2010 World Tour

The 2010 World Tour was a concert tour by rock band ZZ Top, which began in April 2010 and ended in December 2010. Like recent previous tours, it was a short outing, though for the first time in the band's career, they performed in South America, including three shows in Brazil. The band played many of their classic 1970s and 1980s hits. Critical reaction to the tour's shows was generally positive, although the absence of new material was noted. A great number of tickets were sold within a month of the tour's announcement, which prompted more dates to be added.

2010 World Tour
World tour by ZZ Top
Location
  • North America
  • South America
  • Europe
Start dateApril 23, 2010 (2010-04-23)
End dateOctober 29, 2010 (2010-10-29)
Legs4
No. of shows98
ZZ Top concert chronology
  • Double Down Live Tour
    (2009)
  • 2010 World Tour
  • Australian Tour
    (2011)

Itinerary

On December 11, 2009, it was confirmed that ZZ Top would be headlining the High Voltage Festival in July 2010.[1] The band announced five dates in South America, including three shows in Brazil;[2][3] a video message by Billy Gibbons (speaking in Spanish) was posted on the band's official website for fans in Chile.[4] Pre-sales began a month later and, according to ZZ Top's official Twitter, tickets for the May 20th show in São Paulo were sold-out. By the time the first North American leg was underway, more US concerts were announced, including festivals like Summerfest,[5] Rocklahoma,[6] and the Crossroads Guitar Festival.[7] Subsequent dates with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers in the fall were announced as well.[8] This forced the band to cancel many previously booked engagements, several of them being with the Mick Fleetwood Blues Band; shows at the Telluride Blues & Brews Festival in Colorado,[9] Kansas State Fair,[10] and Meadowbrook U.S. Cellular Pavilion in New Hampshire[11] were canceled. After touring Europe in the summer, the band returned to North America, where they toured with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. In October 2010, they made a brief stop in Europe, where the Doobie Brothers opened shows in Belgium, the Netherlands, and Norway.[12]

Development

Donny Stuart was the production manager and has been with ZZ Top for the last four decades.[13] In 1999, ZZ Top hired Toby Francis as front of house engineer, who had previously worked with Jane's Addiction and Guns N' Roses.[14] Francis left in late 2010 to work with The Smashing Pumpkins and the band hired Jamie Rephann as a replacement.[15] Jake Mann, from Clair Brothers, was the monitor engineer and has worked with the band for four years.[14] Chris Stuba was the lighting designer, working with lighting technician Bobby Dominguez and assistant lighting technician Jeff Archibeque.[13]

The sound was provided by Clair, consisting of Martin Audio products including WSX subwoofers and W8C loudspeakers, which were powered by Martin MA 2.8 and 4.2 power amplifiers.[16] Billy Gibbons and Dusty Hill did not use stage monitors or in-ear monitors; instead they relied on custom-made speaker cabinets to monitor themselves, a ritual that both Gibbons and Hill have used for years.[17] Bandit Lites provided the lighting package, including mostly Vari-Lite fixtures, with VL3000 and VL2500 spotlights, as well as VL3500 floodlights.[18] Martin Light MAC2000 floodlights, Atomic 3000 strobe lights and Color Kinetics ColorBlast 12 LED fixtures completed the lighting package.[18] The lighting was controlled by a grandMA lighting control console.[18] In 2005, the band had custom microphone stands made by John A. Douglas,[19] who designed one of several skull-themed drum kits for Frank Beard used on the tour. The stands were made from truck exhaust pipes and had color-changing LED tubes built inside. Microphones were Telefunken M80s that were chrome plated.[15]

Before beginning rehearsals for the tour, ZZ Top held a poll on their official website, asking fans to vote for their top three favorite songs.[20] The results revealed that four songs were actually added to the band's set list: "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers", "Viva Las Vegas", "Francine", and "Thunderbird".[21] The main set would include five songs from Eliminator (1983), three songs from Tres Hombres (1973), and two songs from Rio Grande Mud (1972); highlights in the show were a medley of "La Grange", "Sloppy Drunk Blues", and "Bar-B-Q". Billy Gibbons and Dusty Hill wore custom-made jackets designed by Jaime Castaneda, who has worked for Nudie Cohn and Manuel Cuevas; their jackets usually consisted of rhinestones.[22]

Concert synopsis

With the house lights down, the show began with a house music introduction. After about 50–60 seconds, the microphone stands would be lit, usually in a red color, and the band members would walk on stage. They started with a performance of "Got Me Under Pressure".[citation needed] The next song was "Waitin' for the Bus", which segued into "Jesus Just Left Chicago".[citation needed] After a performance of "Pincushion", they would play "I'm Bad, I'm Nationwide". The show continued with a 'blues hat' skit, in which Gibbons would ask for 'technicians' (one of them being Gibbons' wife) to hand him his fedora. This led into covers of "Future Blues" by Willie Brown and "Rock Me Baby" by B.B. King, followed by "Cheap Sunglasses". A snippet of "My Head's In Mississippi" was included before leading into a brief guitar solo by Gibbons and performing "I Need You Tonight". After playing a cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe", the band performed "Brown Sugar" from their 1971 debut album, along with "Party on the Patio" from El Loco (1981) and "Just Got Paid" from Rio Grande Mud. The main set ended with "Gimme All Your Lovin'", "Sharp Dressed Man", and "Legs". After a brief break, the band returned to the stage. The encore began with the "La Grange" medley, which included a cover of "Sloppy Drunk Blues" and "Bar-B-Q" from Rio Grande Mud. "Tush" always closed the show. "Viva Las Vegas" was sometimes preceded "La Grange". In addition, "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers", "Viva Las Vegas", "Francine", and "Thunderbird" were variously performed only during the first North American leg.

Tour dates

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
DateCityCountryVenueOpening act(s)AttendanceRevenue
Leg 1: North and South America
April 23, 2010TylerUnited StatesThe Oil PalaceJonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights
April 24, 2010BeaumontFord ParkEdgar Winter
Jonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights
April 25, 2010Bee CaveThe Backyard at Bee CaveJonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights
April 29, 2010West Palm BeachSunFestJonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights
White Collar Crime
April 30, 2010MelbourneMaxwell C. King Center1,939 / 1,939$128,573
May 1, 2010St. PetersburgTropicana Field34,813 / 36,973
May 4, 2010JacksonvilleMoran TheaterJonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights1,442 / 2,500$81,569
May 5, 2010ColumbusColumbus Civic Center
May 7, 2010Little RockRiverfest Amphitheatre1,930 / 3,500$104,011
May 8, 2010AtlantaChastain Park Amphitheater3,710 / 6,700$213,145
May 9, 2010TupeloBancorpSouth Center2,863 / 3,500$96,538
May 14, 2010BeltonBell County Expo Center
May 18, 2010SantiagoChileMovistar ArenaEl Cruce
Harrison Trio
May 20, 2010São PauloBrazilVia FunchalHudson Cadorini
Banda Rollemax
May 21, 2010
May 23, 2010Porto AlegrePepsi on Stage
May 26, 2010Buenos AiresArgentinaEstadio Luna Park
May 28, 2010SpeedwayUnited StatesIndianapolis Motor Speedway
May 29, 2010PryorRocklahomaCinderella
Saliva
June 5, 2010VancouverCanadaThunderbird Sports CentreWide Mouth Mason
June 6, 2010VictoriaSave-On-Foods Memorial Centre
June 8, 2010CranbrookCranbrook Recreational Complex
June 9, 2010
June 10, 2010Grande PrairieCrystal Centre
June 11, 2010EdmontonNorthern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium
June 13, 2010Medicine HatMedicine Hat Arena
June 15, 2010WinnipegMTS Centre
June 16, 2010Thunder BayThunder Bay Community Auditorium
June 19, 2010BellevilleBig Music FestCollective Soul
Finger Eleven
June 23, 2010BloomingtonUnited StatesU.S. Cellular ColiseumBackyard Tire Fire
June 24, 2010MuskegonHeritage LandingMid-Life Crisis
June 25, 2010MilwaukeeMarcus Amphitheater35,817 / 45,774$2,331,045
June 26, 2010
Leg 2: Europe
July 2, 2010SkånevikNorwaySkånevikfjordenBjørn Berge
July 3, 2010JärvenpääFinlandVanhankylänniemiJohn Lee Hooker Jr.
Eddie Cotton
July 5, 2010Monte CarloMonacoPrince's Palace of MonacoThe Stooges
PPZ Rocket
July 6, 2010ToulouseFranceZénith de ToulouseJoe Bonamassa
July 8, 2010BayonneArènes de Bayonne
July 9, 2010NîmesArena of Nîmes
July 10, 2010LocarnoSwitzerlandPiazza GrandeJeff Beck
July 12, 2010RomeItalyIppodromo delle CapannellePino Scotto
July 13, 2010LuccaPiazza NapoleoneJeff Beck
July 14, 2010PadovaVilla ContariniMaurizio Solieri Band
July 15, 2010VigevanoCastello SforzescoTower of Power
July 16, 2010Aix-les-BainsFranceLac du BourgetPete Doherty
Gogol Bordello
July 18, 2010KemptenGermanybigBOX AllgäuSiggi Schwarz
July 19, 2010StrasbourgFranceZénith de StrasbourgPhilip Sayce
July 20, 2010TienenBelgiumGrote MarktJohn Fogerty
Manzarek–Krieger
July 22, 2010NantesFranceZénith de Nantes MétropolePhilip Sayce
July 24, 2010LondonEnglandVictoria ParkHeaven & Hell
Foreigner
Leg 3: North America
July 31, 2010StillwaterUnited StatesTumbleweed Concert ArenaCorey Smith
August 1, 2010SouthavenSnowden Grove AmphitheaterYoung Guns3,958 / 10,353$87,985
August 4, 2010ClearfieldClearfield County Fair
August 7, 2010Wisconsin DellsCrystal Grand Music Theatre
August 9, 2010SturgisBuffalo Chip CampgroundBuckcherry
August 10, 2010Sioux FallsSioux Empire FairThe Lugnuts
August 13, 2010West WendoverPeppermill Wendover
August 14, 2010MurphysIronstone AmphitheatreJoan Jett & the Blackhearts
August 15, 2010Costa MesaPacific Amphitheatre
August 19, 2010AlbuquerqueLegends Theater
August 20, 2010Las VegasLas Vegas Hilton
August 21, 2010
August 22, 2010JackpotCactus Pete's
August 24, 2010LancasterAntelope Valley Fair
August 25, 2010LivermoreWente Vineyards
August 27, 2010SalemL.B. Day Comcast Amphitheatre
August 29, 2010SnoqualmieSnoqualmie Casino
September 2, 2010Avila BeachAvila Beach Golf ResortTommy Castro
September 3, 2010Mountain ViewShoreline AmphitheatreEagles of Death Metal
September 4, 2010Del MarDel Mar Racetrack
September 5, 2010LaughlinAquarius Casino Resort
September 9, 2010OrilliaCanadaCasino Rama Entertainment Centre
September 10, 2010
September 12, 2010New York CityUnited StatesBeacon TheatreMoreland and Arbuckle4,342 / 5,162$264,689
September 13, 2010
September 14, 2010RichmondNational TheaterBarrelhouse
September 16, 2010TampaSt. Pete Times Forum14,369 / 16,755$1,135,296
September 18, 2010RaleighTime Warner Cable Music Pavilion18,456 / 19,669$693,042
September 19, 2010CharlotteVerizon Wireless Amphitheater16,311 / 18,739$677,372
September 21, 2010DallasSuperpages.com Center14,320 / 18,000$787,276
September 23, 2010TulsaBOK Center12,887 / 13,222$1,055,145
September 24, 2010The WoodlandsCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion15,871 / 15,871$1,053,362
September 26, 2010PhoenixUS Airways Center
September 28, 2010Chula VistaCricket Wireless Amphitheatre
October 1, 2010Los AngelesHollywood Bowl17,415 / 17,415$1,691,714
October 2, 2010IrvineVerizon Wireless Amphitheater14,932 / 14,932$1,096,208
Leg 4: Europe
October 14, 2010GrazAustriaStadthalle Graz
October 15, 2010ZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadionThe Doobie Brothers
October 16, 2010ParisFrancePalais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy8,031 / 9,286$758,389
October 18, 2010BrusselsBelgiumForest National
October 19, 2010EnschedeNetherlandsGo Planet Expo Hall
October 21, 2010CopenhagenDenmarkForum Copenhagen
October 22, 2010GothenburgSwedenScandinavium
October 23, 2010OsloNorwayOslo Spektrum
October 24, 2010StockholmSwedenAnnexet
October 27, 2010Saint PetersburgRussiaYubileyny Sports Palace
October 29, 2010MoscowCrocus City Hall

Citations

References