Scott, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer. Throughout his career, Scott has achieved four number-one hits on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, along with a total of over one hundred charting songs. Scott has been nominated for ten Grammy Awards and won a Latin Grammy Award, Billboard Music Award, MTV Video Music Award, and multiple BET Hip Hop Awards. As of 2023, Scott has sold over 49 million certified records in the US alone. Scott's musical style has been described as a "blend between traditional hip-hop and lo-fi" and often characterized as "ambient," with a heavily appraised influence from rappers Kanye West and Kid Cudi. His stage name is derived from the latter's real name, Scott Mescudi, combined with the name of a favorite uncle.
The Super Bowl LIII Halftime Show, officially known as the Pepsi Super Bowl LIII Halftime Show, took place on February 3, 2019, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, as part of Super Bowl LIII. It was headlined by Maroon 5, joined by rappers Big Boi and Travis Scott as guests.
Birds in the Trap Sing McKnight is the second studio album by American rapper Travis Scott. It was released on September 2, 2016, through Grand Hustle Records and distributed by Epic Records. It exclusively premiered through Travis Scott and Chase B's radio show Wav Radio on Beats 1 and Apple Music. The album features guest appearances from André 3000, Blac Youngsta, Kid Cudi, Nav, 21 Savage, Kendrick Lamar, Bryson Tiller, Young Thug, Quavo, K. Forest, and the Weeknd. Production was handled by a number of record producers, including Nav, Vinylz, Mike Dean, Cardo, Frank Dukes, Allen Ritter, and Murda Beatz, among others.
The Starboy: Legend of the Fall Tour was the fifth concert tour by Canadian singer the Weeknd, in support of his third studio album Starboy (2016). The tour started on February 17, 2017, at the Ericsson Globe in Stockholm and concluded on December 14, 2017 at RAC Arena in Perth.
"Sicko Mode" is a song by American rapper Travis Scott. It features vocals from Canadian rapper Drake, who was credited on Apple Music but not on the Billboard Hot 100 or Spotify. It was originally released by Epic Records on August 3, 2018, as the third track from Astroworld (2018), before being released as the second single on August 21. It features additional uncredited vocals by fellow American rappers Swae Lee and the late Big Hawk.
The Astroworld – Wish You Were Here Tour was the third concert tour by American rapper and singer Travis Scott, in support of his fourth studio album, Astroworld (2018). American rappers Sheck Wes, Trippie Redd, Gunna served as the opening acts in North America for the first leg of the tour, with Sheck Wes solely continuing in North America for the second leg and Octavian being the sole opening act in Europe for the third leg, while Trippie Redd dropped out of the tour less than a month after it started. Don Toliver also came out to perform "Can't Say" with Scott for every show in the first leg and a few shows in the second leg despite not serving as an opening act for the tour. The tour started on November 8, 2018, at the CFG Bank Arena in Baltimore, Maryland, and ended on July 16, 2019, at the O2 Arena in London, England.
The Roskilde Festival 2019 was held on 29 June to 6 July 2019 in Roskilde, Denmark. The headliners included Bob Dylan, Travis Scott, Robyn, and The Cure.
The After Hours til Dawn Tour, previously titled The After Hours Tour, is the ongoing seventh concert tour by the Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd, in support of his fourth and fifth studio albums, After Hours (2020) and Dawn FM (2022). The tour, which primarily visits stadiums, commenced its first leg on July 14, 2022, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. The tour visited North America, Europe and Latin America between 2022 and 2023.
Utopia is the fourth studio album by American rapper Travis Scott. It was released through Cactus Jack and Epic Records on July 28, 2023. The album features guest appearances from Teezo Touchdown, Drake, Playboi Carti, Beyoncé, Rob49, 21 Savage, the Weeknd, Swae Lee, Yung Lean, Dave Chappelle, Young Thug, Westside Gunn, Kid Cudi, Bad Bunny, SZA, Future, and James Blake. Physical releases of the album feature additional guest appearances from Lil Uzi Vert and Sheck Wes. Production was handled by a variety of record producers, including Scott and Blake themselves, WondaGurl, Ye, Allen Ritter, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, Wheezy, Buddy Ross, Vegyn, 30 Roc, Jahaan Sweet, Boi-1da, Vinylz, Tay Keith, Bnyx, Oz, Justin Vernon, the Alchemist, Dom Maker, Illangelo, DVLP, and Metro Boomin, among others. The album serves as the follow-up to Scott's third studio album, Astroworld (2018), as well as JackBoys (2019), his compilation album that was released in collaboration with Cactus Jack. It is a concept record that was accompanied by a film titled Circus Maximus which was released the day before the album.
"Delresto (Echoes)" is a song by American rapper and singer Travis Scott with fellow American singer Beyoncé. It was released through Beyoncé's Parkwood Entertainment, Scott's Cactus Jack, Columbia, and Epic Records as the second single from his fourth studio album Utopia, both being released on July 28, 2023. The song was produced by Scott with additional production by Beyoncé, Hit-Boy, Mike Dean, and Allen Ritter; all of whom wrote the song alongside James Blake and The-Dream. The song also features uncredited additional vocals from Justin Vernon of Bon Iver.
Circus Maximus is a 2023 American musical anthology film co-written, executive produced, and directed by Travis Scott. The film is Scott's directorial debut, with segments by Gaspar Noé, Nicolas Winding Refn, Harmony Korine, Valdimar Jóhannsson, Andrew Dosunmu, CANADA, and Kahlil Joseph.
The Never Sleep Tour was the third concert tour by Canadian rapper Nav, in promotion of his fourth studio album, Demons Protected by Angels (2022). The tour began on February 14, 2023, at the Fillmore in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and ended on April 11, 2023, at the Scotiabank Arena in his hometown of Toronto, Canada. Canadian singer RealestK and American rapper SoFaygo served as the opening acts for the tour. American singer Bryson Tiller was supposed to make an appearance at the show in Toronto but pulled out due to his right eardrum being damaged. The tour is named after "Never Sleep", the lead single from the album.