Tour of the Universe (tour)

Tour of the Universe was a 2009–10 worldwide concert tour by English electronic band Depeche Mode in support of the group's 12th studio album, Sounds of the Universe, which was released in April 2009.

Tour of the Universe
Tour by Depeche Mode
Depeche Mode performing "It's No Good" at the O2 Arena in London on 15 December 2009.
Associated albumSounds of the Universe
Start date6 May 2009
End date27 February 2010
Legs7
No. of shows
  • 70 in Europe
  • 26 in North America
  • 5 in South America
  • 1 in Asia
  • 102 in total
Box office$133 million[1][2]
Depeche Mode concert chronology

The Live Nation-produced tour, which was announced in October 2008 in Berlin,[3] kicked off with a warm-up show in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg in May 2009. By the end of the year, the tour had reached Europe, Asia, North America and South America.

The concerts in Barcelona, Spain were filmed for the video release Tour of the Universe: Barcelona 20/21.11.09, which was released on 8 November 2010 in Europe and 9 November 2010 in North America on DVD and Blu-ray.[4]

Overview

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The tour commenced in May 2009 with a warm-up show in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg, followed by the first full-fledged date in the Tel Aviv District city of Ramat Gan, Israel. The tour was disrupted as lead singer Dave Gahan was struck by a severe bout of gastroenteritis, which occurred before the band were to take to the stage in Athens.[5] Following subsequent cancellations of eight further shows, the tour was eventually confirmed to recommence in June while Gahan reportedly flew to the United States for treatment;[6] a low-grade malignant tumour in his bladder was found and successfully removed. Although a portion of the cancelled dates were rescheduled, the band's appearance at the Pinkpop Festival in the Netherlands was pulled, while all remaining dates and one of two dates in Leipzig, Germany were cancelled indefinitely due to "scheduling conflicts".

In June 2009, the band played their first show following Gahan's illness in Leipzig, resuming a European leg which eventually wrapped up in Bilbao, Spain. The tour was cut short after Gahan tore a calf muscle, forcing the cancellation of two dates in Porto, Portugal and Seville, Spain respectively.

In July 2009, the group began a tour of the U.S. and Canada. The leg, which featured a headline slot at the Lollapalooza Festival in Chicago,[7] started in Toronto and culminated in Fort Lauderdale, Florida in early September. In August, two dates in California were cancelled after Gahan received doctor's orders to serve a period of complete vocal rest.[8]

In October 2009, the band returned to North America to play four dates in Mexico. The leg continued on to Costa Rica and South America, their first shows in these territories since the Exotic Tour in 1994. The group received attention in the media following the group's performance in Peru after it was reported that Gahan thanked the wrong country. According to reports, Gahan said: "Thank you very much, Chile" towards the end of the concert held in Lima.[9] However, this claim was later disputed by a band representative, who quoted Gahan as saying: "Thank you very much, good night" instead.[10] The leg eventually finished up in Buenos Aires. Later in the month, the act began a European leg of indoor venues, which kicked off in Oberhausen, Germany and culminated mid-December in Manchester, United Kingdom.

In January 2010, the group commenced a third European leg in Berlin. The leg included five shows that were rescheduled following Gahan's illness in the summer of 2009. The tour also included a date as part of a series of concerts in aid of Teenage Cancer Trust, which was held at the Royal Albert Hall in London.[11] During this concert, the performances of "Home", "One Caress" and "Come Back" were accompanied by a seven-piece string section. Additionally, during the encore, former band member Alan Wilder made a surprise appearance onstage, accompanying Martin Gore's performance of "Somebody" on piano.[12] It was the first time Wilder had performed with the band in more than fifteen years, having exited the group in 1995. Speaking about the event, Wilder said that he was "happy to accept" Gahan's proposal to join the group onstage and stated that "[they] were long overdue some kind of reunion of this sort".[13] The entire tour eventually wrapped up in Düsseldorf, Germany in late February, after ten months and 102 shows in 32 countries. In total, the band performed to more than 2.7 million people. As reported by music industry publication Billboard, the tour was one of the most profitable in 2009, ending 20th in the magazine's "Top Tours" list.[14]

Similar to the group's previous tour, Touring the Angel, recordings of some of the tour's concerts were made available on double CD format or as a digital download under the generic name Recording the Universe.[15] A video release of the live concerts held at Palau Sant Jordi in Barcelona, Spain, titled Tour of the Universe: Barcelona 20/21.11.09, was released on 8 November 2010 in Europe and 9 November 2010 in North America on DVD and Blu-ray. The DVD release was issued in two formats, "Deluxe" and "Super Deluxe", which both include two audio CDs of the live concerts. The "Super Deluxe" edition also includes a second DVD featuring the tour documentary, "Inside the Universe", as well as extra bonus materials.

Set list

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General set list for Europe, leg #2 and #3

  1. Intro (excerpt from "In Chains")
  2. "In Chains"
  3. "Wrong"
  4. "Hole to Feed"
  5. "Walking in My Shoes"
  6. "It's No Good"
  7. "A Question of Time"
  8. "World in My Eyes"
  9. "Precious"
  10. "Fly on the Windscreen"
  11. Song performed by Martin Gore
  12. Song performed by Martin Gore
  13. "Policy of Truth"
  14. "In Your Room" (Zephyr mix (with bits from the album version))
  15. "I Feel You"
  16. "Enjoy the Silence"
  17. "Never Let Me Down Again"
  18. Song performed by Martin Gore
  19. "Stripped"
  20. "Personal Jesus

Note: Set lists differed between dates, with rotated songs (denoted above), possible minor song order changes and song omissions.

Tour dates

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List of concerts, showing date, city, country, and venue
DateCityCountryVenue/Event
Europe
6 May 2009Esch-sur-AlzetteLuxembourgRockhal
Asia
10 May 2009Tel AvivIsraelRamat Gan Stadium
Europe
8 June 2009LeipzigGermanyZentralstadion
10 June 2009BerlinOlympiastadion
12 June 2009FrankfurtCommerzbank-Arena
13 June 2009MunichOlympiastadion
16 June 2009RomeItalyStadio Olimpico
18 June 2009MilanStadio Giuseppe Meazza
20 June 2009WerchterBelgiumFestivalpark (TW Classic Festival)
22 June 2009BratislavaSlovakiaŠtadión Pasienky
23 June 2009BudapestHungaryFerenc Puskás Stadium
25 June 2009PragueCzech RepublicSynot Tip Arena
27 June 2009Saint-DenisFranceStade de France
28 June 2009NancyZénith de Nancy
30 June 2009CopenhagenDenmarkParken Stadium
1 July 2009HamburgGermanyHSH Nordbank Arena
3 July 2009ArvikaSwedenFolkets Park (Arvika Festival)
6 July 2009CarcassonneFranceEsplanade Gambetta
8 July 2009ValladolidSpainEstadio Nuevo José Zorrilla
9 July 2009BilbaoMonte Cobetas (Bilbao BBK Live)
North America
24 July 2009TorontoCanadaMolson Canadian Amphitheatre
25 July 2009MontrealBell Centre
28 July 2009BristowUnited StatesNissan Pavilion
31 July 2009MansfieldComcast Center
1 August 2009Atlantic CityBorgata Event Center
3 August 2009New York CityMadison Square Garden
4 August 2009
7 August 2009ChicagoGrant Park (Lollapalooza)
10 August 2009SeattleKeyArena
16 August 2009Los AngelesHollywood Bowl
17 August 2009
19 August 2009AnaheimHonda Center
20 August 2009Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara Bowl
22 August 2009ParadisePearl Concert Theater
23 August 2009PhoenixUS Airways Center
25 August 2009West Valley CityThe E Center
27 August 2009MorrisonRed Rocks Amphitheatre
29 August 2009DallasSuperPages.com Center
30 August 2009The WoodlandsCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
1 September 2009AtlantaAaron's Amphitheatre at Lakewood
4 September 2009TampaFord Amphitheatre
5 September 2009SunriseBankAtlantic Center
1 October 2009GuadalajaraMexicoArena VFG
3 October 2009Mexico CityForo Sol
4 October 2009
6 October 2009MonterreyMonterrey Arena
Central America
8 October 2009AlajuelaCosta RicaAutódromo La Guácima
South America
10 October 2009BogotáColombiaSimón Bolívar Park
13 October 2009LimaPeruExplanada del Estadio Monumental
15 October 2009SantiagoChileClub Hípico de Santiago
17 October 2009Buenos AiresArgentinaClub Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Europe
31 October 2009OberhausenGermanyKönig Pilsener Arena
1 November 2009BremenAWD-Dome
3 November 2009HanoverTUI Arena
7 November 2009MannheimSAP Arena
8 November 2009StuttgartHanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle
10 November 2009GenevaSwitzerlandPalexpo
12 November 2009ValenciaSpainRecinto Ferial
14 November 2009LisbonPortugalPavilhão Atlântico
16 November 2009MadridSpainPalacio de Deportes
17 November 2009
20 November 2009BarcelonaPalau Sant Jordi
21 November 2009
23 November 2009LyonFranceHalle Tony Garnier
25 November 2009Casalecchio di RenoItalyFuturshow Station
26 November 2009TurinTorino Palasport Olimpico
28 November 2009ErfurtGermanyMessehalle
30 November 2009RotterdamNetherlandsRotterdam Ahoy
1 December 2009NurembergGermanyNuremberg Arena
3 December 2009ViennaAustriaWiener Stadthalle
6 December 2009ZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadion
7 December 2009
10 December 2009DublinIrelandThe O2
12 December 2009GlasgowScotlandSECC
13 December 2009BirminghamEnglandLG Arena
15 December 2009LondonO2 Arena
16 December 2009
18 December 2009ManchesterManchester Evening News Arena
9 January 2010BerlinGermanyO2 World
11 January 2010BudapestHungaryLászló Papp Budapest Sports Arena
14 January 2010PragueCzech RepublicO2 Arena
17 January 2010LiévinFranceStade Couvert Régional
19 January 2010ParisPalais Omnisports Bercy
20 January 2010
23 January 2010AntwerpBelgiumSportpaleis
25 January 2010MalmöSwedenMalmö Arena
26 January 2010GothenburgScandinavium
29 January 2010BergenNorwayVestlandshallen
31 January 2010StockholmSwedenEricsson Globe
2 February 2010HelsinkiFinlandHartwall Arena
4 February 2010Saint PetersburgRussiaCKK Arena
6 February 2010MoscowOlympic Stadium
8 February 2010KyivUkrainePalace of Sports
10 February 2010ŁódźPolandAtlas Arena
11 February 2010
14 February 2010ZagrebCroatiaArena Zagreb
17 February 2010LondonEnglandRoyal Albert Hall
20 February 2010O2 Arena
22 February 2010HorsensDenmarkForum Horsens
23 February 2010
26 February 2010DüsseldorfGermanyEsprit Arena
27 February 2010

Support acts

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Musicians

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Depeche Mode

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Additional musicians

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  • Peter Gordeno – synthesizers, piano, backing vocals
  • Christian Eigner – drums, synthesizers

References

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  1. ^ [1] [dead link]
  2. ^ [2] [dead link]
  3. ^ "Billboard News". Billboard. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Depeche Mode Prepare Tour DVD". 23 September 2010. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  5. ^ "Depeche Mode's Martin Gore announces solo album 'MG' and shares 'Europa Hymn' video – watch – NME". NME. 29 March 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  6. ^ FOX. "Fox 5 NY, New York News, Breaking News, weather, sports, traffic and more. – WNYW". Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Depeche Mode Works the Hits at Lollapalooza". 8 August 2009.
  8. ^ "Depeche Mode 'cancel two US shows'". Digital Spy. 17 August 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  9. ^ "Music – New Music News, Reviews, Pictures, and Videos". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 18 October 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  10. ^ "Depeche Mode rep denies singer made slip in Peru". AP. 15 October 2009. Archived from the original on 19 October 2009. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  11. ^ Colothan, Scott. "Depeche Mode Announce February 2010 Royal Albert Hall Show – Gigwise". Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  12. ^ "News". 19 February 2010. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  13. ^ "Chart Attack". Archived from the original on 21 February 2010. Retrieved 10 April 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  14. ^ "Top 25 Tours of 2009". Billboard. 11 December 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  15. ^ "Depeche Mode". Archived from the original on 4 March 2011. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
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