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List of Queen concert tours

The British rock band Queen was well known for its diverse music style in contemporary rock. Their large sound systems, lighting rigs, innovative pyrotechnics and extravagant costumes often gave shows a theatrical nature. Artists such as Bob Geldof, George Michael, David Bowie, and Robbie Williams have expressed admiration for lead singer Freddie Mercury's stage presence.

Queen wrote certain songs, such as "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions", with the goal of audience participation. "Radio Ga Ga" came to inspire synchronized hand-clapping (this routine, originating from the song's video, was the invention of the video's director, David Mallet). This influenced Queen's appearance at Live Aid, where the 72,000-person crowd at Wembley Stadium would sing loudly and clap their hands in unison. Queen's performance at Live Aid was later voted the greatest live show of all time by a group of over 60 musicians, critics, and executives in a poll conducted by Channel 4.[1]

1970s

Queen played approximately 700 live performances during their career with roughly two-thirds during the 1970s. Their early performances were generally hard rock, but the band developed a noticeably more pop-oriented sound in later years. Many of their future trademarks first appeared in these early shows, although some could be traced back to the members' previous bands and artistic outlets (e.g., Smile, Ibex later renamed as Wreckage, and Sour Milk Sea).

Freddie Mercury often dressed in a flamboyant manner and acted with camp, while dry ice and multi-coloured lights were used. During the concerts, it was typical for both Brian May and Roger Taylor to have impromptu, instrumental interludes and for Mercury to engage in a crowd 'shout-along' whereas it was traditional for Taylor to sing one song. Brian May and John Deacon sang backup vocals[citation needed]. Other distinguishable trademarks were Mercury's microphone, which featured only the upper part of the stand with no base (which allegedly came about while Mercury was with "Wreckage" during which the bottom of his stand accidentally broke off), a grand piano, and May's hand-built electric guitar, the Red Special. The lengthy guitar solo by May showcased his use of a multiple-delay effect, helping create a layered atmosphere. Rarely, Queen would host a non-member on stage with them, the most notable being keyboardist Spike Edney who performed with the band during the 1980s. A semi-informal medley of 1950s rock 'n' roll songs (especially "Big Spender" and "Jailhouse Rock") was also a staple and usually formed the backbone of an encore. The band's logo, designed by Mercury shortly before the release of the first album, is made up of the band's star signs and was usually displayed on the front of Taylor's bass drum during their early tours. Some stage costumes worn by Mercury and May on their earliest tours and a few subsequent tours were created by fashion designer Zandra Rhodes.

The concert duration and set-list for each Queen show progressed significantly during its career, eventually leading to shows exceeding two hours. Queen performed most of the songs released on their studio albums during concerts. So far, two shows have been officially released as concert videos from this era, which are the November 1974 show at the Rainbow and the Christmas Eve 1975 show at the Hammersmith Odeon.

Lisa Marie Presley stated that the first rock concert she attended was by Queen in Los Angeles in the late 70s. After the show, she gave Mercury a scarf that belonged to her late father.[2]

Queen – Queen II Tours

With the release of their first two albums Queen & Queen II, the band began live performing in earnest, essentially following the traditional 'album-tour' cycle throughout the 70s. The embryonic Queen played numerous gigs in and around London in the early seventies, but evidence suggests that its first performance was on 27 June 1970 at Truro in England.[3] The band's first major step toward becoming a recognized live act came when Queen was a support act to Mott the Hoople on its UK tour. Queen's performances consistently received an enthusiastic reception from audiences. This led to Mott the Hoople inviting Queen to be its support act for Hoople's US tour. Here, the band was able to hone its on-stage presentations in front of large crowds, try out different songs and arrangements, and gain experience with state-of-the-art light and sound systems. The Queen song "Now I'm Here" was written by Brian May as a tribute to Mott The Hoople.

Sheer Heart Attack Tour

The year 1974 had started with their first trip outside of Europe and an appearance at the Sunbury Music Festival in Australia. Although the band headlined the event on 2 February, their appearance the next day was canceled. In March, the band commenced on their first headlining tour of the United Kingdom to promote their new album Queen II, and then embark on their first trip to the USA. Once again, they supported Mott The Hoople on a four-week tour beginning in April. The band paid more attention to their look on stage and employed the services of Zandra Rhodes to design some of their costumes, such as Freddie Mercury and Brian May's white and black wingsuits. Queen's supporting stint came to an abrupt halt, however, when May collapsed from hepatitis after the New York show on 11 May, and they all had to fly home so that he could recover.

The band were soon back on the road and commenced their second tour as the headlining act, with nineteen concerts at eighteen different venues around the UK. The band rotated supporting acts, and the setlist contained much of the material from the new album Sheer Heart Attack. With more money to invest in a new stage show, the band wore new costumes for this tour and added an additional lighting rig, complete with state of the art stage effects. To conclude Queen's touring for the year, they extended the leg with mainland European shows, consisting of ten shows in six countries, performing over a two-and-a-half-week period. The year 1975 started with the American leg of the tour, before transferring to Japan. The tour would have been longer, but an accident involving the truck that transported their equipment meant it was not able to reach the remaining scheduled venues, which would have been a second American leg for the tour.[4] In late February, on the North American tour, a handful of shows were cancelled due to Freddie Mercury's voice failing on him. After several doctor's visits, he was diagnosed with vocal fold nodules, which would impact him for the rest of his life. With this, several more shows were cancelled to allow for a more lenient touring schedule for his voice.

There were slight differences between the European, North American and Japanese sets. The Japanese shows were a bit longer; the band added Doing All Right to the set, extended Killer Queen to include the second verse, and added See What A Fool I've Been to the end of some shows as well as reviving Hangman on the final night of the tour, almost certainly due to the warm welcome they received from the Japanese fans.[5] Additionally, for the North American leg, Seven Seas of Rhye was dropped from the setlist due to it picking up little attention from listeners.

The band planned to return to the United States in late 1975 to play arena shows, however these were all cancelled, most likely due to Queen wanting to distance themselves from Trident and switching managers to John Reid. The shows most likely wouldn't have been profitable, seeing as Queen didn't tour arenas in the United States until 1977.

A Night at the Opera Tour

The tour marked the debut of "Bohemian Rhapsody", which would be played at every Queen gig thereafter (except a 1984 gig in Sun City but because of other reason).

The DVD A Night at the Odeon is taken from the Christmas Eve concert at the Hammersmith Odeon. "It's quite something to watch", said Brian May. "We were just a four-piece, but we made a lot of noise. I'm quite shocked at how good it was. We were incredibly tight and, at the same time – because we knew each other so well – very loose in terms of improvisation."[6]

Summer Gigs 1976

Queen played four shows during a short UK tour during September 1976. Beginning on 1 September, Queen played in Edinburgh, as well as on the following night on 2 September. On 10 September, they played in Cardiff, which was Queen's second and final show in the city, having played there on the previous tour in 1975.

The final Queen show of the year was in Hyde Park, performed on 18 September after the hot summer of 1976. The Hyde Park gig was in fact a free concert, which drew in a crowd of about 180,000. The free concert was organised by Richard Branson, an entrepreneur at the time.

The Hyde Park show has several audio sources available, including a soundboard source. The only other concert on the tour with available audio is the second Edinburgh concert, which has an audience recording in circulation.

This tour features the debut performances of "You Take My Breath Away", "'39" and "Tie Your Mother Down" (Tie Your Mother Down was not played at Hyde Park due to limited time), about 3 months before A Day At The Races was released.

A Day at the Races Tour

News of the World

Jazz

Crazy Tour

1980s

The Game Tour

Hot Space Tour

The Works Tour

Live Aid

The performance at Live Aid at Wembley Stadium in 1985 is often regarded[7] as Queen's greatest single live performance. Their set lasted 21 minutes and consisted of a version of "Bohemian Rhapsody" (ballad section and guitar solo) slightly sped up in lyrics, "Radio Ga Ga", a crowd singalong, "Hammer to Fall", "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", "We Will Rock You" (1st verse), and "We Are the Champions". Mercury and May returned later on to perform a version of "Is This the World We Created?" The band were unenthusiastic about performing when they were first approached by Bob Geldof, but the acclaim they received after their performance led to them writing, collectively, the song "One Vision" which was then released as a single.

The Magic Tour

1990s

Queen did not perform any concerts in their original line-up in the 1990s. After Freddie Mercury's death in November 1991, Queen organised The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert and took place in April 1992 at Wembley Stadium. The three remaining members (in one of the few concerts they played together after Mercury's death) and a host of special guests staged a lengthy and emotional show billed as the Concert For AIDS Awareness (as well as Concert for Life) that was televised worldwide. Queen appeared only sporadically following the concert. Not all appearances featured all three surviving members. The final occasion where all remaining members of Queen performed on stage was in January 1997 at Paris in France for the world premiere of Bejart Ballet For Life. Joining the surviving trio were Spike Edney on keyboards/backing-vocals and Elton John who sang lead vocals. They only performed one song, namely "The Show Must Go On" which was one of the two songs they had performed together at The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, and this was the last reported appearance of John Deacon on stage.

Date[8] City Country Venue Notes
20 April 1992 London England Wembley Stadium The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert
18 September 1993 Midhurst Cowdray Park Festival appearance, featured only Taylor and Deacon
17 January 1997 Paris France Theatre National de Chaillot Queen + Elton John, last appearance of John Deacon
25 November 1999 London England Brixton Academy May and Taylor appearance at a Foo Fighters concert

2000s

Following Freddie Mercury's death and John Deacon's retirement, May and Taylor continued to make sporadic live appearances in addition to their long-term collaboration with Paul Rodgers.

One-off performances

Date[8] City Country Venue Notes
9 July 2000 London England Hyde Park Queen + Five
27 September 2000 Millennium Dome Queen + Five
19 March 2001 New York United States Waldorf Astoria Hotel Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction
24 November 2001 London England Ocean Club Fan Club concert for 10th anniversary of Mercuy's death
30 April 2002 Amsterdam The Netherlands Museum Square Birthday party for Dutch Queen
14 May 2002 London England Astoria Theater With the cast of We Will Rock You
3 June 2002 Buckingham Palace Queen's Jubilee
18 October 2002 Los Angeles United States Club 1650
16 November 2002 London England Children in Need With the cast of We Will Rock You
14 May 2003 Billingsgate Market
27 May 2003 Modena Italy Parco Novi Sad With Luciano Pavarotti and Zucchero Fornaciari
12 June 2003 New York United States Marriott Marquis Hotel Songwriter's Hall of Fame Induction
7 August 2003 Melbourne Australia Regent Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You
29 November 2003 Cape Town South Africa Green Point Stadium 46664 charity concert
8 September 2004 Las Vegas United States Paris Hotel With the cast of We Will Rock You
9 October 2004 Sydney Australia Lyric Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You
16 October 2004 Moscow Russia State Kremlin Palace Russian Music Awards, with the cast of We Will Rock You
11 November 2004 London England Hackney Empire Hall of Fame Induction
12 December 2004 Cologne Germany Flora With the cast of We Will Rock You
12 January 2005 London England Dominion Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You
17 June 2006 Hyde Park Appearance at a Foo Fighters concert
3 September 2006 Dominion Theatre Freddie Mercury 60th birthday celebration, with the cast of We Will Rock You

Queen + Paul Rodgers Tour

Rock the Cosmos Tour

2010s

Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2012

Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2014–2015

Queen + Adam Lambert 2016 Summer Festival Tour

Queen + Adam Lambert Tour 2017–2018

The Rhapsody Tour

Queen's line-up (live)

Queen
(1970–1971)
Queen
(1971–1981)
Queen
(1982–1986)

With

Queen +
(1992–1997)

With

Queen +
(1997–present)

With

Queen + Paul Rodgers
(2005–2009)

With

Queen + Adam Lambert
(2011–2017)

With

Queen + Adam Lambert
(2017–present)

With

See also

References

  1. ^ BBC (9 November 2005). "Queen win greatest live gig poll". BBC News. Retrieved 12 July 2006.
  2. ^ [1] 21 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Chapman, Phil (1 October 2017). The Dead Straight Guide to Queen. This Day In Music Books. ISBN 978-1-78759-050-2.
  4. ^ . Queen Official Website. February 2016. Archived from the original on 21 February 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  5. ^ "Queen live on tour: Sheer Heart Attack". Queen Concerts. January 2005. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  6. ^ "Queen: Living Legends 2015", Classic Rock #217, December 2015, p15
  7. ^ "Queen: their finest moment at Live Aid". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  8. ^ a b "Queen live concertography: Brian + Roger + ?". Queen Concerts. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  9. ^ "Queen News October 2008". Brianmay.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.

Further reading

  • Greg Brooks, Chris Charlesworth. Queen Live: A Concert Documentary. London: Omnibus Press, 1995. ISBN 0-7119-4814-3

list, queen, concert, tours, british, rock, band, queen, well, known, diverse, music, style, contemporary, rock, their, large, sound, systems, lighting, rigs, innovative, pyrotechnics, extravagant, costumes, often, gave, shows, theatrical, nature, artists, suc. The British rock band Queen was well known for its diverse music style in contemporary rock Their large sound systems lighting rigs innovative pyrotechnics and extravagant costumes often gave shows a theatrical nature Artists such as Bob Geldof George Michael David Bowie and Robbie Williams have expressed admiration for lead singer Freddie Mercury s stage presence Queen wrote certain songs such as We Will Rock You and We Are the Champions with the goal of audience participation Radio Ga Ga came to inspire synchronized hand clapping this routine originating from the song s video was the invention of the video s director David Mallet This influenced Queen s appearance at Live Aid where the 72 000 person crowd at Wembley Stadium would sing loudly and clap their hands in unison Queen s performance at Live Aid was later voted the greatest live show of all time by a group of over 60 musicians critics and executives in a poll conducted by Channel 4 1 Contents 1 1970s 1 1 Queen Queen II Tours 1 2 Sheer Heart Attack Tour 1 3 A Night at the Opera Tour 1 4 Summer Gigs 1976 1 5 A Day at the Races Tour 1 6 News of the World 1 7 Jazz 1 8 Crazy Tour 2 1980s 2 1 The Game Tour 2 2 Hot Space Tour 2 3 The Works Tour 2 4 Live Aid 2 5 The Magic Tour 3 1990s 4 2000s 4 1 Queen Paul Rodgers Tour 4 2 Rock the Cosmos Tour 5 2010s 5 1 Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2012 5 2 Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2014 2015 5 3 Queen Adam Lambert 2016 Summer Festival Tour 5 4 Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2017 2018 5 5 The Rhapsody Tour 6 Queen s line up live 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading1970s EditQueen played approximately 700 live performances during their career with roughly two thirds during the 1970s Their early performances were generally hard rock but the band developed a noticeably more pop oriented sound in later years Many of their future trademarks first appeared in these early shows although some could be traced back to the members previous bands and artistic outlets e g Smile Ibex later renamed as Wreckage and Sour Milk Sea Freddie Mercury often dressed in a flamboyant manner and acted with camp while dry ice and multi coloured lights were used During the concerts it was typical for both Brian May and Roger Taylor to have impromptu instrumental interludes and for Mercury to engage in a crowd shout along whereas it was traditional for Taylor to sing one song Brian May and John Deacon sang backup vocals citation needed Other distinguishable trademarks were Mercury s microphone which featured only the upper part of the stand with no base which allegedly came about while Mercury was with Wreckage during which the bottom of his stand accidentally broke off a grand piano and May s hand built electric guitar the Red Special The lengthy guitar solo by May showcased his use of a multiple delay effect helping create a layered atmosphere Rarely Queen would host a non member on stage with them the most notable being keyboardist Spike Edney who performed with the band during the 1980s A semi informal medley of 1950s rock n roll songs especially Big Spender and Jailhouse Rock was also a staple and usually formed the backbone of an encore The band s logo designed by Mercury shortly before the release of the first album is made up of the band s star signs and was usually displayed on the front of Taylor s bass drum during their early tours Some stage costumes worn by Mercury and May on their earliest tours and a few subsequent tours were created by fashion designer Zandra Rhodes The concert duration and set list for each Queen show progressed significantly during its career eventually leading to shows exceeding two hours Queen performed most of the songs released on their studio albums during concerts So far two shows have been officially released as concert videos from this era which are the November 1974 show at the Rainbow and the Christmas Eve 1975 show at the Hammersmith Odeon Lisa Marie Presley stated that the first rock concert she attended was by Queen in Los Angeles in the late 70s After the show she gave Mercury a scarf that belonged to her late father 2 Queen Queen II Tours Edit With the release of their first two albums Queen amp Queen II the band began live performing in earnest essentially following the traditional album tour cycle throughout the 70s The embryonic Queen played numerous gigs in and around London in the early seventies but evidence suggests that its first performance was on 27 June 1970 at Truro in England 3 The band s first major step toward becoming a recognized live act came when Queen was a support act to Mott the Hoople on its UK tour Queen s performances consistently received an enthusiastic reception from audiences This led to Mott the Hoople inviting Queen to be its support act for Hoople s US tour Here the band was able to hone its on stage presentations in front of large crowds try out different songs and arrangements and gain experience with state of the art light and sound systems The Queen song Now I m Here was written by Brian May as a tribute to Mott The Hoople Sheer Heart Attack Tour Edit The year 1974 had started with their first trip outside of Europe and an appearance at the Sunbury Music Festival in Australia Although the band headlined the event on 2 February their appearance the next day was canceled In March the band commenced on their first headlining tour of the United Kingdom to promote their new album Queen II and then embark on their first trip to the USA Once again they supported Mott The Hoople on a four week tour beginning in April The band paid more attention to their look on stage and employed the services of Zandra Rhodes to design some of their costumes such as Freddie Mercury and Brian May s white and black wingsuits Queen s supporting stint came to an abrupt halt however when May collapsed from hepatitis after the New York show on 11 May and they all had to fly home so that he could recover The band were soon back on the road and commenced their second tour as the headlining act with nineteen concerts at eighteen different venues around the UK The band rotated supporting acts and the setlist contained much of the material from the new album Sheer Heart Attack With more money to invest in a new stage show the band wore new costumes for this tour and added an additional lighting rig complete with state of the art stage effects To conclude Queen s touring for the year they extended the leg with mainland European shows consisting of ten shows in six countries performing over a two and a half week period The year 1975 started with the American leg of the tour before transferring to Japan The tour would have been longer but an accident involving the truck that transported their equipment meant it was not able to reach the remaining scheduled venues which would have been a second American leg for the tour 4 In late February on the North American tour a handful of shows were cancelled due to Freddie Mercury s voice failing on him After several doctor s visits he was diagnosed with vocal fold nodules which would impact him for the rest of his life With this several more shows were cancelled to allow for a more lenient touring schedule for his voice There were slight differences between the European North American and Japanese sets The Japanese shows were a bit longer the band added Doing All Right to the set extended Killer Queen to include the second verse and added See What A Fool I ve Been to the end of some shows as well as reviving Hangman on the final night of the tour almost certainly due to the warm welcome they received from the Japanese fans 5 Additionally for the North American leg Seven Seas of Rhye was dropped from the setlist due to it picking up little attention from listeners The band planned to return to the United States in late 1975 to play arena shows however these were all cancelled most likely due to Queen wanting to distance themselves from Trident and switching managers to John Reid The shows most likely wouldn t have been profitable seeing as Queen didn t tour arenas in the United States until 1977 A Night at the Opera Tour Edit The tour marked the debut of Bohemian Rhapsody which would be played at every Queen gig thereafter except a 1984 gig in Sun City but because of other reason The DVD A Night at the Odeon is taken from the Christmas Eve concert at the Hammersmith Odeon It s quite something to watch said Brian May We were just a four piece but we made a lot of noise I m quite shocked at how good it was We were incredibly tight and at the same time because we knew each other so well very loose in terms of improvisation 6 Summer Gigs 1976 Edit Queen played four shows during a short UK tour during September 1976 Beginning on 1 September Queen played in Edinburgh as well as on the following night on 2 September On 10 September they played in Cardiff which was Queen s second and final show in the city having played there on the previous tour in 1975 The final Queen show of the year was in Hyde Park performed on 18 September after the hot summer of 1976 The Hyde Park gig was in fact a free concert which drew in a crowd of about 180 000 The free concert was organised by Richard Branson an entrepreneur at the time The Hyde Park show has several audio sources available including a soundboard source The only other concert on the tour with available audio is the second Edinburgh concert which has an audience recording in circulation This tour features the debut performances of You Take My Breath Away 39 and Tie Your Mother Down Tie Your Mother Down was not played at Hyde Park due to limited time about 3 months before A Day At The Races was released A Day at the Races Tour Edit Main article A Day at the Races Tour News of the World Edit Main article News of the World Tour Jazz Edit Main article Jazz Tour Crazy Tour Edit Main article Crazy Tour1980s EditThe Game Tour Edit Main article The Game Tour Hot Space Tour Edit Main article Hot Space Tour The Works Tour Edit Main article The Works Tour Live Aid Edit Main article Live AidThe performance at Live Aid at Wembley Stadium in 1985 is often regarded 7 as Queen s greatest single live performance Their set lasted 21 minutes and consisted of a version of Bohemian Rhapsody ballad section and guitar solo slightly sped up in lyrics Radio Ga Ga a crowd singalong Hammer to Fall Crazy Little Thing Called Love We Will Rock You 1st verse and We Are the Champions Mercury and May returned later on to perform a version of Is This the World We Created The band were unenthusiastic about performing when they were first approached by Bob Geldof but the acclaim they received after their performance led to them writing collectively the song One Vision which was then released as a single The Magic Tour Edit Main article Magic Tour Queen 1990s EditQueen did not perform any concerts in their original line up in the 1990s After Freddie Mercury s death in November 1991 Queen organised The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert and took place in April 1992 at Wembley Stadium The three remaining members in one of the few concerts they played together after Mercury s death and a host of special guests staged a lengthy and emotional show billed as the Concert For AIDS Awareness as well as Concert for Life that was televised worldwide Queen appeared only sporadically following the concert Not all appearances featured all three surviving members The final occasion where all remaining members of Queen performed on stage was in January 1997 at Paris in France for the world premiere of Bejart Ballet For Life Joining the surviving trio were Spike Edney on keyboards backing vocals and Elton John who sang lead vocals They only performed one song namely The Show Must Go On which was one of the two songs they had performed together at The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert and this was the last reported appearance of John Deacon on stage Date 8 City Country Venue Notes20 April 1992 London England Wembley Stadium The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert18 September 1993 Midhurst Cowdray Park Festival appearance featured only Taylor and Deacon17 January 1997 Paris France Theatre National de Chaillot Queen Elton John last appearance of John Deacon25 November 1999 London England Brixton Academy May and Taylor appearance at a Foo Fighters concert2000s EditFollowing Freddie Mercury s death and John Deacon s retirement May and Taylor continued to make sporadic live appearances in addition to their long term collaboration with Paul Rodgers One off performances Date 8 City Country Venue Notes9 July 2000 London England Hyde Park Queen Five27 September 2000 Millennium Dome Queen Five19 March 2001 New York United States Waldorf Astoria Hotel Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction24 November 2001 London England Ocean Club Fan Club concert for 10th anniversary of Mercuy s death30 April 2002 Amsterdam The Netherlands Museum Square Birthday party for Dutch Queen14 May 2002 London England Astoria Theater With the cast of We Will Rock You3 June 2002 Buckingham Palace Queen s Jubilee18 October 2002 Los Angeles United States Club 165016 November 2002 London England Children in Need With the cast of We Will Rock You14 May 2003 Billingsgate Market27 May 2003 Modena Italy Parco Novi Sad With Luciano Pavarotti and Zucchero Fornaciari12 June 2003 New York United States Marriott Marquis Hotel Songwriter s Hall of Fame Induction7 August 2003 Melbourne Australia Regent Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You29 November 2003 Cape Town South Africa Green Point Stadium 46664 charity concert8 September 2004 Las Vegas United States Paris Hotel With the cast of We Will Rock You9 October 2004 Sydney Australia Lyric Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You16 October 2004 Moscow Russia State Kremlin Palace Russian Music Awards with the cast of We Will Rock You11 November 2004 London England Hackney Empire Hall of Fame Induction12 December 2004 Cologne Germany Flora With the cast of We Will Rock You12 January 2005 London England Dominion Theatre With the cast of We Will Rock You17 June 2006 Hyde Park Appearance at a Foo Fighters concert3 September 2006 Dominion Theatre Freddie Mercury 60th birthday celebration with the cast of We Will Rock YouQueen Paul Rodgers Tour Edit Main article Queen Paul Rodgers Tour Rock the Cosmos Tour Edit Main article Rock the Cosmos Tour2010s EditQueen Adam Lambert Tour 2012 Edit Main article Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2012 Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2014 2015 Edit Main article Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2014 2015 Queen Adam Lambert 2016 Summer Festival Tour Edit Main article Queen Adam Lambert 2016 Summer Festival Tour Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2017 2018 Edit Main article Queen Adam Lambert Tour 2017 2018 The Rhapsody Tour Edit Main article The Rhapsody TourQueen s line up live EditQueen 1970 1971 Freddie Mercury lead vocals piano Brian May guitar vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals Mike Grose bass guitar April July 1970 Barry Mitchell bass guitar August 1970 January 1971 Doug Bogie bass guitar February 1971 Queen 1971 1981 Freddie Mercury lead vocals piano keyboards rhythm guitar Brian May guitar keyboards piano vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals John Deacon bass guitar occasional vocalsQueen 1982 1986 Freddie Mercury lead vocals piano keyboards rhythm guitar Brian May guitar keyboards piano vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals John Deacon bass guitar guitar occasional vocalsWith Morgan Fisher keyboards piano April June 1982 Fred Mandel keyboards piano July November 1982 Spike Edney keyboards piano rhythm guitar backing vocals 1984 1986 Queen 1992 1997 Brian May guitar keyboards piano vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals John Deacon bass guitar occasional vocalsWith Spike Edney keyboards piano guitar backing vocals and various others guestsQueen 1997 present Brian May guitar keyboards piano vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocalsWith Spike Edney keyboards piano guitar backing vocals David Grosman bass guitar occasional backing vocals 1998 2004 Danny Miranda bass guitar backing vocals 2005 2009 Neil Fairclough bass guitar backing vocals 2009 present and various others guestsQueen Paul Rodgers 2005 2009 Brian May guitar vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals Paul Rodgers lead vocals guitar piano harmonicaWith Spike Edney keyboards accordion backing vocals Jamie Moses rhythm guitar backing vocals Danny Miranda bass guitar backing vocals Neil Murray bass guitar 14 amp 16 October 2008 only 9 Queen Adam Lambert 2011 2017 Brian May guitar vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals Adam Lambert lead vocalsWith Spike Edney keyboards backing vocals Rufus Tiger Taylor percussion drums backing vocals Neil Fairclough bass guitar backing vocalsQueen Adam Lambert 2017 present Brian May guitar vocals Roger Taylor drums percussion vocals Adam Lambert lead vocalsWith Spike Edney keyboards backing vocals Neil Fairclough bass guitar backing vocals Tyler Warren percussion drums backing vocalsSee also EditConcerts for the People of Kampuchea Rock in Rio Live Aid The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert Party at the Palace 46664 ConcertsReferences Edit BBC 9 November 2005 Queen win greatest live gig poll BBC News Retrieved 12 July 2006 1 Archived 21 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine Chapman Phil 1 October 2017 The Dead Straight Guide to Queen This Day In Music Books ISBN 978 1 78759 050 2 Live 1974 Queen Official Website February 2016 Archived from the original on 21 February 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2012 Queen live on tour Sheer Heart Attack Queen Concerts January 2005 Retrieved 22 February 2012 Queen Living Legends 2015 Classic Rock 217 December 2015 p15 Queen their finest moment at Live Aid Telegraph co uk Retrieved 25 July 2017 a b Queen live concertography Brian Roger Queen Concerts Retrieved 25 July 2017 Queen News October 2008 Brianmay com Retrieved 19 May 2014 Further reading EditGreg Brooks Chris Charlesworth Queen Live A Concert Documentary London Omnibus Press 1995 ISBN 0 7119 4814 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Queen concert tours amp oldid 1164703303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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