A Head Full of Dreams Tour

A Head Full of Dreams Tour
Tour by Coldplay

Promotional poster for the tour
Associated album A Head Full of Dreams
Start date 31 March 2016 (2016-03-31)
End date 8 October 2017 (2017-10-08)
No. of shows 10 in Latin America
44 in Europe
42 in North America
10 in Asia
6 in Oceania
112 in total
Coldplay concert chronology

The A Head Full of Dreams Tour[1] is the seventh concert tour currently being undertaken by British alternative rock band Coldplay, launched in support of their namesake seventh studio album A Head Full of Dreams. Marking the band's return to large-scale venues, after the low-key Ghost Stories Tour, the tour will visit stadiums and arenas across three continents, with a total of 60 shows penned. The A Head Full of Dreams Tour boasts extensive laser light and pyrotechnic visuals similar to the Mylo Xyloto Tour, and also sees a reappearance of the Xylobands as a central part of the show's visual design. The tour has so far confirmed to be comprising three legs, with a total of 60 shows across Latin America, where they will perform for the first time since the Viva la Vida Tour, Europe, and North America, where they will embark on the very first stadium tour of the United States. The first show of the tour was held at the Estadio Ciudad de La Plata in La Plata, Argentina, on 31 March 2016.

Promotion

In November 2015, Coldplay announced the Latin American and European legs of the "A Head Full of Dreams Tour" through their official website, with 28 stadium shows confirmed across 14 countries in Europe and Latin America the next year.[2] On 7 December 2015, a fourth and final date at Wembley Stadium, on Wed, 15 June 2016 was announced by the band.[3] The following day, while being interviewed on The Late Late Show with James Corden, the band announced that the tour would also visit Asia and North America.[4]

On 7 April 2016, Coldplay announced 12 new arena dates in the United States.[5] On 29 May 2016, the band will play a homecoming gig in Exeter in England as part of BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend.[6] [7] They have also been announced as the first headliners at Glastonbury 2016, performing on Sunday 26th June. This will be the fourth time they've headlined the festival and sets a record for the most number of times a headliner has played.[8] It was also announced that this would be their only festival performance in 2016. However, two more festivals are now on their tour agenda. While nothing has been announced nor confirmed as of yet, Coldplay has expressed an interest to visit less-visited countries during concert tours, such as India and a large amount of Asia, as well as Africa. No dates have been set currently.[9] Further tour dates will be announced after the release of dates of Leg 2 in Europe. On 6 October 2016, it has been confirmed on Twitter that they will visit the United States again and Canada in the Summer of 2017. On 15 November 2016, the band posted a teaser on Facebook for an Asian tour in 2017 that would visit Singapore, Philippines, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan.[10]

Opening acts

Lianne La Havas (left) is following Coldplay for the Latin American and European legs of the tour as its main supporting act, while Alessia Cara (right) will serve as main support during the North American leg.

For each of the main tour dates, two supporting acts, the first billed as the "opener", and the second as the "main support", performed before the concert. British folk and soul singer-songwriter Lianne La Havas is serving as the tour's main supporting act for all the shows during the Latin America leg and a majority of the European leg of the tour. Her appearances on the tour follow her own 10-month tour in support of her July 2015-released album Blood, which had ended two weeks before the start of the A Head Full of Dreams Tour.[11] It marks the first stadium shows of Havas' career, and her first performances in Latin America.[12][13] The opening acts during the Latin America leg featured local talent, including Argentinian singer and plastic artist Hana Ciliberti, and Mexican pop rock artist Ximena Sariñana, who will perform at the shows in Mexico City.[14]

Canadian R&B and pop artist Alessia Cara will also perform as a supporting act on the A Head Full of Dreams Tour, serving as the opener on a majority of the shows during the European leg and as the main support during the North American leg.[15] Cara, who will be turning 20 years old during the tour, had launched into mainstream success in 2015 with "Here",[16][17] and had been performing her first concert tour in the months trailing the A Head Full of Dreams Tour, in support for her debut studio album Know-It-All.[18] Cara, however, will skip three dates on the tour. Swiss artist Lea Lu will occupy the opening slot during the 11 June show in Zurich, Switzerland,[19] while British rock band Reef will perform during the tour's final two London shows.[20] In Lieu of Lianne La Havas' absence during the 11 June show in Zurich and the 3 July show in Stockholm, Sweden, British recording artists Foxes and Birdy will serve as main support respectively.[21]

Opener
Main support
  • Lianne La Havas (31 March – 7, 12 June – 1, 5 – 6 July)
  • Foxes (11 June)
  • Birdy (3 July)
  • Alessia Cara (16 July – 3 September)

Setlist

I think we’re just about at the point in our career where we can get through a concert without playing anything shit. Only now. If we put all our amazing songs together that covers about 20 minutes. Then fill the rest with just pretty good ones.
 Chris Martin, replying to a question about a 7-album setlist design.[22]

Similar to the Mylo Xyloto Tour, the A Head Full of Dreams Tour is typically split into five parts; an introduction on the main "A-stage", a performance on the "B-stage", a second set on the A-stage, a set on the outward "C-stage", and finally an encore on the A-stage. Songs played on the A-stage are accompanied by the show's full laser light and pyrotechnic visuals, while performances on the B-stage are not accompanied by such, and songs played on the C-stage are strictly acoustic performances.

Chris Martin on stage at Manchester's Etihad Stadium on 4 June 2016

Shows typically feature over 20 songs on the setlist, many of which played differently from the recorded versions of the songs, usually combined with intros and outros from other tracks. For example, "Paradise", which closes the opening set of the show, is played with a remix of the song by Tiësto as an outro, while "Fix You" is played with the instrumental background from "Midnight". A majority of the songs played during the tour come from the namesake album A Head Full of Dreams, and from the band's previous studio album, Ghost Stories, though songs from the band's earlier discography, such as Parachutes and A Rush of Blood to the Head are routinely played and shuffled across the setlist between shows. Frontman Chris Martin expressed satisfaction with the setlist, stating that the band were "enjoying playing really old songs", and that the tour "will finally have a setlist where we feel good about it from start to finish."[23]

A view of the stage at Wembley Stadium, London, during one of the four sold out concerts.

Apart from the band's own songs, covers of songs by other artists were also performed, with "Heroes" by David Bowie being a staple on the setlist, during the middle of the second A-stage set. The cover is a tribute to the late Bowie, whose death in January 2016 had been massively publicized by both the media and music fans alike. According to Martin, he and Bowie were good friends, claiming that Bowie even had assigned the nickname of "Sticky Martinez" to him.[24] The relationship between the band and Bowie musically, however, was not as profound; Bowie had earlier rejected a collaboration for Lhuna, a charity single released by the band in 2008 featuring Australian singer-songwritter Kylie Minogue, after deeming the song was simply "not one of [their] best".[25] Prior to the start of the tour, Martin also took to covering Bowie's songs, such as "Life on Mars?" on The Howard Stern Show and The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon in the weeks following Bowie's death.[26][27] The band also occasionally plays "'Til Kingdom Come"/"Ring of Fire", a combination between the X&Y song and the classic Johnny Cash song, which the band had initially conceived for the Twisted Logic Tour and also appeared in the setlist during the Viva la Vida Tour and Mylo Xyloto Tour. Occasionally, impromptu moments, usually during "A Sky Full of Stars" may also lead to an additional song being performed, as was the case during the band's 5 April performance at the Estadio Nacional de Lima in Peru, where Chris Martin sang "Happy Birthday to You" for his son Moses.[28]

Another staple of the setlist is a segment of the show known as the "Fan Dedication Song", where a song is requested by fans attending particular concerts on the tour, through social media service Instagram, for the band to play at the end of their C-stage set.[29] The segment was described by Martin as being similar to a photo booth, stating, "we'd ask people to give us a reason why they want us to play that song so there is a purpose behind why we play it."[23][30]

Setlist examples

Reception

Tickets for the first two legs were put on sale on Friday 27 November 2015 (which was also Black Friday). Their two Wembley Stadium dates quickly sold out, prompting a third, and later a fourth, to be added.[33] In addition to London dates being popular, shows were added in Mexico City, La Plata, Barcelona, Manchester, Zürich, Amsterdam and Copenhagen.

Tour dates

A Head Full of Dreams Tour
Date City Country Venue "Fan Request Song" Attendance Revenue
Leg 1 — Latin America[34][35]
31 March 2016 La Plata Argentina Estadio Ciudad de La Plata "Green Eyes" 48,167 / 48,167 $6,619,890
1 April 2016 "Shiver" 48,902 / 48,902
3 April 2016 Santiago Chile Estadio Nacional de Chile "Don't Panic" 60,787 / 60,787 $4,539,380
5 April 2016 Lima Peru Estadio Nacional de Lima "In My Place" 43,720 / 43,720 $4,828,810
7 April 2016 São Paulo Brazil Allianz Parque "Speed of Sound" 46,563 / 46,563 $4,093,280
10 April 2016 Rio de Janeiro Estádio do Maracanã "A Message" 59,669 / 59,669 $4,645,550
13 April 2016 Bogotá Colombia Estadio El Campín "The Hardest Part" 41,376 / 41,376 $3,532,820
15 April 2016 Mexico City Mexico Foro Sol 62,404 / 62,404 $11,231,300
16 April 2016 "A Rush of Blood to the Head" 65,337 / 65,337
17 April 2016 "Shiver" 67,451 / 67,451
Leg 2 — Europe[36]
24 May 2016 Nice France Stade Charles-Ehrmann "Us Against the World" 53,566 / 53,566 $3,367,270
26 May 2016 Barcelona Spain Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys "See You Soon" 111,261 / 111,261 $9,734,130
27 May 2016 "Trouble"
29 May 2016[lower-alpha 20][37] Exeter England Powderham Castle N/A N/A N/A
1 June 2016 Gelsenkirchen Germany Veltins-Arena "In My Place" 55,048 / 55,048 $4,650,320
4 June 2016 Manchester England Etihad Stadium "Trouble" 109,492 / 109,492 $10,676,300
5 June 2016 "In My Place"
7 June 2016 Glasgow Scotland Hampden Park "The Hardest Part" 48,526 / 48,526 $4,547,280
11 June 2016 Zürich Switzerland Letzigrund "Strawberry Swing" 89,254 / 89,254 $11,808,300
12 June 2016 "Don't Panic"
15 June 2016 London England Wembley Stadium "In My Place" 303,985 / 303,985 $28,810,200
16 June 2016 "God Put a Smile upon Your Face"
18 June 2016 "Green Eyes"
19 June 2016 "Trouble"
23 June 2016 Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam Arena "In My Place" 104,511 / 104,511 $8,759,000
24 June 2016 "Don't Panic"
26 June 2016[lower-alpha 21] Pilton England Worthy Farm N/A N/A N/A
28 June 2016 London Kensington Palace
29 June 2016 Berlin Germany Olympiastadion "In My Place" 68,047 / 68,047 $5,540,960
1 July 2016 Hamburg Volksparkstadion "Shiver" 43,860 / 43,860 $3,808,980
3 July 2016 Stockholm Sweden Friends Arena "Don't Panic" 53,575 / 53,575 $3,970,140
5 July 2016 Copenhagen Denmark Telia Parken "Shiver" 144,475 / 144,475 $9,182,590
6 July 2016 "God Put a Smile upon Your Face"
Leg 3 — United States[38]
16 July 2016 East Rutherford United States MetLife Stadium "God Put a Smile upon Your Face" 100,763 / 100,763 $10,749,394
17 July 2016 "Earth Angel"
"Johnny B. Goode" [lower-alpha 22]
20 July 2016 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse "'Til Kingdom Come" 12,667 / 12,667 $1,460,006
21 July 2016 St. Louis Scottrade Center "Green Eyes" 13,960 / 13,960 $1,547,633
23 July 2016 Chicago Soldier Field N/A [lower-alpha 23] 95,323 / 95,323 $10,215,572
24 July 2016 "Don't Panic"
27 July 2016 Louisville KFC Yum! Center "'Til Kingdom Come" 13,755 / 13,755 $1,520,726
28 July 2016 Columbus Nationwide Arena 15,530 / 15,530 $1,933,346
30 July 2016 Foxborough Gillette Stadium "Green Eyes" 54,952 / 54,952 $6,530,260
1 August 2016 Buffalo First Niagara Center 15,100 / 15,100 $1,878,324
3 August 2016 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills "'Til Kingdom Come" 15,436 / 15,436 $1,731,667
4 August 2016 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center "See You Soon" 14,360 / 14,360 $1,614,917
6 August 2016 Philadelphia Lincoln Financial Field "'Til Kingdom Come" 54,497 / 54,497 $5,530,866
20 August 2016 Pasadena Rose Bowl "Don't Panic" 120,062 / 120,062 $10,914,898
21 August 2016 "'Til Kingdom Come"
23 August 2016 Glendale Gila River Arena "Shiver" 14,427 / 14,427 $1,776,867
25 August 2016 Tulsa BOK Center "'Til Kingdom Come" 13,234 / 13,234 $1,578,961
27 August 2016 Arlington AT&T Stadium "In My Place" 52,538 / 52,538 $5,679,031
29 August 2016 Denver Pepsi Center "Don't Panic" 15,664 / 15,664 $1,902,639
31 August 2016 Salt Lake City Vivint Smart Home Arena "Green Eyes" 15,645 / 15,645 $1,871,968
1 September 2016 Las Vegas T-Mobile Arena "God Put a Smile Upon Your Face" 15,898 / 15,898 $2,124,032
3 September 2016 Santa Clara Levi's Stadium "'Til Kingdom Come" 52,404 / 52,404 $5,990,660
4 September 2016[lower-alpha 24] Philadelphia Benjamin Franklin Parkway N/A N/A
Europe[42]
11 November 2016 London England London Palladium N/A N/A N/A
Asia[43]
19 November 2016[lower-alpha 25] Mumbai India MMRDA Grounds "In My Place" N/A N/A
Leg 4 — Oceania[1]
3 December 2016 Auckland New Zealand Mount Smart Stadium "Green Eyes" TBA TBA
6 December 2016 Brisbane Australia Suncorp Stadium TBA
9 December 2016 Melbourne Etihad Stadium
10 December 2016
13 December 2016 Sydney Allianz Stadium
14 December 2016
Leg 5 — Asia[1]
31 December 2016 Abu Dhabi UAE du Arena TBA TBA TBA
31 March 2017 Singapore Singapore National Stadium
1 April 2017
4 April 2017 Manila Philippines MOA Concert Grounds
7 April 2017 Bangkok Thailand Rajamangala Stadium
11 April 2017 Taipei Taiwan HSR Taoyuan Station Plaza
12 April 2017
15 April 2017 Seoul South Korea Seoul Olympic Stadium
19 April 2017 Tokyo Japan Tokyo Dome
Leg 6 — Europe[1][44]
6 June 2017 Munich Germany Olympiastadion TBA TBA TBA
8 June 2017 Lyon France Parc Olympique Lyonnais
11 June 2017 Vienna Austria Ernst-Happel-Stadion
14 June 2017 Leipzig Germany Red Bull Arena
16 June 2017 Hanover HDI-Arena
18 June 2017 Warsaw Poland PGE Narodowy
21 June 2017 Brussels Belgium King Baudouin Stadium
22 June 2017
25 June 2017 Gothenburg Sweden Ullevi
26 June 2017
30 June 2017 Frankfurt Germany Commerzbank-Arena
1 July 2017
3 July 2017 Milan Italy San Siro
4 July 2017
8 July 2017 Dublin Ireland Croke Park
11 July 2017 Cardiff Wales Millennium Stadium
12 July 2017
15 July 2017 Paris France Stade de France
16 July 2017
18 July 2017
Leg 7 — North America[1]
1 August 2017 East Rutherford United States MetLife Stadium TBA TBA TBA
4 August 2017 Foxborough Gillette Stadium
6 August 2017 Landover FedExField
8 August 2017 Montreal Canada Bell Centre
9 August 2017
12 August 2017 Minneapolis United States U.S. Bank Stadium
14 August 2017 Omaha CenturyLink Center Omaha
15 August 2017 Kansas City Sprint Center
17 August 2017 Chicago Soldier Field
19 August 2017 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena
21 August 2017 Toronto Canada Rogers Centre
25 August 2017 Houston United States NRG Stadium
28 August 2017 Miami Gardens Hard Rock Stadium
23 September 2017 Seattle CenturyLink Field
26 September 2017 Edmonton Canada Rogers Place
29 September 2017 Vancouver BC Place
2 October 2017 Portland United States Moda Center
4 October 2017 Santa Clara Levi's Stadium
8 October 2017 San Diego Qualcomm Stadium
TOTAL 2,436,191 / 2,436,191
(100%)
$220,898,267

The tour grossed $137.2 million in the first half of 2016 from 29 shows. [45]

References

Notes
  1. Intro with an excerpt from The Great Dictator, by Charlie Chaplin
  2. Intro with ambience from "Oceans"
  3. Outro with "Paradise (Tiësto Remix)"
  4. Outro with excerpt from "Army of One"
  5. Instrumental bridge and outro played only
  6. Background from "Midnight" used in lieu of organs
  7. Extended version, played from tape)
  8. Requested by a fan as part of the tour's "Fan Dedication Song" series.
  9. Played with an extended outro
  10. Played concert credits on the screen, played from tape
  11. Intro with an excerpt from The Great Dictator, by Charlie Chaplin
  12. Intro with ambience from "Oceans"
  13. Outro with "Paradise (Tiësto Remix)"
  14. Outro with Muhammad Ali tribute and excerpt from "Army of One"
  15. Instrumental bridge and outro played only
  16. Background from "Midnight" used in lieu of organs
  17. Extended version, played from tape)
  18. Requested by a fan as part of the tour's "Fan Dedication Song" series.
  19. Played with an extended outro
  20. The May 29, 2016 concert at Powderham Castle in Exeter is part of BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend 2016.
  21. The June 26, 2016 concert at Worthy Farm in Pilton is part of Glastonbury Festival 2016.
  22. "Earth Angel" and "Johnny B. Goode" were requested by Chris Martin's son Moses, featuring Michael J. Fox who joined Coldplay with a guitar solo.[39]
  23. No fan request song was performed due to the concert being stopped before the C-stage due to thunderstorms.[40]
  24. The 4 September 2016 is a part of the Budweiser Made in America Festival.[41]
  25. The 19 November 2016 is a part of the Global Citizen Festival.
Citations
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Tour". coldplay.com. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  2. "First legs of 2016 tour announced – extra dates added!". Coldplay.com. 27 November 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  3. "Fourth Wembley Stadium show announced". Coldplay.com. 7 December 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  4. Garcia, Pia (10 December 2015). "Coldplay brings 'A Head Full of Dreams' to Asia". CNN Philippines. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  5. http://coldplay.com/extra-u-s-dates-announced/
  6. "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2016".
  7. "Radio 1 to take Coldplay home for the weekend". BBC Media Centre.
  8. "Coldplay announced as First Glastonbury 2016 Headliner". Glastonbury.
  9. Coldplay [coldplay] (18 April 2016). "We will try to come to as many places as we can over this tour. Love, Coldplay" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  10. "Coldplay teases Filipino fans with Asian tour". CNN Philippines. 14 November 2016. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  11. McLean, Craig (12 March 2016). "Singer Lianne La Havas: from Streatham to the Albert Hall". The Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  12. Coldplay website staff (8 April 2016). "Lianne La Havas interview". Coldplay. Parlophone. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  13. Bang Showbiz (31 March 2016). "Lianne La Havas supports Coldplay on Latin America tour dates". Yahoo7. Yahoo! / Seven West Media. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  14. Flores, Griselda (23 March 2016). "Ximena Sariñana to Open Coldplay's Concerts in Mexico". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  15. Yoo, Noah (8 April 2016). "Coldplay Expand U.S. Tour, Alessia Cara to Join". Pitchfork. Condé Nast. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  16. Meaghan, Sam (6 April 2016). "Alessia Cara to support Coldplay on UK and EU tour". Gigwise. Giant Digital. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  17. Walker, Sarah (6 April 2016). "Canada's Alessia Cara to tour with Coldplay in Europe". Hello! Canada. Hello! Ltd. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  18. Geslani, Michelle (7 November 2015). "Alessia Cara announces North American tour". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  19. 20 Minuten staff (6 April 2016). "Lea Lu spielt in Zürich als Vorband von Coldplay". 20 Minuten (in German). Express-Zeitung AG (Tamedia / Berner Zeitung). Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  20. Renshaw, David (6 April 2016). "Reef to open for Coldplay on UK stadium tour this summer". NME. Time Inc. UK. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  21. Coldplay website staff (6 April 2016). "UK / European support acts confirmed". Coldplay. Parlophone. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  22. Adams, Cameron (24 December 2015). "Coldplay's Chris Martin tells: 'We're at the point where we can get through a concert without playing anything sh--'". News.com.au. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  23. 1 2 Payne, Chris (22 December 2015). "Hey Coldplay Fans: You Can Request Songs for the Band's Farewell Tour". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  24. Sacks, Ethan (29 January 2016). "Coldplay's Chris Martin got impressive nickname from Bowie". New York Daily News. Daily News, L.P. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  25. Kreps, Daniel (14 December 2015). "Chris Martin: David Bowie Rejected Coldplay Collaboration". Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  26. "Chris Martin Discusses Super Bowl 50, David Bowie, And Why This Album Could Be Coldplay's Last". The Howard Stern Show. 16 March 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  27. Camp, Zoe (23 March 2016). "Coldplay's Chris Martin Covers David Bowie's "Life on Mars?" with Jimmy Fallon on "The Tonight Show"". Pitchfork. Condé Nast. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  28. "Coldplay at Estadio Nacional, Lima, Peru". Setlist.fm. 13 April 2016. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  29. Coldplay website staff (1 April 2016). "Request a song for the Latin American shows". Coldplay. Parlophone. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  30. Cragg, Michael (23 December 2015). "Coldplay are taking song requests – should other bands follow suit?". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  31. "Coldplay no Brasil: banda lota Maracanã em show mágico". Globo.com. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  32. Angermiller, Michelle (17 July 2016). "Coldplay Launches A Head Full of Dreams Tour With Vivid Colors, Multiple Stages, David Bowie Tribute & More". Billboard. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  33. "First legs of 2016 tour announced – extra dates added!".
  34. "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. 26 April 2016. Archived from the original on 26 April 2016. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  35. "Coldplay's "A Head Full of Dreams" Tour Sets Attendance Record in Mexico City". Live Nation Entertainment. April 19, 2016.
  36. Box score:
  37. "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend Line Up". BBC.
  38. "Billboard Boxscore :: Current Scores". Billboard. Archived from the original on October 4, 2016. Retrieved October 4, 2016.
  39. Reed, Ryan (July 18, 2016). "See Coldplay, Michael J. Fox Play 'Back to the Future' Songs Onstage". Rolling Stone. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
  40. Legaspi, Althea (July 24, 2016). "Rain can't dampen Coldplay party at Soldier Field". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  41. Rainey, Erikka (June 20, 2016). "Rihanna And Coldplay To Headline Philadelphia's Made In America Festival". bandsintown.com. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  42. Wilkie, Ewan (November 2, 2016). "Coldplay collaborate with Bauer Media Group on London Palladium gig". musicweek.com. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
  43. Coscarelli, Joe (September 12, 2016). "Global Citizen Festival Expands to India". The New York Times. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
  44. Britton, Luke Morgan (3 October 2016). "Coldplay announce first tour dates of 2017 – see ticket information". NME. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  45. http://www.pollstarpro.com/files/charts2016/2016MidYearTop100WorldwideTours.pdf

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