Jump to content

Something About Faith Tour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Something About Faith Tour
Tour by Faith Evans
Associated albumSomething About Faith
Start dateOctober 5, 2010
End dateDecember 31, 2011
Legs3
No. of shows20 in North America
4 in Europe
24 in total
Faith Evans concert chronology

Something About Faith Tour is a music concert tour by American R&B/soul singer, Faith Evans. The tour supports her album, Something About Faith, visiting 30 cities in North America and additional dates in Europe.[1][2] The outing started on October 5 in New York at B.B. King’s Blues Club, the date her new album was released.[3]

Opening Acts

[edit]

Set list

[edit]
  1. "Something About Faith" (Intro)
  2. "Love Like This"
  3. "Reasons"
  4. "You Gets No Love"
  5. "Burnin' Up"
  6. "I Don't Need It"
  7. "You Used to Love Me"
  8. "Soon as I Get Home"
  9. Biggie Smalls Tribute: DJ Set Interlude (contains elements of "One More Chance", "Big Poppa", "Hypnotize" and "Juicy")
  10. Medley: "Party" / "Lucky Day" / "Brown Sugar (Extra Sweet)"
  11. "Can't Believe"
  12. "Come Over"
  13. "Never Gonna Let You Go"
  14. "Stop N Go"
  15. "Mesmerized"
  16. "All Night Long"
  17. "I Love You"
  18. "Tru Love"
  19. "Again"
  20. "Gone Already"

Tour dates

[edit]
Date City Country Venue
North America[4]
October 5, 2010 New York City United States B.B. King's Blues Club
October 9, 2010[A] Atlanta Sweet Auburn Historic District
October 10, 2010 Charlotte Tempo
October 29, 2010 Houston Arena Theatre
November 6, 2010[B] Atlanta Georgia World Congress Center
November 14, 2010 Los Angeles Conga Room
Europe[5][6]
December 4, 2010 Ascot England Club 1
December 5, 2010 London IndigO2
December 8, 2010
December 10, 2010 Manchester Manchester Academy
North America[7]
January 20, 2011 San Francisco United States Mezzanine
April 9, 2011 New Orleans The Sugar Mill
April 21, 2011 Chicago Alhambra Palace
May 6, 2011[C] Jacksonville Metropolitan Park
May 27, 2011[D] Washington, D.C. The Park at Fourteenth
May 28, 2011 Detroit Detroit Opera House
May 29, 2011 Las Vegas Hard Rock Cafe
June 24, 2011[E] Ontario Citizens Business Bank Arena
August 12, 2011[F] Las Vegas Mandalay Bay Events Center
August 27, 2011[G] Portland Memorial Coliseum
October 8, 2011 Shreveport Shreveport Municipal Memorial Auditorium
November 5, 2011[H] Miami Knight Center
December 17, 2011[I] Los Angeles Nokia Theatre L.A. Live
December 31, 2011 West Hollywood Key Club
  • Not all tour dates are listed
Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
A Sweet Auburn Heritage Festival[8]
B For Sisters Only Expo[9]
C Budweiser Funk Fest
D The Park Unplugged
E Urban Legends Concert[10]
F Hillshire Farm Freedom Friday Party
G Northwest Love Jam[11]
H Best of the 90s
I 16th Annual House Full of Toys Benefit Concert[12]
Cancellations and rescheduled shows
June 18, 2011 Riverside, California Fox Performing Arts Center Cancelled[10]
July 29, 2011 Los Angeles, California Gibson Amphitheatre Cancelled[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Faith Evans Announces Tour
  2. ^ Faith Evans Announces Indig02 concert in December
  3. ^ Faith Evans New York concert event
  4. ^ Concert Review: Faith Evans Live in Houston Archived 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Concert Review, Faith Evans live in London Archived 2013-09-25 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Review; Faith Evans and SWV concert in London Archived 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Faith Evans in Concert
  8. ^ "Atlanta Fairs & Festivals Events". zvents. October 2010. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  9. ^ Godfrey, Sarah (November 8, 2010). "Monica, Faith Evans, and Donell Jones at For Sisters Only". TBD. Allbritton Communications Company. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c "No Faith Evans at the Fox Performing Arts Center on Saturday". InstantRiverside.com. Instant Inland Empire Media, Inc. June 18, 2011. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  11. ^ "Northwest Love Jam: Ginuwine, Dru Hill, Faith Evans, Jon B". The Portland Mercury. Index Publishing. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  12. ^ Wood, Mikael (December 18, 2011). "Stevie Wonder and Friends Rock the Annual House Full of Toys Benefit". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
[edit]