Purpose World Tour

The Purpose World Tour was the third concert tour by Canadian singer Justin Bieber, in support of his fourth studio album Purpose (2015).[2] The tour started on March 9, 2016, in Seattle, Washington, and concluded on July 2, 2017, in London, United Kingdom. After that, the remaining 14 shows of the tour were cancelled due to Bieber's mental health issues.

Purpose World Tour
World tour by Justin Bieber
Promotional poster for the Purpose World Tour
LocationNorth America • Europe • Africa • South America • Oceania • Asia
Associated albumPurpose
Start dateMarch 9, 2016 (2016-03-09)
End dateJuly 2, 2017 (2017-07-02)
Legs6
No. of shows
  • 74 in North America
  • 5 in Asia
  • 61 in Europe
  • 5 in Oceania
  • 15 in South America
  • 2 in Africa
  • 162 total
Attendance2.8 million
Box office$256 million ($318.21 million in 2023 dollars)[1]
Justin Bieber concert chronology

According to Pollstar, Purpose World Tour grossed $163.3 million and sold 1,761,642 tickets in 2016 and the 29 shows in 2017 grossed $93.7 million with 1,043,839 tickets sold. Overall, the tour had a total gross of $257 million and 2,805,481 in attendance in 141 shows, becoming one of the highest-grossing concert tours of both 2016 and 2017.[3][4]

Background edit

The tour was announced on November 11, 2015, on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. That same day, 58 dates in the United States along Canada were revealed on the singer's website.[5] Due to overwhelming demand, additional shows were added in several cities.[2] On September 30, 2016, Bieber announced that tour dates for New Zealand and Australia were to be released the following week. On October 25, 2016, two tour dates were announced for Mexico, as well as the South American and Central American legs of the tour. On December 5, 2016, Bieber announced on The Ellen DeGeneres Show he would be starting a stadium tour starting in Australia and continue throughout the year in 2017, with dates announced later that day.[6]

Concert synopsis edit

The show starts with a pre-recorded sequence in which he is "stuck inside a glass cube; then the real Bieber appeared inside a real cube" performing "Mark My Words", scrawling words like "hope" on the walls with a marker,[7] while wearing a long white coat.[8] Later, Bieber rises from below the stage in a large glass cube, "with the hydraulics pushing him higher" during the performance of "Where Are Ü Now",[9] with holograms flashing about,[10] while "Bieber's crew of dancers tumbled onstage in all-white attire as women suspended in midair did acrobatics against a chrome-y, industrial video backdrop."[8] For "I'll Show You", Bieber is "trapped under a literal steel cage while firestorms and spinning whirlwinds engulf him."[9] During the song's chorus, "an LED light show began flashing across its beams, covering him in exploding octagons and digital fireworks."[8] During "The Feeling", acrobats twirled above him, while cosmic projections of Halsey are shown.[9] Later, the performance of "Get Used To It" brought pyrotechnics, as well as movement from the platforms onstage.[8]

The performance of "Love Yourself" has Bieber on acoustic guitar while seated on a red velvet couch down center stage.[9] Later, the acoustic break also continued with a breezy solo rendition of "Home to Mama" and a new song called "Insecurities".[9] After the acoustic set, "Boyfriend" is performed, with dancers in LED-laden black bodysuits creating "a light show" in choreography.[8] Later, "Been You" is performed by Bieber and his dancers, featuring a "dance break",[9] while in "Company", "a hidden platform anchored to the ceiling begins to descend and it turned out to be a giant, suspended trampoline, on which Justin completed a couple of backflips."[8] "No Sense" is followed by the performance of "Hold Tight" and "No Pressure". The performance of "As Long As You Love Me", having a hard electric guitar riffs. Later, Bieber introduced his own act-two drum solo.[9] Wearing a Marilyn Manson T-shirt, he "cheerily introduces and hugs elementary school-aged dancers" during the "Children" performance,[11] which is followed by "Life Is Worth Living", where Bieber is backed by couples in stark white doing a contemporary choreography.[9] In "What Do You Mean?", dancers on skateboards circled the singer, who by then had changed into a pair of joggers emblazoned with the Purpose tour logo.[7] The performance of "Baby" was considered "playful", by Dylan Rupert of Billboard[8][12] and later he performs "Purpose" at a white grand piano,[8] The concert finishes with "Sorry", where Bieber stood with his dancers beneath a shower of artificial rain.[7]

Critical reception edit

NME's Luke Morgan Britton named the tour as one of the best live shows of 2016, writing: "It was grandiose, self-indulgent, erratic and, when he could be bothered, had some of the best live singing you'll see. The 'Purpose' tour was like the life of a tortured pop star as performance art."[13] Dylan Rupert of Billboard praised Bieber's vocals for sounding "smooth as ever", while noting that the performance of "Company" was "one of the show's most thrilling (though slightly puzzling) moments" and praising the acoustic set.[8] Marc Snetiker of Entertainment Weekly called it "a concert that shows, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Bieber is back. [...] Bieber had to prove that his comeback tour is exactly that — a performer's return to top form, not just a fluke of well-produced singles and hooks. That unfortunate weight did seem to bear down on Bieber during the entire show — he brought out no special guests and remained solemn throughout the night — but over time, its heft will diminish."[9] Andrew Matson of Rolling Stone offered a very positive review, declaring: "The concert was sublime vocally, visually and musically, Bieber and his scaled back band did justice to songs in a cavernous space, often elevating the material." [...] "Bieber sang for real, played the piano, acoustic guitar and rock drums all gracefully and danced with zero mistakes. Sure, his energy seemed tentative as his dancers did Matrix capoeira all around him, but the Purpose tour is off to a stellar start, showcasing a musician taking control of his art and an audience vibing along for his journey."[14]

Mikael Wood of Los Angeles Times wrote about Bieber performance, stating: "His face expressionless, he sang with focused intensity — especially in "Hold Tight" and "Life Is Worth Living" — and danced in a powerfully unself-conscious way, as though he were simply a guy trying out moves for his own enjoyment."[7] For Owen R. Smith of Seattle Times, "Nothing could topple the positive quality of the evening overall."[12] Chris Macias of The Sacramento Bee noted that "[F]or all the spectacle, and the occasional lifting of his garments to show off those abs, the Biebs is a bit tentative as a performer."[11] François Marchand of Vancouver Sun analysed the tour, stating: "But all in all it was entertaining and the songs on Purpose are excellent – smooth and steady, atmospheric and deep."[15] Tony Hicks of Mercury News was mixed, noting that "while the visuals were impressive, they masked the fact that Bieber's voice sounded muffled most of the night. [...] He does deserve credit for being in control all night. But that comes at a cost. Until his hair became out of sorts, there wasn't a second that didn't feel scripted, including stints of our hero showing off his musicianship by performing with an acoustic guitar and doing a comically pedestrian drum solo."[10]

In less favorable reviews, Adam Graham from The Detroit News noted the singer "sleep-walked through his choreography, made no attempts to mask his pre-recorded vocals and performed with the enthusiasm of a teenager being forced to clean his room."[16] Jim Louvau of Phoenix New Times wrote: "You'd think that he'd show at least a perfunctory level of joy while performing on stage in front of thousands of ticket-buying fans, but at least outwardly, that was not the case."[17] For MLive, Edward Pevos noted: "When Bieber was dancing, he wasn't singing much. He was also a bit unenthusiastic. It was as if he just wanted to get through the show at times. The microphone was often no where near his mouth while the backing tracks were playing."[18][16]

Purpose World Tour's Mumbai leg saw an attendance of 60,000 making it one of the highest selling Indian concerts by an English-language artist, eclipsed only by Michael Jackson.[19]

Set list edit

This set list is representative of the show on March 9, 2016, in Seattle. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[20]

  1. "Mark My Words"
  2. "Where Are Ü Now"
  3. "Get Used to It"
  4. "I'll Show You"
  5. "The Feeling"
  6. "Boyfriend"
  7. "Home to Mama" / "Cold Water"
  8. "Love Yourself"
  9. "Been You"
  10. "Company"
  11. "No Sense"
  12. "Hold Tight"
  13. "No Pressure"
  14. "As Long as You Love Me
  15. "Children"
  16. "Let Me Love You" (Added at the European 1st leg)
  17. "Life is Worth Living"
  18. "What Do You Mean?"
  19. "Baby"
  20. "Purpose"
  21. "Sorry"
Notes
  • During the show in Vancouver, Bieber performed "One Less Lonely Girl".[21]
  • During several shows, Bieber performed an unreleased song, "Insecurities" during the acoustic set.[22]
  • During several shows, Bieber performed another unreleased song, "Look At The Stars" during the acoustic set. Bieber posted a video of him singing the song on his Instagram in January 2016.[23]
  • During the shows in Louisville, Auburn Hills, Boston, Washington, D.C. & the second show in Chiba, Bieber performed a cover of Justin Timberlake's "Cry Me a River".[24]
  • During the show in Ottawa, Bieber performed a cover of Delirious? song, "I Could Sing of Your Love Forever" during the acoustic set.
  • During the shows in Greensboro, Baltimore, New York City, Madrid and Monza Bieber performed a cover of Tracy Chapman song "Fast Car" during the acoustic set.
  • During the shows in Chiba, Bieber performed "Cold Water" during the acoustic set.[25]
Special guests

Bieber performed duets with musical guests on some dates of the tour.

Shows edit

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, opening act, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
DateCityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
North America[32]
March 9, 2016SeattleUnited StatesKeyArenaCorey Harper
Moxie Raia
12,227 / 12,227$1,316,780
March 11, 2016VancouverCanadaRogers Arena14,648 / 14,648$1,312,442
March 13, 2016PortlandUnited StatesModa CenterCorey Harper
Post Malone
Moxie Raia
14,146 / 14,146$1,336,071
March 15, 2016SacramentoSleep Train ArenaPost Malone
Moxie Raia
13,786 / 13,786$1,311,567
March 17, 2016San JoseSAP Center13,508 / 13,508$1,427,847
March 18, 2016OaklandOracle Arena14,828 / 14,828$1,548,782
March 20, 2016Los AngelesStaples Center41,445 / 41,445$4,365,483
March 21, 2016
March 23, 2016
March 25, 2016Las VegasMGM Grand Garden Arena11,843 / 11,843$1,411,304
March 26, 2016FresnoSave Mart Center11,874 / 11,874$1,154,574
March 29, 2016San DiegoValley View Casino Center11,571 / 11,571$1,120,203
March 30, 2016GlendaleGila River Arena13,550 / 13,550$1,319,237
April 2, 2016Salt Lake CityVivint Smart Home Arena15,115 / 15,115$1,400,611
April 4, 2016DenverPepsi Center13,910 / 13,910$1,457,492
April 6, 2016Kansas CitySprint Center13,701 / 13,701$1,277,251
April 7, 2016TulsaBOK Center13,231 / 13,231$1,222,176
April 9, 2016HoustonToyota Center12,868 / 12,868$1,407,652
April 10, 2016DallasAmerican Airlines Center14,764 / 14,764$1,563,919
April 12, 2016AtlantaPhilips Arena25,717 / 25,717$2,726,349
April 13, 2016
April 19, 2016St. LouisScottrade Center15,450 / 15,450$1,433,791
April 20, 2016LouisvilleKFC Yum! Center16,496 / 16,496$1,513,138
April 22, 2016RosemontAllstate Arena28,519 / 28,519$2,952,529
April 23, 2016
April 25, 2016Auburn HillsThe Palace of Auburn Hills14,795 / 14,795$1,538,259
April 26, 2016ClevelandQuicken Loans Arena16,028 / 16,028$1,480,206
April 28, 2016ColumbusSchottenstein Center13,919 / 13,919$1,331,983
April 29, 2016Washington, D.C.Verizon Center14,917 / 14,917$1,551,880
May 4, 2016BrooklynBarclays Center29,470 / 29,470$3,075,262
May 5, 2016
May 7, 2016PhiladelphiaWells Fargo Center30,535 / 30,535$3,131,498
May 8, 2016
May 10, 2016BostonTD Garden28,406 / 28,406$2,962,651
May 11, 2016
May 13, 2016OttawaCanadaCanadian Tire CentreThe Knocks
Moxie Raia
13,697 / 13,697$1,327,205
May 14, 2016Quebec CityVideotron Centre14,014 / 14,014$1,318,420
May 16, 2016MontrealBell CentrePost Malone
Moxie Raia
15,956 / 15,956$1,518,543
May 18, 2016TorontoAir Canada Centre31,482 / 31,482$2,984,876
May 19, 2016
June 11, 2016WinnipegMTS CentreMoxie Raia12,228 / 12,228$1,180,804
June 13, 2016CalgaryScotiabank SaddledomePost Malone
Moxie Raia
12,944 / 12,944$1,242,290
June 14, 2016EdmontonRexall Place13,802 / 13,802$1,292,176
June 16, 2016SaskatoonSaskTel Centre12,741 / 12,741$1,162,416
June 18, 2016FargoUnited StatesFargodome12,451 / 12,451$1,177,819
June 19, 2016MinneapolisTarget Center14,498 / 14,498$1,514,540
June 21, 2016LincolnPinnacle Bank Arena13,048 / 13,048$1,244,748
June 22, 2016Des MoinesWells Fargo Arena13,086 / 13,086$1,251,093
June 24, 2016CincinnatiU.S. Bank Arena12,522 / 12,522$1,193,105
June 25, 2016IndianapolisBankers Life Fieldhouse14,403 / 14,403$1,363,344
June 27, 2016NashvilleBridgestone Arena14,051 / 14,051$1,368,341
June 29, 2016JacksonvilleJacksonville Arena11,590 / 11,590$1,116,384
June 30, 2016OrlandoAmway Center13,282 / 13,282$1,273,025
July 2, 2016MiamiAmerican Airlines Arena27,019 / 27,019$2,836,286
July 3, 2016
July 6, 2016GreensboroGreensboro Coliseum14,832 / 14,832$1,421,008
July 7, 2016BaltimoreRoyal Farms Arena13,325 / 13,325$1,199,139
July 9, 2016NewarkPrudential Center13,739 / 13,739$1,475,513
July 10, 2016HartfordXL Center11,930 / 11,930$1,169,815
July 12, 2016BuffaloFirst Niagara Center14,424 / 14,424$1,376,691
July 13, 2016PittsburghConsol Energy Center14,508 / 14,508$1,353,964
July 15, 2016Atlantic CityBoardwalk Hall12,829 / 12,829$1,241,152
July 18, 2016New York CityMadison Square Garden29,425 / 29,425$3,340,025
July 19, 2016
Asia
August 13, 2016ChibaJapanMakuhari Messe25,000 / 25,000$2,980,580
August 14, 2016
Europe[33]
August 20, 2016[a]ChelmsfordEnglandHylands Park
August 21, 2016[a]StaffordshireWeston Park
September 8, 2016KópavogurIcelandKórinnSturla Atlas
Vic Mensa
34,893 / 34,893$5,009,775
September 9, 2016
September 14, 2016BerlinGermanyMercedes-Benz ArenaVic Mensa13,344 / 13,344$1,219,782
September 16, 2016MunichOlympiahalle13,204 / 13,204$1,275,680
September 18, 2016CologneLanxess Arena16,524 / 16,524$1,395,423
September 20, 2016ParisFranceAccorHotels ArenaThe Knocks
Vic Mensa
32,179 / 32,179$2,576,666
September 21, 2016
September 23, 2016OsloNorwayTelenor ArenaThe Knocks45,234 / 45,234$3,950,932
September 24, 2016
September 26, 2016HelsinkiFinlandHartwall Arena23,354 / 23,354$2,486,008
September 27, 2016
September 29, 2016StockholmSwedenTele2 ArenaThe Knocks
MiC Lowry
79,380 / 79,380$5,474,781
September 30, 2016
October 2, 2016CopenhagenDenmarkTelia Parken51,080 / 51,080$3,615,874
October 5, 2016AntwerpBelgiumSportpaleis37,616 / 37,616$2,890,081
October 6, 2016
October 8, 2016ArnhemNetherlandsGelreDome70,428 / 70,428$5,236,048
October 9, 2016
October 11, 2016LondonEnglandThe O2 Arena63,868 / 63,868$4,865,897
October 12, 2016
October 14, 2016
October 15, 2016
October 17, 2016BirminghamBarclaycard Arena31,269 / 31,269$2,458,371
October 18, 2016
October 20, 2016ManchesterManchester Arena49,586 / 49,586$3,700,285
October 21, 2016
October 23, 2016
October 24, 2016BirminghamGenting Arena14,970 / 14,970$1,168,892
October 26, 2016SheffieldSheffield Arena13,126 / 13,126$1,034,351
October 27, 2016GlasgowScotlandSSE Hydro38,193 / 38,193$2,963,880
October 29, 2016
October 30, 2016
November 1, 2016DublinIreland3Arena25,301 / 25,301$2,304,928
November 2, 2016
November 8, 2016ViennaAustriaWiener Stadthalle15,988 / 15,988$1,427,759
November 9, 2016ZagrebCroatiaArena Zagreb18,103 / 18,103$1,326,854
November 11, 2016KrakówPolandTauron Arena16,010 / 16,010$1,320,727
November 12, 2016PragueCzech RepublicO2 Arena18,384 / 18,384$1,129,114
November 14, 2016HamburgGermanyBarclaycard Arena13,493 / 13,493$1,208,095
November 16, 2016FrankfurtFesthalle12,185 / 12,185$1,255,135
November 17, 2016ZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadion13,735 / 13,735$1,461,928
November 19, 2016BolognaItalyUnipol Arena27,418 / 27,418$2,062,484
November 20, 2016
November 22, 2016BarcelonaSpainPalau Sant Jordi17,828 / 17,828$1,478,323
November 23, 2016MadridBarclaycard Center14,300 / 14,537$1,450,184
November 25, 2016LisbonPortugalMEO Arena19,380 / 19,380$1,233,487
November 28, 2016LondonEnglandThe O2 Arena32,366 / 32,366$2,313,609
November 29, 2016
North America[34]
February 15, 2017MonterreyMexicoEstadio BBVA Bancomer45,535 / 45,535$3,491,598
February 18, 2017Mexico CityForo SolRobin Schulz155,201 / 155,201$9,340,236
February 19, 2017
February 21, 2017
Oceania[34]
March 6, 2017PerthAustralianib StadiumMartin Garrix
Sheppard
24,129 / 24,129$2,820,168
March 10, 2017MelbourneEtihad Stadium54,821 / 54,821$5,483,928
March 13, 2017BrisbaneSuncorp Stadium41,000 / 41,000$4,256,386
March 15, 2017SydneyANZ Stadium65,836 / 65,836$6,163,843
March 18, 2017AucklandNew ZealandMount Smart Stadium35,420 / 35,420$3,678,465
Latin America[35][36]
March 23, 2017SantiagoChileEstadio Nacional43,000 / 43,000$5,007,755
March 29, 2017Rio de JaneiroBrazilPraça da ApoteoseRudy Mancuso30,801 / 30,801$3,332,095
April 1, 2017São PauloAllianz Parque88,273 / 88,273$9,187,869
April 2, 2017
April 5, 2017LimaPeruEstadio NacionalKing Lotus, David Cabrera Morillos25,103 / 29,365$2,326,212
April 8, 2017QuitoEcuadorEstadio Olímpico Atahualpa4 A.M.13,047 / 16,254$1,420,349
April 12, 2017BogotáColombiaEstadio El CampínAli Stone18,783 / 22,507$2,024,896
April 15, 2017Punta CanaDominican RepublicHard Rock Hotel & Casino9,482 / 11,024$1,022,669
April 18, 2017San JuanPuerto RicoJosé Miguel Agrelot Coliseum12,560 / 14,194$1,606,420
April 21, 2017Panama CityPanamaPlaza Figali7,676 / 7,676$896,402
April 24, 2017San JoseCosta RicaEstadio NacionalBartosz Brenes23,377 / 26,985$2,082,325
Asia[37][38]
May 3, 2017Tel AvivIsraelYarkon ParkStatic & Ben El Tavori57,958 / 58,000$6,321,104
May 6, 2017DubaiUnited Arab EmiratesAutism Rocks ArenaDeen Squad
Hamza Hawsawi
Rodge
23,936 / 29,690$3,327,376
May 10, 2017MumbaiIndiaDY Patil StadiumSartek
Zaeden
Alan Walker
39,376 / 39,376$3,515,105
Africa[38]
May 14, 2017JohannesburgSouth AfricaFNB StadiumSketchy Bongo58,896 / 68,984$3,078,163
May 17, 2017Cape TownCape Town Stadium39,706 / 45,214$2,316,485
Europe[38]
June 3, 2017[b]LandgraafNetherlandsMegaland
June 5, 2017AarhusDenmarkJysk VæddeløbsbaneRudimental
Gnash
Adam Daniel
36,000 / 36,000$2,880,000
June 7, 2017[c]StavangerNorwayForus Travbane
June 10, 2017[d]StockholmSwedenGärdet
June 15, 2017BernSwitzerlandStade de SuisseHalsey32,108 / 40,236$3,151,958
June 18, 2017[e]MonzaItalyAutodromo Nazionale MonzaMartin Garrix
Bastille
Alma
Mamacita
June 21, 2017DublinIrelandRDS ArenaJohn Gibbons

Halsey

30,653 / 31,740$3,487,723
June 24, 2017[f]LilleFranceStade Pierre-Mauroy
June 25, 2017[g]FrankfurtGermanyCommerzbank Arena
June 30, 2017CardiffWalesPrincipality StadiumHalsey38,434 / 45,021$2,680,252
July 2, 2017[h]LondonEnglandHyde ParkMartin Garrix
Tove Lo
Anne-Marie
Total2,832,121 / 2,897,874 (99%)$259,364,636[45]

Cancelled shows edit

DateCityCountryVenueReason
April 11, 2017MedellínColombiaAtanasio Girardot Sports ComplexLogistics issue[46]
July 29, 2017ArlingtonUnited StatesAT&T StadiumDepression[47]
August 5, 2017PasadenaRose Bowl
August 12, 2017DenverSports Authority Field at Mile High
August 18, 2017MinneapolisU.S. Bank Stadium
August 23, 2017East RutherfordMetLife Stadium
August 24, 2017
August 29, 2017FoxboroughGillette Stadium
September 5, 2017TorontoCanadaRogers Centre
September 6, 2017
September 23, 2017TokyoJapanAjinomoto Stadium
September 24, 2017
September 27, 2017Hong KongChinaAsiaWorld–Arena
September 30, 2017BocauePhilippinesPhilippine Arena
October 7, 2017SingaporeSingapore National Stadium

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The August 20, 2016, concert in Chelmsford, England, at the Hylands Park and the August 21, 2016, concert in Staffordshire, England, at the Weston Park were both part of the V Festival.
  2. ^ The June 3, 2017, concert in Landgraaf, Netherlands, at Megaland is a part of Pinkpop Festival.[39]
  3. ^ The June 7, 2017, concert in Stavanger, Norway, at Forus Travbane is a part of Sommerfesten 2017.[40]
  4. ^ The June 10, 2017, concert in Stockholm, Sweden, at Gärdet is a part of Summerburst Festival 2017.[41]
  5. ^ The June 18, 2017, concert in Monza, Italy, at Autodromo Nazionale Monza is a part of I-Days Festival.[42]
  6. ^ The June 24, 2017, concert in Lille, France, at Stade Pierre-Mauroy is a part of North Summer Festival.[43]
  7. ^ The June 25, 2017, concert in Frankfurt, Germany, at Commerzbank-Arena is a part of Wireless Festival.[43]
  8. ^ The July 2, 2017, concert in London, England, at Hyde Park is a part of British Summer Time Festival.[44]

References edit

  1. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Justin Bieber Official Website". JustinBieberMusic.com. 2015 DEFJAM RECORDS. November 11, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  3. ^ "2016 Year End Top 100 Worldwide Tours" (PDF). pollstar.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 13, 2017. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  4. ^ "2017 Year End Top 20 Worldwide Tours" (PDF). pollstar.com. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  5. ^ Lawler, Kelly (November 11, 2015). "Justin Bieber announces 'Purpose' world tour". USA Today. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  6. ^ "Justin Bieber Reveals 2017 U.S. Stadium Tour on Ellen'". Billboard. December 5, 2016. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d Wood, Mikael (March 21, 2016). "Justin Bieber's concert at Staples Center had pageantry, sex appeal and a vaguely religious vibe". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rupert, Dylan (March 10, 2016). "Justin Bieber Finds New 'Purpose' at Seattle Tour Kickoff". Billboard. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Snetiker, Marc (March 10, 2016). "The 10 wildest moments from Justin Bieber's Purpose tour kick-off". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  10. ^ a b Hicks, Tony (March 18, 2016). "Review: Justin Bieber starts flat, finishes strong in San Jose". Mercury News. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  11. ^ a b Macias, Chris (March 16, 2016). "Review: Justin Bieber rises up in Sleep Train Arena concert". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  12. ^ a b Smith, Owen R. (March 10, 2016). "Justin Bieber kicks off 'Purpose' tour with athletic, mature show in Seattle". Seattle Times. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  13. ^ "2016's best live bands – as voted by team NME". NME. December 9, 2016. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  14. ^ Matson, Andrew (March 10, 2016). "Justin Bieber Splashes, Strums on Purpose Tour Kickoff". Rolling Stone. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  15. ^ Marchand, François (March 13, 2016). "Review: Justin Bieber shows his true pop Purpose in Vancouver concert". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  16. ^ a b Graham, Adam (April 26, 2016). "Review: Lazy Justin Bieber puts on Sorry Palace concert". The Detroit News. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  17. ^ Louvau, Jim (March 31, 2016). "Justin Bieber Looked Bored and Miserable at Gila River Arena in Glendale". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  18. ^ Pevos, Edward (April 26, 2016). "Justin Bieber lip-syncs his way through The Palace on 'Purpose'". MLive. Retrieved April 30, 2016.
  19. ^ "Justin Bieber gig: Haven't seen this madness since Michael Jackson's concert, says Mumbai". Hindustan Times. May 11, 2017.
  20. ^ PopCrush Staff (March 11, 2016). "Justin Bieber Kicks Off 'Purpose World Tour': Watch the Opening, See the Set List + Photos". popcrush.com. PopCrush Network. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  21. ^ Wilson, Samantha (March 12, 2016). "Justin Bieber Shockingly Performs 'One Less Lonely Girl' After Fans Beg Him To — Watch". hollywoodlife.com. WordPress Network. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  22. ^ "Justin Bieber Premieres New Song 'Insecurities' on Purpose Tour: Watch". Billboard. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  23. ^ "Watch Justin Bieber Perform New Track 'Look At The Stars'". Much.com. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  24. ^ "Justin Bieber Unplugs for a Falsetto-Filled Cover of Justin Timberlake's 'Cry Me a River'". MTV News.
  25. ^ "JUSTIN BIEBER INTERPRETER COLD WATER ON STAGE IN JAPAN". The Stopru. Archived from the original on September 18, 2016.
  26. ^ "Justin Bieber Brings Out Big Sean and Chance the Rapper in L.A." Retrieved March 21, 2016.
  27. ^ "Skrillex Joins Justin Bieber in LA -". Utor Home. Archived from the original on April 7, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  28. ^ "Watch Justin Bieber and Ludacris Perform "Baby" Like It's 2010 All Over Again". TeenVogue. April 14, 2016. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
  29. ^ "Watch Justin Bieber and Usher Reunite on Stage". TeenVogue. April 14, 2016. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
  30. ^ "JUSTIN BIEBER AND JADEN SMITH PERFORM 'NEVER SAY NEVER' TOGETHER JUST LIKE OLD TIMES". MTV News.
  31. ^ "Surprise! Justin Bieber and Luis Fonsi Performed 'Despacito' in Puerto Rico: Watch". Billboard. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  32. ^ Box score:
  33. ^ Box score:
  34. ^ a b Box score:
  35. ^ Ali Stone abrirá el concierto de Justin Bieber en Colombia. Retrieved April 5, 2017. (in Spanish)
  36. ^ Box score:
  37. ^ "Sonakshi Sinha to perform at Bieber's Mumbai gig". The News International. March 14, 2017. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  38. ^ a b c Box score:
  39. ^ "Justin Bieber naar Pinkpop". February 15, 2017. Retrieved February 15, 2017.
  40. ^ "Justin Bieber til Stavanger". November 17, 2016. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
  41. ^ "Justin Bieber kommer till Summerburst Stockholm 2017". Archived from the original on November 29, 2016. Retrieved November 25, 2016.
  42. ^ "Biglietti concerto Justin Bieber e Martin Garrix I-Days Milano 2017". Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  43. ^ a b "North Summer Festival 2017 à Lille : Justin Bieber au programme !". Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  44. ^ Music, Guardian (December 9, 2016). "Justin Bieber to headline British Summer Time festival 2017 !". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved December 9, 2016.
  45. ^ Coscarelli, Joe (July 25, 2017). "Justin Bieber Cancels 'Purpose' Tour Dates for His 'Soul and Well-Being'". The New York Times. Retrieved August 3, 2017. Still, the tour grossed $163.3 million last year, according to the industry trade publication Pollstar, and had earned another $93.2 million so far this year.
  46. ^ Montes, Silvia (July 25, 2017). "Justin Bieber se disculpa y explica por qué ha cancelado su gira". Diario AS.
  47. ^ Haskell, Rob (February 7, 2019). "'Justin and Hailey Bieber Open Up About Their Passionate, Not-Always-Easy but Absolutely All-In Romance". Vogue magazine. Retrieved December 5, 2019.