World tour by Queen + Adam Lambert | |
Location |
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Start date | 10 July 2019 |
End date | 14 February 2024 |
Legs | 6 |
No. of shows |
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Queen + Adam Lambert concert chronology |
The Rhapsody Tour was a worldwide concert tour by Queen + Adam Lambert, the collaboration between British rock band Queen and American singer Adam Lambert. The tour was announced following the success of the biopic film Bohemian Rhapsody . The tour marks the group's third visits to North America and Oceania after performing there in 2014 as part of the Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2014–2015 and in 2017 and 2018 as part of the Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2017–2018. The North American dates of the tour sold out in April 2019. [1] The North American leg began on 10 July 2019, in Vancouver, Canada at the Rogers Arena and continued throughout the continent until its last show in Charlotte. The tour went through Europe, Oceania and a second North American leg which ended in Los Angeles before concluding in Tokyo Dome on 14 February 2024.
After performing with American Idol finalists Kris Allen and Adam Lambert during the programme's season finale in 2009, the active members of Queen, Brian May and Roger Taylor, began contemplating the future of the band after the group's amicable split with touring collaborator Paul Rodgers. Two years later, at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards, Queen was presented that year's Global Icon Award, accepted by May. As part of the broadcast, Queen performed a short set with Lambert, receiving an overwhelmingly welcoming response. Speculation regarding a collaboration with Lambert soon arose, with the three formally announcing a short summer tour of Europe in 2012, including three dates at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, as well as shows in Ukraine, Russia and Poland. As with the partnership with Paul Rodgers, John Deacon chose not to participate.
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance [3] | Revenue [4] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 July 2019 | Vancouver | Canada | Rogers Arena | 14,392 / 14,392 | $1,701,360 |
12 July 2019 | Tacoma | United States | Tacoma Dome | 19,147 / 19,147 | $1,939,777 |
14 July 2019 | San Jose | SAP Center | 13,418 / 13,418 | $1,788,296 | |
16 July 2019 | Phoenix | Talking Stick Resort Arena | 13,574 / 13,574 | $1,604,064 | |
17 July 2019 [lower-alpha 1] | Las Vegas | Las Vegas Festival Grounds | — | — | |
19 July 2019 | Inglewood | The Forum | 29,373 / 29,373 | $4,301,412 | |
20 July 2019 | |||||
23 July 2019 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 14,419 / 14,419 | $1,879,599 | |
24 July 2019 | Houston | Toyota Center | 12,653 / 12,653 | $1,627,417 | |
27 July 2019 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | 16,754 / 16,754 | $1,781,325 | |
28 July 2019 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | 15,728 / 15,728 | $1,920,782 |
30 July 2019 | Washington, D.C. | United States | Capital One Arena | 14,896 / 14,896 | $1,919,710 |
31 July 2019 | Pittsburgh | PPG Paints Arena | 14,152 / 14,152 | $1,672,100 | |
3 August 2019 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | 15,422 / 15,422 | $1,949,987 | |
4 August 2019 | Mansfield | Xfinity Center | 19,821 / 19,821 | $1,537,028 | |
6 August 2019 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | 29,622 / 29,622 | $4,148,957 | |
7 August 2019 | |||||
9 August 2019 | Chicago | United Center | 16,108 / 16,108 | $2,089,002 | |
10 August 2019 | Saint Paul | Xcel Energy Center | 15,578 / 15,578 | $1,956,969 | |
13 August 2019 | Columbus | Nationwide Arena | 14,294 / 14,294 | $1,566,927 | |
15 August 2019 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 14,169 / 14,169 | $1,626,022 | |
17 August 2019 | Sunrise | BB&T Center | 14,325 / 14,325 | $1,782,692 | |
18 August 2019 | Tampa | Amalie Arena | 14,558 / 14,558 | $1,697,316 | |
20 August 2019 | New Orleans | Smoothie King Center | 13,741 / 13,741 | $1,706,957 | |
22 August 2019 | Atlanta | State Farm Arena | 11,721 / 11,721 | $1,502,796 | |
23 August 2019 | Charlotte | Spectrum Center | 14,597 / 14,597 | $1,768,254 | |
28 September 2019 [lower-alpha 2] | New York City | Central Park | — | — |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 January 2020 | Seoul | South Korea | Gocheok Sky Dome | — | — |
19 January 2020 | |||||
25 January 2020 | Saitama | Japan | Saitama Super Arena | — | — |
26 January 2020 | |||||
28 January 2020 | Osaka | Kyocera Dome | — | — | |
30 January 2020 | Nagoya | Nagoya Dome | — | — | |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance [13] | Revenue [14] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 February 2020 | Wellington | New Zealand | Westpac Stadium | 33,921 / 33,921 | $4,597,181 |
7 February 2020 | Auckland | Mount Smart Stadium | 27,357 / 27,357 | $3,715,732 | |
10 February 2020 | Dunedin | Forsyth Barr Stadium | 28,919 / 28,919 | $3,712,779 | |
13 February 2020 | Brisbane | Australia | Suncorp Stadium | 40,337 / 40,337 | $4,899,923 |
15 February 2020 | Sydney | ANZ Stadium | 60,029 / 60,029 | $6,492,672 | |
16 February 2020 [lower-alpha 3] | — | — | |||
19 February 2020 | Melbourne | AAMI Park | 59,230 / 59,230 | $7,471,188 | |
20 February 2020 | |||||
23 February 2020 | Perth | Optus Stadium | 44,593 / 44,593 | $4,707,760 | |
26 February 2020 | Adelaide | Adelaide Oval | 42,484 / 42,484 | $4,436,072 | |
29 February 2020 | Gold Coast | Metricon Stadium | 39,607 / 39,607 | $4,536,677 | |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
27 May 2022 | Belfast | Northern Ireland | SSE Arena | 18,317 / 18,779 | $2,496,960 |
28 May 2022 | |||||
30 May 2022 | Manchester | England | AO Arena | 30,142 / 30,142 | $4,381,781 |
31 May 2022 | |||||
2 June 2022 | Glasgow | Scotland | OVO Hydro | 26,233 / 26,233 | $3,686,571 |
3 June 2022 | |||||
4 June 2022 [lower-alpha 5] | London | England | Buckingham Palace | — | — |
5 June 2022 | The O2 Arena | 174,485 / 174,485 [lower-alpha 6] | $22,744,678 [lower-alpha 7] | ||
6 June 2022 | |||||
8 June 2022 | |||||
9 June 2022 | |||||
11 June 2022 | Birmingham | Utilita Arena | — | — | |
12 June 2022 | |||||
14 June 2022 | London | The O2 Arena | |||
15 June 2022 | |||||
17 June 2022 | |||||
18 June 2022 | |||||
20 June 2022 | |||||
21 June 2022 | |||||
24 June 2022 | Berlin | Germany | Mercedes-Benz Arena | 11,535 / 11,535 | $1,322,696 |
26 June 2022 | Cologne | Lanxess Arena | 14,048 / 14,048 | $1,448,054 | |
28 June 2022 | Zürich | Switzerland | Hallenstadion | 13,500 / 13,500 | $1,995,553 |
29 June 2022 | Munich | Germany | Olympiahalle | 11,275 / 11,275 | $1,342,201 |
1 July 2022 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Ziggo Dome | — | — |
2 July 2022 | |||||
6 July 2022 | Madrid | Spain | WiZink Center | 27,615 / 31,837 | $4,350,727 |
7 July 2022 | |||||
10 July 2022 | Bologna | Italy | Unipol Arena | — | — |
11 July 2022 | |||||
13 July 2022 | Paris | France | Accor Arena | — | — |
15 July 2022 | Antwerp | Belgium | Sportpaleis | — | — |
17 July 2022 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Royal Arena | — | — |
18 July 2022 | |||||
20 July 2022 | Stockholm | Sweden | Avicii Arena | — | — |
21 July 2022 | Oslo | Norway | Telenor Arena | — | — |
24 July 2022 | Tampere | Finland | Tampere Deck Arena | — | — |
25 July 2022 | |||||
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 October 2023 | Baltimore | United States | CFG Bank Arena | — | — |
5 October 2023 | — | — | |||
8 October 2023 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | — | — |
10 October 2023 | Detroit | United States | Little Caesars Arena | — | — |
12 October 2023 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | — | — | |
13 October 2023 | — | — | |||
15 October 2023 | Boston | TD Garden | — | — | |
16 October 2023 | — | — | |||
18 October 2023 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | — | — | |
21 October 2023 [lower-alpha 8] | Austin | Circuit of the Americas | — | — | |
23 October 2023 | Atlanta | State Farm Arena | — | — | |
25 October 2023 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | — | — | |
27 October 2023 | Saint Paul | Xcel Energy Center | — | — | |
28 October 2023 | — | — | |||
30 October 2023 | Chicago | United Center | — | — | |
31 October 2023 | — | — | |||
2 November 2023 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | — | — | |
3 November 2023 | — | — | |||
5 November 2023 | Denver | Ball Arena | — | — | |
8 November 2023 | San Francisco | Chase Center | — | — | |
9 November 2023 | — | — | |||
11 November 2023 | Los Angeles | BMO Stadium | — | — | |
12 November 2023 | — | — | |||
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 February 2024 | Nagoya | Japan | Vantelin Dome | — | — |
7 February 2024 | Osaka | Kyocera Dome | — | — | |
10 February 2024 | Sapporo | Sapporo Dome | — | — | |
13 February 2024 | Tokyo | Tokyo Dome | — | — | |
14 February 2024 | — | — | |||
TOTAL | 1,076,089 / 1,080,773 (99.6%) | $133,807,954 | |||
Total available grossing: $156.7 million from 63 shows. [24]
| Additional musicians
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Queen are a British rock band formed in London in 1970 by Freddie Mercury, Brian May, and Roger Taylor, later joined by John Deacon (bass). Their earliest works were influenced by progressive rock, hard rock, and heavy metal, but the band gradually ventured into more conventional and radio-friendly works by incorporating further styles, such as arena rock and pop rock.
The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness was a benefit concert held on Easter Monday, 20 April 1992, at Wembley Stadium in London, England, for an audience of 72,000. The concert was produced for television by Ray Burdis, directed by David Mallet and broadcast live on television and radio to 76 countries around the world, with an audience of up to one billion. The concert was a tribute to Queen's lead vocalist, Freddie Mercury, who died of AIDS on 24 November 1991.
A Night at the Hip Hopera is the third album by The Kleptones. It fused Queen's rock music with rap vocals and many sound bites from movies and other sources. Unlike 1992's cancelled BASIC Queen Bootlegs album and despite its title, it is considered a bastard pop album rather than a hip-hop album.
We Will Rock You is a jukebox musical based on the songs of British rock band Queen with a book by Ben Elton. The musical tells the story of a renegade group known as the Bohemians who struggle to restore the free exchange of thought and culture in a vaguely Orwellian society.
Super Live in Japan is a DVD by Queen + Paul Rodgers, capturing the performances in Saitama Super Arena in Japan on 27 October 2005 from their world tour, featuring songs from both Queen and Rodgers' catalogues. 15 of these songs became available on DVD to the rest of the world as a Bonus DVD for the Queen + Paul Rodgers studio album The Cosmos Rocks (2008). The songs are marked as such: *. "Fire and Water" was released on the digital single for "C-lebrity", and "Fire and Water" and "The Show Must Go On" will be available to download on the "C-lebrity" iTunes exclusive single.
We Are the Champions: Final Live in Japan is a live concert video of English rock band Queen's performance at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Tokyo on 11 May 1985 as part of the Japanese leg of The Works Tour.
The Magic Tour was a European concert tour by the British rock band Queen in 1986. The tour was in support of their latest album, A Kind of Magic, and featured 26 shows across Western Europe. In addition, the band performed one show behind the Iron Curtain in Hungary.
The Hot Space Tour was the ninth headlining concert tour by the British rock band Queen in support of their 1982 album Hot Space. The tour started on the 9th of April in Gothenburg, Sweden and ended, after sixty-nine concerts, in Tokorozawa, Japan on the 3rd of November.
Queen Rock Montreal is a live album by the British rock band Queen. It was released on 29 October 2007 as a double CD, Blu-ray, DVD, and triple vinyl in the UK and the following day in the US.
The Jazz Tour was the sixth headlining concert tour by the British rock band Queen, supporting the album Jazz. The tour was memorable for the spectacle created by the band. As James Henke of Rolling Stone said about the band's Halloween 1978 concert in New Orleans: "...when they were launching a U.S. tour in support of their Jazz, album, Queen threw a bash in New Orleans that featured snake charmers, strippers, crossdressers and a naked fat lady who smoked cigarettes in her crotch." Part of the European leg was recorded for the band's first live album, Live Killers.
The News of the World Tour was the fifth headlining concert tour by the British rock band Queen, supporting their successful 1977 album News of the World. The tour spanned from 11 November 1977 to 13 May 1978 over three tour legs: North America, Europe, and the United Kingdom. Rehearsals for the tour took place at Shepperton Studios in October 1977.
The Rock the Cosmos Tour was the second and final concert tour by Queen + Paul Rodgers, promoting their only studio album The Cosmos Rocks. The opening date was recorded for a DVD release. which was released on 15 June 2009. The tour included one of the largest open-air concerts in Kharkiv, Ukraine which garnered 350,000 people. Over the course of the tour, they played to just short of one million viewers.
The Game Tour was the eighth headlining concert tour by the British rock band Queen to support their successful 1980 album The Game. This tour featured the first performances in South America by the group. This tour marked the last time Queen played without a fifth player, as all tours from 1982 onwards would feature an extra man playing on keyboard.
Jewels is a compilation album by the British rock band Queen, released on 28 January 2004. The album was released only in Japan on CD. It's a Japan only 24 bit digitally remastered compilation CD featuring extensive liner notes in Japanese and obi-strip.
The Queen Extravaganza Tour was a concert tour by official Queen tribute band the Queen Extravaganza.
Queen – Live In Budapest was retitled later as Hungarian Rhapsody: Queen Live in Budapest is a concert film of the British rock band Queen's performance at the Népstadion in Budapest on 27 July 1986. It was part of the band's final tour with original lead singer Freddie Mercury, The Magic Tour. Queen were one of the few bands from Western Europe to perform in the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War. The film had a limited theatrical release in Eastern Bloc countries in 1987/1988 with the concert physically released on VHS and Laserdisc in the UK and Japan on 16 February 1987 under the original title Queen Live In Budapest, and on CD, DVD and Blu-ray for the first time on 5 November 2012 worldwide, except in the United States where it was released a day later.
The Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2014–2015 was a worldwide concert tour by British rock band Queen and American singer Adam Lambert during 2014 and 2015. Following on their 2012 tour and their appearance at the 2013 iHeart Radio Music Festival, the band announced a 2014 tour of North America. Following the overwhelming success of their North American tour, it was expanded to Australia, New Zealand and Asia in the autumn, then Europe in early 2015. A tour of South America took place in September 2015.
Queen + Adam Lambert Rock Big Ben Live was a concert on New Year's Eve 2014 and New Years Day 2015 performed by Queen + Adam Lambert to celebrate the New Year in the UK. It was performed in the shadow of Big Ben in Central Hall Westminster in Central London.
The Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2012 was a European concert tour that was the first touring collaboration between British rock band Queen and American singer Adam Lambert.
The Queen + Adam Lambert 2016 Summer Festival Tour was a summer stadium/festival tour by British rock band Queen and American singer Adam Lambert. The tour began on 20 May 2016, in Lisbon, Portugal at the Bela Vista Park and continued throughout Europe before concluding on 25 June 2016, in Padua, Italy at the Villa Contarini. Afterwards, the band toured throughout Asia, starting in Tel Aviv, Israel at the Yarkon Park on 12 September 2016, and visited the Formula One Singapore Grand Prix on 17 September 2016 at the Marina Bay Street Circuit and concluded on 30 September 2016 in Bangkok, Thailand at the Impact Arena.