This Is Not a Drill
2022–23 concert tour by Roger Waters From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2022–23 concert tour by Roger Waters From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This Is Not a Drill was the seventh concert tour by English songwriter Roger Waters. The tour began at the PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, United States, on 6 July 2022, and ended at the Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa of Quito, Ecuador, on 9 December 2023.[a] Waters first talked about a new live spectacle following his Us + Them Tour on a Rolling Stone interview in September 2019. In 2021, he called the show his "first farewell tour".
Tour by Roger Waters | |
Location |
|
---|---|
Start date | 6 July 2022 |
End date | 9 December 2023 |
Legs | 3 |
No. of shows | 99 |
Roger Waters concert chronology |
In 2017, Waters released his fourth solo album Is This the Life We Really Want?, conceived as a radio play about a man and his granddaughter investigating why children are being killed in other parts of the world.[1] Waters described the play as "part magic carpet ride, part political rant, part anguish".[2]
To promote the album, Waters embarked on the Us + Them Tour, visiting North America, Oceania, Europe, and Latin America between May 2017 and December 2018. A portion of the show featured extensive anti-Donald Trump imagery during the performance of Pink Floyd songs,[3] which led some attendees to boo or even walk out of the show.[4] Waters responded to the pro-Trump critics by saying, "I find it slightly surprising that anybody could have been listening to my songs for 50 years without understanding", and said to those critics if they didn't like politics in music to "go see Katy Perry or watch the Kardashians. I don't care".[5]
The tour was chronicled in a film, Roger Waters: Us + Them, recorded at the Ziggo Dome in Amsterdam, and released in September 2019. In an interview promoting the film, Waters talked to Rolling Stone about his plans for the future, where he first mentioned the main concept for a following tour:
It will be even more political than Us + Them was — political and humane. We were listening to songs and looking at set lists today. We were talking about, what should we call it? I shouldn't be giving this away, but I don't give a shit because it will probably all change, but imagine the iconic helicopter that normally comes before “Happiest Days” and “Brick 2” — that noise that we all know and love — and imagine a megaphone, somebody abused this device before, I know — but, "This is not a drill". I thought that could be a good title for the show: This Is Not a Drill. The ruling class is killing us.[6]
In the same interview, Waters stated the tour would only visit arenas, with no concerts held in outdoor venues, and it would visit cities in United States, Canada, "and maybe three gigs in Mexico City. And that’s all. I can’t go off around the world, and I don’t really want to either".
In January 2020, Waters officially announced the tour, named This Is Not a Drill. "This tour will be part of a global movement by people who are concerned by others to affect the change that is necessary", said Waters in a video announcing the tour. "That’s why we’re going on the road. That’s why speak to each other in pubs. That’s why this conversation should be on everybody’s lips, constantly, the whole time, because it’s super important. So I hope you’ll all come to the shows".[3] The show saw him performing in a 360° stage for the first time. Originally, the final show in the United States was due to take place on 3 October 2020, exactly one month before the 2020 presidential election.[3]
On 27 March 2020, Waters posted a statement on his website and social media, announcing the postponement of the tour to the following year due to the coronavirus pandemic outbreak, declaring that the situation was a "Bummer, but if it saves one life, it’s worth it".[7][8][9][10] In April 2021, tour dates in Canada and United States were announced to take place in 2022,[11] while the concerts in Mexico were announced later in June.[12] In a statement, it was specified that the show "includes a dozen great songs from Pink Floyd’s Golden Era alongside several new ones — words and music, same writer, same heart, same soul, same man". Waters has called This Is Not a Drill his "first farewell tour".[11] In November 2021, a new show in Monterrey, Mexico, was announced, followed by three new shows in the United States announced later in March 2022. Concerts in North America took place between July and October 2022.[citation needed]
Rehearsals for the tour began around 13 June 2022 in Southampton, with the first full rehearsal taking place on 16 June.[13] Sean Evans, Waters' tour creative director, reprises his role for this tour, creating all visuals and stage design. To promote the tour, Waters and his band made an appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on 21 June, and performed a medley of songs from The Wall.[14]
At the beginning of every concert, a voiceover described by journalist James Ball as "a plummy British announcer" requested audience members to turn off their cell phones, and to "fuck off to the bar" if they like Pink Floyd but "can’t stand Roger’s politics".[15] Waters debuted a new song at the show, titled "The Bar", which was written during lockdown.[16]
In September 2022, contrary to what Waters expressed previously, the first concerts in Europe were officially announced on his website and social media. Concerts took place between March and June 2023.[17] In May 2023, Waters announced concerts in stadiums in South America, which took place between October and December 2023. These concerts didn't feature the 360° stage from previous legs, but a traditional stage instead.[18] The South American leg saw other differences in the theatrics of the show itself. "Comfortably Numb 2022" included Waters pacing back and forth in front of the stage screens to sing, while wearing an all-white doctor's robe.[19] And during "In The Flesh", where Waters used to come out dressed as the character Pink from The Wall, Waters was rolled out on stage in a white wheelchair, dressed in an all-white straitjacket. He appeared frail and weak until he was "injected" with a syringe and peaked up in time to sing.[20] Although no opening acts were announced for the whole tour, the shows in Santiago had local artists Rosa Quispe Huanca and Inti-Illimani opening each date.[21]
In 2020, Major League Baseball stopped advertising Waters' This Is Not a Drill concerts after receiving criticism from Jewish advocacy groups. Jewish organisation B'nai B'rith criticised MLB's decision to sponsor ticket pre-sales for the tour and wrote that the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, which Waters joined in 2011, "far exceed the boundaries of civil discourse".[22][23][24]
In July 2022, during an interview with Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail, Waters questioned journalist Brad Wheeler about the lack of coverage of the first of his two shows in Toronto, Canada. When replied that the date coincided with the opening show of the Weeknd's After Hours til Dawn Tour (which was ultimately postponed) and that his "wasn’t the biggest in town that night", Waters declared not to know who the Weeknd is, and questioned why his concert was not reviewed on the following night. He continued by saying his statement was not "a personal attack", adding "with all due respect to the Weeknd or Drake or any of them, I am far, far, far more important than any of them will ever be, however many billions of streams they’ve got. There is stuff going on here that is fundamentally important to all of our lives". Rolling Stone commented on the controversy that "it is unclear by which metric Waters measures importance".[25][26][27][28][29]
In September 2022, Waters wrote an open letter to Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska in response to her interview in Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. In the letter, Waters criticised the country's stance in the Russo-Ukrainian War, blaming the West and Washington particularly for supplying Ukraine with weapons and "extreme nationalists" for having "set your country on the path to this disastrous war", while calling for an end to the conflict.[30][31][32] After Zelenska replied with a tweet, Waters posted a second letter calling for an end of the armed conflict, and the start of negotiations.[33]
In reaction to the letters, Tauron Arena in Kraków, Poland, stated that the concerts in the venue, which were to be held on 21 and 22 April 2023, would no longer take place, with an official saying "Roger Waters' manager decided to withdraw... without giving any reason".[34][35][36] Waters was also declared persona non grata in the city after a proposal from Łukasz Wantuch, a member of the Kraków City Council.[37] Waters posted an open letter in social media stating that the decision to cancel was not his and that, if the cancellation was confirmed, "it will be a sad loss for me, because I have been looking forward to sharing my message of love with the people of Poland", and that Wantuch's "draconian censoring of my work will deny them the opportunity to make up their own minds".[38]
Waters' name appears on Myrotvorets, a controversial website that maintains a list of people it deems enemies of Ukraine. Critics, including Waters, describe Myrotvorets as a "kill list".[39][15]
In 2023, due to Waters' comments, German cities announced plans to cancel shows, which were unsuccessful. In February, the Frankfurt city council released a statement announcing the cancellation of the concert in the city, to take place on 28 May at the Festhalle, calling Waters "one of the world’s most well-known antisemites".[40] A coalition of parties in Munich's city council also filed a motion for Waters’ concert at the city's Olympiahalle on 21 May to be cancelled, and a similar motion was tabled in Cologne in February, with management of the Lanxess Arena claiming "there is currently no legal basis for an extraordinary termination" of Waters’ concert there.[41] Munich mayor Dieter Reiter said in March that it's "unspeakable" that Waters should appear in city, and so close to the site of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre, however, he declared that "we do not currently see any legally secure possibility... to reverse the decision already made". The city planned shows of solidarity promoting tolerance on the same day as the show, and called for public boycott instead.[42]
Waters threatened legal action against both cities,[41] and the concerts remained on his website.[43] On 3 April, he confirmed in his website the filing of a suit in Frankfurt, stating "I’m coming, bringing my message of love and peace to all my brothers and sisters".[44] On 24 April, the court ruled in Waters' favour and lifted the ban.[45] During his first concert in Berlin on 17 May, Waters reacted through a pre-recorded message in the screen, stating "A court in Frankfurt has ruled that I am not an anti-Semite. Excellent. Just to be clear, I condemn anti-Semitism unreservedly".[46]
Online, and at later shows during the tour, a statement was projected before the show saying:
My recent performance in Berlin has attracted bad faith attacks from those who want to smear and silence me because they disagree with my political views and moral principles.
The elements of my performance that have been questioned are quite clearly a statement in opposition to fascism, injustice, and bigotry in all its forms. Attempts to portray those elements as something disingenuous are politically motivated. The depiction of an unhinged fascist demagogue has been a feature of my shows since Pink Floyd's 'The Wall' in 1980.
I have spent my entire life speaking out against authoritarianism and oppression wherever I see it. When I was a child after the war, the name Anne Frank was often spoken in our house, she became a permanent reminder for what happens when fascism is left unchecked. My parents fought the Nazis in World War II, with my father [Eric Fletcher Waters] paying the ultimate price.
Regardless of the consequences of the attacks against me, I will continue to condemn injustice and all those who perpetrate it.
The following set list was obtained from the concert held on 6 July 2022 at the PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh.[49]
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|
The tour debuted a new stripped down "haunting organ and vocals version"[51] of "Comfortably Numb" as the show's opener every night. The recording was released on 17 November 2022, titled "Comfortaby Numb 2022", as the lead single from his album The Lockdown Sessions.[52]
In April 2023, Waters announced that his concert at the O2 Arena in Prague on 25 May would be a cinema event. The film Roger Waters: This Is Not a Drill was directed by long-time collaborator Sean Evans, and broadcast live in more than 1,500 cinemas across more than 50 countries. Tickets were released on 25 April.[53]
The concerts in the United States and Canada ranked #31 on Billboards Boxscore Charts, grossing $66,330,771. Those shows sold 519,362 tickets.[54]
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 July 2022 | Pittsburgh | United States | PPG Paints Arena | 10,447 / 15,479 | $1,073,335 |
8 July 2022 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | 28,754 / 33,748 | $3,193,049 |
9 July 2022 | |||||
12 July 2022 | Boston | United States | TD Garden | 15,679 / 15,679 | $2,515,971 |
15 July 2022 | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | 18,893 / 19,433 | $2,268,886 |
17 July 2022 | Quebec City | Videotron Centre | 15,135 / 17,972 | $1,423,818 | |
20 July 2022 | Albany | United States | MVP Arena | 9,513 / 12,472 | $966,516 |
23 July 2022 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | 11,486 / 16,389 | $1,398,525 | |
26 July 2022 | Chicago | United Center | 14,707 / 16,644 | $2,153,151 | |
28 July 2022 | Milwaukee | Fiserv Forum | 11,025 / 13,705 | $1,428,420 | |
30 July 2022 | Minneapolis | Target Center | 10,913 / 16,165 | $1,382,461 | |
2 August 2022 | Cincinnati | Heritage Bank Center | 10,716 / 15,021 | $1,206,615 | |
5 August 2022 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | 25,864 / 32,394 | $3,074,885 | |
6 August 2022 | |||||
10 August 2022 | Columbus | Nationwide Arena | 7,955 / 16,814 | $902,920 | |
13 August 2022 | Elmont | UBS Arena | 10,056 / 11,500 | $928,566 | |
16 August 2022 | Washington, D.C. | Capital One Arena | 11,322 / 15,757 | $1,685,710 | |
18 August 2022 | Raleigh | PNC Arena | 10,106 / 15,252 | $1,269,918 | |
20 August 2022 | Atlanta | State Farm Arena | 11,676 / 14,445 | $1,308,458 | |
23 August 2022 | Miami | FTX Arena | 13,225 / 17,139 | $1,722,142 | |
25 August 2022 | Orlando | Amway Center | 12,424 / 15,742 | $1,642,724 | |
27 August 2022 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 10,600 / 14,588 | $1,329,482 | |
30 August 2022 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | 29,314 / 34,082 | $4,327,748 | |
31 August 2022 | |||||
3 September 2022 | Kansas City | T-Mobile Center | 11,316 / 15,463 | $1,308,795 | |
6 September 2022 | Denver | Ball Arena | 15,372 / 16,034 | $2,003,945 | |
8 September 2022 | Salt Lake City | Vivint Arena | 11,686 / 13,983 | $1,450,457 | |
10 September 2022 | Portland | Moda Center | 14,252 / 16,434 | $1,706,704 | |
13 September 2022 | Edmonton | Canada | Rogers Place | 11,527 / 15,706 | $1,114,840 |
15 September 2022 | Vancouver | Rogers Arena | 16,105 / 16,105 | $1,955,650 | |
17 September 2022 | Tacoma | United States | Tacoma Dome | 14,951 / 18,365 | $1,997,075 |
20 September 2022 | Sacramento | Golden 1 Center | 11,455 / 14,479 | $1,386,609 | |
23 September 2022 | San Francisco | Chase Center | 26,362 / 30,625 | $3,724,860 | |
24 September 2022 | |||||
27 September 2022 | Los Angeles | Crypto.com Arena | 30,044 / 30,044 | $4,680,308 | |
28 September 2022 | |||||
1 October 2022 | Las Vegas | T-Mobile Arena | 15,161 / 17,460 | $1,665,199 | |
3 October 2022 | Glendale | Desert Diamond Arena | 9,029 / 13,918 | $1,080,686 | |
6 October 2022 | Austin | Moody Center | 12,728 / 12,728 | $1,541,375 | |
8 October 2022 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 15,832 / 16,569 | $2,410,363 | |
11 October 2022 | Monterrey | Mexico | Arena Monterrey | 17,000 / 17,000 | $993,675 |
14 October 2022 | Mexico City | Palacio de los Deportes | 43,764 / 43,764 | $3,488,706 | |
15 October 2022 |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
17 March 2023 | Lisbon | Portugal | Altice Arena | 34,021 | $2,834,980 |
18 March 2023 | |||||
21 March 2023 | Barcelona | Spain | Palau Sant Jordi | — | — |
23 March 2023 | Madrid | WiZink Center | — | — | |
24 March 2023 | |||||
27 March 2023 | Milan | Italy | Mediolanum Forum | — | — |
28 March 2023 | |||||
31 March 2023 | |||||
1 April 2023 | |||||
4 April 2023 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Ziggo Dome | — | — |
6 April 2023 | |||||
7 April 2023 | |||||
11 April 2023 | Oslo | Norway | Telenor Arena | — | — |
12 April 2023 | |||||
15 April 2023 | Stockholm | Sweden | Tele2 Arena | — | — |
17 April 2023 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Royal Arena | — | — |
18 April 2023 | |||||
21 April 2023 | Bologna | Italy | Unipol Arena | — | — |
23 April 2023 | Budapest | Hungary | MVM Dome | — | — |
25 April 2023 | Zürich | Switzerland | Hallenstadion | — | — |
28 April 2023 | Bologna | Italy | Unipol Arena | — | — |
29 April 2023 | |||||
3 May 2023 | Paris | France | Accor Arena | — | — |
4 May 2023 | |||||
7 May 2023 | Hamburg | Germany | Barclays Arena | — | — |
9 May 2023 | Cologne | Lanxess Arena | — | — | |
12 May 2023 | Lille | France | Stade Pierre-Mauroy | — | — |
14 May 2023 | Antwerp | Belgium | Sportpaleis | — | — |
17 May 2023 | Berlin | Germany | Mercedes-Benz Arena | — | — |
18 May 2023 | |||||
21 May 2023 | Munich | Olympiahalle | — | — | |
24 May 2023 | Prague | Czech Republic | O2 Arena | — | — |
25 May 2023 | |||||
28 May 2023 | Frankfurt | Germany | Festhalle | — | — |
31 May 2023 | Birmingham | England | Utilita Arena | — | — |
2 June 2023 | Glasgow | Scotland | OVO Hydro | — | — |
3 June 2023 | |||||
6 June 2023 | London | England | The O2 Arena | — | — |
7 June 2023 | |||||
10 June 2023 | Manchester | AO Arena | — | — | |
24 October 2023 | Brasília | Brazil | Arena BRB Mané Garrincha | — | — |
28 October 2023 | Rio de Janeiro | Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos | — | — | |
1 November 2023 | Porto Alegre | Arena do Grêmio | — | — | |
4 November 2023 | Curitiba | Arena da Baixada | — | — | |
8 November 2023 | Belo Horizonte | Mineirão Stadium | — | — | |
11 November 2023 | São Paulo | Allianz Parque | — | — | |
12 November 2023 | |||||
17 November 2023 | Montevideo | Uruguay | Estadio Centenario | — | — |
21 November 2023 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Estadio River Plate | — | — |
22 November 2023 | |||||
25 November 2023 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Monumental | — | — |
26 November 2023 | |||||
29 November 2023 | Lima | Peru | National Stadium | — | — |
2 December 2023 | San José | Costa Rica | Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica | — | — |
5 December 2023 | Bogotá | Colombia | Coliseo Live | — | — |
9 December 2023 | Quito | Ecuador | Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa | — | — |
Total | — | — |
Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
21 April 2023 | Kraków | Poland | Tauron Arena | Cancelled due to stance on Russo-Ukrainian War[34][35][36][38] |
22 April 2023 | ||||
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