Gypsy Heart Tour

2011 concert tour by Miley Cyrus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gypsy Heart Tour

The Gypsy Heart Tour (Spanish: 'Corazón Gitano Tour') was the third concert tour by American singer Miley Cyrus, held in support of her third studio album Can't Be Tamed (2010). It visited primally Latin America, Australia, and the Philippines; it began on April 29, 2011 in Quito, Ecuador and concluded on July 2, 2011 in Perth, Australia.[1][2] It was her first tour not to visit the United States. The tour ranked 22nd in Pollstar's "Top 50 Worldwide Tours (Mid-Year)", earning over $26 million.[3]

Quick Facts Associated album, Start date ...
Gypsy Heart Tour
Tour by Miley Cyrus
Thumb
Promotional poster for the tour
Associated albumCan't Be Tamed
Start dateApril 29, 2011 (2011-4-29)
End dateJuly 2, 2011 (2011-7-2)
Legs3
No. of shows21
Miley Cyrus concert chronology
Close

Background

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Cyrus performing in Sydney

The Gypsy Heart tour is a dream come true. Not only because of all the beautiful cities I will get to visit, but all of the beautiful people I will get to meet. Gypsy Heart is not just a tour for me, but a mission to spread love[4]

The tour was announced by media outlets on March 21, 2011, following Cyrus' appearance on Saturday Night Live.[5] Initial tour dates were announced in South America. Dates in Australia, the Philippines, Costa Rica, Panama and Mexico soon followed.[6] During an interview with OK!, Cyrus said she would not bring the tour to the United States due to not feeling comfortable to perform in the country.[7] Many media outlets believed this was due to Cyrus' personal life. She commented:

"I just think right now America has gotten to a place where I don't know if they want me to tour or not. Right now I just want to go to the places where I am getting the most love and Australia and South America have done that for me. I'm kind of going to the places where I get the most love. I don't want to go anywhere where I don't feel completely comfortable with it."[8]

Cyrus stated the tour would not be in the same vein as her previous efforts. She said her previous tour, Wonder World Tour, focused more on theatrics and costume changes.[9] The singer wanted the show to focus on the music and letting the audience see a different side of her that is not portrayed on television. She said the show would feature an acoustic section, along with taking requests from the audience.

Set list

Thumb
Cyrus performing "Party in the U.S.A."

This set list is from the May 6 show in Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is not intended to represent all tour dates, and it has cover songs

  1. "Liberty Walk"
  2. "Party in the U.S.A."
  3. "Kicking and Screaming"
  4. "Robot"
  5. "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" / "Cherry Bomb" / "Bad Reputation"
  6. "Every Rose Has Its Thorn"
  7. "Obsessed"
  8. "Forgiveness and Love"
  9. "Fly on the Wall"
  10. "7 Things"
  11. "Scars"
  12. "Smells Like Teen Spirit"
  13. "Can't Be Tamed"
  14. "Landslide"
  15. "Take Me Along"
  16. "Two More Lonely People"
  17. "The Climb"
Encore
  1. "See You Again"
  2. "My Heart Beats for Love"
  3. "Who Owns My Heart"

Notes

  • Starting with the show in Asuncion, "The Driveway" replaced "Two More Lonely People".
  • In San José, Cyrus performed "Stay".
  • In Perth, Cyrus performed a cover of Gorillaz's "On Melancholy Hill".

Tour dates

More information Date (2011), City ...
Date (2011) City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
Latin America[10][11][12][13]
April 29 Quito Ecuador Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa 27,352 / 27,352
May 1 Lima Peru Explanada del Monumental 30,013 / 30,700
May 4 Santiago Chile Estadio Nacional 42,805 / 63,893
May 6 Buenos Aires Argentina River Plate Stadium 65,000 / 68,269
May 10 Asunción Paraguay Hipódromo de Asunción 24,834 / 24,834 $1,458,345
May 13 Rio de Janeiro Brazil HSBC Arena 14,145 / 14,145 $1,595,236
May 14 São Paulo Arena Anhembi 22,285 / 29,320 $3,575,180
May 17 Caracas Venezuela Estadio de Fútbol de la USB 5,087 / 6,200 $1,828,950[14]
May 19[a] Bogotá Colombia Coliseo Cubierto El Campín 10,957 / 10,957
May 21 San José Costa Rica Estadio Nacional 33,451 / 33,451
May 24 Panama City Panama Figali Convention Center 10,250 / 10,250
May 26 Mexico City Mexico Foro Sol 31,200 / 31,200 $2,796,984
May 28 Zapopan Estadio Omnilife 35,460 / 35,460 $3,000,418
Asia
June 17 Pasay Philippines SM Mall of Asia Concert Grounds 16,782 / 18,000
Oceania
June 21 Brisbane Australia Entertainment Centre 11,293 / 11,293 $1,016,120[17]
June 23 Melbourne Rod Laver Arena 25,109 / 25,109 $2,186,990[18]
June 24
June 26 Sydney Acer Arena 26,839 / 26,839 $2,485,360[19]
June 27
June 29 Adelaide Entertainment Centre 8,374 / 8,374 $765,677[17]
July 2 Perth Burswood Dome 15,601 / 15,601 $1,359,070[17]
Total 456,837 / 491,247 (93%) $22,068,330
Close

Notes

  1. The May 19 show at Coliseo Cubierto El Campín, Bogota, was originally scheduled to be performed in the Simón Bolívar Park, but was moved.[15][16]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.