Concert Tour Name: | World Magnetic Tour |
Album: | Death Magnetic |
Type: | World |
Artist: | Metallica |
Start Date: | October 17, 2008 |
End Date: | November 21, 2010 |
Number Of Legs: | 18 |
Gross: | $217,245,629 |
Last Tour: | European Vacation Tour (2008) |
This Tour: | World Magnetic Tour (2008–2010) |
Next Tour: | 2012 European Black Album Tour (2012) |
The World Magnetic Tour was a 2008–2010 concert tour by American heavy metal band Metallica in support of the band's ninth studio album, Death Magnetic, which was released on September 12, 2008.
The tour officially kicked off in October 2008 in San Francisco, United States, following three European promotional dates in September and two U.S. rehearsal shows. By September 2010, the tour had reached North America, Europe, South America, Asia and Oceania.
The tour culminated with three dates in Melbourne, Australia, in late November 2010. The tour ended up being the most successful by Metallica, grossing roughly $217.2 million, with the top grossing location, Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia, taking more than $14 million over four shows.
A North American leg, their first since the Madly in Anger with the World Tour in 2004, began in Phoenix, Arizona, and wrapped up in late December in Oakland, California. The leg continued in early January 2009, starting in Milwaukee and finishing up in Newark, New Jersey, in early February.
In February 2009, the band commenced a European tour. The group played three rounds of dates, resuming in late March and then returning again in May. In between the first and second legs, the band performed a small promotional show in Austin, Texas, U.S. to support the video game release . The European legs began in Nottingham, England, and eventually culminated in Cologne, Germany.
In June 2009, the group played three dates in Mexico City. The shows reached a total capacity of 158,349 and were the band's first shows in Mexico in ten years. Later in the month, the group returned to Europe, performing a mixture of indoor and outdoor shows, and festival appearances. The leg featured headline slots at the first iterations of the Sonisphere Festival, a new festival event which took place in Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and the UK. The leg began in Helsinki and finished in early August in Knebworth, England.
In September 2009, the band kicked off a third North American leg, beginning in Nashville, Tennessee, and finishing in mid-November in New York City. The act resumed touring duties in December, performing five dates in the Western U.S.In January 2010, the band headed to South America, playing mostly outdoor shows. The leg kicked off in Lima and finished in São Paulo, Brazil. In March, the group returned to Mexico, performing in Guadalajara and Monterrey. The leg continued on with additional dates in South America, as well as shows in Central America. The band also performed for the first time in countries such as Puerto Rico, Costa Rica and Guatemala.
In April 2010, the act once again returned to Europe, beginning with two dates in Oslo. The leg included appearances at the 2010 editions of the Sonisphere Festival, which featured exclusive billings of the "Big Four" of thrash metal: Slayer, Megadeth and Anthrax, as well as Metallica. The events took place in Poland, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania and Turkey. The band also returned to Israel in May, for the third time in their career.
In September 2010, the band kicked off one of three legs in Oceania, followed by two dates in Tokyo. In mid-October and late November 2010, the group returned for additional concerts in Oceania. The group also played a show in the United States in early November for the launch party. The entire tour culminated with three dates in Melbourne, Australia.
The dates in Mexico City were recorded and later released on CD, DVD and Blu-ray with the title, Orgullo, Pasión y Gloria ("Pride, Passion and Glory"). Additionally, the show in Nîmes, France, was filmed and subsequently released on DVD and Blu-ray entitled, Français Pour Une Nuit ("French for One Night"). Both titles were released to retail in November 2009 only in their respective markets (South America and France) and through the band's official website.
The band's performance at the Sonisphere Festival in Sofia was beamed to more than 450 movie theatres in more than 140 markets in the U.S. and select cities in Europe, Canada and South America on June 22, 2010. The live video was later released on DVD and Blu-ray in October 2010, entitled The Big 4 Live from Sofia, Bulgaria.
According to concert magazine Pollstar, the tour was the tenth highest-grossing for 2009 with revenue of US$89.1 million from 78 shows,[1] and ranked fifth in 2010 with revenue of $110.1 million.[2] Overall, the tour grossed $217,245,629 from 164 reported shows across two years with an attendance of over 2.6 million people.[1] [2]
This was the first time Metallica ever played in Puerto Rico. They were originally going to play on April 28, 1993, at Hiram Bithorn Stadium on the Nowhere Else to Roam Tour, but the rains that day reached a level of over two feet, which would have been a hazardous situation if the band had played.
(Taken from the Sofia, Bulgaria, Vasil Levski Stadium show on June 22, 2010)
(Taken from the Christchurch, New Zealand, CBS Canterbury Arena show on September 21, 2010)
City | Country | Venue/Event | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
[1] | Daly City | United States | Cow Palace | |
Phoenix | Jobing.com Arena | |||
Albuquerque | Tingley Coliseum | |||
Kansas City | Sprint Center | |||
Des Moines | Wells Fargo Arena | |||
Portland | Rose Garden Arena | |||
Salt Lake City | EnergySolutions Arena | |||
Denver | Pepsi Center | |||
Omaha | Qwest Center | |||
Moline | iWireless Center | |||
Columbus | Jerome Schottenstein Center | |||
St. Louis | Scottrade Center | |||
Tulsa | BOK Center | |||
Houston | Toyota Center | |||
North Little Rock | Alltel Arena | |||
New Orleans | New Orleans Arena | |||
Seattle | KeyArena | |||
Vancouver | Canada | General Motors Place | ||
Calgary | Pengrowth Saddledome | |||
Edmonton | Rexall Place | |||
Ontario | United States | Citizens Business Bank Arena | ||
Fresno | Save Mart Center | |||
San Diego | Cox Arena | |||
Inglewood | The Forum | |||
Oakland | Oracle Arena |
Album | Song | Times | |
---|---|---|---|
Kill 'Em All (1983) | "Hit the Lights" | 36 | |
"The Four Horsemen" | 28 | ||
"Motorbreath" | 34 | ||
"Jump in the Fire" | 7 | ||
"Whiplash" | 33 | ||
"Phantom Lord" | 20 | ||
"No Remorse" | 25 | ||
"Seek & Destroy" | 186 | ||
Ride the Lightning (1984) | "Fight Fire with Fire" | 55 | |
"Ride the Lightning" | 43 | ||
"For Whom the Bell Tolls" | 77 | ||
"Fade to Black" | 65 | ||
"Trapped Under Ice" | 17 | ||
"Creeping Death" | 81 | ||
"The Call of Ktulu" | 1 | ||
Master of Puppets (1986) | "Battery" | 40 | |
"Master of Puppets" | 186 | ||
"The Thing That Should Not Be" | 11 | ||
"Welcome Home (Sanitarium)" | 43 | ||
"Disposable Heroes" | 13 | ||
"Leper Messiah" | 12 | ||
"Orion" | 6 | ||
"Damage, Inc." | 23 | ||
...And Justice for All (1988) | "Blackened" | 60 | |
"...And Justice for All" | 14 | ||
"One" | 186 | ||
"The Shortest Straw" | 10 | ||
"Harvester of Sorrow" | 53 | ||
"Dyers Eve" | 18 | ||
Metallica (1991) | "Enter Sandman" | 186 | |
"Sad But True" | 186 | ||
"Holier Than Thou" | 24 | ||
"The Unforgiven" | 29 | ||
"Wherever I May Roam" | 40 | ||
"Through the Never" | 11 | ||
"Nothing Else Matters" | 186 | ||
"Of Wolf and Man" | 18 | ||
"The God That Failed" | 2 | ||
Load (1996) | "Until It Sleeps" | 9 | |
"King Nothing" | 1 | ||
"Bleeding Me" | 2 | ||
"The Outlaw Torn" | 3 | ||
ReLoad (1997) | "Fuel" | 38 | |
"The Memory Remains" | 22 | ||
Garage Inc. (1998) | "Turn the Page" | 31 | |
"Die, Die My Darling" | 30 | ||
"Whiskey in the Jar" | 1 | ||
"Helpless" | 20 | ||
"The Small Hours" | 1 | ||
"The Wait" | 7 | ||
"Last Caress" | 31 | ||
"Green Hell" | 1 | ||
"Am I Evil?" | 26 | ||
"Blitzkrieg" | 13 | ||
"Breadfan" | 30 | ||
"The Prince" | 5 | ||
"Stone Cold Crazy" | 51 | ||
"So What?" | 2 | ||
"Killing Time" | 5 | ||
"Overkill" | 3 | ||
"Damage Case" | 1 | ||
"Stone Dead Forever" | 1 | ||
"Too Late Too Late" | 5 | ||
S&M (1999) | "No Leaf Clover" | 13 | |
M:I-2 (2000) | "I Disappear" | 5 | |
St. Anger (2003) | "Frantic" | 6 | |
We All Love Ennio Morricone (2007) | "The Ecstasy of Gold" | 1 | |
Death Magnetic (2008) | "That Was Just Your Life" | 169 | |
"The End of the Line" | 149 | ||
"Broken, Beat & Scarred" | 148 | ||
"The Day That Never Comes" | 141 | ||
"All Nightmare Long" | 92 | ||
"Cyanide" | 134 | ||
"The Unforgiven III" | 7 | ||
"The Judas Kiss" | 29 | ||
"Suicide & Redemption" | 1 | ||
"My Apocalypse" | 36 | ||
Black Sabbath cover | "Hole in the Sky" | 1 | |
Saxon cover | "Motorcycle Man" | 1 |
Venue | City | Gross revenue | |
---|---|---|---|
Jobing.com Arena | Glendale | $841,979[3] | |
Tingley Coliseum | Albuquerque | $709,660 | |
Sprint Center | Kansas City | $854,765 | |
Qwest Center | Omaha | $716,650 | |
Jerome Schottenstein Center | Columbus | $3,015,642 | |
Scottrade Center | St. Louis | $629,800 | |
BOK Center | Tulsa | $737,115 | |
Toyota Center | Houston | $1,168,463 | |
New Orleans Arena | New Orleans | $757,050[4] | |
KeyArena | Seattle | $965,466 | |
Rexall Place | Edmonton | $1,107,681[5] | |
Citizens Business Bank Arena | Ontario | $774,417 | |
Save Mart Center | Fresno | $791,405 | |
Cox Arena | San Diego | $844,674 | |
The Forum | Inglewood | $5,234,771 | |
Oracle Arena | Oakland | $1,275,000[6] | |
Bradley Center | Milwaukee | $794,657 | |
Joe Louis Arena | Detroit | $1,240,617 | |
Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | $1,274,265[7] | |
Wachovia Center | Philadelphia | $1,353,652 | |
TD Banknorth Garden | Boston | $1,144,875 | |
Allstate Arena | Rosemont | $2,243,799[8] | |
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale | $1,152,255 | |
Prudential Center | Newark | $2,223,933 | |
Trent FM Arena | Nottingham | $593,004 | |
Evening News Arena | Manchester | $1,128,049 | |
Sheffield Arena | Sheffield | $743,428 | |
O2 Arena | London | $2,286,382[9] | |
Metro Radio Arena | Newcastle | $611,431 | |
Sportpaleis | Antwerp | $1,254,264[10] | |
Ericsson Globe | Stockholm | $2,111,922 | |
LG Arena | Birmingham | $714,135 | |
SECC | Glasgow | $581,563 | |
Ahoy | Rotterdam | $912,063 | |
Foro Sol | Mexico City | $8,602,465 | |
Hartwall Areena | Helsinki | $2,560,139[11] | |
Spektrum | Oslo | $2,143,596[12] | |
Forum | Copenhagen | $5,947,788[13] | |
Marlay Park | Dublin | $2,218,516[14] | |
Sommet Center | Nashville | $1,014,175 | |
U.S. Bank Arena | Cincinnati | $854,243 | |
Centre Bell | Montreal | $3,229,512 | |
AT&T Center | San Antonio | $1,100,908 | |
American Airlines Center | Dallas | $1,171,625 | |
BankAtlantic Center | Sunrise | $1,182,818 | |
St. Pete Times Forum | Tampa | $1,194,309 | |
Philips Arena | Atlanta | $1,105,745 | |
Target Center | Minneapolis | $1,220,279 | |
John Paul Jones Arena | Charlottesville | $804,426 | |
Air Canada Centre | Toronto | $2,866,691 | |
Colisée Pepsi | Quebec City | $2,307,372[15] | |
Times Union Center | Albany | $956,958 | |
HSBC Arena | Buffalo | $1,166,124 | |
Madison Square Garden | New York City | $2,539,232 | |
Estadio Universidad San Marcos | Lima | $2,807,550[16] | |
Estadio Antonio Vespucio Liberti | Buenos Aires | $4,835,210[17] | |
Orfeo Superdomo | Córdoba | $580,374 | |
Club Hipico | Santiago | $3,691,580 | |
Parque Condor | Porte Alegre | $1,982,970[18] | |
Estádio do Morumbi | São Paulo | $8,617,636[19] | |
Estadio Tres de Marzo | Guadalajara | $2,427,868 | |
Estadio Universitario | Monterrey | $2,191,098[20] | |
Estadio Ricardo Saprissa Aymá | San José (CR) | $2,096,150 | |
Centro de Convenciones Figali | Panama City | $724,754 | |
Parque Simón Bolívar | Bogotá | $3,214,090 | |
Campos de Beisbol de la Rinconada | Caracas | $3,581,780 | |
Coliseo de José Miguel Agrelot | San Juan | $1,792,301[21] | |
Telenor Arena | Oslo | $5,059,884 | |
Odyssey Arena | Belfast | $1,379,144 | |
Rod Laver Arena | Melbourne | $8,372,134[22] | |
Acer Arena | Sydney | $10,009,750[23] | |
CBS Canterbury Arena | Christchurch | $2,292,270[24] | |
Vector Arena | Auckland | $2,103,040 | |
Entertainment Centre | Brisbane | $6,135,710[25] | |
Burswood Dome | Perth | $5,071,110 |