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Nine Lives Tour

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Nine Lives Tour
Tour by Aerosmith
Associated album
Start dateMay 8, 1997 (1997-05-08)
End dateJuly 17, 1999 (1999-07-17)
Legs11
No. of showsapprox. 283 (scheduled); 204 (played); 43 (cancelled); 36 (rearranged)
Aerosmith concert chronology
  • Get a Grip Tour
    (1993–1994)
  • Nine Lives Tour
    (1997–1999)
  • Roar of the Dragon Tour
    (1999–2000)

The Nine Lives Tour saw Aerosmith playing in North America, Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain, Czech Republic, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Holland, Italy, Austria, Finland, Sweden, Denmark and Portugal. It initially promoted their 1997 release Nine Lives and ran from May 1997 to July 1999.[1]

The length of the tour was due to the chart-topping success of "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing". "We were just about to go off the road and that song came around," explained drummer Joey Kramer. "We continued to tour off that song for another year. That was welcomed by the band. At that time, that was what we did: we would be on the road for twelve or eighteen months, and the only time we came off the road was to make another record."[2]

The tour included a range of support acts. Some opened on entire legs of the tour, others for only half. Some performers appeared at selected dates and others performed just once. They included Shed Seven, Kula Shaker, 3 Colours Red, Jonny Lang, Marry Me Jane, Talk Show, Days of the New, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Spacehog, Monster Magnet, Fuel, Fighting Gravity, Seven Mary Three, Candlebox, The Afghan Whigs, The Black Crowes, Lenny Kravitz, Bryan Adams, Stereophonics, Skunk Anansie, Ministry and Guano Apes.[3]

Several dates were cancelled, owing to Kramer and singer Steven Tyler recovering from serious injuries that occurred on separate occasions.[4][5]

Setlist

[edit]

A standard show on the Nine Lives Tour consisted of 24 tracks, 2 and a half hour stage time. The minimum number of songs played at a show on this tour was 12, and the maximum number of songs played at a show on this tour was 28 songs, played at select shows.

"Cryin'", "Dream On", "Love in an Elevator", "Pink", "Sweet Emotion" and "Walk This Way" were the only songs which were played at every single show on the Nine Lives Tour. The title track from the new record, "Nine Lives", was the opening song at most shows.

  1. "Nine Lives"
  2. "Love in an Elevator"
  3. "Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees)"
  4. "Eat the Rich"
  5. "Livin' on the Edge"
  6. "Dream On"
  7. "Taste of India"
  8. "Janie's Got a Gun"
  9. "What Kind of Love Are You On"
  10. "Last Child"
  11. "Rag Doll"
  12. "Pink"
  13. "Draw the Line"
  14. "Stop Messin' Around"
  15. "Mother Popcorn"
  16. "intro"
  17. "Walk This Way"
  18. "I Don't Wanna Miss A Thing"
  19. "Cryin'"
  20. "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)"
  21. "Come Together"
  22. "What it Takes"
  23. "Sweet Emotion"

Tour dates

[edit]

[6]

Date City Country Venue
Europe I
May 8, 1997 Newcastle England Newcastle Arena
May 10, 1997 Manchester NYNEX Arena
May 12, 1997 Hamburg Germany Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
May 15, 1997 Helsinki Finland Hartwall Arena
May 17, 1997 Nürburg Germany Rock am Ring
May 18, 1997 Nuremberg Rock im Park
May 20, 1997 Prague Czech Republic Prague Sports Hall
May 23, 1997 Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
May 25, 1997 Milan Italy Forum di Assago
May 27, 1997 Rotterdam Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy
May 29, 1997 Ghent Belgium Flanders Expo
May 31, 1997 Birmingham England NEC Arena
June 2, 1997 Glasgow Scotland S.E.C.C. Arena
June 4, 1997 London England Wembley Arena
June 5, 1997
June 7, 1997 Lyon France Halle Tony Garnier
June 9, 1997 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion
June 11, 1997 Paris France Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy
June 13, 1997 Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi
June 15, 1997 Madrid Palacio de los Deportes
North America I
June 30, 1997 Old Orchard Beach United States Seashore Performing Arts Center
July 2, 1997 Ottawa Canada Corel Centre
July 4, 1997 Montreal Molson Centre
July 6, 1997 Toronto Molson Amphitheatre
July 9, 1997 Darien Lake United States Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
July 11, 1997 Mansfield Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts
July 12, 1997
July 14, 1997 Richmond Classic Amphitheatre at Strawberry Hill
July 16, 1997 Burgettstown Coca-Cola Star Lake Amphitheater
July 18, 1997 Camden Blockbuster-Sony Music Entertainment Centre
July 20, 1997 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 29, 1997 Virginia Beach GTE Virginia Beach Amphitheater
July 31, 1997 Hershey Hershey Park Stadium
August 2, 1997 Bristow Nissan Pavilion
August 4, 1997 Scranton Montage Mountain Performing Arts Center
August 6, 1997 New York City Madison Square Garden
August 9, 1997 Hartford Meadows Music Theater
August 10, 1997 Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center
August 12, 1997 Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center
August 14, 1997 Minneapolis Target Center
August 16, 1997 East Troy Alpine Valley Music Theatre
August 18, 1997 Cincinnati Riverbend Music Center
August 21, 1997 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills
August 22, 1997
August 24, 1997 Maryland Heights Riverport Amphitheater
August 26, 1997 Bonner Springs Sandstone Amphitheater
August 28, 1997 Columbus Polaris Amphitheater
August 30, 1997 Tinley Park New World Music Theatre
August 31, 1997 Noblesville Deer Creek Music Center
North America II
September 23, 1997 Raleigh United States Hardee's Walnut Creek Amphitheatre
September 25, 1997 Charlotte Blockbuster Pavilion
September 27, 1997 Atlanta Lakewood Amphitheater
September 29, 1997 Lafayette Cajundome
October 1, 1997 Memphis Pyramid Arena
October 3, 1997 Orlando Orlando Arena
October 5, 1997 West Palm Beach Coral Sky Amphitheater
October 7, 1997 Antioch Starwood Amphitheater
October 9, 1997 Dallas Starplex Amphitheater
October 11, 1997 Houston The Summit
October 13, 1997 Phoenix Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavilion
October 16, 1997 Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheater
October 18, 1997 Devore Blockbuster Pavilion
October 20, 1997 Concord Concord Pavilion
October 22, 1997 Seattle KeyArena
October 24, 1997 Portland Rose Garden Arena
October 25, 1997 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum
North America III
November 22, 1997 Jacksonville United States Jacksonville Coliseum
November 24, 1997 Tampa Ice Palace
November 26, 1997 Biloxi Mississippi Coast Coliseum
November 28, 1997 Tupelo Tupelo Coliseum
November 29, 1997 Birmingham Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center
December 2, 1997 Little Rock Barton Coliseum
December 4, 1997 Austin Frank Erwin Center
December 8, 1997 El Paso Don Haskins Center
December 10, 1997 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum
December 12, 1997 San Diego Cox Arena
December 14, 1997 Las Vegas MGM Grand Garden Arena
December 16, 1997 Anaheim Arrowhead Pond
December 18, 1997 San Antonio Alamodome
December 20, 1997 Oklahoma City Myriad Convention Center
December 21, 1997 Valley Center Kansas Coliseum
December 30, 1997 Boston Fleet Center
December 31, 1997
January 3, 1998 Landover US Air Arena
January 7, 1998 Portland Cumberland County Civic Center
January 9, 1998 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Civic Arena
January 11, 1998 Rochester Rochester Community War Memorial
January 13, 1998 Albany Pepsi Arena
January 15, 1998 Philadelphia CoreStates Spectrum
January 16, 1998 Boston Mama Kins Music Hall
January 17, 1998 New Haven New Haven Coliseum
January 19, 1998 State College Bryce Jordan Center
January 21, 1998 Syracuse Onondaga County War Memorial
January 23, 1998 Charleston Charleston Civic Center
January 24, 1998 North Charleston North Charleston Coliseum
January 27, 1998 Roanoke Roanoke Civic Center
January 29, 1998 Columbia Carolina Coliseum
January 31, 1998 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum
February 2, 1998 Lexington Rupp Arena
February 4, 1998 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena
February 6, 1998 Ames Hilton Coliseum
February 8, 1998 Madison Kohl Center
February 10, 1998 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills
Japan
March 1, 1998 Nagoya Japan Nagoya Dome
March 3, 1998 Osaka Osaka Dome
March 5, 1998 Fukuoka Fukuoka Dome
March 8, 1998 Tokyo Tokyo Dome
March 9, 1998
March 12, 1998 Yokohama Yokohama Arena
March 14, 1998
North America IV
April 18, 1998 Salt Lake City United States Delta Center
April 20, 1998 Denver McNichols Sports Arena
April 22, 1998 Colorado Springs World Arena
April 24, 1998 Spokane Spokane Arena
April 27, 1998 Anchorage Sullivan Arena
April 29, 1998
Europe II
Dates were canceled after Steven Tyler suffered a cruciate knee ligament injury after dropping the microphone stand on his knee during "Mama Kin" on April 29, 1998.
June 26, 1998 Saint Petersburg Russia Kirov or Petrovsky Stadium
June 28, 1998 Moscow Luzhniki Stadium
July 1, 1998 Oulu Finland Oulu Baseball Stadium
July 3, 1998 Ringe Denmark Midtfyns Festival
July 5, 1998 Belfort France Les Eurockéenes de Belfort
July 7, 1998 Paris L'Olympia
July 9, 1998 Cologne Germany Sporthalle
July 10, 1998 Frauenfeld Switzerland Out in the Green Festival
July 12, 1998 Andorra-la-Vella Andorra Dr. Music Festival
July 14, 1998 Milan Italy Fila Forum
July 16, 1998 Pistoia Pistoia Festival
July 18, 1998 Stuttgart Germany Blindman's Ball
July 19, 1998 Magdeburg Blindman's Ball
July 21, 1998 Katowice Poland Stadion Slaski
July 24, 1998 Stockholm Sweden Lollipop Festival
July 26, 1998 Rotterdam Netherlands Ahoy
July 28, 1998 Sheffield England Sheffield Arena
with Run-D.M.C.
July 30, 1998 Dublin Ireland Point Theatre
August 1, 1998 London England Wembley Arena
with Run-D.M.C.
North America V
September 9, 1998 Scranton United States Montage Mountain Performing Arts Center
September 11, 1998 Camden Blockbuster-Sony Music Entertainment Centre
September 13, 1998 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre
September 15, 1998
September 17, 1998 Cincinnati Riverbend Music Center
September 19, 1998 Tinley Park World Music Theatre
September 21, 1998 Noblesville Deer Creek Music Center
September 23, 1998 Columbus Polaris Amphitheater
September 25, 1998 Maryland Heights Riverport Amphitheater
September 27, 1998 Bonner Springs Sandstone Amphitheater
September 29, 1998 Antioch Starwood Amphitheater
October 1, 1998 Raleigh Walnut Creek Amphitheater
October 3, 1998 Atlanta Lakewood Amphitheater
October 5, 1998 Charlotte Blockbuster Pavilion
October 7, 1998 Virginia Beach GTE Virginia Beach Amphitheater
October 9, 1998 Bristow Nissan Pavilion
October 11, 1998 Hartford Meadows Music Theatre
October 13, 1998 Wantagh Jones Beach Amphitheater
October 15, 1998
October 17, 1998 Holmdel P.N.C. Bank Arts Center
Webcast
October 20, 1998 Montreal Canada Molson Centre
October 22, 1998 Quebec City Colisee de Quebec
October 24, 1998 Hamilton Copps Coliseum
October 26, 1998 Toledo United States Toledo Sports Arena
November 3, 1998 Milwaukee Bradley Center
November 5, 1998 Minneapolis Target Center
November 7, 1998 Mankato Mankato Civic Center
November 9, 1998 Omaha Civic Auditorium
November 11, 1998 Fargo Fargodome
November 13, 1998 Duluth Duluth Entertainment Convention Center
November 15, 1998 La Crosse La Crosse Center
November 17, 1998 Sioux Falls Sioux Falls Arena
November 19, 1998 Peoria Peoria Civic Center
November 21, 1998 Evansville Roberts Municipal Stadium
November 23, 1998 Fort Wayne Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
November 25, 1998 Moline, Illinois MARK of the Quad Cities
November 27, 1998 Rockford Rockford MetroCentre
November 29, 1998 Notre Dame Joyce Center
December 1, 1998 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena
December 3, 1998 Dayton Ervin J. Nutter Center
December 5, 1998 Carbondale SIU Arena
December 7, 1998 Knoxville Thompson–Boling Arena
December 9, 1998 Lexington Freedom Hall
December 11, 1998 Champaign Assembly Hall
December 13, 1998 Huntington Huntington Civic Center
December 15, 1998 Cleveland Gund Arena
December 17, 1998 Philadelphia First Union Spectrum
December 19, 1998 Washington, D.C. MCI Center
December 27, 1998 East Rutherford Continental Airlines Arena
December 29, 1998 Albany Pepsi Arena
December 31, 1998 Boston FleetCenter
January 2, 1999 Worcester Worcester's Centrum Centre
January 4, 1999 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Civic Arena
January 6, 1999 Chattanooga UTC Arena
North America VI
April 11, 1999 Columbus United States Schottenstein Center
April 13, 1999 Memphis Pyramid Arena
April 15, 1999 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum
April 17, 1999 Greenville Bi-Lo Center
April 19, 1999 Birmingham Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center
April 21, 1999 Biloxi Mississippi Coast Coliseum
April 23, 1999 Lafayette Cajundome
April 25, 1999 San Antonio Retama Park
April 27, 1999 The Woodlands Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
April 29, 1999 Dallas Coca-Cola Starplex Amphitheater
May 1, 1999 Greenwood Village Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
May 3, 1999 Las Vegas Thomas & Mack Center
May 7, 1999 Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl
May 13, 1999 Sacramento ARCO Arena
May 15, 1999 George The Gorge Amphitheatre
May 17, 1999 Salt Lake City Delta Center
May 20, 1999 Auburn Hills Palace of Auburn Hills
May 22, 1999 East Troy Alpine Valley Music Center
May 23, 1999 Tinley Park World Music Theatre
Europe III
June 10, 1999 Stockholm Sweden Globen Arena
June 16, 1999 Munich Germany Olympiahalle
June 18, 1999 Linz Austria Steel City Festival
June 20, 1999 Zurich Switzerland Letzigrund
June 22, 1999 Stuttgart Germany Schleyerhalle
June 24, 1999 Cologne Kölnarena
June 26, 1999 London England Wembley Stadium
Toxic Twin Towers Ball
June 28, 1999 Brussels Belgium Forest National
June 30, 1999 Frankfurt Germany Festhalle Frankfurt
July 2, 1999 Nijmegen Netherlands Veronica[fm] in Concert
July 4, 1999 Erfurt Germany Messehalle, Erfurt
July 6, 1999 Berlin Waldbühne
July 8, 1999 Ringe Denmark Midtfyns Festival
July 11, 1999 Monza Italy Monza Rock Festival
July 12, 1999 Naples Neapolis Festival
July 15, 1999 Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi
July 17, 1999 Lisbon Portugal T99 Festival

Notes

[edit]

From late October 1998 onward, the tour was also called "The Little South of Sanity Tour" given the release of the Geffen live album of the same name.

Problems

[edit]

A total of 43 shows on the Nine Lives Tour were cancelled and a further 36 shows were rescheduled. The majority of the shows were cancelled/rescheduled due to injuries (Steven Tyler suffered cruciate ligament injury after dropping the microphone stand on his knee, and Joey Kramer suffered second degree burns from a freak accident at a gas station). A select few shows were cancelled/rearranged due to 'scheduling conflict' or the flu.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ratliff, Ben (8 August 1997). "Aerosmith turn sex and death into peppy family fun". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  2. ^ Chamberlain, Rich (May 2017). "The stories behind the songs: Aerosmith – I don't want to miss a thing". Classic Rock. No. 235. p. 27.
  3. ^ "Aerosmith taps Monster Magnet, Fuel to open reschedules tour". MTV.[dead link]
  4. ^ "Aerosmith's Permanent Vacation continues". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  5. ^ "Aerosmith to cut short winter tour". MTV. Retrieved 2020-10-18.[dead link]
  6. ^ "Aero Force One - Login". Aeroforceone.com. 2012-02-17. Archived from the original on 2008-04-20. Retrieved 2012-02-22.