Tour by Elton John | |
Location | Europe • North America |
---|---|
Associated album | Ice on Fire |
Start date | 14 November 1985 |
End date | 15 October 1986 |
Legs | 3 |
No. of shows | 122 |
Elton John concert chronology |
The Ice on Fire Tour was a worldwide concert tour held by English musician and composer Elton John, in support of his 19th studio album Ice on Fire . The tour included three legs (in the UK, Europe and North America) and a total of 122 shows.
John had decided he wanted to hit the road with his new band, made up of some of the musicians who had worked with him on the Ice on Fire album in January, as well as a new set of backing singers: Alan Carvell, Helena Springs and Shirley Lewis – making it the largest band John had ever taken on tour.
On 14 November 1985, the tour began in Dublin and continued across the British Isles, including nine nights in a row at Wembley Arena, before concluding on 11 January 1986, in Belfast, Northern Ireland. As usual, John would select a handful of songs from his most recent album for inclusion in the set; in this instance, "Shoot Down the Moon", "This Town" and the singles "Nikita" and "Wrap Her Up" — all from Ice on Fire. The tour would continue in three months' time, but with a different percussionist. [1]
Percussionist Jody Linscott replaced Ray Cooper on this second leg of the 1985–1986 World Tour, which began at the Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid on 1 March and continued through Europe before concluding on 26 April at the Vorst Nationaal in Brussels, Belgium.
After a four-month a break, during which John and the band recorded the Leather Jackets album, the North American leg of the world tour began at the Pine Knob Music Theatre in Clarkston, Michigan on 17 August and ended on 15 October with eight nights at Los Angeles' Universal Amphitheatre. One unique aspect to this tour was that John played acoustic guitar on stage (on Lesley Duncan's "Love Song"), something he had not done since 1976.
This part of the tour proved especially difficult for John, who unknowingly had developed potentially cancerous nodules on his vocal cords, and by the time he played his four-night run in New York City in mid-September, he was having a great deal of difficulty singing. John was ordered by his doctor not to speak while off-stage, and there was serious doubt as to whether or not he could finish this segment of the tour, let alone pull off the upcoming symphonic tour of Australia.
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
Europe [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] | |||
14 November 1985 | Dublin | Ireland | Royal Dublin Society |
15 November 1985 | |||
16 November 1985 | |||
17 November 1985 | |||
20 November 1985 | Newport | Wales | Newport Centre |
21 November 1985 | |||
23 November 1985 | Cornwall | England | St Austell Coliseum |
24 November 1985 | |||
26 November 1985 | Sheffield | Sheffield City Hall | |
27 November 1985 | |||
28 November 1985 | Edinburgh | Scotland | Edinburgh Playhouse |
29 November 1985 | |||
1 December 1985 | Manchester | England | Manchester Apollo |
2 December 1985 | |||
3 December 1985 | |||
4 December 1985 | Nottingham | Nottingham Royal Concert Hall | |
5 December 1985 | |||
7 December 1985 | Brighton | The Brighton Centre | |
11 December 1985 | London | Wembley Arena | |
12 December 1985 | |||
13 December 1985 | |||
14 December 1985 | |||
15 December 1985 | |||
16 December 1985 | |||
17 December 1985 | |||
18 December 1985 | |||
19 December 1985 | |||
21 December 1985 | Birmingham | National Exhibition Centre | |
22 December 1985 | |||
23 December 1985 | |||
30 December 1985 | Bournemouth | Bournemouth International Centre | |
31 December 1985 | |||
3 January 1986 | Glasgow | Scotland | Glasgow Centre |
4 January 1986 | |||
5 January 1986 | Newcastle | England | Newcastle City Hall |
6 January 1986 | |||
7 January 1986 | |||
9 January 1986 | Belfast | Northern Ireland | King's Hall |
10 January 1986 | |||
11 January 1986 | |||
1 March 1986 | Madrid | Spain | Palacio de Deportes |
2 March 1986 | San Sebastian | Velódromo de Anoeta | |
4 March 1986 | Barcelona | Palau dels Esports de Barcelona | |
6 March 1986 | Bordeaux | France | Patinoire de Mériadeck |
7 March 1986 | Toulouse | Palais des Sports de Toulouse | |
8 March 1986 | |||
10 March 1986 | Lyon | Palais des Sports de Gerland | |
11 March 1986 | Marseille | Parc des Expositions | |
12 March 1986 | Montpellier | Zénith Sud | |
14 March 1986 | Nantes | Palais des Sports de Beaulieu | |
15 March 1986 | Brest | Parc de Penfeld | |
17 March 1986 | Lille | Palais des Sports Saint-Sauveur | |
18 March 1986 | Paris | Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy | |
19 March 1986 | |||
20 March 1986 | |||
21 March 1986 | |||
22 March 1986 | |||
23 March 1986 | Lausanne | Switzerland | Palais de Beaulieu |
25 March 1986 | Basel | St. Jakobshalle | |
26 March 1986 | Zürich | Hallenstadion | |
27 March 1986 | |||
29 March 1986 | Munich | West Germany | Olympiahalle |
30 March 1986 | |||
1 April 1986 | West Berlin | Deutschlandhalle | |
2 April 1986 | Hanover | Eilenriedehalle | |
3 April 1986 | Frankfurt | Festhalle Frankfurt | |
4 April 1986 | |||
5 April 1986 | Dortmund | Westfalenhallen | |
6 April 1986 | Cologne | Koln Sporthalle | |
8 April 1986 | Ludwigshafen | Friedrich-Ebert-Halle | |
9 April 1986 | |||
10 April 1986 | Stuttgart | Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle | |
12 April 1986 | Hamburg | Alsterdorfer Sporthalle | |
13 April 1986 | |||
14 April 1986 | |||
16 April 1986 | Bremen | Stadthalle | |
19 April 1986 (Postponed due to a bomb scare) | Vienna | Austria | Wiener Stadthalle |
20 April 1986 (Afternoon & Evening) | |||
23 April 1986 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Rotterdam Ahoy Sportpaleis |
24 April 1986 | |||
26 April 1986 | Brussels | Belgium | Forest National |
North America [7] [8] [9] | |||
17 August 1986 | Clarkston | United States | Pine Knob Music Theatre |
18 August 1986 | |||
19 August 1986 | Cuyahoga Falls | Blossom Music Center | |
21 August 1986 | Bonner Springs | Sandstone Amphitheater | |
22 August 1986 | Bloomington | Met Center | |
23 August 1986 | Hoffman Estates | Poplar Creek Music Theater | |
26 August 1986 | Toronto | Canada | CNE Grandstand |
27 August 1986 | Montréal | Stade Parc Jarry | |
29 August 1986 | Hartford | United States | Hartford Civic Center |
30 August 1986 | Saratoga Springs | Saratoga Performing Arts Center | |
31 August 1986 | Columbia | Merriweather Post Pavilion | |
2 September 1986 | Philadelphia | The Spectrum | |
3 September 1986 | Worcester | The Centrum | |
5 September 1986 | |||
6 September 1986 | |||
7 September 1986 | Providence | Providence Civic Center | |
8 September 1986 | Philadelphia | The Spectrum | |
11 September 1986 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | |
12 September 1986 | |||
13 September 1986 | |||
14 September 1986 | |||
16 September 1986 | Atlanta | Omni Coliseum | |
19 September 1986 | Pembroke Pines | Hollywood Sportatorium | |
20 September 1986 | Tallahassee | Leon County Civic Center | |
21 September 1986 | Tampa | USF Sun Dome | |
23 September 1986 | Antioch | Starwood Amphitheatre | |
24 September 1986 | Memphis | Mid-South Coliseum | |
26 September 1986 | Houston | The Summit | |
27 September 1986 | Dallas | Reunion Arena | |
30 September 1986 | Denver | McNichols Sports Arena | |
1 October 1986 | Salt Lake City | Salt Palace | |
3 October 1986 | Oakland | Oakland Coliseum Arena | |
4 October 1986 | Costa Mesa | Pacific Amphitheatre | |
7 October 1986 | Los Angeles | Universal Amphitheatre | |
8 October 1986 | |||
10 October 1986 | |||
11 October 1986 | |||
12 October 1986 | |||
13 October 1986 | |||
14 October 1986 | |||
15 October 1986 |
Venue | City | Tickets sold / available | Gross revenue (1986) |
---|---|---|---|
Pine Knob Music Center | Clarkston, Michigan | 48,000 / 48,000 (100%) | $674,520 |
Poplar Creek Music Theater | Hoffman Estates | 24,161 / 24,161 (100%) | $326,000 |
National Exhibition Grandstand | Toronto | 24,298 / 24,298 (100%) | $448,275 |
The Spectrum | Philadelphia | 34,222 / 34,222 (100%) | $562,367 |
Civic Center | Providence | 13,120 / 13,120 (100%) | $229,600 |
Centrum | Worcester | 36,831 / 36,831 (100%) | $613,368 |
The Omni | Atlanta | 14,449 / 14,449 (100%) | $252,858 |
Leon County Civic Center | Tallahassee | 10,768 / 10,768 (100%) | $175,395 |
Sun Dome | Tampa | 10,492 / 10,800 (97%) | $173,188 |
Mid-South Coliseum | Memphis | 9,625 / 12,000 (80%) | $149,188 |
The Summit | Houston | 13,740 / 13,740 (100%) | $240,450 |
Reunion Arena | Dallas | 14,753 / 14,753 (100%) | $258,178 |
McNichols Sports Arena | Denver | 13,845 / 18,365 (75%) | $237,334 |
Alameda County Coliseum | Oakland | 13,745 / 13,745 (100%) | $240,538 |
Pacific Amphitheater | Costa Mesa | 17,872 / 18,764 (95%) | $273,489 |
TOTAL | 299,921 / 308,016 (97%) | $4,854,748 |
Live in Australia with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is the twenty-eighth official album release for English musician Elton John, released in 1987. It is a live album recorded at the Sydney Entertainment Centre on 14 December 1986 with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.
The Night and Day Concert is a concert performed by Elton John on 30 June 1984 in the Wembley Stadium. It was broadcast live in full on BBC Radio 1, borrowing Radio 2's FM stereo frequencies.
Elton John and his band set out on The One Tour just under a month prior to the album's release. The album proved a big success as did the world tour which lasted for two years.
After the huge success of the previous year's Face to Face concerts Billy Joel and Elton John set out on the road again. They only reunited for twelve concerts visiting both the United States and Canada. They played from California down to Florida covering eight states and also Toronto.
On the back of the success of the album, Made in England, Elton John went out on tour to promote it. The 1995 leg of the tour covered fifteen European countries, but strangely missing out John's homeland of the United Kingdom. John with his band then crossed the Atlantic Ocean for an extensive tour of the United States, playing forty-two concerts in just under three months, including seven sold out concerts at New York City's legendary Madison Square Garden, which has become a staple venue for any Elton John tour.
Riding on the success of their previous two tours, Elton John and Billy Joel once again hit the stadiums in 1998. The production had previously only toured the United States and Canada, but this time they visited Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Europe, avoiding any North American cities.
The Sleeping with the Past Tour was a worldwide concert tour by English musician and composer Elton John, in support of his 22nd studio album, Sleeping with the Past. The tour included a total of three legs and a total of 74 shows.
The Tour De Force was a concert tour by English musician and composer Elton John. The tour consisted in 26 shows scheduled in Australia accompanied by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.
Breaking Hearts Tour was the North American leg of the Elton John Breaking Hearts Tour. The European leg was dubbed "European Express". The tour started on 17 August 1984, at Tempe, Arizona. It included five sold-out concerts in New York City performed at Madison Square Garden.
The European Express Tour was the European leg of Elton John's 1984 Breaking Hearts Tour.
The Too Low for Zero Tour was a concert tour by English musician and composer Elton John, in support of his 17th studio album Too Low for Zero. The tour consisted in 24 shows across Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong.
The Jump Up! Tour was a worldwide concert tour by English musician and composer Elton John, in support of his 16th studio album Jump Up!. The tour included five legs and a total of 135 shows.
An Evening with Elton John was a 1999 solo concert tour by Elton John.
The Medusa Tour was a concert tour by Elton John that lasted from 1999 to 2000. The tour was a continuation of the previous tour, An Evening with Elton John. The tour started on 23 September 1999 in Jacksonville, Florida and came to an end on 10 December 2000 in Montgomery, Alabama.
The Stately Home Tour was a 2000 concert tour by Elton John. After completing the Medusa Tour, Elton decided to tour some of the stately homes of Europe, mainly covering England and Germany. The tour started on 27 May 2000 in Bedfordshire and ended on 30 July 2000 in Edinburgh, Scotland.
In 2002, Elton John and Billy Joel continued on their success Face to Face concert series.
The 2004 Tour was a concert tour by Elton John that took place in 2004 covering three continents, fourteen countries and twenty-nine cities.
The Diving Board Tour was a concert tour by British musician Elton John taking place in North, South and Central America and Europe in promotion of John's 2013 album The Diving Board.
All the Hits Tour was a concert tour by English musician Elton John that took place in North America, Europe and Oceania in 2015.
Quotations related to Ice on Fire Tour at Wikiquote