Motomami World Tour
2022 concert tour by Rosalía From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2022 concert tour by Rosalía From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Motomami World Tour was the third concert tour by Spanish singer Rosalía in support of her third studio album, Motomami (2022).[1] Led by Live Nation Entertainment, the tour was officially announced on 18 April 2022. It began on 6 July 2022 in Almería, Spain, and concluded on 18 December 2022 in Paris, France, visiting cities in Europe, Latin America and North America throughout 46 dates.[2]
Tour by Rosalía | |
Location |
|
---|---|
Associated album | Motomami |
Start date | 6 July 2022 |
End date | 18 December 2022 |
Legs | 4 |
No. of shows | 21 in Europe 20 in North America 5 in South America 46 in total |
Attendance | 440,703 |
Box office | $30.4 million |
Website | rosalia |
Rosalía concert chronology |
The tour was a commercial and critical success - it received positive reviews from critics and fans, who complimented the immersive stage design and setlist. The Motomami World Tour was attended by 440,000 people and grossed $30.4 million from 45 shows, surpassing her previous concert tour, the El Mal Querer Tour, as her highest-grossing tour to date.[3] It became the tenth best performing female concert tour of the year worldwide.
Rosalía released her third studio album Motomami on 18 March 2022. The alternative reggaeton album became Rosalía's first major LP release after the international recognition El Mal Querer brought her.[4] It was a critical and commercial success, charting in many countries, including the United Kingdom and the United States, reaching the top 40.[5] Tour manager Agustín Boffi had previously revealed during the Bime Pro music conference in Bilbao in October 2021 that Rosalía would embark on a "world tour in 2022" that had been prepared "for over a year". Boffi also revealed that the tour crew would be expanded to "over 150 people" compared to the 40 people that were working on her previous concert cycle.[6] Initial rehearsals reportedly started in January 2022 while dancing practices began in April in Barcelona. Final rehearsals were held at Sant Jordi Club, where a private show was held for a dozen of selected fans on 2 July.
The tour was first announced with 44 dates in April 2022 with tickets going on sale for North American fans on 21 April for American Express cardholders, and for European fans the following day.[7] The tour started in Almería, Spain on 6 July 2022, and conclude in Paris on 18 December 2022. Additional shows were announced in Barcelona, Los Angeles, Madrid and New York City.[8] Due to overwhelming demand, the São Paulo concert was moved from the Tokio Marine Hall to Espaço Unimed, a double-sized venue.[9] Additional shows in Mexico City and Buenos Aires were announced, respectively in April and May.[10] No opening acts were announced, although the concerts in Buenos Aires and Santiago had theirs announced the day before each show.
Rosalía wore costumes from Dion Lee and Pepa Salazar on stage. She enlisted long-time friend Ferran Echegaray and sister Pilar Vila as artistic directors and production designers and Jesse Blevins from Barcelonian company Fluge Audiovisuales as lighting director.[11] The design concept is based on Harold Rosenberg's idea of a white canvas to be filled within the abstract expressionism movement and the defense of the performance. The tour stage is composed of a white cyclorama and two vertical 7,5x9 meter, 4,8mm pitch screens on both sides that accompany a 20-meter-long runway (only in shows performed in indoor arenas) that loops around an audience pit. Lightning equipment primarily consists of two Lancelot HTI 4000 by Robert Juliat located on the top part of the stage, above the runway. The sound system is confected of 112 Meyer Sound loudspeakers, 62 on the public address system, 6 on the downfill, 16 on the frontfill and 28 on the outfill.[12] The stage for the Motomami Tour was reportedly constructed in the United States with a cost over half-a-million euros.
The stage design is intended to deliver a "minimalistic" and "immersive" experience incorporating the motorcycle aesthetic of the record. The on-stage activity, which pretends to approximate every single audience member to the stage through mobile cameras handed by the performer and a selected amount of dancers.[13] In resemblance to her Motomami Live TikTok concert that took place on 17 March, six Panasonic PT-RZ31K cameras, if not a steadicam, follow Rosalía during a major part of the show, projecting what happens onstage on both screens in a TikTok-ish recording manner, also enriching the experience of visualizing the concert from the grandstand.[14] The presence of a cameraman often sparked controversy. Rosalía later told the Recording Academy that she "figured there had to be a huge camera to make the audience feel. I understand people expected fireworks, but the craziest thing for me is dancing and expressing myself. I'm at a point where I want to put all my effort into having the best voice, put all the best choreography. That's what's important to me".[15]
The tour received positive-to-mixed reviews from critics during its first leg. Nuria Net from Rolling Stone gave the first show at Madrid a positive review, stating that "On this Motomami Tour, it's all about minimalism and showcaszing her raw talent, but it's also loud and eclectic. In the cover image of the acclaimed album, Rosalía appears naked except for a motorcycle helmet. During her live show, she bares it all even more".[16] About the stage design, she added: "the immersive experience is translated to the stage by a cameraperson who could very well have been the ninth 'motopapi' dancer, hovering constantly around Rosalía, even standing right in front of her and blocking her from front view. But that's the point." Writing for El País, Fernando Neira wrote a controversial paper about the same show, in which he questioned the "camera-focused" type of spectacle by calling Rosalía a "walking selfie" performing a "televised karaoke" while also talking poorly about the record.[17] Neira's words were widely criticized by fans and specialized outlets including Forbes, ElDiario.es, and singer Alaska, who called Neira "absurd" and stated that the show "is a full 21st century spectacle" while also comparing it to recent live performances by Kiss and C. Tangana.[18][19] Jenesaispop's Sebas Alonso gave the tour a positive review, rating the show with an 8/10. The portal highlighted the "futuristic" yet "minimalistic" aspects of the show stating that "Rosalía is always two steps ahead (...) she's already thinking about what's next. There are no artists in this world interested in looking back at 2019", praising the show not relying on the "glorification of the 80s or 90s" by betting on a "new way to perform and to interact, with no costume changes or kilometrical cranes".[20]
The North American leg of the tour received positive reviews from critics. Maura Johnston from The Boston Globe, who attended the tour's first stop in the United States, called Rosalía's set a "wildly energetic, yet utterly human" one that "proved that she's a pop force in full command of herself to be reckoned with, and that she's only beginning to write her legacy".[21] Consequence of Sound and Edge covered both concerts in New York City, coinciding that "Rosalía is a leading figure in Latin music".[22][23] Chris Richards wrote an outstanding review of the only show in the District of Columbia for The Washington Post. Calling Rosalía "a polyglot with a paralyzing voice" performing a "syncretic masterstroke" record by "positing her curiosity as tenacity, her meticulousness as virtuosity", Richards described the show as "hyperreal" stating that "this wasn't your everyday information-age maximalist popstuff. It wasn't worldly mood boarding. It wasn't trend forecasting, or klepto flossing or tea leaf browsing. This was something far more intimate, something futuristic and precious, and inextricably so a new kind of pop music that seems fully aware of life's unfathomable breadth, as well as the fact that we're each given only so much future to live.[24] About the shows in California, Riff and USD The Guardian called it "a solid representation of the cathartic soundscape of the album, where the songs slam back and forth between chaos and calm, old and new, rigid and soft, much like the nature of her artistry".[25][26]
The European leg of the tour received positive reviews from critics. Hannah Mylrea from NME and The Independent gave the show in Lisbon a five-star perfect review.[27] They coincided that "rapidly switching from soaring ballads to industrial club moments, this show is a demonstration of Rosalía's singular artistic vision. Encompassing the genre-shifting nature of Motomami and allowing each of the record's sides to shine in equal measure –be that with a complex dance routine, or a tear-jerking moment of catharsis– it's indicative of Rosalía's sheer talent as a performer, and a reminder that nobody is doing it quite like her at the moment".[28]
The London stop at The O2 Arena was widely acclaimed by British media outlets. Metro called Rosalía "music's greatest living collagists" as "a textural auteur who appears to fold in every sound and taste, culture and country she's ever experienced into her own extremely complicated and dynamic universe."[29] Evening Standard and The Telegraph coincided that Rosalía is "one of the greatest performers it has ever been their privilege to see and hear".[30][31] Charles Ravens wrote for The Guardian that Rosalía is "pop's fearless queen" conjuring "a kaleidoscopic paradise" and compared her to "Frank Ocean with twice as hits", "Björk with dance routines" and "Kanye West with a personality transplant".[32]
The solo tour stops were attended by many celebrities and public personalities such as Queen Letizia, Frank Ocean, M.I.A, Drake, Dua Lipa, Pedro Pascal, Robert Pattinson, Kylie Jenner, Kendall Jenner, Bella Hadid, Shawn Mendes, Pedro Almodóvar, Rossy de Palma, Suki Waterhouse, Emily Ratajkowski, Danna Paola, Zara Larsson, Julieta Venegas, Angèle, Simon Jacquemus, Nicki Nicole, Addison Rae, Estopa, Pabllo Vittar, Ludmilla, Carlos Cuevas, Amaia, Tokischa, Carminho and Rauw Alejandro.[33][34]
As the audience enters the venue before the start of the show, a progressive Bic pen drawing inspired by the Motomami artwork is projected on the stage while a playlist of selected songs plays in the background, including "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" by Pink Floyd, "Obsesión" by Aventura, "Fiebre" by Bad Gyal, "Loco por Perrearte (Remix)" by De La Ghetto and Rauw Alejandro, among others. Three minutes before shuting down the venue's lights, "Matsuri-Shake", an experimental punk song by Japanese all-girl band Ni Hao is played. Once obscure, loud motorcycle noises emerge from the loudspeakers while smoke comes out of the stage's extremes. Rosalía and her dance crew (popularly known as 'motopapis') enter from behind the screen shortly after, wearing a white neon full face motorcycle helmet. Rosalía soon reveals herself and performs an extended version of "Saoko", followed by "Candy" immediately after. During the performance, with her entirely-male dancing formation running around Rosalía in circles.
During "Bizcochito", Rosalía walks to the end of the runway and makes a "sassy" fake chewing gum face that became viral on TikTok. A high-pitch voice distorter is used on the singer's vocals at the end. An extended solo version of lead single "La Fama" similar to the one used in her performance on Saturday Night Live, starts playing while Rosalía puts on a pair of sunglasses. Rosalía picks up a guitar and interacts with the audience for the first time during a speech that precedes "Dolerme". During the performance, a blue floodlight shines above the singer and the main screen projects images of moving water. A medley of "De Aquí No Sales" and "Bulerías" comes right after. The former's performance partly recycles that of El Mal Querer Tour while the latter features an avant-flamenco outro that was already spotted on her Motomami Live virtual concert. The 'motopapis' form a human motorcycle during an extended version of the Pharrell-produced "Motomami". The show continues with Rosalía being transferred by two of her dancers (making the form of a crux immissa) to a spinning platform to sing the emotional "G3 N15". The show goes on with "Linda", the first of two collaborations with Tokischa. In this is heavily choreographed performance, the lateral screens show direct images from the stage through mobile cameras handed by dancers Jaxon Willard and Stanley Glover.
Rosalía walks down to the public with yet another mobile camera during "La Noche de Anoche", encouraging her followers to sing the track on her microphone while live recording them. A camera operator using a steadicam accompanies Rosalía during "Diablo", where she sits on a barber chair, removes her makeup with a white towel and cuts her hair extensions in a performance that resembles Cut Piece, a pioneer of performance art first performed by Yoko Ono in 1964. Rosalía whistles and plays a black classical piano during "Hentai" while the main screen projects a green landscape similar to Charles O'Rear's Bliss, that slowly sees sunset, followed by a shortened version of "Pienso en tu Mirá". A "nude" version of La Factoría and Eddy Lover's 2007 song "Perdóname" is performed immediately after.
A twenty-meter-long black skirt "wraps" the singer's waist during a revamped electric and Spanish guitar-driven performance of "De Plata", the only song of her debut album Los Ángeles to be included in the setlist. Rosalía asks the audience to collaborate with her completing the alphabet during "Abcdefg", in which each mentioned letter is projected on the screen. She later lies on the floor and starts singing "La Combi Versace" in another heavily choreographed performance. The show smoothly transitions to a purple reggaeton party that starts the remixed version of Sech's "Relación" and is followed by the Travis Scott collaboration "TKN", incorporating elements of Lorna's "Papi Chulo". Rosalía brings approximately twenty fans on stage to dance along to "Yo x Ti, Tu x Mi" and "Gasolina" by Daddy Yankee before singing a shortened version of "Despechá". Rosalia sings about vulnerability and her struggles with fame and paparazzi on "Aislamiento" which eventually collapses in synthesizers and transitions to the remixed version of the Weeknd's "Blinding Lights", followed by "Chiri". Vulnerability strikes again during "Como Un G", which starts with Rosalía on her knees. The following performance, "Malamente", features Rosalía's dancers running around in a new choreography routine.
"LAX", in which Rosalía sings about her fears of stardom, serves as the show's first and only interlude, with its lyrics written by a Bic pen being projected on the central screen as they're sung. Lightning turns orange and a mic stand is used during "Delirio de Grandeza". Rosalía later laments that the show is nearly coming to an end and proceeds to perform "Con Altura", with the crew leaving the stage after its end. After a few minutes, the encore begins with the dancers riding scooters as the first chords of "Chicken Teriyaki" start playing, after which pianist Llorenç Barceló comes onstage during "Sakura", which Rosalía sings in an almost theatrical way. Jal Joshua walks the runway during a twenty-one-number countdown with Rosalía appearing shortly after to sing an extended version of "CUUUUuuuuuute" before leaving the stage. The song "ハピネス" by Japanese musician Sekitō Shigeo is played over the public address system as the audience leaves the venue; the recording is an instrumental version of "Happiness is Me and You" by Gilbert O'Sullivan.
This section needs additional citations for verification. (November 2024) |
The Motomami World Tour was attended by 440,000 people and grossed $30.4 million from 45 shows, surpassing her previous concert tour, the El Mal Querer Tour, as her highest-grossing tour to date.[3] It became the tenth best performing female concert tour of the year worldwide, and the second best-performing female tour by a Spanish-singing act after Karol G's Strip Love Tour.[citation needed]
The tour's impact mainly resides in the redefinement of the relation between the artist and the camera for a more immersive experience. Initially critizised during the tour's first leg, the onstage presence of a cameraman, steadicams etc became the show's signature and most-acclaimed dimension. This practice increased after the Motomami Tour wrapped up in December 2022. Examples include At Their Very Best (The 1975; 2022-23), Sweat (Charli XCX and Troye Sivan; 2024), C, XOXO Tour (Camila Cabello; 2024), Guts World Tour (Olivia Rodrigo, 2024), 2023 Tour (Christina Aguilera; 2023), and the Doble P Tour (Peso Pluma, 2023) among others.[citation needed]
The following setlist was obtained from the 9 July 2022 concert, held at the Estadio de La Cartuja in Seville, Spain.[35] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.
Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Europe[37] | ||||||
6 July 2022 | Almería | Spain | Recinto Ferial | — | 6,969 / 8,483 | $476,698 |
9 July 2022 | Seville | Estadio de La Cartuja | 15,254 / 18,758 | $991,360 | ||
12 July 2022 | Granada | Plaza de Toros | 7,442 / 7,442 | $506,814 | ||
14 July 2022 | Fuengirola | Marenostrum Music Castle | 12,364 / 15,982 | $793,165 | ||
16 July 2022 | Valencia | Auditorio Marina Sur | 15,357 / 17,919 | $1,107,086 | ||
19 July 2022 | Madrid | WiZink Center | 30,202 / 30,202 | $2,044,525 | ||
20 July 2022 | ||||||
23 July 2022 | Barcelona | Palau Sant Jordi | 35,490 / 35,490 | $2,263,939 | ||
24 July 2022 | ||||||
27 July 2022 | Bilbao | Bizkaia Arena | 13,599 / 16,114 | $903,305 | ||
29 July 2022 | A Coruña | Coliseum da Coruña | 7,988 / 7,988 | $516,687 | ||
1 August 2022 | Palma | Son Fusteret | 8,999 / 8,999 | $636,564 | ||
Latin America[38] | ||||||
14 August 2022 | Mexico City | Mexico | Auditorio Nacional | — | 19,161 / 19,161 | $1,235,436 |
15 August 2022 | ||||||
17 August 2022 | Zapopan | Auditorio Telmex | 7,902 / 7,943 | $628,737 | ||
19 August 2022 | Monterrey | Auditorio Citibanamex | 6,668 / 6,679 | $573,034 | ||
22 August 2022[lower-alpha 1] | São Paulo | Brazil | Espaço Unimed | 8,594 / 8,594 | $607,526 | |
25 August 2022 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Movistar Arena | Bresh | 25,740 / 31,001 | $1,522,966 |
26 August 2022 | ||||||
28 August 2022 | Santiago | Chile | Movistar Arena | ICZ | 15,506 / 15,506 | $795,162 |
31 August 2022 | Bogotá | Colombia | Movistar Arena | — | 10,732 / 11,384 | $594,775 |
3 September 2022 | La Romana | Dominican Republic | Altos De Chavón | 5,796 / 5,796 | $460,747 | |
9 September 2022 | San Juan | Puerto Rico | José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum | 12,283 / 13,593 | $897,410 | |
North America[40] | ||||||
15 September 2022 | Boston | United States | MGM Music Hall at Fenway | — | 4,652 / 4,916 | $400,989 |
18 September 2022 | New York City | Radio City Music Hall | 11,544 / 11,544 | $1,224,263 | ||
19 September 2022 | ||||||
23 September 2022 | Toronto | Canada | Budweiser Stage | 7,667 / 8,871 | $542,478 | |
26 September 2022 | Washington, D.C. | United States | The Anthem | 6,000 / 6,000 | $553,258 | |
28 September 2022 | Chicago | Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom | 4,901 / 4,901 | $402,201 | ||
2 October 2022 | San Diego | CalCoast Credit Union Open Air Theatre | 4,720 / 4,720 | $500,930 | ||
4 October 2022 | San Francisco | Bill Graham Civic Auditorium | 8,507 / 8,507 | $765,305 | ||
7 October 2022 | Inglewood | YouTube Theater | 11,699 / 11,699 | $1,450,359 | ||
8 October 2022 | ||||||
12 October 2022 | Houston | 713 Music Hall | 5,058 / 5,058 | $437,422 | ||
14 October 2022 | Irving | The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory | 5,952 / 8,023 | $478,837 | ||
17 October 2022 | Atlanta | Coca-Cola Roxy | 3,607 / 3,607 | $339,968 | ||
22 October 2022[lower-alpha 2] | Miami | MANA Wynwood | — | — | ||
Europe[42] | ||||||
25 November 2022 | Braga | Portugal | Altice Forum | — | 11,444 / 11,444 | $567,766 |
27 November 2022 | Lisbon | Altice Arena | 19,002 / 19,002 | $888,048 | ||
1 December 2022 | Milan | Italy | Mediolanum Forum | 10,146 / 10,146 | $535,363 | |
4 December 2022 | Berlin | Germany | Velodrom | 7,872 / 7,872 | $428,310 | |
7 December 2022 | Düsseldorf | Mitsubishi Electric Halle | 7,187 / 7,187 | $398,453 | ||
10 December 2022 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | AFAS Live | 6,019 / 6,019 | $345,725 | |
12 December 2022 | Brussels | Belgium | Forest National | 8,388 / 8,388 | $484,072 | |
15 December 2022 | London | England | The O2 Arena | 14,752 / 14,752 | $1,083,667 | |
18 December 2022 | Paris | France | Accor Arena | 15,540 / 15,540 | $1,048,470 | |
Total | 440,703 / 465,230 (94.73%) | $30,431,765 |
Credits adapted from Live Nation.[43][44][45]
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