Loading AI tools
2001 concert tour by NSYNC From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
PopOdyssey was the fourth concert tour by American boy band NSYNC. Sponsored by Verizon Wireless and Chili's,[1] the tour promoted the band's fourth studio album, Celebrity. The tour's name is defined as "an adventurous journey towards popularity, beginning as just a dream and ending in reality". The tour became the biggest production in pop music, beating U2's PopMart Tour. The tour, which visited stadiums, was NSYNC's first to include backup dancers, and is known for its elaborate audio and visual effects which included lasers, fireworks, animation, and suspension wires.
The 2001 tour earned over $90 million, becoming one of the biggest tours of the year.[2] It was also nominated for "Most Creative Stage Production" for Pollstar's "Concert Industry Awards". The tour primarily visited North America.[3]
While promoting their performance at Rock in Rio in 2001, the band stated production was underway on their forthcoming tour. Following the performance, SFX Entertainment announced the band was planning a summer concert tour to promote their upcoming album. Band member Lance Bass said the inspiration for the tour's concept was the film 2001: A Space Odyssey, saying, "We wanted to do 2001: A Pop Odyssey and pay tribute to pop icons. So the whole tour revolves around the meaning of pop and what was popular from the '40s til today."[4] Initially, the tour was expected to begin May 12, 2001 at the Pro Player Stadium in Miami,[5] with English pop group BBMak slated to be the opening act.[6] PopOdyssey was considered "the largest production for a pop concert",[7] as the stage was five stories tall and included three video screens and five mini-stages.[8] The tour was then postponed to May 23, 2001, to ensure that the crew was able to complete the stage construction.[9] NSYNC's third studio album Celebrity was initially planned to be released on June 26, 2001,[10] but was moved to July 24, 2001. As a result, NSYNC decided to perform new songs from Celebrity on the tour before the album was released.[11] Additional tour dates were cancelled due to weather conditions in the South.[12] However, PopOdyssey was one of the most anticipated tours of 2001.[13] Two months into the tour, the band expressed hopes of later bringing their shows back to Europe, where they first toured before their American breakthrough,[14][15] in addition to Australia;[16] this did not come to fruition.
The opening of PopOdyssey was held at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida to positive reviews.[17] They were joined on tour by several pop acts including: Christina Milian, Samantha Mumba and Deborah Gibson.[18] During the show, public service announcements were shown for an anti-drug campaign with the Office of National Drug Control Policy, along with promotional spots for On the Line, a film starring band members Bass and Fatone which was to be released theatrically in the fall of 2001.[19] The band also partnered with the Candie's Foundation to help prevent teen pregnancy.[20] The tour also opened the newly built Heinz Field.[21] Celebrity peaked at number one on the Billboard 200, setting the second-highest record for first-week sales after their previous album No Strings Attached (2000).[22] The tour ended in the Caribbean islands of Turks and Caicos.[23]
The show begins with a short film that spells out the definitions of the words Pop ("music popular with the general public") and Odyssey ("a long series of travels and adventures") on a typewriter. The words are combined to form PopOdyssey: "an adventurous journey towards popularity, beginning as just a dream and ending in reality.” Joey Fatone, dressed as a professor in a classroom, appears in the video and plays a montage that details NSYNC’s journey from their origins to the present. Fatone then scrawls the phrase Dirty pop on a chalkboard. Hooded figures appear on the main stage in a nod to NSYNC’s previous tour entrances. This turns out to be a misdirection, as the band instead emerges from a midfield stage which connects to the main stage by a long ramp. After kicking off with “Pop," they perform a mash-up of old favorites from their debut album.
After performing newer song “The Two of Us”, a film segment of Lance Bass and Chris Kirkpatrick in cowboy attire prefaces “Space Cowboy.” The video directs the audience to look upwards, and the guys appear on the rafters of the stage. Harnesses take them flying above the crowds and to the midfield stage. They return to the main stage and each guy rides a futuristic-style mechanical bull.[19]
The guys transition to the ballad “This I Promise You,” accompanied only by guitar, piano, and saxophone, and ending with a new harmony by the guys. A 1920s-style film segment titled “There Was Once a Flower” has Justin Timberlake playing a Charlie Chaplin-esque figure (just like in the "Gone" music video) trying to give a flower to his love interest, only to be rejected. The camera zooms in on Timberlake with a tear rolling down his face, saying, “I just can’t believe she’s gone.” The band, dressed in Prohibition era costumes, sing “Gone” while sitting on steps on the main stage. As Timberlake is the main singer in this song, he moves downstage solo to the catwalk and engages in theatrical displays of heartbrokenness.
As Timberlake concludes singing, bandmate Kirkpatrick joins him onstage and the two humorously fight. While both guys spar, the other band mates swarm the stage on go-karts, wagons, and an oversized teddy bear, accompanied by dancers. To the tune of “Pop Goes the Weasel", the guys spray silly string and squirt water guns at the audience. They perform “It’s Gonna Be Me” with a toy theme, referencing their music video.
They segue into “See Right Through You,” singing and dancing atop moving conveyor belts. For “Up Against the Wall,” the guys are bounced onto Velcro walls brought onstage. A short film plays of JC Chasez stuck in a phone call with his gold-digging girlfriend, a phone call that is interrupted by his band mates. Chasez asks the girlfriend “Wait a minute. Do you want me, or what I can buy you?," and the band performs “Celebrity.”
On the midfield stage, the guys shift into a downtempo segment as Fatone reads letters written by fans in the audience. The guys perform a trio of ballads, “Something Like You”/“Falling/“Selfish”. They switch to the uptempo “No Strings Attached”; there is a gag at the beginning of Timberlake’s verse about him “losing his touch.” After his fruitless attempts to summon his touch, Timberlake finally joins his hands together to form a fireball effect that sets off a row of fireworks on stage.[24]
The high-tech villain figure Mobius 8 appears midfield playing remixed snippets of NSYNC songs.[25] The guys shoot out onto the main stage from unseen elevators and sing “The Game Is Over,” with the screens showing video game effects. The group engages in a video-game “battle” with Mobius. The show ends with “Bye Bye Bye.” Each band member goes inside a cage that is covered in drapes. The drapes are then dropped, revealing the cages to be now empty.
On this tour, all six accompanists returned from the No Strings Attached tour. Two new additions would join the ranks, however
The following setlist was obtained from the concert held on May 23, 2001, at the Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida. It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.[39]
May 12, 2001 | Miami, Florida | Pro Player Stadium | Rescheduled to August 2, 2001; later cancelled[9] |
May 15, 2001 | St. Petersburg, Florida | Tropicana Field | Rescheduled to July 31, 2001. Moved to Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida[9] |
May 18, 2001 | Jacksonville, Florida | Alltel Stadium | Rescheduled to May 23, 2001[9] |
May 20, 2001 | Jackson, Mississippi | Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium | Rescheduled to August 24, 2001. |
May 22, 2001 | Charlotte, North Carolina | Ericsson Stadium | Cancelled[7] |
May 24, 2001 | Atlanta, Georgia | Georgia Dome | Rescheduled to August 11, 2001[9] |
May 30, 2001 | Foxborough, Massachusetts | Foxboro Stadium | Cancelled[40] |
June 10, 2001 | Plattsburgh, New York | Plattsburgh Air Force Base | Cancelled[41] |
June 26, 2001 | Green Bay, Wisconsin | Lambeau Field | Cancelled[42] |
June 29, 2001 | Pontiac, Michigan | Pontiac Silverdome | Moved to Comerica Park in Detroit |
July 31, 2001 | Las Cruces, New Mexico | Aggie Memorial Stadium | Cancelled[7] |
August 2, 2001 | Miami, Florida | Hard Rock Stadium | Cancelled due to the effects of Tropical Storm Barry[43] |
August 7, 2001 | Birmingham, Alabama | Legion Field | Cancelled due to the effects of Tropical Storm Barry[43] |
August 11, 2001 | Vancouver, Canada | BC Place Stadium | Cancelled |
August 18, 2001 | Memphis, Tennessee | Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium | Cancelled[7] |
August 20, 2001 | Lexington, Kentucky | Commonwealth Stadium | Cancelled |
Venue | City | Tickets sold / Available | Gross revenue |
---|---|---|---|
Alltel Stadium | Jacksonville | 42,218 / 71,256 (59%) | $2,030,372[44] |
Hersheypark Stadium | Hershey | 61,996 / 66,222 (94%) | $3,252,128[45] |
Foxboro Stadium | Foxborough | 44,858 / 48,089 (93%) | $4,744,485 |
Giants Stadium | East Rutherford | 154,359 / 176,817 (87%) | $7,364,012[46] |
Cinergy Field | Cincinnati | 36,371 / 42,285 (86%) | $1,947,461[47] |
Ralph Wilson Stadium | Orchard Park | 43,406 / 55,874 (78%) | $2,175,436[46] |
Veterans Stadium | Philadelphia | 46,005 / 54,212 (85%) | $2,534,204[46] |
Soldier Field | Chicago | 85,650 / 103,903 (82%) | $4,739,359[46] |
Miller Park | Milwaukee | 34,148 / 44,978 (76%) | $1,956,157[48] |
TransWorld Dome | St. Louis | 31,790 / 48,808 (65%) | $1,708,437[49] |
War Memorial Stadium | Little Rock | 31,062 / 41,126 (75%) | $1,517,261[49] |
Reliant Astrodome | Houston | 44,116 / 65,144 (68%) | $2,328,582[49] |
Texas Stadium | Irving | 44,564 / 44,564 (100%) | $2,374,325[49] |
Arrowhead Stadium | Kansas City | 40,863 / 53,143 (77%) | $2,107,135[49] |
Bank One Ballpark | Phoenix | 42,959 / 49,111 (87%) | $2,213,026[50] |
Rose Bowl | Pasadena | 62,196 / 62,196 (100%) | $3,154,129[50] |
Sam Boyd Stadium | Las Vegas | 29,003 / 38,100 (76%) | $1,297,973[50] |
Alamodome | San Antonio | 55,206 / 67,573 (82%) | $3,000,974[51][52] |
RFK Stadium | Washington, D.C. | 41,831 / 47,962 (87%) | $2,232,680[53] |
Heinz Field | Pittsburgh | 48,118 / 56,275 (85%) | $2,558,856[54] |
Sun Bowl Stadium | El Paso | 38,313 / 48,987 (78%) | $2,048,331[53] |
TOTAL | 1,014,174 / 1,238,536 | $52,540,838 | |
Promotional concerts setlist | |
---|---|
Atlantis | Winter Olympics |
|
|
The tour was documented for video during the concert at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. Bandmember JC Chasez mentioned the band chose to film at that venue because rehearsals were held at that facility. The VHS, entitled *NSYNC: PopOdyssey Live, was released on November 21, 2001. A DVD edition was released on April 23, 2002.[55] The DVD featured the entire concert along with special features, which included: interviews with each bandmember, behind-the-scenes Easter eggs, photo gallery, profile of each musician, web links and a documentary.[56] A special intro video was made for the video release to explain the meaning of the tour name. The original video shown at the beginning of each concert was made available as a special feature. For the Celebrity Tour, the concert at the TD Waterhouse Centre was filmed for a possible DVD release. However, the footage was deemed "unusable" and not released. Bootleg DVDs were sold on eBay in 2003 with amateur footage of the concert in Anaheim. A professionally filmed video montage appeared on YouTube in 2006.[57]
Before the group began the Celebrity Tour, they performed a few promotional concerts that aired on television. The first was a CBS Thanksgiving special entitled "*NSYNC: The Atlantis Concert". The show was filmed at the Atlantis Paradise Island on November 14 and 15, 2001.[58] The concert was exclusive to guests of the hotel and featured duets with country recording artist, Tim McGraw. The special aired on November 23, 2001 alongside The Rugrats Movie. This concert was followed with another promotional performance. To celebrate the 2002 Winter Olympics, the band was one of the headlining performers for the "Olympic Celebration Concert Series". The concert was filmed at the Olympic Medals Plaza on February 23, 2002. The concert aired live on NBC.
The tour received generally positive reviews for its lavish visual effects, the band’s stage presence, and the group’s new songs from Celebrity. Scott Mervis of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called the show at RFK Stadium the "mother of all stadium tours",[59] and Jon Bream of the Star Tribune noted the effects were bigger, brighter and bolder than their last tour.[60] For the debut concert at Altell Stadium, Nick Marino of The Florida Times-Union wrote that despite the massive stage, the band's stage presence was out of this world.[17] Marino stated PopOdyssey is "a big pop show, an expensive pop show, but a pop show all the same. NSYNC realizes (thank goodness) that they are famous, in part, for being famous, and they're using that fact as the touchstone for this entire tour. Pretty smart".[17]
Bream also noted, "This time around, the Prefab Five seemed to be projecting more of an attitude, as if some of the songs and the messages on the video screen were flipping a figurative finger at critics. The feistiness adds a much-needed edge, but if critics are NSYNC's biggest gripe, these guys have nothing to complain about".[60] Sean Richardson of the Boston Phoenix thought the show at Foxboro Stadium was "colorful", praising the humor of the vignettes and the audience engagement.[61] Peter Debruge from Entertainment Weekly said the show at Hersheypark Stadium more closely resembled a Super Bowl halftime show than a traditional concert, saying, "Love them or hate them, you've got to admit NSYNC puts on a killer show".[62]
Jane Stevenson of Jam! gave the SkyDome show three and a half out of five stars.[8] She stated the band's decision to perform 10 songs from Celebrity as part of their 18-song set list was risky but wise, and that the "more dance-oriented tunes...will only help to spur sales" of the new album.[8] In a review of the opening show of the band's three-night run at Giants Stadium, Neil Strauss of The New York Times compared the show to U2's PopMart Tour, stating that PopOdyssey "was everything that U2's PopMart was afraid to be—sheer spectacle for the sake of nothing but spectacle."[63] Though Strauss said the opening number "Pop" was not as strong of a single as "Bye Bye Bye," he commented the band showed a more aggressive side in showing they write their own songs.[63] Strauss singled out the new song "The Game Is Over" for its "futuristic urban twist...with a skittering, robotic video-game beat."[63]
Critics also argued the increased use of dazzling effects distracted from the music and performance.[64][62] Writing about the Giants Stadium concert, Isaac Guzman of the New York Daily News considered the show to be "all sizzle, no steak".[65] In a review of the Chicago show, Phil Gallo of Variety felt "many fans will have trouble digesting all the audiovisual information on offer" and that the production lacked cohesiveness.[19] Gallo also noted that while the first half of the show seems focused on JC Chasez, "the second half is almost all Justin Timberlake, the heartthrob who does a fine job in the band’s faux silent movie...during “Gone,” arguably the band’s strongest ballad in its three-album career."[19]
Of PopOdyssey's heavy use of effects, Chris Kirkpatrick said the band felt they needed these elements because it was a stadium tour. He commented, "When you're playing in the middle of a giant stadium you have to make it big and you have to be big. It was called the 'Pop Odyssey.' It was a spectacle more than anything else. The music was a big part, but we put a lot into just making it a great show."[66] The band returned to a more stripped-down, less flashier setting when they embarked on the Celebrity tour in March 2002.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.