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Summer Tour 2004 (Van Halen)

The Van Halen Tour 2004 was a North American concert tour by hard rock band Van Halen.[1] It was the band's first tour since 1998 and saw the return of lead singer Sammy Hagar, who left the band in 1996 after tensions with lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen.[1][2]

Van Halen Tour 2004
Tour by Van Halen
Start dateJune 11, 2004
End dateNovember 19, 2004
Legs4
No. of shows80
Van Halen concert chronology
Michael Anthony, Sammy Hagar, and Eddie Van Halen performing during 2004.

Tensions between Hagar and Eddie Van Halen were rekindled during the rehearsals before the tour even started and continued until the last show.[3] The 2004 tour marked the last time that Hagar would ever perform with Van Halen.[3] Some points of contention between the two included Eddie's increased struggles with substance abuse and Sammy Hagar’s promotion of his personal Cabo Wabo tequila brand.[1] The tour also signaled the declining relationship of bassist Michael Anthony with Eddie and Alex Van Halen.[4] During the 2004 tour, Anthony was forced to lose his licensing rights to the band and to take a pay cut due to tensions with the Van Halen brothers.[4][5]

While commercially successful attendance was an issue, the tour generally received poor reviews from critics, with some alleging that Eddie was sloppy, unfocused, and the band was past their prime.[6][7] The tour’s legacy has been similarly poor as well, especially regarding the off-stage developments involving Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony.[4] Nick Deriso of Ultimate Classic Rock called the tour “disastrous."[4]

Background edit

The 2004 tour was the first time that Van Halen had played together since 1998, with then lead singer Gary Cherone.[1] In 2004, Van Halen reunited with Sammy Hagar, their second lead vocalist from 1985–1996, who had split with the band due to tensions with Eddie Van Halen.[2][5] Hagar claimed that the 1996 split resulted from disagreements over recording new tracks for the movie Twister, after he was exhausted from touring in support of the band’s album Balance.[8] According to Hagar, he was then informed that the songs the band had recorded would be released without his vocals and were not going to be used for the Twister soundtrack, but for a greatest-hits album, which Hagar opposed.[8] However, Eddie Van Halen claimed that the tensions with Hagar stemmed from the singer’s decision to produce his own “solo best-of set,” which increased tensions when Hagar then refused to partake in the Van Halen greatest hits release.[2] Van Halen turned to David Lee Roth, the band’s first lead singer, to replace Hagar as the band's lead singer.[8]

The 2004 reunion tour resulted after Sammy Hagar decided to call drummer Alex Van Halen in 2003 and “hit it off like old times."[9] After Hagar then called lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen, the band was once again reunited.[9]

Originally, the band planned to release a full-length album, titled The Best of Both Worlds, which would have featured the instrumentals from the aborted second album with Gary Cherone, with Hagar on vocals.[5] This plan was abandoned because Eddie Van Halen was only able to complete three of the tracks.[5] They decided to release a new compilation double album featuring three new songs, which was to be followed by a reunion tour.[5] The new songs were "It's About Time", "Up for Breakfast" and "Learning to See". Initially, 28 dates were announced, but the tour was extended to 80 across five months.[5]

Michael Anthony originally thought that the tour would expand to Europe, Japan, and South America, but the idea was abandoned because of Hagar's feud with Eddie Van Halen.[1]

Controversies edit

Hagar’s reunion with the band, and relationship with Eddie Van Halen, began well.[9] In August 2004, Hagar said that he and Eddie Van Halen were going to “Pretend like it [the feud] never happened. We’re going to rise above it.”[9] In an early review of the tour, Hagar was described as “undeniably delighted to be back together” with Van Halen.[9] However, Hagar and Van Halen’s feelings of goodwill proved short-lived.[2]

Hagar accused Eddie of drinking too much, despite Eddie's denials: "It was horrible to know a person that was in that kind of shape."[5] In his memoir, Hagar wrote that during the tour Van Halen was “unkempt, hunched over, frighteningly skinny” and “drinking wine straight out of a bottle."[4] Van Halen was reported to have collapsed during the tour as well, in addition to playing poorly due to his struggles with substance abuse.[4] Eddie Van Halen said that he was “an alcoholic” and that in 2004 he became a “very angry drunk,” although he claimed that Hagar’s memoir was “definitely embellished."[10]

Another point of contention during the tour was Sammy Hagar’s promotion of his Cabo Wabo tequila brand, to the displeasure of Eddie Van Halen.[1] Bassist Michael Anthony said that “he [Eddie Van Halen] was never happy about that, the whole Cabo Wabo thing.”[1] Anthony claimed that Sammy independently contracted with arenas to sell the tequila, which “would create some tension onstage and offstage."[1] Hagar claims he was told by the Van Halen brothers, before the tour, that he would not be allowed to promote his Cabo Wabo tequila, so he purposefully “got a Cabo Wabo tattoo” on his arm and “wore short sleeves."[11]

The tour also caused controversy with Michael Anthony, the band's longtime bassist (performing with them until 2000 when they went on hiatus, but still officially a member in 2004).[5] Anthony was hired as a touring musician rather than a 'real' member of the band, resulting in being paid a reduced commission.[5] Initially, the Van Halen brothers did not want him on the tour at all, but Sammy Hagar refused to tour without him.[5]

The tour also resulted in a legal dispute between Van Halen and the Baltimore Orioles.[12] The Orioles had contracted Van Halen to perform a September 2 concert at Oriole Park at Camden Yards for $1.5 million, in addition to 80 percent of ticket and merchandise revenues.[12] However, the Orioles later canceled this deal, causing Van Halen to file a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, suing for at least $2 million.[13] Van Halen argued that they lost potential revenue in the Baltimore area from a non-compete clause and that they had to rearrange the 2004 tour for the show that the Orioles’ reneged on.[14]

Reception edit

According to Pollstar, the tour grossed $54.3 million, making it the sixth highest grossing tour of 2004.[15] Pollstar reports that the tour had an average ticket price of $99.12 and sold 1,054,238 tickets over 83 shows.[15] However, according to Billboard Boxscore, the tour grossed nearly $40 million.[16]

Critical reception for the tour was generally negative, with some reviews alleging that the tour was a watered-down version of the band’s past versions.[17] Jason Bracelin, of the Houston Press, wrote that “In their prime, the guys in Van Halen were as sticky, sweaty, and accident-prone as the best keggers. Now, they’re hard-rock parental units approaching their fifties, and so are many of their fans."[17] Kyle Munson, of The Des Moines Register, wrote that Van Halen sounded “sloppy” and alleged that Hagar seemed more focused with signing autographs than singing.[18] However, Doug Fox, after a performance in Salt Lake City, wrote that the future of Van Halen “seems to be on firmer ground as well with the return of Hagar."[19]

Legacy edit

Overall, the tour’s long term reputation has been similarly poor, being described as both “Disastrous” by Nick Deriso of Ultimate Classic Rock and “Ill-Fated” by Andy Greene of Rolling Stone.[3][4] The tour also is notable for its lasting damage on the relationship between lead singer Sammy Hagar and lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen. Sammy Hagar, in his memoir, wrote that after the 2004 tour, his relationship with Eddie Van Halen was “irretrievably broken."[4] By the end of the tour, Anthony and Hagar reportedly used “different jets, different hotels, different limos, different security details" from the Van Halen brothers.[4]

The tour also signaled the declining relationship between bassist Michael Anthony and the band.[4] Allegedly, Alex and Eddie Van Halen did not want to tour with Anthony, while Hagar insisted upon his presence in the band.[4] Anthony ended up being forced to relinquish his Van Halen licensing rights in addition to a pay cut.[4] Anthony claims he accepted the deal because he thought it may have been the last time the band would ever perform together.[3] In 2006, Eddie Van Halen fired Anthony from the band and replaced him with his son, Wolfgang Van Halen.[20]

Setlist edit

Typical Setlist

  1. "Jump"
  2. "Runaround"
  3. "Humans Being"
  4. "Up for Breakfast"
  5. Bass solo
  6. "Somebody Get Me a Doctor"
  7. "Poundcake"
  8. "It's About Time"
  9. Drum solo
  10. "Top of the World"
  11. "Unchained"
  12. "Why Can't This Be Love"
  13. "Eagles Fly"
  14. "Deeper Kinda Love"
  15. "Learning to See"
  16. "Best of Both Worlds"
  17. Guitar solo
  18. "Dreams"
  19. "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love"
  20. "Right Now"
  21. "You Really Got Me"
  22. "Panama"
  23. "When It's Love"
  24. "Runnin' with the Devil" (occasionally with Michael Anthony on vocals)
  25. "The Seventh Seal" (occasionally)
  26. "Finish What Ya Started" (occasionally)

Tour dates edit

Date[21][22] City Country Venue Support Act(s)
First leg
June 11, 2004 Greensboro United States Greensboro Coliseum Silvertide
June 13, 2004 Hershey Hersheypark Stadium
June 14, 2004 Richmond Richmond Coliseum
June 14, 2004 Buffalo HSBC Arena Silvertide
June 16, 2004 Philadelphia Wachovia Center
June 17, 2004
June 19, 2004 Worcester Worcester Centrum
June 20, 2004
June 22, 2004 East Rutherford Continental Airlines Arena
June 23, 2004
June 25, 2004 Washington, D.C. MCI Center
June 26, 2004 Albany Pepsi Arena
June 28, 2004 Hartford Hartford Civic Center
June 29, 2004 Burgettstown Post-Gazette Pavilion
July 1, 2004 Noblesville Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
July 2, 2004 Cleveland Gund Arena
July 3, 2004 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre
July 6, 2004 Louisville United States Freedom Hall
July 7, 2004 Columbus Value City Arena
July 9, 2004 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena
July 10, 2004 Detroit Joe Louis Arena
July 11, 2004 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills
July 19, 2004 Chicago United Center Shinedown
July 20, 2004
July 22, 2004 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center
July 23, 2004 Ashwaubenon Resch Center
July 25, 2004 Oklahoma City Ford Center
July 26, 2004 Kansas City Kemper Arena
July 28, 2004 St. Louis Savvis Center
July 29, 2004
July 31, 2004 Omaha Qwest Center
August 1, 2004 Denver Pepsi Center
August 3, 2004 Salt Lake City Delta Center
August 5, 2004 Phoenix America West Arena
August 6, 2004 Paradise Mandalay Bay Events Center
August 7, 2004
August 10, 2004 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose
August 11, 2004 Sacramento ARCO Arena
August 13, 2004 Oakland Oakland Arena
August 14, 2004 Fresno Save Mart Center
August 16, 2004 Anaheim Arrowhead Pond
August 17, 2004 Chula Vista Coors Amphitheatre
August 19, 2004 Los Angeles Staples Center
August 20, 2004
Second leg
September 2, 2004 Baltimore United States Oriole Park at Camden Yards
September 3, 2004 Atlantic City Borgata Events Center Laidlaw
September 5, 2004 Biloxi Mississippi Coast Coliseum
September 9, 2004 Tampa St. Pete Times Forum
September 11, 2004 Sunrise Office Depot Center
September 12, 2004 Columbia Colonial Center
September 13, 2004 San Juan Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum Vivanativa
September 14, 2004 Charlotte United States Charlotte Coliseum
September 15, 2004 Greenville BI-LO Center
September 16, 2004 Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena Shinedown
September 17, 2004 Atlanta Philips Arena Laidlaw
September 18, 2004 Cincinnati U.S. Bank Arena
September 20, 2004 Moline MARK of the Quad Cities Rose Hill Drive
September 21, 2004 Champaign Assembly Hall
September 23, 2004 Houston Toyota Center
September 24, 2004 North Little Rock Alltel Arena
September 25, 2004 Dallas American Airlines Center Mrnorth
September 28, 2004 San Antonio SBC Center
September 29, 2004 Lubbock United Spirit Arena
October 1, 2004 Paradise Orleans Arena
October 2, 2004 Albuquerque Journal Pavilion
Third leg
October 19, 2004 Portland United States Rose Garden Arena Rose Hill Drive
October 20, 2004 Spokane Spokane Arena
October 22, 2004 Seattle KeyArena
October 23, 2004 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum
October 25, 2004 Edmonton Rexall Place
October 26, 2004 Calgary Pengrowth Saddledome
October 28, 2004 Saskatoon Credit Union Centre
October 30, 2004 Winnipeg Winnipeg Arena
October 31, 2004 Fargo United States Fargodome Mrnorth
November 3, 2004 Milwaukee Bradley Center
November 4, 2004 Ames Hilton Coliseum
November 6, 2004 Valley Center Kansas Coliseum
November 9, 2004 Montreal Canada Bell Centre
November 10, 2004 Hamilton Copps Coliseum
November 11, 2004 Fort Wayne United States War Memorial Coliseum
November 13, 2004 Rapid City Don Barnett Arena
November 14, 2004 Bozeman Brick Breeden Fieldhouse
November 16, 2004 Nampa Idaho Center
November 18, 2004 Tucson AVA Amphitheater
November 19, 2004

Personnel edit

Additional musician

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h MICHAEL ANTHONY Speaks Candidly About VAN HALEN's Past And Future 2008-06-24 at the Wayback Machine; Blabbermouth, March 17, 2006
  2. ^ a b c d Giles, Jeff. "The Day Sammy Hagar Split from Van Halen." Ultimate Classic Rock, 16 June 2016, https://ultimateclassicrock.com/sammy-hagar-splits-van-halen/.
  3. ^ a b c d Greene, Andy (8 August 2013). "Van Halen Reunite With Sammy Hagar in 2004". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Deriso, Nick. “When Van Halen Mounted a Disastrous Reunion with Sammy Hagar.” Ultimate Classic Rock. 11 June 2015. https://ultimateclassicrock.com/sammy-hagar-van-halen-reunion-2004/
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Elliott, Paul (October 2013). "What do you do with $80 million? Anything you want!". Classic Rock #189. p. 48.
  6. ^ Bracelin, Jason. "Feels Like Old Times; with Sammy Hagar Back on Stage, Van Halen Trudges on." Houston Press, Sep 23 2004, ProQuest. Web. 18 Nov. 2020.
  7. ^ Munson, Kyle. "Headline: Van Halen Squeezes Out More Notes." Des Moines Register, Nov 06 2004, ProQuest. Web. 15 Nov. 2020 .
  8. ^ a b c Hochman, Steve. "Stunned Hagar Says Growing Tension Led to His Firing." Los Angeles Times, 28 June 1996, www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-06-28-ca-19283-story.html.
  9. ^ a b c d e GEORGE Varga SPECIAL TO, RAVE!. "Sammy Hagar's Return to Van Halen has Turned into a Mutual Admiration Summer Tour." Daily Breeze, Aug 20 2004, p. K19. ProQuest. Web. 15 Nov. 2020.
  10. ^ Klosterman, Chuck. "Billboard Cover: Eddie Van Halen on Surviving Addiction, Why He's Still Making Music and What He Really Thinks of David Lee Roth (and Other Past Van Halen Bandmates)." Billboard, MRC Media, 19 June 2015, www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/6605231/eddie-van-halen-addiction-david-lee-roth-touring.
  11. ^ “How I Did It: Sammy Hagar.” Inc. Editorial. Inc, November Issue. https://www.inc.com/magazine/201311/liz-welch/sammy-hagar.html
  12. ^ a b Wydeven, Reg. "Orioles, Van Halen Bicker about Broken Contract Agreement." The Post - Crescent, Sep 04 2004, ProQuest. Web. 15 Nov. 2020 .
  13. ^ "Van Halen Sues Orioles Over Stadium Concert: Salt Lake Telegram." Deseret News, Aug 21 2004, p. A02. ProQuest. Web. 15 Nov. 2020 .
  14. ^ Harris, Chris. "Van Halen Get To Play Ball Against The Orioles ... In Court." MTV News, 12 Aug. 2005, www.mtv.com/news/1507482/van-halen-get-to-play-ball-against-the-orioles-in-court/.
  15. ^ a b "2004 Top 100 Tours." Pollstar, 2017, www.Pollstar.com/Chart/2017/03/2004YearendTop100Tours_485.pdf.
  16. ^ Waddell, Ray. "Exclusive: Van Halen Reuniting With Roth For Tour." Billboard, MRC Media, 24 Jan. 2007, www.billboard.com/articles/business/1055749/exclusive-van-halen-reuniting-with-roth-for-tour.
  17. ^ a b Bracelin, Jason. "Feels Like Old Times; with Sammy Hagar Back on Stage, Van Halen Trudges on." Houston Press, Sep 23 2004, ProQuest. Web. 18 Nov. 2020.
  18. ^ Munson, Kyle. "Headline: Van Halen Squeezes Out More Notes." Des Moines Register, Nov 06 2004, ProQuest. Web. 15 Nov. 2020 .
  19. ^ Fox, Doug. “‘Hear About it Later:’ Van Halen rocks Delta Center.” Daily Herald. 6 Aug. 2004, https://www.heraldextra.com/lifestyles/hear-about-it-later-van-halen-rocks-delta-center/article_eca555a3-394b-59fe-9ad4-0359b3981773.html
  20. ^ Kielty, Martin. "Wolfgang Van Halen Was Ready for Michael Anthony's Return." Ultimate Classic Rock, 17 Nov. 2020, https://ultimateclassicrock.com/wolfgang-van-halen-michael-anthony-return/
  21. ^ . 2007-02-18. Archived from the original on 2007-02-18. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  22. ^ "Van Halen Tour: 2004". www.vharchives.com. Retrieved 2021-01-03.

External links edit

  • Van-Halen.com – The official Van Halen website
  • Van Halen NewsDesk

summer, tour, 2004, halen, halen, tour, 2004, north, american, concert, tour, hard, rock, band, halen, band, first, tour, since, 1998, return, lead, singer, sammy, hagar, left, band, 1996, after, tensions, with, lead, guitarist, eddie, halen, halen, tour, 2004. The Van Halen Tour 2004 was a North American concert tour by hard rock band Van Halen 1 It was the band s first tour since 1998 and saw the return of lead singer Sammy Hagar who left the band in 1996 after tensions with lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen 1 2 Van Halen Tour 2004Tour by Van HalenStart dateJune 11 2004End dateNovember 19 2004Legs4No of shows80Van Halen concert chronologyIII Tour 1998 Van Halen Tour 2004 2004 North American Tour 2007 2008 Michael Anthony Sammy Hagar and Eddie Van Halen performing during 2004 Tensions between Hagar and Eddie Van Halen were rekindled during the rehearsals before the tour even started and continued until the last show 3 The 2004 tour marked the last time that Hagar would ever perform with Van Halen 3 Some points of contention between the two included Eddie s increased struggles with substance abuse and Sammy Hagar s promotion of his personal Cabo Wabo tequila brand 1 The tour also signaled the declining relationship of bassist Michael Anthony with Eddie and Alex Van Halen 4 During the 2004 tour Anthony was forced to lose his licensing rights to the band and to take a pay cut due to tensions with the Van Halen brothers 4 5 While commercially successful attendance was an issue the tour generally received poor reviews from critics with some alleging that Eddie was sloppy unfocused and the band was past their prime 6 7 The tour s legacy has been similarly poor as well especially regarding the off stage developments involving Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony 4 Nick Deriso of Ultimate Classic Rock called the tour disastrous 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Controversies 3 Reception 4 Legacy 5 Setlist 6 Tour dates 7 Personnel 8 References 9 External linksBackground editThe 2004 tour was the first time that Van Halen had played together since 1998 with then lead singer Gary Cherone 1 In 2004 Van Halen reunited with Sammy Hagar their second lead vocalist from 1985 1996 who had split with the band due to tensions with Eddie Van Halen 2 5 Hagar claimed that the 1996 split resulted from disagreements over recording new tracks for the movie Twister after he was exhausted from touring in support of the band s album Balance 8 According to Hagar he was then informed that the songs the band had recorded would be released without his vocals and were not going to be used for the Twister soundtrack but for a greatest hits album which Hagar opposed 8 However Eddie Van Halen claimed that the tensions with Hagar stemmed from the singer s decision to produce his own solo best of set which increased tensions when Hagar then refused to partake in the Van Halen greatest hits release 2 Van Halen turned to David Lee Roth the band s first lead singer to replace Hagar as the band s lead singer 8 The 2004 reunion tour resulted after Sammy Hagar decided to call drummer Alex Van Halen in 2003 and hit it off like old times 9 After Hagar then called lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen the band was once again reunited 9 Originally the band planned to release a full length album titled The Best of Both Worlds which would have featured the instrumentals from the aborted second album with Gary Cherone with Hagar on vocals 5 This plan was abandoned because Eddie Van Halen was only able to complete three of the tracks 5 They decided to release a new compilation double album featuring three new songs which was to be followed by a reunion tour 5 The new songs were It s About Time Up for Breakfast and Learning to See Initially 28 dates were announced but the tour was extended to 80 across five months 5 Michael Anthony originally thought that the tour would expand to Europe Japan and South America but the idea was abandoned because of Hagar s feud with Eddie Van Halen 1 Controversies editHagar s reunion with the band and relationship with Eddie Van Halen began well 9 In August 2004 Hagar said that he and Eddie Van Halen were going to Pretend like it the feud never happened We re going to rise above it 9 In an early review of the tour Hagar was described as undeniably delighted to be back together with Van Halen 9 However Hagar and Van Halen s feelings of goodwill proved short lived 2 Hagar accused Eddie of drinking too much despite Eddie s denials It was horrible to know a person that was in that kind of shape 5 In his memoir Hagar wrote that during the tour Van Halen was unkempt hunched over frighteningly skinny and drinking wine straight out of a bottle 4 Van Halen was reported to have collapsed during the tour as well in addition to playing poorly due to his struggles with substance abuse 4 Eddie Van Halen said that he was an alcoholic and that in 2004 he became a very angry drunk although he claimed that Hagar s memoir was definitely embellished 10 Another point of contention during the tour was Sammy Hagar s promotion of his Cabo Wabo tequila brand to the displeasure of Eddie Van Halen 1 Bassist Michael Anthony said that he Eddie Van Halen was never happy about that the whole Cabo Wabo thing 1 Anthony claimed that Sammy independently contracted with arenas to sell the tequila which would create some tension onstage and offstage 1 Hagar claims he was told by the Van Halen brothers before the tour that he would not be allowed to promote his Cabo Wabo tequila so he purposefully got a Cabo Wabo tattoo on his arm and wore short sleeves 11 The tour also caused controversy with Michael Anthony the band s longtime bassist performing with them until 2000 when they went on hiatus but still officially a member in 2004 5 Anthony was hired as a touring musician rather than a real member of the band resulting in being paid a reduced commission 5 Initially the Van Halen brothers did not want him on the tour at all but Sammy Hagar refused to tour without him 5 The tour also resulted in a legal dispute between Van Halen and the Baltimore Orioles 12 The Orioles had contracted Van Halen to perform a September 2 concert at Oriole Park at Camden Yards for 1 5 million in addition to 80 percent of ticket and merchandise revenues 12 However the Orioles later canceled this deal causing Van Halen to file a lawsuit in the U S District Court in Los Angeles suing for at least 2 million 13 Van Halen argued that they lost potential revenue in the Baltimore area from a non compete clause and that they had to rearrange the 2004 tour for the show that the Orioles reneged on 14 Reception editAccording to Pollstar the tour grossed 54 3 million making it the sixth highest grossing tour of 2004 15 Pollstar reports that the tour had an average ticket price of 99 12 and sold 1 054 238 tickets over 83 shows 15 However according to Billboard Boxscore the tour grossed nearly 40 million 16 Critical reception for the tour was generally negative with some reviews alleging that the tour was a watered down version of the band s past versions 17 Jason Bracelin of the Houston Press wrote that In their prime the guys in Van Halen were as sticky sweaty and accident prone as the best keggers Now they re hard rock parental units approaching their fifties and so are many of their fans 17 Kyle Munson of The Des Moines Register wrote that Van Halen sounded sloppy and alleged that Hagar seemed more focused with signing autographs than singing 18 However Doug Fox after a performance in Salt Lake City wrote that the future of Van Halen seems to be on firmer ground as well with the return of Hagar 19 Legacy editOverall the tour s long term reputation has been similarly poor being described as both Disastrous by Nick Deriso of Ultimate Classic Rock and Ill Fated by Andy Greene of Rolling Stone 3 4 The tour also is notable for its lasting damage on the relationship between lead singer Sammy Hagar and lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen Sammy Hagar in his memoir wrote that after the 2004 tour his relationship with Eddie Van Halen was irretrievably broken 4 By the end of the tour Anthony and Hagar reportedly used different jets different hotels different limos different security details from the Van Halen brothers 4 The tour also signaled the declining relationship between bassist Michael Anthony and the band 4 Allegedly Alex and Eddie Van Halen did not want to tour with Anthony while Hagar insisted upon his presence in the band 4 Anthony ended up being forced to relinquish his Van Halen licensing rights in addition to a pay cut 4 Anthony claims he accepted the deal because he thought it may have been the last time the band would ever perform together 3 In 2006 Eddie Van Halen fired Anthony from the band and replaced him with his son Wolfgang Van Halen 20 Setlist editTypical Setlist Jump Runaround Humans Being Up for Breakfast Bass solo Somebody Get Me a Doctor Poundcake It s About Time Drum solo Top of the World Unchained Why Can t This Be Love Eagles Fly Deeper Kinda Love Learning to See Best of Both Worlds Guitar solo Dreams Ain t Talkin bout Love Right Now You Really Got Me Panama When It s Love Runnin with the Devil occasionally with Michael Anthony on vocals The Seventh Seal occasionally Finish What Ya Started occasionally Tour dates editDate 21 22 City Country Venue Support Act s First leg June 11 2004 Greensboro United States Greensboro Coliseum Silvertide June 13 2004 Hershey Hersheypark Stadium June 14 2004 Richmond Richmond Coliseum June 14 2004 Buffalo HSBC Arena Silvertide June 16 2004 Philadelphia Wachovia Center June 17 2004 June 19 2004 Worcester Worcester Centrum June 20 2004 June 22 2004 East Rutherford Continental Airlines Arena June 23 2004 June 25 2004 Washington D C MCI Center June 26 2004 Albany Pepsi Arena June 28 2004 Hartford Hartford Civic Center June 29 2004 Burgettstown Post Gazette Pavilion July 1 2004 Noblesville Verizon Wireless Amphitheater July 2 2004 Cleveland Gund Arena July 3 2004 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre July 6 2004 Louisville United States Freedom Hall July 7 2004 Columbus Value City Arena July 9 2004 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena July 10 2004 Detroit Joe Louis Arena July 11 2004 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills July 19 2004 Chicago United Center Shinedown July 20 2004 July 22 2004 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center July 23 2004 Ashwaubenon Resch Center July 25 2004 Oklahoma City Ford Center July 26 2004 Kansas City Kemper Arena July 28 2004 St Louis Savvis Center July 29 2004 July 31 2004 Omaha Qwest Center August 1 2004 Denver Pepsi Center August 3 2004 Salt Lake City Delta Center August 5 2004 Phoenix America West Arena August 6 2004 Paradise Mandalay Bay Events Center August 7 2004 August 10 2004 San Jose HP Pavilion at San Jose August 11 2004 Sacramento ARCO Arena August 13 2004 Oakland Oakland Arena August 14 2004 Fresno Save Mart Center August 16 2004 Anaheim Arrowhead Pond August 17 2004 Chula Vista Coors Amphitheatre August 19 2004 Los Angeles Staples Center August 20 2004 Second leg September 2 2004 Baltimore United States Oriole Park at Camden Yards September 3 2004 Atlantic City Borgata Events Center Laidlaw September 5 2004 Biloxi Mississippi Coast Coliseum September 9 2004 Tampa St Pete Times Forum September 11 2004 Sunrise Office Depot Center September 12 2004 Columbia Colonial Center September 13 2004 San Juan Puerto Rico Jose Miguel Agrelot Coliseum Vivanativa September 14 2004 Charlotte United States Charlotte Coliseum September 15 2004 Greenville BI LO Center September 16 2004 Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena Shinedown September 17 2004 Atlanta Philips Arena Laidlaw September 18 2004 Cincinnati U S Bank Arena September 20 2004 Moline MARK of the Quad Cities Rose Hill Drive September 21 2004 Champaign Assembly Hall September 23 2004 Houston Toyota Center September 24 2004 North Little Rock Alltel Arena September 25 2004 Dallas American Airlines Center Mrnorth September 28 2004 San Antonio SBC Center September 29 2004 Lubbock United Spirit Arena October 1 2004 Paradise Orleans Arena October 2 2004 Albuquerque Journal Pavilion Third leg October 19 2004 Portland United States Rose Garden Arena Rose Hill Drive October 20 2004 Spokane Spokane Arena October 22 2004 Seattle KeyArena October 23 2004 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum October 25 2004 Edmonton Rexall Place October 26 2004 Calgary Pengrowth Saddledome October 28 2004 Saskatoon Credit Union Centre October 30 2004 Winnipeg Winnipeg Arena October 31 2004 Fargo United States Fargodome Mrnorth November 3 2004 Milwaukee Bradley Center November 4 2004 Ames Hilton Coliseum November 6 2004 Valley Center Kansas Coliseum November 9 2004 Montreal Canada Bell Centre November 10 2004 Hamilton Copps Coliseum November 11 2004 Fort Wayne United States War Memorial Coliseum November 13 2004 Rapid City Don Barnett Arena November 14 2004 Bozeman Brick Breeden Fieldhouse November 16 2004 Nampa Idaho Center November 18 2004 Tucson AVA Amphitheater November 19 2004Personnel editSammy Hagar lead vocals guitar Eddie Van Halen lead guitar keyboards backing vocals Michael Anthony bass guitar backing vocals Alex Van Halen drums percussion Additional musician Wolfgang Van Halen rhythm guitar during 316 References edit a b c d e f g h MICHAEL ANTHONY Speaks Candidly About VAN HALEN s Past And Future Archived 2008 06 24 at the Wayback Machine Blabbermouth March 17 2006 a b c d Giles Jeff The Day Sammy Hagar Split from Van Halen Ultimate Classic Rock 16 June 2016 https ultimateclassicrock com sammy hagar splits van halen a b c d Greene Andy 8 August 2013 Van Halen Reunite With Sammy Hagar in 2004 Rolling Stone Retrieved 18 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Deriso Nick When Van Halen Mounted a Disastrous Reunion with Sammy Hagar Ultimate Classic Rock 11 June 2015 https ultimateclassicrock com sammy hagar van halen reunion 2004 a b c d e f g h i j Elliott Paul October 2013 What do you do with 80 million Anything you want Classic Rock 189 p 48 Bracelin Jason Feels Like Old Times with Sammy Hagar Back on Stage Van Halen Trudges on Houston Press Sep 23 2004 ProQuest Web 18 Nov 2020 Munson Kyle Headline Van Halen Squeezes Out More Notes Des Moines Register Nov 06 2004 ProQuest Web 15 Nov 2020 a b c Hochman Steve Stunned Hagar Says Growing Tension Led to His Firing Los Angeles Times 28 June 1996 www latimes com archives la xpm 1996 06 28 ca 19283 story html a b c d e GEORGE Varga SPECIAL TO RAVE Sammy Hagar s Return to Van Halen has Turned into a Mutual Admiration Summer Tour Daily Breeze Aug 20 2004 p K19 ProQuest Web 15 Nov 2020 Klosterman Chuck Billboard Cover Eddie Van Halen on Surviving Addiction Why He s Still Making Music and What He Really Thinks of David Lee Roth and Other Past Van Halen Bandmates Billboard MRC Media 19 June 2015 www billboard com articles columns rock 6605231 eddie van halen addiction david lee roth touring How I Did It Sammy Hagar Inc Editorial Inc November Issue https www inc com magazine 201311 liz welch sammy hagar html a b Wydeven Reg Orioles Van Halen Bicker about Broken Contract Agreement The Post Crescent Sep 04 2004 ProQuest Web 15 Nov 2020 Van Halen Sues Orioles Over Stadium Concert Salt Lake Telegram Deseret News Aug 21 2004 p A02 ProQuest Web 15 Nov 2020 Harris Chris Van Halen Get To Play Ball Against The Orioles In Court MTV News 12 Aug 2005 www mtv com news 1507482 van halen get to play ball against the orioles in court a b 2004 Top 100 Tours Pollstar 2017 www Pollstar com Chart 2017 03 2004YearendTop100Tours 485 pdf Waddell Ray Exclusive Van Halen Reuniting With Roth For Tour Billboard MRC Media 24 Jan 2007 www billboard com articles business 1055749 exclusive van halen reuniting with roth for tour a b Bracelin Jason Feels Like Old Times with Sammy Hagar Back on Stage Van Halen Trudges on Houston Press Sep 23 2004 ProQuest Web 18 Nov 2020 Munson Kyle Headline Van Halen Squeezes Out More Notes Des Moines Register Nov 06 2004 ProQuest Web 15 Nov 2020 Fox Doug Hear About it Later Van Halen rocks Delta Center Daily Herald 6 Aug 2004 https www heraldextra com lifestyles hear about it later van halen rocks delta center article eca555a3 394b 59fe 9ad4 0359b3981773 html Kielty Martin Wolfgang Van Halen Was Ready for Michael Anthony s Return Ultimate Classic Rock 17 Nov 2020 https ultimateclassicrock com wolfgang van halen michael anthony return Van Halen Tour Dates 2004 2007 02 18 Archived from the original on 2007 02 18 Retrieved 2020 12 12 Van Halen Tour 2004 www vharchives com Retrieved 2021 01 03 External links editVan Halen com The official Van Halen website Van Halen NewsDesk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Summer Tour 2004 Van Halen amp oldid 1203583449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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