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Wikipedia

The Wall Live (2010–2013)

The Wall Live was a worldwide[1] concert tour by Roger Waters, formerly of Pink Floyd.[2][3][4] The tour is the first time the Pink Floyd album The Wall has been performed in its entirety by the band or any of its former members since Waters performed the album live in Berlin 21 July 1990. The first leg of the tour grossed in North America over $89.5 million from 56 concerts. It was the second-highest-grossing concert tour in North America in 2010 and the third-highest-grossing concert tour worldwide as of 2013.[5] In 2013, the tour held the record for being the highest-grossing tour for a solo musician, surpassing the previous record holder, Madonna (the record was later eclipsed by Ed Sheeran).[6] It is currently the 7th highest-grossing tour of all-time.

The Wall Live
Tour by Roger Waters
Location
  • North America
  • Europe
  • Oceania
  • South America
Associated albumThe Wall
Start date15 September 2010
End date21 September 2013
Legs6
No. of shows
  • 98 in North America
  • 91 in Europe
  • 15 in Oceania
  • 15 in South America
  • 219 in total
Box officeUS$ 458.6 million (US$ 834.2 million in 2023 dollars)
Roger Waters concert chronology

The tour opened on 15 September 2010 in Toronto, and moved through North America before ending the first leg of the tour in Mexico City, 21 December 2010. The European tour began 21 March 2011 in Lisbon, Portugal, and ended 12 July 2011 in Athens, Greece. In 2012, the tour included Australia, New Zealand, and South America, resuming 27 January in Perth, and ending 1 April 2012 in São Paulo.[7] It was confirmed by Waters during an interview with Jimmy Fallon that he would be returning to North America for yet another leg of The Wall tour, beginning 27 April 2012 in Mexico City and ending 21 July 2012 in Quebec City on the Plains of Abraham, a former battlefield.[8][9] This last show in Quebec City was the second largest outdoor production of "The Wall" ever – the largest being the Live in Berlin show in 1990.[10] The tour returned to European stadiums again in summer 2013.[11] After the 21 September 2013 Paris show he claimed on stage this to be possibly the last The Wall show, confirming rumours that there will be no further tour dates planned for 2014. Waters, a pacifist, incorporated an increased emphasis on the show's anti-war message, and he requested fans to send him pictures of loved ones who have died as a result of wars.[12]

Snowy White[13] (who was a session and tour musician with Pink Floyd in the 1970s, and was in the tour band for the original 1980–81 tour for The Wall) and Dave Kilminster[14] were the first musicians confirmed to be in Waters's touring band. Kipp Lennon, Mark Lennon and Michael Lennon of the band Venice were confirmed for backing vocal duties,[15] but Michael Lennon withdrew from the band due to rehearsal difficulties. He was replaced by cousin Pat Lennon, also of Venice. On 23 April, the full band line-up was announced on Roger Waters's Facebook page. Following a charity gig Waters performed with his former Pink Floyd bandmates on 10 July 2010,[16] he confirmed that David Gilmour would guest on "Comfortably Numb" at one show during the tour. Gilmour appeared at the 12 May 2011 show at The O2, London playing lead guitar on "Comfortably Numb" and mandolin on "Outside the Wall", on which they were also joined by Nick Mason on tambourine.

On 24 August 2010, The Times Leader newspaper of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, reported that Waters and company were in town rehearsing for the tour at the Mohegan Sun Arena. This venue previously hosted pre-tour rehearsals and pre-tour concerts for such performers as Elton John, the Simon & Garfunkel "Old Friends" Reunion Tour in 2003 and AC/DC rehearsals in 2008 before the band's world tour.[17] There were no rehearsals or performances; the crew used the occasion to work out technical details. On 12 September 2010, there was a rehearsal performance at the Izod Center in East Rutherford, New Jersey, for invited guests.[18]

In 2014 Waters directed a documentary about the tour titled Roger Waters: The Wall. The film incorporated footage from the concerts in Quebec City and Athens. It premiered in the Special Presentations section of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.[19]

Tour band edit

 
The Roger Waters Band, Kansas City, 30 October 2010 (from left to right, Kilminster, White, Joyce, Pat Lennon, Mark Lennon, Kip Lennon, Wyckoff, Roger Waters, Smith, Harry Waters, Carin, Broad). Behind the band is the "rubble" from the destroyed wall

The following musicians have played on the tour:[20]

  • Roger Waters – bass, lead vocals, acoustic guitar, trumpet on "Outside the Wall"
  • G. E. Smith – guitars, bass, mandolin on "Outside the Wall"
  • Dave Kilminster – guitars, banjo on "Outside the Wall", bass on "Mother"
  • Snowy White – guitars, bass on "Goodbye Blue Sky"
  • Graham Broad – drums, percussion, ukulele on "Outside the Wall"
  • Jon Carin – keyboards, lap steel guitar, programming, high-strung guitar on "Comfortably Numb", acoustic guitar on "Outside The Wall", electric guitar on "Run Like Hell", "Bring The Boys Back Home", "Comfortably Numb" and "Brick 3"
  • Harry Waters – Hammond organ, keyboards, accordion on "Outside the Wall"
  • Robbie Wyckoff – lead vocals (songs or parts of songs originally sung by David Gilmour), backing vocals, percussion
  • Jon Joyce – backing vocals, percussion
  • Kipp Lennon – backing vocals, percussion
  • Mark Lennon – backing vocals, percussion
  • Pat Lennon – backing vocals, percussion

with:

  • David Gilmour – guest vocals, guitar and mandolin at Waters' London O2 show, 12 May 2011.
  • Nick Mason – guest tambourine at Waters' London O2 show, 12 May 2011.

Concert overview edit

Pre-show edit

 
The schoolmaster puppet in Kansas City, 30 October 2010

During the pre-show, in the American part of the tour, a man who appears to be homeless pushes a shopping cart around the aisles around the floor seats. He wears a flannel jacket and a cowboy hat, and makes small talk with the fans as he makes his way around the floor. His cart is full of empty soda cans and rubbish and a sign that reads different sayings that vary from show to show, including, "No thought control" on one side and, "Homeless people need money for booze and hookers" on the other. His cart also contains the original stuffed "Pink" doll from 1979.

The pre-show audio was 20 minutes of several clips from television sitcoms and cartoons like Family Guy as well as comedy routines from George Carlin. After the first leg of the North American tour, the sound collage was dropped and replaced with 20 minutes of music in the following order and has been the same for every show since, "Mother" by John Lennon, "Masters of War" by Bob Dylan, "A Change Is Gonna Come" by Sam Cooke, "Imagine" by John Lennon, "Strange Fruit" by Billie Holiday, and "People Get Ready" by The Impressions.

The show edit

During the homeless man's tour through the crowd, the pre-show music stops and the sounds of channel surfing can be heard. When the homeless man reaches the stage, the climax of the movie Spartacus is played. A spotlight shines on him and his cart as the sounds of the slaves each claiming to be Spartacus are heard. After which, the man throws "Pink" onto the stage.

For the European shows and all shows thereafter, the homeless man was replaced with two "soldiers", bearing the crossed hammer uniform, who bring the "Pink" puppet onto the stage and hold him throughout the Spartacus clip, before dumping him on the ground and marching off the stage.

As he does this, the audio transitions to a trumpet (later revealed to be Roger Waters) playing the melody of "Outside the Wall".[2] The trumpet playing continues unaccompanied for about a minute, until the band (unseen) unexpectedly bursts into action with "In the Flesh?". Fireworks explode across the stage during the opening chords and stage hands with 'marching hammers' arm bands and flags rise up above the band on lifts. Around mid-song, Waters emerges from the back of the stage, dressed in black. During the climax of the song, a scaled down Stuka Dive Bomber, suspended by a guide wire, flies into the wall and explodes. During "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" there is a giant inflated puppet schoolmaster, an icon from the original show. Local school children are brought out onto the stage to lip-sync and dance. From the Berlin 16 June show onwards, Waters sings an acoustic reprise of "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" with lyrics referring to the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes before finally greeting the audience and telling them about the filming of the original Wall Tour shows. He then sings "Mother" to a video of him playing the song from the original 1980 tour. He refers to the video as "miserable little Roger." A giant mother blow-up designed on the look of the animated version is featured as well. The song has more of a political message than before, the words "Big Brother Is Watching You" are written on the wall, with the "Br" crossed off and replaced with an "M". After the line "Mother, should I trust the government?" the words "No fucking way" are projected on the wall, as well as a local translation in non-English speaking countries.

The initial projections shown during "Goodbye Blue Sky" caused some controversy. During the song, aeroplanes are shown dropping bombs shaped like Latin crosses, hammer and sickles, dollar signs, star and crescents, Stars of David, the Shell logo, and the Mercedes-Benz logo, with the addition of the McDonald's logo in later shows. The plane dropping dollar signs appeared directly after the plane dropping the Star of David. Although Waters said in Rolling Stone that there was no relevance to the order of the bombs, he changed the order after Abraham Foxman, president of the Anti-Defamation League, complained.[21] Waters stated, "Contrary to Mr Foxman's assertion, there are no hidden meanings in the order or juxtaposition of these symbols."[22] These visuals were changed at Waters' request for all future shows, to avoid any sensitive juxtapositions of the symbols used in the video. At the first show of the tour, while these symbols dropped from the plane they also dropped from the ceiling of the Air Canada Centre in little cut-out shapes of confetti. During the song "Don't Leave Me Now" the production features a giant wife puppet similar in design and execution as the Schoolmaster. During the first half on the show, the wall is slowly built up brick by brick and as with the eighties tour, an instrumental called "The Last Few Bricks" that doesn't appear on the original album is played to give the stage hands extra time to build the wall. At the end of "Goodbye Cruel World", the last brick is put in place and the wall is completed across the stage. An intermission follows with photos and short bios of people lost in conflicts are projected on the wall.

 
Waters performing in front of The Wall during the guitar solo to "Comfortably Numb"

The second act begins with "Hey You" and is played with minimal visuals on the wall. The band performs, now hidden from the audience's view, from behind the wall. For the acoustic guitar solo piece "Is There Anybody Out There?" a brick is removed so that guitarists Dave Kilminster and G.E. Smith are visible. As "Nobody Home" begins, a section folds out of the wall revealing a small mock hotel room complete with a television, chair, lamp and unmade bed. Waters, in character as "Pink", sings the song while seated on a comfy chair that is on a platform extending from the wall. During "Vera" images of Vera Lynn are displayed on the wall, along with videos of young children being reunited with their veteran fathers. "Bring the Boys Back Home" features Dwight D. Eisenhower's American Society of Newspaper Editors speech. During "Comfortably Numb", Robbie Wyckoff and Dave Kilminster stand on top of the wall as David Gilmour did in the original tour – a performance reprised by Gilmour himself during a one-off appearance at the London O2 show on 12 May 2011. At the end of the song, the projection of the wall explodes and cinematic pillars rise.

The band plays "The Show Must Go On" dressed in black fascist attire complete with the Marching Hammers armbands.[2] Waters' trademarked inflatable pig is released, untethered, during "In the Flesh", and guided by remote control, floats around the venue.[2] Spotlights shine on the audience as Waters interrogates them, pointing out the "riff raff" in the room. Waters is projected onto the wall with a machine gun shooting the audience. During "Run Like Hell", images are displayed on the wall parodying the iPod lowercase "i" fad. Pictures of pigs are shown next to the words "iLead", dogs next to "iProtect", sheep next to "iFollow" (pigs, dogs, and sheep indicating their roles on the Pink Floyd album Animals), George W. Bush and other leaders next to "iBelieve", Hitler next to "iPaint", children next to "iLearn", and gravestones next to "iPay" among others. In all of the pictures, the subjects are wearing iPods. After this montage, the leaked footage from the 12 July 2007 Baghdad airstrike is played, displaying captions of the American pilots speaking and pointing out Reuters employees Saeed Chmagh and Namir Noor-Eldeen, whose cameras were mistaken for weapons; after the attack, a banner is projected onto the wall: "Namir Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh, We Will Remember You." A burst of gunfire sends it to the ground.

"Waiting for the Worms" features more of Gerald Scarfe's original animation from the film adaptation and tour, except that the infamous sequence of marching hammers has now been replaced with a new computer-generated, cel-shaded version. "Stop" abruptly blacks out the entire wall, with a lone spotlight shining upon the Pink doll from the beginning of the program, which is sitting atop the wall; it is then thrown off its high perch to the ground.

Gerald Scarfe's animated sequence is displayed during "The Trial". As the song reaches its steady climax and with the crowd shouting "Tear down the Wall", the wall crumbles violently from the top down amid smoke while a flurry of red paper confetti (in the shape of the bomb symbols from earlier in the show) drops onto the audience. The band emerges from behind the rubble and plays "Outside the Wall" with a variety of acoustic instruments. (At certain shows on the Australian leg, the band plays a complete acoustic version of "Waltzing Matilda" immediately after "Outside the Wall" as a rare encore. Similarly, at the shows in Mexico, the band performed "Las Mañanitas" to the tune of "Another Brick in the Wall") Waters introduces the band to the crowd, they bow and then exit the stage.

Critical reception edit

Kevin Coffey of the Omaha World-Herald wrote:

Roger Waters and a cast of supporting musicians ... perform[ed] from start to finish one of the most commercially successful, beloved and ambitious art-rock albums in history ... as the show begins, the famous and enormous white wall is erected on stage, brick by brick, until it obscures the band and becomes a screen upon which a dazzling array of videos and visuals are projected. Technically, this was a nearly flawless show. The sound was clean and true. The original album and tour was about isolation. This time around, it was more anti-war, anti-capitalism and anti-poverty than about any kind of psychological issue. In addition to wild and slightly creepy animations from Gerald Scarfe, projections on the wall and video screens showed images of poverty, soldiers and others who died in conflicts as well as video of planes bombing areas with crosses, dollar signs, Shell Oil logos and others.[23]

J.C. Maçek III of PopMatters wrote:

As an immersive concert experience, however, The Wall is an entirely different beast. Its harsh, theatrical nature pulls the audience deep into its storyline and its visuals create the illusion of actually being inside a dynamic, frightening and engrossing movie. Yes, The Wall live is every bit as cinematic as its actual cinema-released counterpart film Pink Floyd – The Wall and will remain a milestone in Pink Floyd and Roger Waters history. The Wall Live has truly been more than a concert tour, but an anti-war, pro-music, theatrical, cinematic, brilliant, inspiring truly immersive, multi-media experience that complements the history of The Wall and, perhaps, brings it one step farther in its story.[2]

Steve Pick of Stltoday.com said:

"Roger Waters did not put on just an ordinary concert Friday night at the Scottrade Center — he created a huge, technologically complex and metaphorically dense theatrical spectacle."[24]

Timothy Fin of the Kansas City Star has this to say about the show:

" ... Waters accordingly turned the performance into a[n] epic, gaudy and extravagant piece of theatre – an onslaught of sights, sounds and socio-political themes. Some of it was poignant, some of it was bombastic, some of it was viscerally thrilling, like a great rock show ought to be. But all of it was entertaining."[25]

Kevin Stevens of The Setonian stated:

A hail of firework explosions, hundreds of large rectangular bricks, crashing planes, enormous puppets, 3D effects. Surely, this is not your average concert. Roger Waters' tour of his seminal album, "The Wall", lavishes in this Broadway-esque pomp, but never compromises its music for theatrics. This is a rock concert, one that succeeds in transforming Pink Floyd's brilliant 1979 opus into a compelling aesthetic and auditory experience.[26]

A.D. Amorosi of the Philadelphia City Paper wrote:

"If epic paranoia over monster themes such as megalomania, mother fixation, loneliness, television, the warring industrial complex and the uselessness of fans and celebrity, accompanied by the sounds of unsettling bombast, is what you seek as entertainment, there's a bridge I can sell you. Or rather, a wall — The Wall, Roger Waters’ semi-autobiographical 1979 magnum opus ...[27]

According to Matt DeMarco of The Hofstra Chronicle online:

Pyrotechnics were used throughout the show, as were massive marionette puppets, representative of several of the opera's supporting characters. The technological aspect of this show was astounding. Musically, the show was just as phenomenal. Waters brought an impressive touring band with him, including lead guitarist Dave Kilminster, who was just spectacular. The solo he delivered during "Comfortably Numb" was absolutely mind-blowing. Waters, himself, proved that rock ‘n roll has no age limit. At 67 years old, the rock icon played a flawless show, hitting notes that he was hitting 30 years ago. His energy was visibly present; he was truly excited to be performing this album for a live crowd again.[28]

Set list edit

The Wall album is played in its entirety and two songs not in the original release are included—"What Shall We Do Now?" and "The Last Few Bricks"[29]—both of which were also played at every concert during The Wall Tour in 1980–1981, and documented on the album Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980–81, released in 2000. "One of My Turns", "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Run Like Hell" are all transposed one key down to accommodate Waters' vocal range.

A change was made in the setlist from the Berlin 16 June 2011 show onwards, when Waters added an acoustic coda to "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" with brand new lyrics referring to the murder of Jean Charles de Menezes. On later legs of the tour, the official tour program would list this as a separate song called "The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes". This is the first time ever a new song has been added to The Wall—all previous additions to the setlist of the original album either restored unused material (in The Wall film) or added existing songs from Waters' work (in The Wall – Live in Berlin).

Tour dates edit

Date City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
North America (first leg)
15 September 2010 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 40,922 / 40,922 $5,623,300
16 September 2010
18 September 2010
20 September 2010 Chicago United States United Center 45,653 / 47,487 $5,400,900
21 September 2010
23 September 2010
24 September 2010
26 September 2010 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center 12,561 / 12,561 $1,316,224
28 September 2010 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena 12,369 / 13,320 $1,229,950
30 September 2010 Boston TD Garden 34,120 / 34,626 $3,836,070
1 October 2010
3 October 2010
5 October 2010 New York City Madison Square Garden 36,704 / 36,704 $5,449,885
6 October 2010
8 October 2010 Buffalo First Niagara Center 13,718 / 13,718 $1,493,334
10 October 2010 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 12,865 / 12,865 $2,017,970
12 October 2010 Uniondale Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum 21,147 / 21,147 $2,365,175
13 October 2010
15 October 2010 Hartford XL Center 11,647 / 11,647 $1,534,942
17 October 2010 Ottawa Canada Scotiabank Place 12,699 / 12,699 $1,346,000
19 October 2010 Montreal Bell Centre 27,210 / 27,210 $3,482,540
20 October 2010
22 October 2010 Columbus United States Value City Arena 12,010 / 12,010 $1,325,804
24 October 2010 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 13,481 / 13,481 $1,536,384
26 October 2010 Omaha Qwest Center Omaha 9,471 / 9,897 $898,513
27 October 2010 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center 14,130 / 14,130 $1,704,884
29 October 2010 St. Louis Scottrade Center 12,574 / 12,574 $1,341,058
30 October 2010 Kansas City Sprint Center 11,458 / 11,458 $1,253,051
3 November 2010 East Rutherford Izod Center 25,690 / 25,690 $3,385,970
4 November 2010
6 November 2010 New York City Madison Square Garden 12,498 / 12,498 $1,902,115
8 November 2010 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 39,280 / 39,280 $5,474,340
9 November 2010
11 November 2010
13 November 2010 Sunrise BankAtlantic Center 24,939 / 24,939 $2,956,233
14 November 2010
16 November 2010 Tampa St. Pete Times Forum 14,630 / 15,650 $1,784,297
18 November 2010 Atlanta Philips Arena 12,665 / 12,665 $1,772,797
20 November 2010 Houston Toyota Center 11,443 / 11,443 $1,541,128
21 November 2010 Dallas American Airlines Center 12,804 / 12,804 $1,673,754
23 November 2010 Denver Pepsi Center 11,801 / 11,801 $1,491,145
26 November 2010 Paradise MGM Grand Garden Arena 12,661 / 12,661 $1,992,350
27 November 2010 Phoenix US Airways Center 12,234 / 12,234 $1,428,183
29 November 2010 Los Angeles Staples Center 36,621 / 36,621 $5,408,750
30 November 2010
3 December 2010 Oakland Oracle Arena 12,579 / 12,579 $1,536,895
5 December 2010 Los Angeles Staples Center
7 December 2010 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose 23,209 / 23,209 $3,106,707
8 December 2010
10 December 2010 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena 13,159 / 13,159 $1,940,070
11 December 2010 Tacoma United States Tacoma Dome 19,785 / 19,785 $2,194,338
13 December 2010 Anaheim Honda Center 23,854 / 23,854 $3,321,700
14 December 2010
18 December 2010 Mexico City Mexico Palacio de los Deportes 42,864 / 42,864 $4,788,270
19 December 2010
21 December 2010
Europe (first leg)
21 March 2011 Lisbon Portugal Pavilhão Atlântico 31,170 / 31,170 $2,593,376
22 March 2011
25 March 2011 Madrid Spain Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid 29,338 / 29,338 $2,135,012
26 March 2011
29 March 2011 Barcelona Palau Sant Jordi 28,738 / 28,738 $2,079,519
30 March 2011
1 April 2011 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum 38,513 / 38,513 $3,888,218
2 April 2011
4 April 2011
5 April 2011
8 April 2011 Arnhem Netherlands GelreDome 88,693 / 88,693 $8,632,039
9 April 2011
11 April 2011
13 April 2011 Zagreb Croatia Arena Zagreb 17,004 / 17,004 $1,122,965
15 April 2011 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 29,095 / 29,095 $3,495,960
16 April 2011
18 April 2011 Łódź Poland Atlas Arena 26,231 / 26,231 $2,248,310
19 April 2011
23 April 2011 Moscow Russia SK Olimpiyskiy 21,894 / 21,894 $1,904,778
25 April 2011 Saint Petersburg SKK Peterburgskiy 15,998 / 15,998 $1,542,045
27 April 2011 Helsinki Finland Hartwall Areena 20,583 / 20,583 $2,291,537
28 April 2011
30 April 2011 Bærum Norway Telenor Arena 36,034 / 36,034 $5,597,370
1 May 2011
4 May 2011 Stockholm Sweden Ericsson Globe 23,212 / 23,212 $3,127,365
5 May 2011
7 May 2011 Copenhagen Denmark Parken Stadion 46,825 / 46,825 $5,151,114
11 May 2011 London England The O2 Arena 89,182 / 90,006 $10,232,800
12 May 2011
14 May 2011
15 May 2011
17 May 2011
18 May 2011
20 May 2011 Manchester Manchester Evening News Arena 36,817 / 37,050 $4,428,190
21 May 2011
23 May 2011 Dublin Ireland The O2 24,540 / 24,540 $2,370,038
24 May 2011
27 May 2011 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis 24,977 / 24,977 $2,703,230
28 May 2011
30 May 2011 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy 56,764 / 56,764 $6,015,980
31 May 2011
3 June 2011 Mannheim Germany SAP Arena 16,444 / 16,444 $2,226,201
4 June 2011
6 June 2011 Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion 39,811 / 39,811 $9,633,656
7 June 2011
10 June 2011 Hamburg Germany O2 World Hamburg 19,839 / 19,839 $2,605,683
11 June 2011
13 June 2011 Herning Denmark Jyske Bank Boxen 13,564 / 13,564 $1,595,402
15 June 2011 Berlin Germany O2 World Berlin 21,961 / 21,961 $2,734,176
16 June 2011
18 June 2011 Düsseldorf Esprit Arena 35,000 / 35,000 $3,784,690
20 June 2011 Munich Olympiahalle 9,888 / 9,888 $1,343,821
22 June 2011 Budapest Hungary Papp László Budapest Sportaréna 13,445 / 13,445 $1,333,913
24 June 2011 Zurich Switzerland Hallenstadion
25 June 2011
27 June 2011 Birmingham England National Indoor Arena 9,326 / 9,326 $1,142,757
28 June 2011 Manchester Manchester Evening News Arena
30 June 2011 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
1 July 2011
3 July 2011 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum 21,005 / 21,005 $1,335,100
4 July 2011
8 July 2011 Athens Greece OAKA Olympiakó Kleistó Gymnastírio 35,005 / 35,005 $2,559,048
9 July 2011
12 July 2011
Oceania
27 January 2012 Perth Australia Burswood Dome 19,523 / 19,523 $3,637,000
28 January 2012
1 February 2012 Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre 25,359 / 25,359 $4,268,040
2 February 2012
4 February 2012
7 February 2012 Melbourne Rod Laver Arena 38,586 / 38,586 $6,900,750
8 February 2012
10 February 2012
11 February 2012
14 February 2012 Sydney Allphones Arena 22,994 / 22,994 $4,314,050
15 February 2012
18 February 2012 Auckland New Zealand Vector Arena 39,096 / 39,096 $6,149,610
20 February 2012
22 February 2012
23 February 2012
South America
2 March 2012 Santiago Chile Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos 93,926 / 94,875 $9,297,778
3 March 2012
7 March 2012 Buenos Aires Argentina Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti 430,678 / 444,906 $37,970,877
9 March 2012
10 March 2012
12 March 2012
14 March 2012
15 March 2012
17 March 2012
18 March 2012
20 March 2012
25 March 2012 Porto Alegre Brazil Estádio Beira-Rio 42,436 / 46,671 $5,950,540
29 March 2012 Rio de Janeiro Estádio Olímpico João Havelange 43,046 / 53,219 $4,839,180
1 April 2012 São Paulo Estádio do Morumbi 99,869 / 107,621 $12,512,600
3 April 2012
North America (second leg)
27 April 2012 Mexico City Mexico Foro Sol 82,811 / 82,811 $7,596,861
28 April 2012
1 May 2012 Houston United States Toyota Center 11,264 / 11,264 $1,365,855
3 May 2012 Austin Frank Erwin Center 10,230 / 10,230 $1,188,971
5 May 2012 Tulsa BOK Center 10,651 / 10,651 $1,198,062
7 May 2012 Denver Pepsi Center 11,800 / 11,800 $1,443,249
11 May 2012 San Francisco AT&T Park 33,193 / 33,193 $4,151,511
13 May 2012 San Diego Valley View Casino Center 10,219 / 10,219 $1,323,031
15 May 2012 Phoenix US Airways Center 11,585 / 11,585 $1,255,271
19 May 2012 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 45,751 / 45,751 $3,544,731
22 May 2012 Portland Rose Garden 12,275 / 12,275 $1,316,751
24 May 2012 Seattle KeyArena 12,006 / 12,006 $1,481,010
26 May 2012 Vancouver Canada BC Place 36,013 / 36,013 $3,820,182
28 May 2012 Edmonton Rexall Place 24,419 / 24,419 $3,085,732
29 May 2012
31 May 2012 Winnipeg MTS Centre 20,754 / 20,754 $2,384,855
1 June 2012
3 June 2012 Saint Paul United States Xcel Energy Center 12,889 / 12,889 $1,420,771
5 June 2012 Detroit Joe Louis Arena 11,406 / 11,406 $1,222,904
6 June 2012 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena 9,388 / 9,388 $1,042,274
8 June 2012 Chicago Wrigley Field 36,881 / 36,881 $4,388,860
10 June 2012 Louisville KFC Yum! Center 12,547 / 14,666 $1,295,669
11 June 2012 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse 11,248 / 11,248 $1,288,131
13 June 2012 Atlanta Philips Arena 10,707 / 10,707 $1,256,465
15 June 2012 Sunrise BankAtlantic Center 12,299 / 12,299 $1,522,098
16 June 2012 Orlando Amway Center 11,878 / 11,878 $1,383,781
19 June 2012 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 12,748 / 12,748 $1,356,251
21 June 2012 Buffalo First Niagara Center 12,996 / 12,996 $1,327,184
23 June 2012 Toronto Canada Rogers Centre 40,328 / 40,328 $3,876,736
25 June 2012 Ottawa Scotiabank Place 11,604 / 11,604 $1,239,283
26 June 2012 Montreal Bell Centre 14,305 / 14,305 $1,740,898
28 June 2012 Albany United States Times Union Center 10,963 / 10,963 $1,155,427
29 June 2012 Hartford XL Center 11,225 / 11,225 $1,421,495
1 July 2012 Boston Fenway Park 27,847 / 27,847 $3,620,675
3 July 2012 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center 12,488 / 12,488 $1,269,078
6 July 2012 New York City Yankee Stadium 62,188 / 62,188 $7,375,030
7 July 2012
9 July 2012 Raleigh PNC Arena 11,913 / 11,913 $1,259,326
10 July 2012 Charlotte Time Warner Cable Arena 12,540 / 12,540 $1,256,734
12 July 2012 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 12,901 / 12,901 $1,683,729
14 July 2012 Philadelphia Citizens Bank Park 36,773 / 36,773 $4,270,942
21 July 2012[30] Quebec City Canada Plains of Abraham 71,021 / 75,000 $7,391,936
Europe (second leg)
18 July 2013 Arnhem Netherlands GelreDome 6,343 / 10,000 $610,369
20 July 2013 Werchter Belgium Festival Site 35,881 / 40,000 $3,344,159
23 July 2013 Split Croatia Stadion Poljud 19,338 / 25,000 $770,476
26 July 2013 Padua Italy Stadio Euganeo 41,358 / 42,000 $3,624,011
28 July 2013 Rome Stadio Olimpico 50,848 / 52,000 $4,257,575
31 July 2013[31] Athens Greece Olympic Stadium 25,807 / 77,000 $1,453,804
4 August 2013 Istanbul Turkey İTÜ Stadyumu 25,438 / 30,000 $2,767,959
7 August 2013 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 13,621 / 14,200 $1,666,798
9 August 2013 Frankfurt Germany Commerzbank-Arena 26,422 / 29,000 $3,292,846
11 August 2013 Copenhagen Denmark Parken Stadion 35,575 / 40,200 $4,057,727
14 August 2013 Bærum Norway Telenor Arena 33,324 / 35,000 $4,630,713
15 August 2013
17 August 2013 Gothenburg Sweden Ullevi Stadion 30,766 / 35,000 $3,177,530
20 August 2013 Warsaw Poland Stadion Narodowy im. Kazimierza Górskiego 32,549 / 36,331 $3,008,068
23 August 2013 Vienna Austria Ernst-Happel-Stadion 36,385 / 40,000 $4,409,931
25 August 2013 Budapest Hungary Puskás Ferenc Stadion 18,720 / 30,000 $1,137,675
28 August 2013 Bucharest Romania Piaţa Constituţiei 44,813 / 44,850 $3,216,105
30 August 2013 Sofia Bulgaria Vassil Levski National Stadium 31,371 / 35,000 $2,053,674
1 September 2013 Belgrade Serbia Kombank Arena 12,400 / 14,000 $669,712
4 September 2013 Berlin Germany Olympiastadion Berlin 29,857 / 40,000 $3,299,137
6 September 2013 Düsseldorf Esprit Arena 33,727 / 35,000 $3,823,373
8 September 2013 Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam ArenA 47,414 / 47,500 $4,257,133
11 September 2013 Zurich Switzerland Letzigrund 37,367 / 40,000 $4,974,579
14 September 2013 London England Wembley Stadium 57,803 / 58,000 $6,385,728
16 September 2013 Manchester Manchester Arena 9,667 / 12,000 $1,119,528
18 September 2013 Dublin Ireland Aviva Stadium 24,210 / 30,000 $2,443,706
21 September 2013 Paris (Saint-Denis) France Stade de France 69,119 / 70,000 $6,853,334
TOTAL 4,129,863 / 4,268,028 (97%) $458,673,798

Image gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Roger Waters to Restage "The Wall" on 2010 Tour". CBS News. 12 April 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e J.C. Maçek III (5 September 2012). "The Cinematic Experience of Roger Waters' 'The Wall Live'". PopMatters.
  3. ^ "Pink Floyd's Roger Waters to tour 'The Wall' in North America". NME News. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  4. ^ . Classic Rock. 12 April 2010. Archived from the original on 29 May 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  5. ^ Vena, Jocelyn (29 December 2010). "Bon Jovi, AC/DC, U2 Top World Tours of 2010". MTV. Retrieved 4 January 2011.
  6. ^ "Roger Waters Passes Madonna for Solo Boxscore Record with $459M Wall Live Tour". Billboard.
  7. ^ . Roger Waters. Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  8. ^ Barrett, John (28 September 2011). "Roger Waters Performs with Foo Fighters, Announces More U.S. Dates for The Wall Tour". paste.com. Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  9. ^ "Roger Waters The Wall Live". TC News. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
  10. ^ Raymundo, Oscar. . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 23 July 2012.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2012. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
  12. ^ Gardner, Elysa (4 December 2010). "Roger Waters gives 'The Wall' a new, 'more political' edge for tour". USA Today. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  13. ^ "Latest news from Snowy White ..." Snowy White. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  14. ^ . Dave Kilminster. 14 April 2010. Archived from the original on 6 May 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  15. ^ "Venice News". Venice. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  16. ^ Youngs, Ian (15 October 2010). "Pink Floyd may get back together for charity". BBC News. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  17. ^ Mocarsky, Steve (24 August 2010). . The Times Leader. Wilkes-Barre. Archived from the original on 26 August 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  18. ^ "Pink Floyd news :: Brain Damage – September 12th – IZOD CENTER, EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ, USA (dress rehearsal)". Brain Damage. 15 September 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  19. ^ "Toronto Film Festival Completes Lineup". Variety. 19 August 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  20. ^ "The Band". Facebook. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  21. ^ . ADL. 27 September 2010. Archived from the original on 6 November 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  22. ^ Greene, Andy (7 October 2010). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 9 October 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  23. ^ Coffey, Kevin (27 October 2010). "Waters does well with 'The Wall'". Archived from the original on 6 September 2012. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  24. ^ Pick, Steve (31 October 2010). "Roger Waters in a visually stunning concert at Scottrade". stltoday.com. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  25. ^ Fin, Timothy (31 October 2010). "Roger Waters show is sensory overload – in a good way". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  26. ^ Stevens, Kevin (8 November 2010). . The Setonian. Archived from the original on 14 November 2010. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  27. ^ Amorosi, A.D. (9 November 2010). . Philadelphia City Paper. Archived from the original on 12 November 2010. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  28. ^ De Marco, Matt (11 November 2010). "Roger Waters still rockin' strong". The Hofstra Chronicle online. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  29. ^ "Pink Floyd news :: Brain Damage – September 20th – UNITED CENTER, CHICAGO, IL, USA". Brain Damage. 16 June 2011. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  30. ^ Footage from concert used in filming Roger Waters The Wall
  31. ^ Footage from concert used in filming Roger Waters The Wall

wall, live, 2010, 2013, original, pink, floyd, tour, wall, wall, tour, 1980, 1981, wall, live, worldwide, concert, tour, roger, waters, formerly, pink, floyd, tour, first, time, pink, floyd, album, wall, been, performed, entirety, band, former, members, since,. For the original Pink Floyd tour of The Wall see The Wall Tour 1980 1981 The Wall Live was a worldwide 1 concert tour by Roger Waters formerly of Pink Floyd 2 3 4 The tour is the first time the Pink Floyd album The Wall has been performed in its entirety by the band or any of its former members since Waters performed the album live in Berlin 21 July 1990 The first leg of the tour grossed in North America over 89 5 million from 56 concerts It was the second highest grossing concert tour in North America in 2010 and the third highest grossing concert tour worldwide as of 2013 5 In 2013 the tour held the record for being the highest grossing tour for a solo musician surpassing the previous record holder Madonna the record was later eclipsed by Ed Sheeran 6 It is currently the 7th highest grossing tour of all time The Wall LiveTour by Roger WatersLocationNorth AmericaEuropeOceaniaSouth AmericaAssociated albumThe WallStart date15 September 2010End date21 September 2013Legs6No of shows98 in North America91 in Europe15 in Oceania15 in South America219 in totalBox officeUS 458 6 million US 834 2 million in 2023 dollars Roger Waters concert chronologyThe Dark Side of the Moon Live 2006 08 The Wall Live 2010 13 Us Them Tour 2017 18 The tour opened on 15 September 2010 in Toronto and moved through North America before ending the first leg of the tour in Mexico City 21 December 2010 The European tour began 21 March 2011 in Lisbon Portugal and ended 12 July 2011 in Athens Greece In 2012 the tour included Australia New Zealand and South America resuming 27 January in Perth and ending 1 April 2012 in Sao Paulo 7 It was confirmed by Waters during an interview with Jimmy Fallon that he would be returning to North America for yet another leg of The Wall tour beginning 27 April 2012 in Mexico City and ending 21 July 2012 in Quebec City on the Plains of Abraham a former battlefield 8 9 This last show in Quebec City was the second largest outdoor production of The Wall ever the largest being the Live in Berlin show in 1990 10 The tour returned to European stadiums again in summer 2013 11 After the 21 September 2013 Paris show he claimed on stage this to be possibly the last The Wall show confirming rumours that there will be no further tour dates planned for 2014 Waters a pacifist incorporated an increased emphasis on the show s anti war message and he requested fans to send him pictures of loved ones who have died as a result of wars 12 Snowy White 13 who was a session and tour musician with Pink Floyd in the 1970s and was in the tour band for the original 1980 81 tour for The Wall and Dave Kilminster 14 were the first musicians confirmed to be in Waters s touring band Kipp Lennon Mark Lennon and Michael Lennon of the band Venice were confirmed for backing vocal duties 15 but Michael Lennon withdrew from the band due to rehearsal difficulties He was replaced by cousin Pat Lennon also of Venice On 23 April the full band line up was announced on Roger Waters s Facebook page Following a charity gig Waters performed with his former Pink Floyd bandmates on 10 July 2010 16 he confirmed that David Gilmour would guest on Comfortably Numb at one show during the tour Gilmour appeared at the 12 May 2011 show at The O2 London playing lead guitar on Comfortably Numb and mandolin on Outside the Wall on which they were also joined by Nick Mason on tambourine On 24 August 2010 The Times Leader newspaper of Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania reported that Waters and company were in town rehearsing for the tour at the Mohegan Sun Arena This venue previously hosted pre tour rehearsals and pre tour concerts for such performers as Elton John the Simon amp Garfunkel Old Friends Reunion Tour in 2003 and AC DC rehearsals in 2008 before the band s world tour 17 There were no rehearsals or performances the crew used the occasion to work out technical details On 12 September 2010 there was a rehearsal performance at the Izod Center in East Rutherford New Jersey for invited guests 18 In 2014 Waters directed a documentary about the tour titled Roger Waters The Wall The film incorporated footage from the concerts in Quebec City and Athens It premiered in the Special Presentations section of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival 19 Contents 1 Tour band 2 Concert overview 2 1 Pre show 2 2 The show 3 Critical reception 4 Set list 5 Tour dates 6 Image gallery 7 See also 8 ReferencesTour band edit nbsp The Roger Waters Band Kansas City 30 October 2010 from left to right Kilminster White Joyce Pat Lennon Mark Lennon Kip Lennon Wyckoff Roger Waters Smith Harry Waters Carin Broad Behind the band is the rubble from the destroyed wallThe following musicians have played on the tour 20 Roger Waters bass lead vocals acoustic guitar trumpet on Outside the Wall G E Smith guitars bass mandolin on Outside the Wall Dave Kilminster guitars banjo on Outside the Wall bass on Mother Snowy White guitars bass on Goodbye Blue Sky Graham Broad drums percussion ukulele on Outside the Wall Jon Carin keyboards lap steel guitar programming high strung guitar on Comfortably Numb acoustic guitar on Outside The Wall electric guitar on Run Like Hell Bring The Boys Back Home Comfortably Numb and Brick 3 Harry Waters Hammond organ keyboards accordion on Outside the Wall Robbie Wyckoff lead vocals songs or parts of songs originally sung by David Gilmour backing vocals percussion Jon Joyce backing vocals percussion Kipp Lennon backing vocals percussion Mark Lennon backing vocals percussion Pat Lennon backing vocals percussionwith David Gilmour guest vocals guitar and mandolin at Waters London O2 show 12 May 2011 Nick Mason guest tambourine at Waters London O2 show 12 May 2011 Concert overview editPre show edit nbsp The schoolmaster puppet in Kansas City 30 October 2010During the pre show in the American part of the tour a man who appears to be homeless pushes a shopping cart around the aisles around the floor seats He wears a flannel jacket and a cowboy hat and makes small talk with the fans as he makes his way around the floor His cart is full of empty soda cans and rubbish and a sign that reads different sayings that vary from show to show including No thought control on one side and Homeless people need money for booze and hookers on the other His cart also contains the original stuffed Pink doll from 1979 The pre show audio was 20 minutes of several clips from television sitcoms and cartoons like Family Guy as well as comedy routines from George Carlin After the first leg of the North American tour the sound collage was dropped and replaced with 20 minutes of music in the following order and has been the same for every show since Mother by John Lennon Masters of War by Bob Dylan A Change Is Gonna Come by Sam Cooke Imagine by John Lennon Strange Fruit by Billie Holiday and People Get Ready by The Impressions The show edit During the homeless man s tour through the crowd the pre show music stops and the sounds of channel surfing can be heard When the homeless man reaches the stage the climax of the movie Spartacus is played A spotlight shines on him and his cart as the sounds of the slaves each claiming to be Spartacus are heard After which the man throws Pink onto the stage For the European shows and all shows thereafter the homeless man was replaced with two soldiers bearing the crossed hammer uniform who bring the Pink puppet onto the stage and hold him throughout the Spartacus clip before dumping him on the ground and marching off the stage As he does this the audio transitions to a trumpet later revealed to be Roger Waters playing the melody of Outside the Wall 2 The trumpet playing continues unaccompanied for about a minute until the band unseen unexpectedly bursts into action with In the Flesh Fireworks explode across the stage during the opening chords and stage hands with marching hammers arm bands and flags rise up above the band on lifts Around mid song Waters emerges from the back of the stage dressed in black During the climax of the song a scaled down Stuka Dive Bomber suspended by a guide wire flies into the wall and explodes During The Happiest Days of Our Lives and Another Brick in the Wall Part 2 there is a giant inflated puppet schoolmaster an icon from the original show Local school children are brought out onto the stage to lip sync and dance From the Berlin 16 June show onwards Waters sings an acoustic reprise of Another Brick in the Wall Part 2 with lyrics referring to the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes before finally greeting the audience and telling them about the filming of the original Wall Tour shows He then sings Mother to a video of him playing the song from the original 1980 tour He refers to the video as miserable little Roger A giant mother blow up designed on the look of the animated version is featured as well The song has more of a political message than before the words Big Brother Is Watching You are written on the wall with the Br crossed off and replaced with an M After the line Mother should I trust the government the words No fucking way are projected on the wall as well as a local translation in non English speaking countries The initial projections shown during Goodbye Blue Sky caused some controversy During the song aeroplanes are shown dropping bombs shaped like Latin crosses hammer and sickles dollar signs star and crescents Stars of David the Shell logo and the Mercedes Benz logo with the addition of the McDonald s logo in later shows The plane dropping dollar signs appeared directly after the plane dropping the Star of David Although Waters said in Rolling Stone that there was no relevance to the order of the bombs he changed the order after Abraham Foxman president of the Anti Defamation League complained 21 Waters stated Contrary to Mr Foxman s assertion there are no hidden meanings in the order or juxtaposition of these symbols 22 These visuals were changed at Waters request for all future shows to avoid any sensitive juxtapositions of the symbols used in the video At the first show of the tour while these symbols dropped from the plane they also dropped from the ceiling of the Air Canada Centre in little cut out shapes of confetti During the song Don t Leave Me Now the production features a giant wife puppet similar in design and execution as the Schoolmaster During the first half on the show the wall is slowly built up brick by brick and as with the eighties tour an instrumental called The Last Few Bricks that doesn t appear on the original album is played to give the stage hands extra time to build the wall At the end of Goodbye Cruel World the last brick is put in place and the wall is completed across the stage An intermission follows with photos and short bios of people lost in conflicts are projected on the wall nbsp Waters performing in front of The Wall during the guitar solo to Comfortably Numb The second act begins with Hey You and is played with minimal visuals on the wall The band performs now hidden from the audience s view from behind the wall For the acoustic guitar solo piece Is There Anybody Out There a brick is removed so that guitarists Dave Kilminster and G E Smith are visible As Nobody Home begins a section folds out of the wall revealing a small mock hotel room complete with a television chair lamp and unmade bed Waters in character as Pink sings the song while seated on a comfy chair that is on a platform extending from the wall During Vera images of Vera Lynn are displayed on the wall along with videos of young children being reunited with their veteran fathers Bring the Boys Back Home features Dwight D Eisenhower s American Society of Newspaper Editors speech During Comfortably Numb Robbie Wyckoff and Dave Kilminster stand on top of the wall as David Gilmour did in the original tour a performance reprised by Gilmour himself during a one off appearance at the London O2 show on 12 May 2011 At the end of the song the projection of the wall explodes and cinematic pillars rise The band plays The Show Must Go On dressed in black fascist attire complete with the Marching Hammers armbands 2 Waters trademarked inflatable pig is released untethered during In the Flesh and guided by remote control floats around the venue 2 Spotlights shine on the audience as Waters interrogates them pointing out the riff raff in the room Waters is projected onto the wall with a machine gun shooting the audience During Run Like Hell images are displayed on the wall parodying the iPod lowercase i fad Pictures of pigs are shown next to the words iLead dogs next to iProtect sheep next to iFollow pigs dogs and sheep indicating their roles on the Pink Floyd album Animals George W Bush and other leaders next to iBelieve Hitler next to iPaint children next to iLearn and gravestones next to iPay among others In all of the pictures the subjects are wearing iPods After this montage the leaked footage from the 12 July 2007 Baghdad airstrike is played displaying captions of the American pilots speaking and pointing out Reuters employees Saeed Chmagh and Namir Noor Eldeen whose cameras were mistaken for weapons after the attack a banner is projected onto the wall Namir Noor Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh We Will Remember You A burst of gunfire sends it to the ground Waiting for the Worms features more of Gerald Scarfe s original animation from the film adaptation and tour except that the infamous sequence of marching hammers has now been replaced with a new computer generated cel shaded version Stop abruptly blacks out the entire wall with a lone spotlight shining upon the Pink doll from the beginning of the program which is sitting atop the wall it is then thrown off its high perch to the ground Gerald Scarfe s animated sequence is displayed during The Trial As the song reaches its steady climax and with the crowd shouting Tear down the Wall the wall crumbles violently from the top down amid smoke while a flurry of red paper confetti in the shape of the bomb symbols from earlier in the show drops onto the audience The band emerges from behind the rubble and plays Outside the Wall with a variety of acoustic instruments At certain shows on the Australian leg the band plays a complete acoustic version of Waltzing Matilda immediately after Outside the Wall as a rare encore Similarly at the shows in Mexico the band performed Las Mananitas to the tune of Another Brick in the Wall Waters introduces the band to the crowd they bow and then exit the stage Critical reception editThis article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource April 2018 Kevin Coffey of the Omaha World Herald wrote Roger Waters and a cast of supporting musicians perform ed from start to finish one of the most commercially successful beloved and ambitious art rock albums in history as the show begins the famous and enormous white wall is erected on stage brick by brick until it obscures the band and becomes a screen upon which a dazzling array of videos and visuals are projected Technically this was a nearly flawless show The sound was clean and true The original album and tour was about isolation This time around it was more anti war anti capitalism and anti poverty than about any kind of psychological issue In addition to wild and slightly creepy animations from Gerald Scarfe projections on the wall and video screens showed images of poverty soldiers and others who died in conflicts as well as video of planes bombing areas with crosses dollar signs Shell Oil logos and others 23 J C Macek III of PopMatters wrote As an immersive concert experience however The Wall is an entirely different beast Its harsh theatrical nature pulls the audience deep into its storyline and its visuals create the illusion of actually being inside a dynamic frightening and engrossing movie Yes The Wall live is every bit as cinematic as its actual cinema released counterpart film Pink Floyd The Wall and will remain a milestone in Pink Floyd and Roger Waters history The Wall Live has truly been more than a concert tour but an anti war pro music theatrical cinematic brilliant inspiring truly immersive multi media experience that complements the history of The Wall and perhaps brings it one step farther in its story 2 Steve Pick of Stltoday com said Roger Waters did not put on just an ordinary concert Friday night at the Scottrade Center he created a huge technologically complex and metaphorically dense theatrical spectacle 24 Timothy Fin of the Kansas City Star has this to say about the show Waters accordingly turned the performance into a n epic gaudy and extravagant piece of theatre an onslaught of sights sounds and socio political themes Some of it was poignant some of it was bombastic some of it was viscerally thrilling like a great rock show ought to be But all of it was entertaining 25 Kevin Stevens of The Setonian stated A hail of firework explosions hundreds of large rectangular bricks crashing planes enormous puppets 3D effects Surely this is not your average concert Roger Waters tour of his seminal album The Wall lavishes in this Broadway esque pomp but never compromises its music for theatrics This is a rock concert one that succeeds in transforming Pink Floyd s brilliant 1979 opus into a compelling aesthetic and auditory experience 26 A D Amorosi of the Philadelphia City Paper wrote If epic paranoia over monster themes such as megalomania mother fixation loneliness television the warring industrial complex and the uselessness of fans and celebrity accompanied by the sounds of unsettling bombast is what you seek as entertainment there s a bridge I can sell you Or rather a wall The Wall Roger Waters semi autobiographical 1979 magnum opus 27 According to Matt DeMarco of The Hofstra Chronicle online Pyrotechnics were used throughout the show as were massive marionette puppets representative of several of the opera s supporting characters The technological aspect of this show was astounding Musically the show was just as phenomenal Waters brought an impressive touring band with him including lead guitarist Dave Kilminster who was just spectacular The solo he delivered during Comfortably Numb was absolutely mind blowing Waters himself proved that rock n roll has no age limit At 67 years old the rock icon played a flawless show hitting notes that he was hitting 30 years ago His energy was visibly present he was truly excited to be performing this album for a live crowd again 28 Set list editThe Wall album is played in its entirety and two songs not in the original release are included What Shall We Do Now and The Last Few Bricks 29 both of which were also played at every concert during The Wall Tour in 1980 1981 and documented on the album Is There Anybody Out There The Wall Live 1980 81 released in 2000 One of My Turns Don t Leave Me Now and Run Like Hell are all transposed one key down to accommodate Waters vocal range A change was made in the setlist from the Berlin 16 June 2011 show onwards when Waters added an acoustic coda to Another Brick in the Wall Part 2 with brand new lyrics referring to the murder of Jean Charles de Menezes On later legs of the tour the official tour program would list this as a separate song called The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes This is the first time ever a new song has been added to The Wall all previous additions to the setlist of the original album either restored unused material in The Wall film or added existing songs from Waters work in The Wall Live in Berlin Set one In the Flesh The Thin Ice Another Brick in the Wall Part 1 The Happiest Days of Our Lives Another Brick in the Wall Part 2 The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes June 2011 onwards Mother Goodbye Blue Sky Empty Spaces What Shall We Do Now Young Lust One of My Turns Don t Leave Me Now Another Brick in the Wall Part 3 The Last Few Bricks Goodbye Cruel World Set two Hey You Is There Anybody Out There Nobody Home Vera Bring the Boys Back Home Comfortably Numb The Show Must Go On In the Flesh Run Like Hell Waiting for the Worms Stop The Trial Outside the Wall Tour dates editDate City Country Venue Attendance RevenueNorth America first leg 15 September 2010 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 40 922 40 922 5 623 30016 September 201018 September 201020 September 2010 Chicago United States United Center 45 653 47 487 5 400 90021 September 201023 September 201024 September 201026 September 2010 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center 12 561 12 561 1 316 22428 September 2010 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena 12 369 13 320 1 229 95030 September 2010 Boston TD Garden 34 120 34 626 3 836 0701 October 20103 October 20105 October 2010 New York City Madison Square Garden 36 704 36 704 5 449 8856 October 20108 October 2010 Buffalo First Niagara Center 13 718 13 718 1 493 33410 October 2010 Washington D C Verizon Center 12 865 12 865 2 017 97012 October 2010 Uniondale Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum 21 147 21 147 2 365 17513 October 201015 October 2010 Hartford XL Center 11 647 11 647 1 534 94217 October 2010 Ottawa Canada Scotiabank Place 12 699 12 699 1 346 00019 October 2010 Montreal Bell Centre 27 210 27 210 3 482 54020 October 201022 October 2010 Columbus United States Value City Arena 12 010 12 010 1 325 80424 October 2010 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 13 481 13 481 1 536 38426 October 2010 Omaha Qwest Center Omaha 9 471 9 897 898 51327 October 2010 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center 14 130 14 130 1 704 88429 October 2010 St Louis Scottrade Center 12 574 12 574 1 341 05830 October 2010 Kansas City Sprint Center 11 458 11 458 1 253 0513 November 2010 East Rutherford Izod Center 25 690 25 690 3 385 9704 November 20106 November 2010 New York City Madison Square Garden 12 498 12 498 1 902 1158 November 2010 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 39 280 39 280 5 474 3409 November 201011 November 201013 November 2010 Sunrise BankAtlantic Center 24 939 24 939 2 956 23314 November 201016 November 2010 Tampa St Pete Times Forum 14 630 15 650 1 784 29718 November 2010 Atlanta Philips Arena 12 665 12 665 1 772 79720 November 2010 Houston Toyota Center 11 443 11 443 1 541 12821 November 2010 Dallas American Airlines Center 12 804 12 804 1 673 75423 November 2010 Denver Pepsi Center 11 801 11 801 1 491 14526 November 2010 Paradise MGM Grand Garden Arena 12 661 12 661 1 992 35027 November 2010 Phoenix US Airways Center 12 234 12 234 1 428 18329 November 2010 Los Angeles Staples Center 36 621 36 621 5 408 75030 November 20103 December 2010 Oakland Oracle Arena 12 579 12 579 1 536 8955 December 2010 Los Angeles Staples Center 7 December 2010 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose 23 209 23 209 3 106 7078 December 201010 December 2010 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena 13 159 13 159 1 940 07011 December 2010 Tacoma United States Tacoma Dome 19 785 19 785 2 194 33813 December 2010 Anaheim Honda Center 23 854 23 854 3 321 70014 December 201018 December 2010 Mexico City Mexico Palacio de los Deportes 42 864 42 864 4 788 27019 December 201021 December 2010Europe first leg 21 March 2011 Lisbon Portugal Pavilhao Atlantico 31 170 31 170 2 593 37622 March 201125 March 2011 Madrid Spain Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid 29 338 29 338 2 135 01226 March 201129 March 2011 Barcelona Palau Sant Jordi 28 738 28 738 2 079 51930 March 20111 April 2011 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum 38 513 38 513 3 888 2182 April 20114 April 20115 April 20118 April 2011 Arnhem Netherlands GelreDome 88 693 88 693 8 632 0399 April 201111 April 201113 April 2011 Zagreb Croatia Arena Zagreb 17 004 17 004 1 122 96515 April 2011 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 29 095 29 095 3 495 96016 April 201118 April 2011 Lodz Poland Atlas Arena 26 231 26 231 2 248 31019 April 201123 April 2011 Moscow Russia SK Olimpiyskiy 21 894 21 894 1 904 77825 April 2011 Saint Petersburg SKK Peterburgskiy 15 998 15 998 1 542 04527 April 2011 Helsinki Finland Hartwall Areena 20 583 20 583 2 291 53728 April 201130 April 2011 Baerum Norway Telenor Arena 36 034 36 034 5 597 3701 May 20114 May 2011 Stockholm Sweden Ericsson Globe 23 212 23 212 3 127 3655 May 20117 May 2011 Copenhagen Denmark Parken Stadion 46 825 46 825 5 151 11411 May 2011 London England The O2 Arena 89 182 90 006 10 232 80012 May 201114 May 201115 May 201117 May 201118 May 201120 May 2011 Manchester Manchester Evening News Arena 36 817 37 050 4 428 19021 May 201123 May 2011 Dublin Ireland The O2 24 540 24 540 2 370 03824 May 201127 May 2011 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis 24 977 24 977 2 703 23028 May 201130 May 2011 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris Bercy 56 764 56 764 6 015 98031 May 20113 June 2011 Mannheim Germany SAP Arena 16 444 16 444 2 226 2014 June 20116 June 2011 Zurich Switzerland Hallenstadion 39 811 39 811 9 633 6567 June 201110 June 2011 Hamburg Germany O2 World Hamburg 19 839 19 839 2 605 68311 June 201113 June 2011 Herning Denmark Jyske Bank Boxen 13 564 13 564 1 595 40215 June 2011 Berlin Germany O2 World Berlin 21 961 21 961 2 734 17616 June 201118 June 2011 Dusseldorf Esprit Arena 35 000 35 000 3 784 69020 June 2011 Munich Olympiahalle 9 888 9 888 1 343 82122 June 2011 Budapest Hungary Papp Laszlo Budapest Sportarena 13 445 13 445 1 333 91324 June 2011 Zurich Switzerland Hallenstadion 25 June 201127 June 2011 Birmingham England National Indoor Arena 9 326 9 326 1 142 75728 June 2011 Manchester Manchester Evening News Arena 30 June 2011 Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris Bercy 1 July 20113 July 2011 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum 21 005 21 005 1 335 1004 July 20118 July 2011 Athens Greece OAKA Olympiako Kleisto Gymnastirio 35 005 35 005 2 559 0489 July 201112 July 2011Oceania27 January 2012 Perth Australia Burswood Dome 19 523 19 523 3 637 00028 January 20121 February 2012 Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre 25 359 25 359 4 268 0402 February 20124 February 20127 February 2012 Melbourne Rod Laver Arena 38 586 38 586 6 900 7508 February 201210 February 201211 February 201214 February 2012 Sydney Allphones Arena 22 994 22 994 4 314 05015 February 201218 February 2012 Auckland New Zealand Vector Arena 39 096 39 096 6 149 61020 February 201222 February 201223 February 2012South America2 March 2012 Santiago Chile Estadio Nacional Julio Martinez Pradanos 93 926 94 875 9 297 7783 March 20127 March 2012 Buenos Aires Argentina Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti 430 678 444 906 37 970 8779 March 201210 March 201212 March 201214 March 201215 March 201217 March 201218 March 201220 March 201225 March 2012 Porto Alegre Brazil Estadio Beira Rio 42 436 46 671 5 950 54029 March 2012 Rio de Janeiro Estadio Olimpico Joao Havelange 43 046 53 219 4 839 1801 April 2012 Sao Paulo Estadio do Morumbi 99 869 107 621 12 512 6003 April 2012North America second leg 27 April 2012 Mexico City Mexico Foro Sol 82 811 82 811 7 596 86128 April 20121 May 2012 Houston United States Toyota Center 11 264 11 264 1 365 8553 May 2012 Austin Frank Erwin Center 10 230 10 230 1 188 9715 May 2012 Tulsa BOK Center 10 651 10 651 1 198 0627 May 2012 Denver Pepsi Center 11 800 11 800 1 443 24911 May 2012 San Francisco AT amp T Park 33 193 33 193 4 151 51113 May 2012 San Diego Valley View Casino Center 10 219 10 219 1 323 03115 May 2012 Phoenix US Airways Center 11 585 11 585 1 255 27119 May 2012 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 45 751 45 751 3 544 73122 May 2012 Portland Rose Garden 12 275 12 275 1 316 75124 May 2012 Seattle KeyArena 12 006 12 006 1 481 01026 May 2012 Vancouver Canada BC Place 36 013 36 013 3 820 18228 May 2012 Edmonton Rexall Place 24 419 24 419 3 085 73229 May 201231 May 2012 Winnipeg MTS Centre 20 754 20 754 2 384 8551 June 20123 June 2012 Saint Paul United States Xcel Energy Center 12 889 12 889 1 420 7715 June 2012 Detroit Joe Louis Arena 11 406 11 406 1 222 9046 June 2012 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena 9 388 9 388 1 042 2748 June 2012 Chicago Wrigley Field 36 881 36 881 4 388 86010 June 2012 Louisville KFC Yum Center 12 547 14 666 1 295 66911 June 2012 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse 11 248 11 248 1 288 13113 June 2012 Atlanta Philips Arena 10 707 10 707 1 256 46515 June 2012 Sunrise BankAtlantic Center 12 299 12 299 1 522 09816 June 2012 Orlando Amway Center 11 878 11 878 1 383 78119 June 2012 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 12 748 12 748 1 356 25121 June 2012 Buffalo First Niagara Center 12 996 12 996 1 327 18423 June 2012 Toronto Canada Rogers Centre 40 328 40 328 3 876 73625 June 2012 Ottawa Scotiabank Place 11 604 11 604 1 239 28326 June 2012 Montreal Bell Centre 14 305 14 305 1 740 89828 June 2012 Albany United States Times Union Center 10 963 10 963 1 155 42729 June 2012 Hartford XL Center 11 225 11 225 1 421 4951 July 2012 Boston Fenway Park 27 847 27 847 3 620 6753 July 2012 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center 12 488 12 488 1 269 0786 July 2012 New York City Yankee Stadium 62 188 62 188 7 375 0307 July 20129 July 2012 Raleigh PNC Arena 11 913 11 913 1 259 32610 July 2012 Charlotte Time Warner Cable Arena 12 540 12 540 1 256 73412 July 2012 Washington D C Verizon Center 12 901 12 901 1 683 72914 July 2012 Philadelphia Citizens Bank Park 36 773 36 773 4 270 94221 July 2012 30 Quebec City Canada Plains of Abraham 71 021 75 000 7 391 936Europe second leg 18 July 2013 Arnhem Netherlands GelreDome 6 343 10 000 610 36920 July 2013 Werchter Belgium Festival Site 35 881 40 000 3 344 15923 July 2013 Split Croatia Stadion Poljud 19 338 25 000 770 47626 July 2013 Padua Italy Stadio Euganeo 41 358 42 000 3 624 01128 July 2013 Rome Stadio Olimpico 50 848 52 000 4 257 57531 July 2013 31 Athens Greece Olympic Stadium 25 807 77 000 1 453 8044 August 2013 Istanbul Turkey ITU Stadyumu 25 438 30 000 2 767 9597 August 2013 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 13 621 14 200 1 666 7989 August 2013 Frankfurt Germany Commerzbank Arena 26 422 29 000 3 292 84611 August 2013 Copenhagen Denmark Parken Stadion 35 575 40 200 4 057 72714 August 2013 Baerum Norway Telenor Arena 33 324 35 000 4 630 71315 August 201317 August 2013 Gothenburg Sweden Ullevi Stadion 30 766 35 000 3 177 53020 August 2013 Warsaw Poland Stadion Narodowy im Kazimierza Gorskiego 32 549 36 331 3 008 06823 August 2013 Vienna Austria Ernst Happel Stadion 36 385 40 000 4 409 93125 August 2013 Budapest Hungary Puskas Ferenc Stadion 18 720 30 000 1 137 67528 August 2013 Bucharest Romania Piaţa Constituţiei 44 813 44 850 3 216 10530 August 2013 Sofia Bulgaria Vassil Levski National Stadium 31 371 35 000 2 053 6741 September 2013 Belgrade Serbia Kombank Arena 12 400 14 000 669 7124 September 2013 Berlin Germany Olympiastadion Berlin 29 857 40 000 3 299 1376 September 2013 Dusseldorf Esprit Arena 33 727 35 000 3 823 3738 September 2013 Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam ArenA 47 414 47 500 4 257 13311 September 2013 Zurich Switzerland Letzigrund 37 367 40 000 4 974 57914 September 2013 London England Wembley Stadium 57 803 58 000 6 385 72816 September 2013 Manchester Manchester Arena 9 667 12 000 1 119 52818 September 2013 Dublin Ireland Aviva Stadium 24 210 30 000 2 443 70621 September 2013 Paris Saint Denis France Stade de France 69 119 70 000 6 853 334TOTAL 4 129 863 4 268 028 97 458 673 798Image gallery edit nbsp The homeless guy before the show in Denver 23 November 2010 nbsp Waters during in the Flesh nbsp In the Flesh nbsp Waters performing In the Flesh nbsp The Stuka diving at the conclusion of In The Flesh nbsp Performing Another Brick in the Wall I nbsp The Schoolmaster puppet during Another Brick in The Wall II nbsp Mother looms large over a 12 meter wall nbsp Playing an acoustic guitar during Mother nbsp The ex wife puppet during Don t Leave Me Now nbsp The Wall is complete during Hey You nbsp During the climax of the guitar solo in Comfortably Numb nbsp During the guitar solo to Comfortably Numb nbsp In the Flesh nbsp Performing Run Like Hell nbsp During the extended Run Like Hell nbsp Waiting for the Worms nbsp Playing a fascist dictator nbsp Hammer Hammer Hammer Hammer nbsp Performing Stop nbsp The Pink doll falling from the top of the wall as The Trial begins nbsp During The Trial nbsp As the wall comes tumbling down at the end of The Trial nbsp The epilogue Outside the Wall See also editList of highest grossing concert tours List of most attended concert toursReferences edit Roger Waters to Restage The Wall on 2010 Tour CBS News 12 April 2010 Retrieved 5 November 2010 a b c d e J C Macek III 5 September 2012 The Cinematic Experience of Roger Waters The Wall Live PopMatters Pink Floyd s Roger Waters to tour The Wall in North America NME News Retrieved 7 November 2010 Roger Waters To Play The Whole of the Wall Classic Rock 12 April 2010 Archived from the original on 29 May 2010 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Vena Jocelyn 29 December 2010 Bon Jovi AC DC U2 Top World Tours of 2010 MTV Retrieved 4 January 2011 Roger Waters Passes Madonna for Solo Boxscore Record with 459M Wall Live Tour Billboard Roger Waters The Wall Live Roger Waters Archived from the original on 26 February 2012 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Barrett John 28 September 2011 Roger Waters Performs with Foo Fighters Announces More U S Dates for The Wall Tour paste com Retrieved 4 October 2011 Roger Waters The Wall Live TC News Retrieved 25 November 2010 Raymundo Oscar Roger Waters Tour Finale Features Record Breaking Wall and Facebook Campaign Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 23 July 2012 Roger Waters back in Europe in 2013 Archived from the original on 5 June 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2012 Gardner Elysa 4 December 2010 Roger Waters gives The Wall a new more political edge for tour USA Today Retrieved 5 November 2010 Latest news from Snowy White Snowy White Retrieved 7 November 2010 The Wall tour dates Dave Kilminster 14 April 2010 Archived from the original on 6 May 2010 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Venice News Venice Retrieved 7 November 2010 Youngs Ian 15 October 2010 Pink Floyd may get back together for charity BBC News Retrieved 19 October 2010 Mocarsky Steve 24 August 2010 We are another brick in the wall Pink Floyd co founder Roger Waters rehearsing for solo tour at Mohegan Sun Arena The Times Leader Wilkes Barre Archived from the original on 26 August 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Pink Floyd news Brain Damage September 12th IZOD CENTER EAST RUTHERFORD NJ USA dress rehearsal Brain Damage 15 September 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Toronto Film Festival Completes Lineup Variety 19 August 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 The Band Facebook Retrieved 7 October 2011 ADL Says Bomb Imagery in Roger Waters The Wall Tour Calls Up Anti Semitic Stereotypes ADL 27 September 2010 Archived from the original on 6 November 2010 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Greene Andy 7 October 2010 Roger Waters Changes Controversial Wall Video The Anti Defamation League had protested the juxtaposition of the Star of David and dollar signs Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 9 October 2010 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Coffey Kevin 27 October 2010 Waters does well with The Wall Archived from the original on 6 September 2012 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Pick Steve 31 October 2010 Roger Waters in a visually stunning concert at Scottrade stltoday com Retrieved 7 November 2010 Fin Timothy 31 October 2010 Roger Waters show is sensory overload in a good way The Kansas City Star Retrieved 7 November 2010 Stevens Kevin 8 November 2010 Powerful performance of The Wall The Setonian Archived from the original on 14 November 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Amorosi A D 9 November 2010 ICE CUBE Roger Waters The Wall Wells Fargo Center 11 8 Philadelphia City Paper Archived from the original on 12 November 2010 Retrieved 11 November 2010 De Marco Matt 11 November 2010 Roger Waters still rockin strong The Hofstra Chronicle online Retrieved 11 November 2010 Pink Floyd news Brain Damage September 20th UNITED CENTER CHICAGO IL USA Brain Damage 16 June 2011 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Footage from concert used in filming Roger Waters The Wall Footage from concert used in filming Roger Waters The Wall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Wall Live 2010 2013 amp oldid 1191378800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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