Circus Maximus Tour

Last updated
Circus Maximus Tour
Tour by Travis Scott
Location
  • North America
  • South America
  • Europe
  • Oceania
Associated album Utopia
Start dateOctober 11, 2023 (2023-10-11)
End dateOctober 30, 2024 (2024-10-30)
Legs5
No. of shows78
Supporting acts
  • Teezo Touchdown (first leg)
  • Don Toliver (first show of second leg only)
  • Sheck Wes (MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, Allianz Stadium, Sydney Night 1, Marvel Stadium, Melbourne)
  • Veeze (second leg only, starting from sixth show)
  • Skilla Baby (second leg only, starting from sixth show)
  • Babyface Ray (second leg only, starting from sixth show)
  • Yung Lean (third leg)
Kanye West (Kia Center, Orlando show) Ice Spice (Tottenham stadium, London UK) Central Cee (Tottenham Stadium, London UK and Marvel Stadium, Melbourne, Australia show) Lil Baby (Tottenham Stadium, London UK Show) The Weeknd (Allianz Stadium, Sydney, Australia Night 2 only) Future (MetLife stadium) Playboi Carti (MetLife Stadium)
Attendance1,206,441 (63 shows)
Box office$154,675,831 (63 shows)
Website www.travisscott.com/tour
Travis Scott concert chronology

The Circus Maximus Tour, also branded and promoted as Utopia Tour Presents Circus Maximus, was the fourth concert tour by American rapper and singer Travis Scott, in support of his fourth studio album, Utopia (2023). During the full first leg of the tour, fellow American singer-songwriter Teezo Touchdown served as the opening act, while Don Toliver, Chase B, Sheck Wes, Babyface Ray, Skilla Baby, and Veeze served as opening acts at various shows in the second leg and Ice Spice, Central Cee, Lil Baby, Future, Playboi Carti, Mike Dean and The Weeknd being surprise acts in the 3rd and 4th Legs. The Circus Maximus tour is Scott's first concert tour in almost five years, following the Astroworld – Wish You Were Here Tour. [1] The tour started on October 11, 2023, at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, and concluded on October 30, 2024, at Eden Park in Auckland, New Zealand.

Contents

Set lists

Leg 1

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]

  1. "Hyaena"
  2. "Thank God"
  3. "Modern Jam" (with Teezo Touchdown)
  4. "Aye" (originally performed by Lil Uzi Vert)
  5. "SDP Interlude"
  6. "Sirens"
  7. "Praise God" (originally performed by Kanye West)
  8. "God's Country"
  9. "My Eyes"
  10. "Butterfly Effect"
  11. "Highest in the Room"
  12. "Mamacita"
  13. "Circus Maximus"
  14. "Delresto (Echoes)" (played from tape during outfit change)
  15. "Mafia"
  16. "I Know ?"
  17. "90210"
  18. "Meltdown"
  19. "Topia Twins"
  20. "No Bystanders"
  21. "Fein" (performed several times)
  22. "Antidote"
  23. "Sicko Mode"
  24. "Goosebumps"
  25. "Telekinesis"

Additional notes

  • During the show in Raleigh on October 13, Scott performed "Gatti" (originally performed with JackBoys and Pop Smoke) and "Nightcrawler" after "Sicko Mode".
  • During the show in Dallas on October 17, Scott performed "Upper Echelon" after "Circus Maximus" and performed "Gatti" and "Stargazing" after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Dallas on October 18, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played and performed "I Know ?" before "Mafia"; after "90210", he performed "Gatti" and brought Offset out to perform "Bad and Boujee" (originally performed by Migos), "Say My Grace" (which features Scott), and "Worth It".
  • During the show in Kansas City on October 20, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "SDP Interlude" and "Lose" after "Mafia".
  • During the show in Denver on October 22, Scott performed "Skeletons" and "3500" after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Phoenix on October 25, Scott performed "Impossible" after "Mafia" and brought Rob49 out to perform his own song, "Vulture Island", and "Topia Twins" after "Meltdown".
  • During the show in Phoenix on October 26, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" in place of "Mafia" and "Impossible" after the former and performed "I Know ?" twice.
  • During the show in Las Vegas on October 29, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Sweet Sweet" and "Impossible" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played.
  • During the show in Oakland on October 31, Scott performed "Skyfall" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Lose" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played.
  • During the show in Oakland on November 1, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude", "Skyfall" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played, and "Impossible" after "Mafia".
  • During the show in Inglewood on November 5, Scott brought his daughter, Stormi Webster, onstage during "Mafia" and rode the parasail with her and brought Playboi Carti out to perform "Fein" only one time when it cut straight from the chorus to the latter's part after the song was restarted in the middle of the first verse; he did not perform "Antidote" and "Telekinesis", leaving the stage while the latter song was playing.
  • During the show in Seattle on November 8, Scott performed "Lose" and "Love Galore" (originally performed by SZA) after "Highest in the Room" and performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played.
  • During the show in Vancouver on November 10, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and brought Nav out to perform "Beibs in the Trap" after "90210".
  • During the show in Portland on November 12, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and "Portland" (originally performed by Drake) played twice after "Delresto (Echoes)" played, but Scott's verse barely played and he did not perform the song live; he also performed "Fein" an additional time.
  • During the show in Salt Lake City on November 15, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Maria I'm Drunk" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he also performed "Fein" an additional time. Also, Teezo Touchdown did not perform his own set for unknown reasons.
  • During the show in Tulsa on November 18, Scott performed "A-Team" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Maria I'm Drunk" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he also performed "Fein" eight additional times and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Austin on November 21, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he also did not perform "Antidote" and "Telekinesis", leaving the stage while the latter song was playing.
  • During the show in Austin on November 22, Scott did not perform "Highest in the Room", "Circus Maximus", and "Antidote".
  • During the show in Miami on November 27, Scott performed "A-Team", "Don't Play", "Lose", and "Upper Echelon" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Maria I'm Drunk" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; after "Meltdown", he brought Quavo out to perform his own songs, "Hotel Lobby (Unc & Phew)" and "Turn Yo Clic Up", performed "Fein" five additional times, and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Atlanta on December 1, Scott performed "Uptown" after "SDP Interlude", "Upper Echelon" and "3500" after "Sirens", "Maria I'm Drunk" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played, and "Fein" five additional times; after "Antidote", he brought Offset out to perform "Bad and Boujee" and "Say My Grace" and brought Sheck Wes out to perform his own songs, "Mo Bamba" and an unreleased song.
  • Starting from the show in Atlanta on December 2, Scott performed "3500" after "SDP Interlude" and "Upper Echelon" after "Sirens". During that one night, he performed "Lose" before "3500" and "Maria I'm Drunk" and "Impossible" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he brought 21 Savage out to perform "Topia Twins" and his own song, "Rich Flex" (originally performed with Drake), and performed "Fein" six additional times.
  • During the show in Nashville on December 4, Scott performed "Lose" after "SDP Interlude" and "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" five additional times.
  • During the show in Baltimore on December 6, Scott performed "Fein" an additional time and performed "Topia Twins" after "Goosebumps" rather than its usual place in the set list.
  • During the show in Pittsburgh on December 8, Scott performed "Lose" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" six additional times and did not perform "Highest in the Room" and "Antidote".
  • During the show in Philadelphia on December 10, Scott brought Lil Uzi Vert out to perform "Aye" and performed ""A-Team" after "3500" and "Lose" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" three additional times and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Detroit on December 12, Scott performed "Don't Play" instead of "3500", "Lose" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played, and "Kelly Price" (originally performed by Migos), but his verse was not played on the later song; he performed "Fein" two additional times and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Brooklyn on December 18, Scott performed "Quintana" after "3500" and "Maria I'm Drunk" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" eight additional times and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Brooklyn on December 19, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It", "Impossible", and "Can't Say" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" eight additional times and performed "Gatti" after that, but his verse was not played, and he did not perform "Antidote".
  • Starting from the show in New York City on December 21, Scott performed "Maria I'm Drunk" and "Can't Say" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played. During that one night, he performed "Uptown", "Nightcrawler", "Oh My Dis Side" after "3500" and brought 41 out to perform their own song, "Bent", after "Meltdown"; he then performed "Fein" eleven additional times and brought Sheck Wes out the last time to perform his unreleased verse on the song and "Mo Bamba", and then performed "Sicko Mode" before "Antidote" and performed "Fein" two more times after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Boston on December 23, Scott performed "A-Team" after "3500" and performed "Fein" nine additional times and then performed it one last time after "Goosebumps"; he did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Newark on December 26, Scott performed "A-Team" and "Nightcrawler" after "3500" and performed "Fein" eight additional times; he performed "Stargazing" after "Goosebumps" and did not perform "Antidote".
  • During the show in Toronto on December 29, Scott performed "Nightcrawler" after "3500" and performed "Company" (originally performed by Drake) after "Maria I'm Drunk" and "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Can't Say"; he performed "Fein" four additional times and performed "Sicko Mode" before "Antidote".

Leg 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.

  1. "Hyaena"
  2. "Thank God"
  3. "Modern Jam"
  4. "Aye" (originally performed by Lil Uzi Vert)
  5. "SDP Interlude"
  6. "3500"
  7. "Nightcrawler"
  8. "Sirens"
  9. "Upper Echelon"
  10. "Praise God" (originally performed by Kanye West)
  11. "God's Country"
  12. "My Eyes"
  13. "Butterfly Effect"
  14. "Highest in the Room"
  15. "Mamacita"
  16. "Circus Maximus"
  17. "Delresto (Echoes)" (played from tape during outfit change)
  18. "Maria I'm Drunk"
  19. "Can't Say" (with Don Toliver)
  20. "Bandit" (originally performed by and with Don Toliver, unreleased at the time)
  21. "I Know ?"
  22. "90210"
  23. "Meltdown"
  24. "Topia Twins"
  25. "No Bystanders"
  26. "Fe!n" (performed a different number of times each show)
  27. "Sicko Mode"
  28. "Antidote"
  29. "Goosebumps"
  30. "Telekinesis"
  31. "Lost Forever" (with "Telekinesis" resuming during SZA's part after the song ends)

Additional notes

  • During the show in Chicago on January 3, Scott performed "Fein" eight times in a row and also performed it once after "Sicko Mode" and once after "Antidote".
  • Starting from the show in Toronto on January 6, Scott replaced "Bandit" with "Mafia", Don Toliver did not come out to perform "Can't Say" with him, and he did not perform "Lost Forever". During that one night, he performed "Backr00ms" (originally performed by Playboi Carti) after "Aye" and performed "Fein" six times in a row.
  • During the show in Montreal on January 9, Scott performed "Backr00ms" after "Highest in the Room" and performed "Fein" eleven times in a row.
  • During the show in Boston on January 12, Scott performed "Backr00ms" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Fein" nine times in a row.
  • During the show in University Park on January 14, Scott performed "Backr00ms" after "SDP Interlude" and performed "Fein" eight times in a row.
  • Starting from the show in Milwaukee on January 17, Scott performed "Backr00ms" after "3500". During that one night, he performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Delresto (Echoes)" played; he performed "Fein" six times in a row and also performed it once more after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Saint Paul on January 20, Scott performed "Fein" eight times in a row and also performed it once more after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Chicago on January 22, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Maria I'm Drunk" and performed "Fein" six times in a row.
  • During the show in Columbus on January 24, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Maria I'm Drunk" and performed "Fein" seven times in a row.
  • During the show in Miami on January 28, Scott brought Swae Lee out to perform "Nightcrawler" and "No Type" (originally performed by the Rae Sremmurd, which he is a part of) and brought him back out to perform "R.I.P. Screw" after "Maria I'm Drunk"; Scott performed "Fein" eight times in a row and also performed it twice after "Sicko Mode" and once after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Orlando on January 31, Scott performed "Praise God" after "Mamacita" instead of its normal place in the set list and brought Kanye West out to perform his own songs, "Runaway", "Vultures" (originally performed with Ty Dolla Sign as part of ¥$), "Fade", "Can't Tell Me Nothing", "All of the Lights", and "Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1", with Ty Dolla Sign also joining for "Vultures" (along with Bump J) and "Fade"; Scott went to change outfits after the special guests were finished performing as "Delresto (Echoes)" played, while he did not perform "God's Country", "Highest in the Room", and "Circus Maximus".

Leg 3

This set list is representative of the show in Arnhem, Netherlands on June 28, 2024. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Hyaena"
  2. "Thank God"
  3. "Modern Jam"
  4. "Aye" (originally performed by Lil Uzi Vert)
  5. "SDP Interlude"
  6. "Backr00ms" (originally performed by Playboi Carti)
  7. "Type Shit" (originally performed with Future, Metro Boomin, and Playboi Carti)
  8. "Nightcrawler"
  9. "Sirens"
  10. "Upper Echelon"
  11. "Praise God" (originally performed by Kanye West)
  12. "God's Country"
  13. "My Eyes"
  14. "Butterfly Effect"
  15. "Highest in the Room"
  16. "Mamacita"
  17. "Circus Maximus"
  18. "Delresto (Echoes)" (played from tape during outfit change)
  19. "Mafia"
  20. "I Know ?"
  21. "90210"
  22. "Meltdown"
  23. "Topia Twins"
  24. "No Bystanders"
  25. "Fe!n" (performed a different number of times each show)
  26. "Sicko Mode"
  27. "Antidote"
  28. "Goosebumps"
  29. "Parking Lot" (originally performed with Mustard)
  30. "Telekinesis"

Additional notes

  • During the show in Arnhem on June 28, Scott performed "Fein" six times in a row.
  • During the show in Arnhem on June 30, Scott performed "Wake Up" after "90210" and performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • Starting from the show in Kraków on July 2, "Parking Lot" was removed from the set list. During that one night, Scott performed "Stargazing" after "Mamacita" and "Wake Up" after "90210" and performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Zurich on July 5, Scott performed "Stargazing" after "90210" and performed "Fein" five times in a row, while he did not perform "God's Country".
  • Starting from the show in Nice on July 6, "Mafia" was removed from the set list. During that one night, Scott performed "Fein" seven times in a row.
  • During the show in Antwerp on July 9, Scott performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in London on July 11, Scott brought Ice Spice out to perform "Deli", "Think U the Shit (Fart)", and "Oh Shhh..." (the latter of which is a collaboration with Scott and was unreleased at the time) after "SDP Interlude" and then brought Central Cee and Lil Baby out to perform "Band4Band" twice after "Topia Twins"; he performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Manchester on July 13, Scott performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Hamburg on July 16, Scott performed "Drugs You Should Try It" after "Nightcrawler" and eight seconds of the intro of "Sirens" played, but he did not perform it; he also performed "Fein" three times.
  • During the show in Prague on July 18, Scott performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Cologne on July 20, Scott performed "Stargazing" after "I Know ?" and performed "Fein" seven times in a row and once again after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Milan on July 23, Scott performed "Fein" eight times in a row and performed "Stargazing" after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Frankfurt on July 26, Scott performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Frankfurt on July 27, Scott performed "Fein" four times in a row and performed "Stargazing" after "Goosebumps".
  • During the show in Madrid on July 30, Scott performed "Don't Play" after "Circus Maximus" and performed "Fein" five times in a row.
  • During the show in Madrid on July 31, Scott performed "Fein" six times in a row.
  • During the show in Lisbon on August 2, Scott performed "Fein" six times in a row.
  • During the show in Lisbon on August 3, Scott brought Don Toliver out to perform his own songs, "Attitude" and "Tore Up", and "Can't Say" with him after "Delresto (Echoes)" played and brought him back out to perform his own songs, "Bandit" and "After Party", after "Goosebumps"; he performed "Fein" five times in a row and did not perform "90210".
  • During the show in Lisbon on August 4, Scott performed "Fein" four times in a row.

Leg 4

This set list is representative of the show in Santiago, Chile on September 7, 2024. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Hyaena"
  2. "Thank God"
  3. "Modern Jam"
  4. "Aye" (originally performed by Lil Uzi Vert)
  5. "SDP Interlude"
  6. "Mo City Flexologist"
  7. "Backr00ms" (originally performed by Playboi Carti)
  8. "Type Shit" (originally performed with Future, Metro Boomin, and Playboi Carti)
  9. "Nightcrawler"
  10. "Sirens"
  11. "Upper Echelon"
  12. "Praise God" (originally performed by Kanye West)
  13. "God's Country"
  14. "My Eyes"
  15. "Butterfly Effect"
  16. "Highest in the Room"
  17. "Mamacita"
  18. "Circus Maximus"
  19. "Delresto (Echoes)" (played from tape during outfit change)
  20. "Drugs You Should Try It"
  21. "I Know ?"
  22. "90210"
  23. "Meltdown"
  24. "Topia Twins"
  25. "No Bystanders"
  26. "Fe!n" (performed a different number of times each show)
  27. "Sicko Mode"
  28. "Antidote"
  29. "Goosebumps"
  30. "Telekinesis"

Additional notes

Tour dates

List of 2023 concerts
Date (2023)CityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
October 11 Charlotte United States Spectrum Center Teezo Touchdown 15,702 / 15,702 (100%)$1,576,716
October 13 Raleigh PNC Arena 15,292 / 15,292 (100%)$1,740,793
October 17 Dallas American Airlines Center 27,497 / 27,497 (100%)$3,588,066
October 18
October 20 Kansas City T-Mobile Center 15,835 / 16,323 (97%)$1,683,603
October 22 Denver Ball Arena 14,929 / 16,139 (92,5%)$1,845,501
October 25 Phoenix Footprint Center 29,312 / 29,312 (100%)$3,737,225
October 26
October 29 Las Vegas MGM Grand Garden Arena 10,312 / 11,423 (90,27%)$1,464,624
October 31 Oakland Oakland Arena 31,184 / 31,184 (100%)$3,981,574
November 1
November 5 Inglewood SoFi Stadium 49,735 / 49,735 (100%)$7,941,151
November 8 Seattle Climate Pledge Arena 15,903 / 15,903 (100%)$2,440,315
November 10 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena 16,401 / 16,401 (100%)$2,107,129
November 12 Portland United States Moda Center 15,599 / 15,748 (99%)$1,974,532
November 15 Salt Lake City Delta Center 13,740 / 13,740 (100%)$1,756,616
November 18 Tulsa BOK Center 13,924 / 16,951 (82%)$1,801,301
November 21 Austin Moody Center 22,089 / 22,089 (100%)$3,157,157
November 22
November 27 Miami Kaseya Center 17,340 / 17,340 (100%)$2,769,317
December 1 Atlanta State Farm Arena 29,779 / 29,779 (100%)$4,116,231
December 2
December 4 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 12,823 / 14,862 (86,28%)$1,630,072
December 6 Baltimore CFG Bank Arena 10,881 / 10,881 (100%)$1,545,411
December 8 Pittsburgh PPG Paints Arena 14,734 / 15,273 (96,47%)$1,720,398
December 10 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 18,018 / 18,018 (100%)$2,723,762
December 12 Detroit Little Caesars Arena 18,539 / 18,539 (100%)$2,577,035
December 18 Brooklyn Barclays Center 32,118 / 32,118 (100%)$3,757,972
December 19
December 21 New York City Madison Square Garden 17,703 / 17,703 (100%)$3,533,062
December 23 Boston TD Garden 31,583 / 32,423 [a] (97,4%)$4,572,513
December 26 Newark Prudential Center 16,576 / 16,576 (100%)$2,734,071
December 29 Toronto Canada Scotiabank Arena 17,697 / 17,697 (100%)$2,575,312
List of 2024 concerts
Date (2024)CityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
January 3 [b] Chicago United States United Center Don Toliver
Chase B
35,249 / 35,249 [c] (100%)$5,715,798
January 6Toronto Canada Scotiabank Arena17,968 / 17,968 (100%)$2,504,421
January 9 Montreal Bell Centre 19,634 / 19,634 (100%)$2,358,001
January 12Boston United States TD Garden Sheck Wes 15,832 / 16,219 (97,6%)$2,158,045
January 14 University Park Bryce Jordan Center 9,248 / 11,455 (80,7%)$1,355,983
January 17 Milwaukee Fiserv Forum Veeze
Skilla Baby
Babyface Ray
9,181 / 10,322 (88,95%)$915,975
January 20 St. Paul Xcel Energy Center 9,532 / 11,630 (81,96 %)$1,262,115
January 22 Chicago United Center
January 24 Columbus Schottenstein Center 9,984 / 12,364 (80,75%)$1,474,658
January 28 Miami Kaseya Center 15,891 / 15,891 (100%)$2,749,623
January 31 Orlando Kia Center 14,279 / 16,156 (88,38%)$1,536,262
June 28 Arnhem Netherlands GelreDome 52,467 / 54,162 (96,87%)$4,855,422
June 30Chase B
July 2 Kraków Poland Tauron Arena Yung Lean 15,330 / 15,975 (95,96%)$1,790,827
July 5 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion 13,760 / 14,000 (98,29%)$2,328,488
July 6 Nice France Allianz Riviera 34,169 / 34,169 (100%)$4,087,799
July 9 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis 19,664 / 19,664 (100%)$2,416,656
July 11 London United Kingdom Tottenham Hotspur Stadium 46,963 / 46,963 (100%)$6,548,419
July 13 Manchester Co-op Live 16,291 / 16,291 (100%)$2,601,476
July 16 Hamburg Germany Barclays Arena 12,900 / 12,900 (100%)$1,525,810
July 18 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 15,765 / 16,128 (97,75%)$1,679,830
July 20 Cologne Germany RheinEnergieStadion 42,068 / 42,068 (100%)$4,857,788
July 23 Milan Italy Ippodromo Snai La Maura79,896 / 79,896 (100%)$7,041,329
July 26 Frankfurt Germany Deutsche Bank Park 88,911 / 88,911 (100%)$9,768,417
July 27
July 30 Madrid Spain WiZink Center 28,674 / 31,853 (90,02%)$4,638,537
July 31
August 2 Lisbon Portugal MEO Arena 53,354 / 57,400 (92,95%)$4,804,711
August 3
August 4
September 7 Santiago Chile Estadio Municipal de La Florida Pablo Chill-E
September 9 Buenos Aires Argentina Movistar Arena
September 11 São Paulo Brazil Allianz Parque
September 13 [d] Rio de Janeiro Barra Olympic Park
September 15 Bogota Colombia Coliseo MedPlus
September 18 San Juan Puerto Rico Coliseo de Puerto Rico
September 21 Mexico City Mexico Azteca Stadium Terrace
September 22
October 9th E ast Rutherford United States MetLife Stadium
October 17 Sydney Australia Allianz Stadium
October 18
October 22 Melbourne Marvel Stadium
October 23
October 26 Brisbane Suncorp Stadium
October 30 Auckland New Zealand Eden Park
Total1,206,441$154,675,831

Canceled shows

List of canceled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, and reason for cancellation
DateCityCountryVenueReason
October 14, 2023 Raleigh United States PNC Arena Unknown
November 13, 2023 Portland Moda Center
January 3, 2024 Louisville KFC Yum! Center

Notes

  1. Attendance and Revenue combined with the attendance and revenue from December 23, 2023 and January 12, 2024.
  2. Originally scheduled to take place on December 15, 2023.
  3. Attendance and Revenue combined with the attendance and revenue from January 3 and 22, 2024.
  4. The concert in Rio de Janeiro on September 13, 2024 will be part of the Rock in Rio.[ citation needed ]

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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.

<i>Gladiator</i> (2000 film) Film directed by Ridley Scott

Gladiator is a 2000 historical epic film directed by Ridley Scott and written by David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson from a story by Franzoni. It stars Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix, Connie Nielsen, Oliver Reed, Derek Jacobi, Djimon Hounsou and Richard Harris. Crowe portrays the Roman general Maximus Decimus Meridius, who is betrayed when Commodus, the ambitious son of Emperor Marcus Aurelius, murders his father and seizes the throne. Reduced to slavery, Maximus becomes a gladiator and rises through the ranks of the arena, determined to avenge the murders of his family and the emperor.

Circus Maximus was an American band in the late 1960s, which combined influences from folk music, rock, and jazz into a form of psychedelic rock.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lateran Obelisk</span> Ancient Egyptian obelisk, now a landmark of Rome, Italy

The Lateran Obelisk is the largest standing ancient Egyptian obelisk in the world, and it is also the tallest obelisk in Italy. It originally weighed 413 tonnes, but after collapsing and being re-erected 4 metres (13 ft) shorter, now weighs around 300 tonnes. It is located in Rome, in the square across from the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran and the San Giovanni Addolorata Hospital.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ryan Knowles</span> American actor

Ryan Knowles is an American actor, singer, comedian, writer, television host, speech coach and motivational speaker.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Travis Scott production discography</span>

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.

<i>Rodeo</i> (Travis Scott album) 2015 studio album by Travis Scott

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Travis Scott</span> American rapper (born 1991)

Jacques Bermon Webster II, known professionally as Travis Scott, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer. Scott has had four number-one hits on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart, along with a total of over one hundred charting songs. In addition to ten Grammy Award nominations, he has won a Latin Grammy Award, Billboard Music Award, MTV Video Music Award, and several BET Hip Hop Awards. 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.

<i>Birds in the Trap Sing McKnight</i> 2016 studio album by Travis Scott

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Starboy: Legend of the Fall Tour</span> 2017 concert tour by the Weeknd

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sicko Mode</span> 2018 single by Travis Scott featuring Drake

"Sicko Mode" is a song by American rapper Travis Scott featuring uncredited vocals from Canadian rapper Drake. 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 third 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oz (record producer)</span> Swiss record producer

Ozan Yildirim, professionally known as OZ, is a Swiss record producer and songwriter of Turkish descent. He has produced for many hip hop artists, including Drake, Future and Travis Scott, including on the number-one hits "Sicko Mode" (2018), "Highest in the Room" (2019) and "Life Is Good" (2020). He has received nominations for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Song for "Sicko Mode" and "Gold Roses".

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">After Hours til Dawn Tour</span> 2022–24 concert tour by the Weeknd

The After Hours 'til Dawn Global Stadium Tour, previously titled The After Hours Tour, is the ongoing seventh concert tour by Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd, in support of his fourth, fifth, and sixth studio albums, After Hours (2020), Dawn FM (2022), and Hurry Up Tomorrow (2024). The tour, which primarily visits stadiums, commenced on July 14, 2022, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. The tour visited North America in 2022, Europe and Latin America in 2023, and Australia in 2024.

<i>Utopia</i> (Travis Scott album) 2023 studio album by Travis Scott

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Delresto (Echoes)</span> 2023 single by Beyoncé and Travis Scott

"Delresto (Echoes)" is a song by American rapper and singer Travis Scott with fellow American singer and songwriter 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.

<i>Circus Maximus</i> (film) 2023 American musical film and visual album by Travis Scott

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.

References

  1. "Travis Scott Announces Utopia – Circus Maximus Tour: See Dates". billboard . August 31, 2023.
  2. Armstrong, Megan (October 12, 2023). "Here Is Travis Scott's 'Utopia: Circus Maximus Tour' Setlist". Uproxx . Retrieved October 12, 2023.