Tour by Garbage | |
Associated album | Version 2.0 |
---|---|
Start date | May 15, 1998 |
End date | November 24, 1999 |
Legs | 16 |
No. of shows |
|
Garbage concert chronology |
The Version 2.0 World Tour was the second world concert tour cycle by American/Scottish alternative rock group Garbage, which took the band throughout North America, Europe, South Africa, Asia and Australia in support of its second album Version 2.0 .
Garbage performed under the alias Stupid Girl for the first three shows on the tour, referencing their 1996 hit single of the same name. The Version 2.0 tour took in headline performances, support performances for Red Hot Chili Peppers and Alanis Morissette, and slots at rock festivals and radio shows around the world.
A number of notable acts supported Garbage throughout the run of the tour, including Placebo, Moloko, Talvin Singh, Stellar*, Lit, Rasmus, Crystal Method and Laurent Garnier to various reception.
Preempting the start of their world tour, Garbage played three shows in the Midwest under the alias 'Stupid Girl'. [1] The Version 2.0 tour officially kicked off with club dates starting at San Francisco's Warfield Theatre on May 20, and took the band to a number of key media cities in the United States and Canada. [2] Garbage then travelled to Europe to play a number of rock festivals beginning June 1 at Netherlands' Pinkpop and finishing up at Scotland's T in the Park on July 12. In between the festivals, Garbage performed some headlining shows in France and the United Kingdom, with support coming from The Crystal Method. In August, the band travelled to Japan to perform on the bill at the Fuji Rock Festival, and then back to Scotland to perform at two "warm up" shows at Glasgow's Barrowland Ballroom and then headlining the last night of the Reading Festival. [1]
Garbage returned to North America on September 17, to start a three-month tour. Support came from Girls Against Boys. The itinerary took the band from Denver, Colorado up the West Coast as north as Vancouver, British Columbia before routing towards the Southern States. Following these dates, the tour moved up the Eastern Seaboard and into Quebec and Ontario, before finishing up in the Midwest on November 28 in Green Bay, Wisconsin. During December, Garbage performed at radio shows on both coasts, including KROQ-FM's Almost Acoustic Christmas, and made a visit to Mexico City before wrapping up on December 20 in Detroit, Michigan. [1]
Continuing their touring commitment into 1999, Garbage launched a European arena tour on January 14 at Dublin's Point Theatre. Local acts such as Laurent Garnier and Rasmus support continental dates; Moloko support Irish and UK shows. Concerts in Paris and St. Petersburg are filmed to be broadcast by MTV Europe and MTV Russia respectively. A show in Tallinn is cancelled on the day when the band's equipment is held up by customs officials at the Estonian border. [3] The European run ends in Madrid on February 11. [3] Garbage then returned to North America to support Alanis Morissette on two legs of The Junkie tour, starting on February 16 in Cincinnati routing along the Midwest, Four Corners states and onto the West Coast, ending on April 8 in Los Angeles [4]
Garbage revisited Europe to play a second summer of rock festivals, beginning with Vienna's Libro on May 19. [5] The shows included visits to Israel and Iceland, although four concerts in the Baltic States and Russia are cancelled on the advice of the American Embassy due to the USA's involvement in Kosovo. Garbage headlined a special show to mark the opening of the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh on July 1. [6] The European dates conclude in Duisburg on July 25. Garbage then travelled to South Africa to play four shows with Placebo. [1]
The final legs of the Version 2.0 tour see Garbage moving on to New Zealand and Australia to co-headline with Alanis Morissette, beginning in Auckland for sixteen days from Oct 1, and ending in Newcastle. During this time the band also performed at the Livid Festival. Garbage returned to North America to wind down the tour by headlining a series of shows organised by MTV on university campuses. [7] Titled the Campus Invasion Tour, and supported by Lit, the shows began on October 20 in Denver and is routed through the Midwest, North East and Southern States, Arizona and California. [8] The final date of the Version 2.0 tour is held in Irvine, California on November 24. [9]
Encore:
Encore:
Encore:
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
North America | |||
May 15, 1998 | Combined Locks | United States | Ryan's Ballroom [A] |
May 16, 1998 | Urbana | Thunderbird Theatre [A] | |
May 18, 1998 | Grand Rapids | Orbit Room [A] | |
May 20, 1998 | San Francisco | Warfield Theatre | |
May 21, 1998 | Los Angeles | Palace | |
May 24, 1998 | Toronto | Canada | Phoenix |
May 26, 1998 | Boston | United States | Avalon |
May 27, 1998 | Washington, D.C. | 9:30 Club | |
May 28, 1998 | New York City | Roseland Ballroom | |
Europe | |||
June 1, 1998 | Geleen | Netherlands | Pinkpop Festival |
June 3, 1998 | Paris | France | Le Zénith |
June 4, 1998 | London | United Kingdom | Brixton Academy |
June 6, 1998 | Newport | Newport Centre | |
June 7, 1998 | Manchester | Apollo | |
June 8, 1998 | Wolverhampton | Civic Hall | |
June 9, 1998 | Portsmouth | Guildhall | |
June 11, 1998 | Hultsfred | Sweden | Hultsfred Festival |
June 13, 1998 | Seinäjoki | Finland | Provinssirock Festival |
June 16, 1998 | Vienna | Austria | Libro Festival |
June 17, 1998 | Munich | Germany | Coliseum |
June 18, 1998 | Stuttgart | Kongresshalle | |
June 20, 1998 | Sankt Goarshausen | Loreley Festival | |
June 21, 1998 | Scheeßel | Hurricane Festival | |
June 23, 1998 | Lisbon | Portugal | World Expo '98 |
June 26, 1998 | Roskilde | Denmark | Roskilde Festival |
June 28, 1998 | St. Gallen | Switzerland | St. Gallen Festival |
June 30, 1998 | Berlin | Germany | Columbia Halle |
July 1, 1998 | Nuremberg | Forum | |
July 2, 1998 | Nancy | France | Arena Festival |
July 4, 1998 | Torhout | Belgium | Tourhout Festival |
July 5, 1998 | Werchter | Rock Werchter | |
July 7, 1998 | Correggio | Italy | Festa de l'Unità |
July 10, 1998 | Pyrenees | Spain | Doctor Music Festival |
July 11, 1998 | Castlegar | Ireland | Big Day Out |
July 12, 1998 | Balado | United Kingdom | T in the Park |
North America | |||
July 24, 1998 | Chicago | United States | Aragon Ballroom [10] |
Asia | |||
August 1, 1998 | Tokyo | Japan | Fuji Rock Festival |
North America | |||
August 23, 1998 | Barrie | Canada | Summersault Festival |
Europe | |||
August 27, 1998 | Glasgow | United Kingdom | Barrowland Ballroom |
August 28, 1998 | |||
August 30, 1998 | Reading | Reading Festival | |
North America | |||
September 17, 1998 | Denver | United States | Mammoth Events Center |
September 18, 1998 | Salt Lake City | Wasatch Events Center | |
September 20, 1998 | Salem | Armory | |
September 21, 1998 | Vancouver | Canada | Plaza of Nations |
September 22, 1998 | Seattle | United States | Paramount Theatre |
September 24, 1998 | Davis | Freeborn Hall | |
September 25, 1998 | San Jose | SJSU Event Center | |
September 26, 1998 | West Hollywood | Hollywood Palladium | |
September 28, 1998 | |||
September 30, 1998 | Bakersfield | Kern County Fair | |
October 1, 1998 | La Jolla | RIMAC Arena | |
October 2, 1998 | Fresno | Rainbow Ballroom | |
October 3, 1998 | Santa Barbara | Santa Barbara Bowl | |
October 5, 1998 | Tempe | Hayden Square | |
October 6, 1998 | Las Vegas | The Joint | |
October 8, 1998 | Albuquerque | The Zone | |
October 9, 1998 | Las Cruces | Pan American Center | |
October 11, 1998 | Lubbock | Pan Liquid 2000 | |
October 12, 1998 | Tulsa | Cain's Ballroom | |
October 13, 1998 | Oklahoma City | Diamond Ballroom | |
October 15, 1998 | Dallas | Bronco Bowl | |
October 16, 1998 | Austin | Austin Music Hall | |
October 17, 1998 | Houston | Bayou Place | |
October 19, 1998 | Tampa | USF Special Events Center | |
October 20, 1998 | Sunrise | Sunrise Musical Theatre | |
October 21, 1998 | Lake Buena Vista | House of Blues | |
October 23, 1998 | Atlanta | Tabernacle | |
October 24, 1998 | Raleigh | The Ritz | |
October 25, 1998 | Washington, D.C. | Bender Arena | |
October 27, 1998 | Philadelphia | Electric Factory | |
October 28, 1998 | Worcester | The Palladium | |
October 30, 1998 | New York City | Roseland Ballroom | |
October 31, 1998 | Asbury Park | Paramount Theater | |
November 1, 1998 | Providence | Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel | |
November 3, 1998 | South Hadley | Chapin Theatre | |
November 5, 1998 | Montreal | Canada | Metropolis |
November 7, 1998 | Kitchener | Lyric | |
November 8, 1998 | Toronto | Warehouse | |
November 10, 1998 | Cleveland | United States | Agora Theatre |
November 12, 1998 | Detroit | State Theatre | |
November 13, 1998 | Cincinnati | Bogart's | |
November 14, 1998 | Columbus | Newport Music Hall | |
November 16, 1998 | Kalamazoo | State Theater | |
November 17, 1998 | Indianapolis | Egyptian Theater | |
November 18, 1998 | Madison | Dane County Expo Center | |
November 20, 1998 | Kansas City | Memorial Hall | |
November 21, 1998 | St. Louis | American Theater | |
November 22, 1998 | Omaha | Sokol Hall | |
November 24, 1998 | Milwaukee | Eagles Ballroom | |
November 25, 1998 | Chicago | Riviera Nightclub | |
November 27, 1998 | Minneapolis | Orpheum Theater | |
November 28, 1998 | Green Bay | Weidner Center | |
North America [B] | |||
December 1, 1998 | Boston | United States | The Avalon |
December 2, 1998 | Wallingford | Oakdale Theatre | |
December 4, 1998 | Philadelphia | Electric Factory | |
December 5, 1998 | Fairfax | Patriot Center | |
December 6, 1998 | Pittsburgh | Metropol | |
December 8, 1998 | Portland | Memorial Coliseum | |
December 9, 1998 | Seattle | KeyArena | |
December 10, 1998 | San Jose | SJSU Event Center | |
December 12, 1998 | Los Angeles | Shrine Auditorium | |
December 15, 1998 | Mexico City | Mexico | Teatro Metropolitan |
December 18, 1998 | Chicago | United States | Rosemont Horizon |
December 19, 1998 | Minneapolis | Target Center | |
December 20, 1998 | Detroit | Joe Louis Arena | |
Europe | |||
January 14, 1999 | Dublin | Ireland | The Point |
January 15, 1999 | Belfast | United Kingdom | King's Hall |
January 17, 1999 | Birmingham | N.E.C. | |
January 18, 1999 | Doncaster | The Dome | |
January 19, 1999 | Reading | Rivermead | |
January 20, 1999 | London | Wembley Arena | |
January 22, 1999 | Manchester | Evening News Arena | |
January 23, 1999 | Glasgow | SECC | |
January 25, 1999 | Brussels | Belgium | Vorst Nationaal |
January 26, 1999 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Ahoy |
January 27, 1999 | Paris | France | Le Zénith |
January 29, 1999 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Valby-Hallen |
January 30, 1999 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Liseberg Hall |
January 31, 1999 | Stockholm | Annexet | |
February 2, 1999 | Helsinki | Finland | Icehall |
February 3, 1999 | St. Petersburg | Russia | Yubileyny Sports Palace |
February 7, 1999 | Cologne | Germany | Palladium |
February 8, 1999 | Villeurbanne | France | Transbordeur |
February 10, 1999 | Barcelona | Spain | Zeleste |
February 11, 1999 | Madrid | La Riviera | |
North America [C] | |||
February 16, 1999 | Cincinnati | United States | The Crown |
February 18, 1999 | Uniondale | Nassau Coliseum | |
February 19, 1999 | East Rutherford | Continental Airlines Arena | |
February 21, 1999 | State College | Bryce Jordan Center | |
February 22, 1999 | Boston | FleetCenter | |
March 7, 1999 | Minneapolis | United States | Target Center |
March 9, 1999 | Rosemont | Rosemont Horizon | |
March 10, 1999 | Auburn Hills | Palace of Auburn Hills | |
March 11, 1999 | Indianapolis | Market Square Arena | |
March 14, 1999 | St. Louis | Kiel Center | |
March 15, 1999 | Kansas City | Kemper Arena | |
March 17, 1999 | Dallas | Reunion Arena | |
March 21, 1999 | Phoenix | Desert Sky Pavilion | |
March 23, 1999 | Denver | McNichols Arena | |
March 24, 1999 | West Valley City | E Center | |
March 26, 1999 | Nampa | Idaho Center | |
March 27, 1999 | Yakima | Yakima Valley SunDome | |
March 29, 1999 | Seattle | KeyArena | |
March 30, 1999 | Portland | Rose Garden | |
April 1, 1999 | San Jose | San Jose Arena | |
April 3, 1999 | San Diego | Cox Arena | |
April 4, 1999 | Las Vegas | House of Blues | |
April 6, 1999 | Anaheim | Arrowhead Pond | |
April 7, 1999 | Los Angeles | Universal Amphitheatre | |
Europe | |||
May 19, 1999 | Vienna | Austria | Libro Festival |
May 20, 1999 | Prague | Czech Republic | Zimní Stadion Eden |
May 21, 1999 | Nuremberg | Germany | Rock im Park Festival |
May 22, 1999 | Nürburgring | Rock am Ring Festival | |
May 24, 1999 | Katowice | Poland | Spodek |
May 28, 1999 | Granada | Spain | Palacio de los Deportes |
May 29, 1999 | Murcia | Spain | Bullring |
May 30, 1999 | San Sebastián | Spain | Polideportivo Anoeta |
June 13, 1999 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Tibetan Freedom Concert |
Asia | |||
June 15, 1999 | Tel Aviv | Israel | Bitan 11 |
June 16, 1999 | |||
June 17, 1999 | Be'er Sheva | Be'er Sheva University | |
Europe | |||
June 19, 1999 | Imola | Italy | Heineken Jammin' Festival |
June 22, 1999 | Reykjavík | Iceland | Laugardalls Hall |
July 1, 1999 | Edinburgh | United Kingdom | The Garden Party |
July 3, 1999 | Groningen | Netherlands | nl:De Oosterpoort |
July 6, 1999 | Kristiansand | Norway | Quart Festival |
July 9, 1999 | Ringe | Denmark | Midtfyns Festival |
July 10, 1999 | Hamburg | Germany | Jazz & More Festival |
July 11, 1999 | Erfurt | Highfield Festival | |
July 14, 1999 | Athens | Greece | Rockwave Festival |
July 16, 1999 | Istanbul | Turkey | Yapi Kredi Festival |
July 17, 1999 | Zeebrugge | Belgium | Axion Beach Festival |
July 18, 1999 | Lisbon | Portugal | Superbock Festival |
July 20, 1999 | Six-Fours-les-Plages | France | Les Voix Du Gaou Festival |
July 21, 1999 | Nyon | Switzerland | Paléo Festival |
July 22, 1999 | Singen | Germany | Hohentwiel Festival |
July 24, 1999 | Vannes | France | St. Noiffs |
July 25, 1999 | Duisburg | Germany | Warsteiner Festival |
Africa | |||
July 28, 1999 | Johannesburg | South Africa | Standard Bank Arena |
July 29, 1999 | |||
July 31, 1999 | Cape Town | 3 Arts Theatre | |
August 2, 1999 | |||
Oceania [C] | |||
October 1, 1999 | Auckland | New Zealand | Supertop |
October 2, 1999 | Brisbane | Australia | Livid Festival |
October 3, 1999 | Melbourne | The Palace | |
October 5, 1999 | Perth | Entertainment Centre | |
October 7, 1999 | Adelaide | Entertainment Centre | |
October 8, 1999 | Melbourne | Melbourne Park | |
October 9, 1999 | |||
October 11, 1999 | Sydney | National Indoor Stadium | |
October 13, 1999 | Canberra | AIS Arena | |
October 14, 1999 | Sydney | Entertainment Centre | |
October 15, 1999 | Wollongong | Entertainment Centre | |
October 16, 1999 | Newcastle | Entertainment Centre | |
North America [11] | |||
October 20, 1999 | Denver | United States | Magness Arena |
October 22, 1999 | Macomb | Western Hall | |
October 23, 1999 | Chicago | Mandel Hall | |
October 24, 1999 | Warrensburg | UCM Multipurpose Building | |
October 25, 1999 | Terre Haute | Hulman Center | |
October 27, 1999 | Murray | Events Center | |
October 28, 1999 | Huntington | Civic Arena | |
October 29, 1999 | Bethlehem | Stabler Arena | |
October 30, 1999 | Delhi | Floyd L. Maines Arena | |
November 2, 1999 | Indiana | Memorial Field House | |
November 3, 1999 | Syracuse | Goldstein Auditorium | |
November 4, 1999 | Newark | Bob Carpenter Center | |
November 5, 1999 | Binghamton | University Events Center | |
November 7, 1999 | Clarion | Waldo S. Tippon Gymnasium | |
November 9, 1999 | Blacksburg | Burruss Hall | |
November 10, 1999 | Charlotte | Halton Arena | |
November 12, 1999 | Jacksonville | UNF Arena | |
November 14, 1999 | New Orleans | McAlister Auditorium | |
November 16, 1999 | Dallas | Starplex Amphitheatre | |
November 17, 1999 | Nacogdoches | William R. Johnson Coliseum | |
November 20, 1999 | Tucson | Centennial Hall | |
November 22, 1999 | San Luis Obispo | Cal Poly Events Center | |
November 23, 1999 | San Diego | RIMAC Arena | |
November 24, 1999 | Irvine | Bren Events Center |
^ a Garbage's equipment was held at the Russian-Estonian border by customs, and the show was cancelled at the last minute. Garbage appeared on Estonian news programmes criticising the Russian customs, and promised the show would be rescheduled
^ b Garbage had announced the above four dates on March 25, 1999, as part of that year's European summer schedule, including a show in Estonia, [12] but by April 16 were cancelled on the advice of the U.S. Embassy due to concerns caused by the NATO bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War. The U.S. Embassy had felt there was "Anti-American sentiment in some areas". The dates were not rescheduled. [13]
February 4, 1999 | Tallinn | Estonia | Linnahall | Cancelled |
May 26, 1999 | Vilnius | Lithuania | Dinamo Stadium | Cancelled |
May 27, 1999 | Riga | Latvia | Mezaparks | Cancelled |
May 29, 1999 | St. Petersburg | Russia | Kirov Stadium | Cancelled |
Date | Show | Venue | City | Tickets sold / available | Gross revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 18, 1999 | Alanis Morissette/Garbage | Nassau Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | 8,932 / 10,000 (89%) | $280,568 [14] |
February 19, 1999 | Continental Airlines Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | 12,117 / 12,500 (97%) | $385,945 [14] |
Date | Show | Set |
---|---|---|
June 2, 1998 | Nulle Part Ailleurs | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Push It" |
June 5, 1998 | TFI Friday | "I Think I'm Paranoid" |
July 17, 1998 | Top of the Pops | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Special" |
Sept 4, 1998 | Pepsi Chart Show | "Special", "When I Grow Up" |
Sept 5, 1998 | MTV Europe | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Special", "You Look So Fine" |
TFI Friday | "Special" | |
Sept 28, 1998 | KROQ-FM Breakfast with Garbage | "Special", "Vow", "Thirteen", "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Only Happy When it Rains" (acoustic set) |
Oct 26, 1998 | Sonic Session | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Only Happy When It Rains", "Thirteen", "Special", "Vow" (acoustic set) |
Oct 29, 1998 | The Late Show | "Special" |
Oct 30, 1998 | The Howard Stern Show | "#1 Crush" (semi-acoustic) |
Nov 6, 1998 | MusiquePlus | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "Special", "Stupid Girl", "Vow", "Push It", "Only Happy When it Rains", "You Look So Fine", "Milk", "When I Grow Up" |
Nov 29, 1998 | Modern rock Live | Live set |
Dec 11, 1998 | The Tonight Show | "Special" |
Jan 21, 1999 | Friday Night's All Wright | "When I Grow Up" |
Jan 28, 1999 | Nulle Part Ailleurs | "Special", "The Trick is to Keep Breathing" (acoustic set) |
Feb 5, 1999 | Top of The Pops | "When I Grow Up" |
March 1, 1999 | El séptimo de caballería | "Special", "The Trick is to Keep Breathing", "Only Happy When it Rains" (acoustic set) |
March 20, 1999 | Saturday Night Live | "Special", "When I Grow Up" |
April 2, 1999 | The Tonight Show | "Special" |
May 15, 1999 | Later... with Jools Holland | "I Think I'm Paranoid", "You Look So Fine", "Only Happy When it Rains" |
May 29, 1999 | Música sí | "When I Grow Up", "You Look So Fine" |
June 3, 1999 | Gala Regazza | "You Look So Fine" |
June 4, 1999 | Top of the Pops | "You Look So Fine" |
June 5, 1999 | Evening Session | "You Look So Fine", "Medication", "Sleep Together", "I Think I'm Paranoid" |
June 11, 1999 | TFI Friday | "You Look So Fine" |
Oct 12, 1999 | Hey Hey It's Saturday | "When I Grow Up" |
Nov 1, 1999 | The Late Show | "The World Is Not Enough" |
Alanis Nadine Morissette is a Canadian and American singer, songwriter, and musician. Morissette began her music career in Canada in the early 1990s, releasing two dance-pop albums. She achieved global success with her alternative rock album, Jagged Little Pill (1995), which sold over 33 million copies and won Morissette four Grammy Awards including Album of the Year. It produced the singles "You Oughta Know", "You Learn", "Hand in My Pocket", "Ironic", and "Head over Feet". Jagged Little Pill propelled her to become a cultural phenomenon and has been included on several all-time lists.
Garbage is a Scottish and American rock band formed in 1993 in Madison, Wisconsin. The band's line-up consisting of Scottish singer Shirley Manson (vocals) and American musicians Duke Erikson, Steve Marker, and Butch Vig has remained unchanged since its inception. All four members are involved in the songwriting and production process. Garbage has sold over 17 million albums worldwide.
Version 2.0 is the second studio album by Scottish/American rock band Garbage. It was released on May 11, 1998, by Mushroom Records worldwide, with the North American release on Almo Sounds the following day. With this album, the band aimed to improve and expand upon the style of their 1995 eponymous debut rather than reinventing their sound. Lead singer Shirley Manson wrote dark, introspective lyrics, which she felt complemented the songs' melodies.
"Stupid Girl" is a song by Scottish and American rock band Garbage from their self-titled debut studio album (1995). The song was written and produced by band members Duke Erikson, Shirley Manson, Steve Marker and Butch Vig. "Stupid Girl" features lyrics about a young woman's ambivalence and is a musical arrangement centered on a repetitive bassline and a drum sample from the Clash's 1980 song "Train in Vain".
"Temptation Waits" is a 1999 song performed by the band Garbage and is featured in their second studio album Version 2.0 as the opening song.
The Beautiful Garbage World Tour was the third world concert tour cycle by American/Scottish alternative rock group Garbage, which took the band throughout North and Central America, Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand in support of its third album Beautiful Garbage.
The Bleed Like Me Tour was the fourth world concert tour cycle by American/Scottish alternative rock group Garbage. The tour launched in Paris, France and took the band throughout North America, Europe and Australia in support of the band's fourth studio album Bleed Like Me which was released internationally in April 2005. The tour took in combinations of headline performances, slots on the bills at rock festivals, television and radio shows. After being initially organised low-key, the tour snowballed into bigger venues when the parent album and its lead single "Why Do You Love Me" became surprise hits internationally. The tour concluded in Perth, Western Australia after six months on the road; when the tour leg of dates in France, Belgium and United Kingdom were cancelled. A press statement from the band stated that they had "somewhat overextended themselves".
The Garbage tour was the debut concert tour by American rock band Garbage, in support of their self-titled debut album (1995). It began on November 5, 1995, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and ended on December 18, 1996, in Inglewood, California. For the duration of the tour, Garbage's touring line-up was augmented by Daniel Shulman, who had previously been a session musician for Run-D.M.C., on bass guitar. Samplers and MIDI controllers helped the bandmembers to unleash on stage the varied sounds that augmented the studio versions of the songs. Despite all the members of the group having racked up years of touring experience between them prior to forming, Garbage had no initial plans to tour their debut set; they changed their mind when they found that they enjoyed themselves while filming the music video for their debut single, "Vow". Director Samuel Bayer had encouraged the group to play the song live as he filmed them, rather than playing along to a backing track.
The Flavors of Entanglement Tour was the seventh headlining concert tour by Canadian American recording artist, Alanis Morissette. The tour supports her seventh studio album, Flavors of Entanglement. Beginning in May 2008, the tour played over 90 shows in the Americas as well as throughout Europe.
The Not Your Kind of People Tour is the fifth world concert tour cycle by American/Scottish alternative rock group Garbage. The tour launched May 2012 in Los Angeles, United States and included headline performances and festival appearances throughout North America, Europe and Asia. The tour also routed South America and several festivals in Australia during 2013.
The Guardian Angel Tour was a concert tour by Canadian-American musician Alanis Morissette. The tour promoted her August 2012 album Havoc and Bright Lights. The tour ran from June to December 2012 and took place in Europe, North America and South America, including the countries of United Kingdom, France, Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Italy, Brazil and Israel.
One Mile High... Live is the 2013 live Blu-ray and DVD released by alternative rock group Garbage through Eagle Rock Entertainment. The recording took place in October 2012, at the Ogden Theatre in Denver, Colorado, and was initially broadcast live on AXS TV. The show took place approximately mid-way through the bands year-long world tour in support of their fifth album, Not Your Kind of People and features the entire group present, with bass provided by Eric Avery.
The Junkie Tour was the second headlining concert tour by Canadian American recording artist, Alanis Morissette. The tour promoted her fourth studio album, Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie. Beginning January, the tour played over 100 shows in the Americas, Europe, Asia, Oceania and Africa. Morissette took a break in the tour to co-headline a North American tour with American recording artist, Tori Amos. The tour was known as the 5 ½ Weeks Tour. The tour was extended into places she had never toured in 2000, where it became known as the One Tour.
The One Tour was the third headlining concert tour by Canadian American recording artist, Alanis Morissette. The tour was a continuation of the previous Junkie Tour. In contrast to Alanis's previous tours, she performed in places she had never toured before across Europe, North America and parts of Asia. In each city, she selected an ambassador through a website contest on "Z.com", to show her around and teach her the culture.
The Diamond Wink Tour, also known as the Jagged Little Pill Acoustic Tour, was the fifth headlining concert tour by Canadian singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette. The tour celebrates the 10th anniversary release of the Jagged Little Pill album. Alanis took the commemorative date to re-record the album in an acoustic version, which was named Jagged Little Pill Acoustic. The 1st leg consisted of electric performances for big audiences throughout Europe, and the 2nd leg of acoustic performances at intimate venues throughout North America to promote the re-release of the album.
20 Years Queer was a concert tour by American rock band Garbage, to mark the twentieth anniversary of their debut album Garbage. The title also references the band's early single "Queer", and the promotional poster is redolent of the self-titled album's pink feather artwork. The tour was preceded by a special 20-year edition of the record, which was re-mastered and featured remixes and previously unreleased versions of album tracks. Garbage performed the album in its entirety as well as all the B-sides recorded during that period.
The Strange Little Birds Tour was the seventh concert tour by American rock band Garbage, in support of their sixth studio album, Strange Little Birds (2016). The tour began on May 16, 2016, in Irvine, California, and ended on December 17, 2016, in Lima, Peru.
The Rage and Rapture Tour was a co-headlining concert tour by American new wave band Blondie and American rock band Garbage. It was launched in support of Blondie's eleventh studio album, Pollinator (2017), and Garbage's sixth studio album, Strange Little Birds (2016). The tour began on July 5, 2017, at the Mountain Winery in Saratoga, California. Support on the tour was provided by Sky Ferreira in Los Angeles, while John Doe and Exene Cervenka opened the first half of the tour, and Deap Vally opened the second leg.
20 Years Paranoid was a concert tour by American-Scottish alternative rock group Garbage, to mark the twentieth anniversary of their second album Version 2.0. The title also references the album's second single "I Think I'm Paranoid", and the promotional poster is redolent of the album's orange jacket artwork. The tour was preceded in June by a special 20th anniversary edition of Version 2.0, which was re-mastered in late 2017. Garbage will perform the album in its entirety as well as all the B-sides recorded and released during the album's promotional cycle spanning the years 1998–2000.
Garbage 2024 is a 2024 headline concert tour by Scottish–American alternative rock band Garbage in support of their seventh studio album No Gods No Masters. Initially, the tour was solely a European tour which included dates in Scotland, Spain, Italy, France, England and Germany. By the conclusion of the European tour, Garbage announced three North American festival dates as an extension to the tour, with dates in Mexico and the United States, however the North American leg was later cancelled after frontwoman Shirley Manson suffered an injury during the tour that would require surgery and rehabilitation as confirmed by the band's official Instagram account.
boxscore garbage no doubt.
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