R.E.M. concert tours
The following is a listing of R.E.M. tours.
Contents |
1981
R.E.M. traveled extensively, mostly around the Deep South, during their first few years of being a unit. Their first real, albeit relatively local, tour took place in 1981. Mistakenly nicknamed "Rapid.Eye.Movement.Tour.1981" by the band's manager at the time, Jefferson Holt, the tour was arranged by Bill Berry, and its main aim was to help raise the necessary funds to keep the band operating. The tour was in support of their "Radio Free Europe" single, which was to be released on David Hibbert's Hib-Tone label in July 1981.
The tour kicked off on March 26, 1981 at K. O. Jam's in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.[1][2]
1982
In August, the band's first true national tour, in support of Chronic Town, began in San Diego, California. It finished in Florida four months later.[1]
1983
Tour by R.E.M. | |
Location | North America, Europe |
---|---|
Associated album | Murmur |
Start date | March 26, 1983 |
End date | November 25, 1983 |
Legs | 4 |
No. of shows |
96 in North America 5 in Europe 101 in Total |
A tour in support of Murmur got underway in March. The band made their first live television appearance during the tour, on Late Night with David Letterman on October 6. The tour concluded in Europe in late November.[1]
Setlist
This set list is representative of the performance in Rouen, France. It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.
- "Gardening at Night"
- "9-9"
- "Catapult"
- "Letter Never Sent"
- "Pilgrimage"
- "7 Chinese Bros."
- "Talk About the Passion"
- "So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"
- "Sitting Still"
- "Harborcoat"
- "Moral Kiosk"
- "Little America"
- "Second Guessing"
- "Radio Free Europe"
- "Pale Blue Eyes"
- "Camera"
- "1,000,000"
- "Carnival of Sorts (Box Cars)"
- "Wolves, Lower"
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening act(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
North America (Supporting The English Beat) | ||||
March 26, 1983 | Durham | United States | Page Auditorium | N/A |
March 27, 1983 | Chapel Hill | Memorial Hall | N/A | |
March 30, 1983 | Daytona Beach | Plaza Hotel | N/A | |
March 31, 1983 | Coral Gables | University of Miami | N/A | |
April 2, 1983 | Sewanee | University of the South | N/A | |
April 5, 1983 | Nashville | Vanderbilt University | N/A | |
April 7, 1983 | Cincinnati | Bogart's | N/A | |
April 8, 1983 | Lexington | University of Kentucky | N/A | |
April 9, 1983 | Oberlin | Oberlin College | N/A | |
April 10, 1983 | Detroit | Grand Circus Theatre | N/A | |
April 12, 1983 | London | Canada | University of Western Ontario | N/A |
April 13, 1983 | Rochester | United States | University of Rochester | N/A |
April 14, 1983 | Buffalo | Buffalo State University | N/A | |
April 16, 1983 | Poughkeepsie | Kenyon Hall | N/A | |
April 17, 1983 | Montreal | Canada | Le Spectrum de Montréal | N/A |
April 19, 1983 | Clinton | United States | Hamilton College | N/A |
April 20, 1983 | New Haven | Woolsey Hall | N/A | |
April 22, 1983 | Boston | Walter Brown Arena | N/A | |
April 23, 1983 | Hartford | Agora Ballroom | N/A | |
April 24, 1983 | Aberdeen | Fountain Casino | N/A | |
North America | ||||
April 26, 1983 | Farmingdale | United States | Spize | N/A |
April 28, 1983 | Hoboken | Maxwell's | The Bongos | |
April 29, 1983 | Providence | The Living Rooms | Arms Akimbo Prisoners of Beat | |
April 30, 1983 | New York City | The Ritz | The Individuals | |
May 2, 1983 | Blacksburg | After Dark | Not Shakespeare | |
May 3, 1983 | Raleigh | The Pier | Rick Rock | |
May 4, 1983 | Blowing Rock | Scott's Music Hall | N/A | |
May 6, 1983 | Davidson | Love Auditorium | 86 | |
May 7, 1983 | Atlanta | Agora Ballroom | N/A | |
May 8, 1983 | Fox Theatre | N/A | ||
May 9, 1983 | 40 Watt Club | N/A | ||
May 18, 1983 | New York City | The Ritz | The Individuals | |
North America (Supporting The Suburbs) | ||||
May 21, 1983 | St. Paul | United States | Navy Island | Let's Active The Phones The Replacements |
North America | ||||
May 22, 1983 | Milwaukee | United States | The Palms | Let's Active |
May 23, 1983 | Madison | Headliners | ||
May 25, 1983 | Chicago | Park West | Let's Active The dB's | |
May 26, 1983 | Bloomington | Jake's | Let's Active | |
May 28, 1983 | Lincoln | Drumstick | ||
May 29, 1983 | Kansas City | VFW Hall | The Embarrassment Let's Active | |
May 30, 1983 | Uptown Theater | Let's Active | ||
North America (Supporting Bow Wow Wow and The English Beat) | ||||
June 1, 1983 | Morrison | United States | Red Rocks Amphitheatre | N/A |
North America | ||||
June 3, 1983 | Wichita Falls | United States | Wichita Falls | Let's Active |
June 4, 1983 | Dallas | Charlie's | ||
June 5, 1983 | Austin | Nite Life | Let's Active Vital Signs | |
June 7, 1983 | Lubbock | The Roxy | Let's Active | |
June 9, 1983 | Los Angeles | Music Machine | N/A | |
June 10, 1983 | San Diego | The Spirit | Let's Active | |
June 11, 1983 | Hollywood | The Palace | ||
June 13, 1983 | Sacramento | Crest Theatre | The Features Let's Active | |
June 14, 1983 | San Francisco | Old Waldorf | Let's Active | |
June 16, 1983 | Valencia | Six Flags Magic Mountain | ||
June 17, 1983 | Costa Mesa | Concert Factory | N/A | |
June 20, 1983 | Berkeley | Keystone Berkeley | Lloyds Bad Attitude | |
June 21, 1983 | Palo Alto | Keystone Palo Alto | Lloyds Agent | |
June 22, 1983 | San Francisco | The Stone | Lloyds Victims of Technology | |
June 28, 1983 | Denver | Rainbow Music Hall | Young Weasels Computer Class | |
June 29, 1983 | Omaha | The 20's Nightclub | Digital Sex | |
June 30, 1983 | Columbia | Blue Note | The Bel-Airs | |
July 1, 1983 | St. Louis | Six Flags St. Louis | N/A | |
July 2, 1983 | Indianapolis | The Chase | N/A | |
July 3, 1983 | Milwaukee | Summerfest | N/A | |
July 5, 1983 | Cleveland | Pirate's Cove | Hungry Young Men The Replacements | |
July 8, 1983 | Detroit | Saint Andrew's Hall | N/A | |
July 9, 1983 | Toronto | Canada | Larry's Hideaway | Personal Effects |
July 13, 1983 | Boston | United States | Paradise Rock Club | The Replacements |
July 14, 1983 | Providence | The Living Room | Parallel 5th | |
July 15, 1983 | Aberdeen | Fountain Casino | The Replacements | |
July 17, 1983 | New Haven | Toad's Place | ||
July 20, 1983 | Philadelphia | Ripley's Music Hall | ||
July 21, 1983 | Richmond | Much More Club | ||
July 23, 1983 | Winston-Salem | Backstreet Music Venue | Let's Active | |
North America (Supporting The Police) | ||||
August 12, 1983 | Hartford | United States | Hartford Veterans Memorial Coliseum | N/A |
August 13, 1983 | N/A | |||
August 15, 1983 | Norfolk | Norfolk Scope | N/A | |
August 18, 1983 | New York City | Shea Stadium | N/A | |
August 20, 1983 | Philadelphia | John F. Kennedy Stadium | N/A | |
August 21, 1983 | Landover | Capital Centre | N/A | |
August 22, 1983 | N/A | |||
North America | ||||
August 26, 1983 | Atlanta | United States | Six Flags Over Georgia | The Killer Whales |
September 30, 1983 | Athens | Stitchcraft, Inc | N/A | |
October 3, 1983 | Legion Field | Land Sharks Oh-OK | ||
October 4, 1983 | Columbia | Russell House Ballroom | Let's Active | |
October 7, 1983 | Washington, D.C. | Ontario Theatre | The Fleshtones Let's Active | |
October 8, 1983 | Philadelphia | Irvine Auditorium | Pretty Poison Let's Active | |
October 9, 1983 | Piscataway | Busch Student Centre | Let's Active | |
October 11, 1983 | Poughkeepsie | The Chance | ||
October 12, 1983 | Scotia | The Skyway | ||
October 13, 1983 | Providence | The Livingroom | ||
October 14, 1983 | Orono | University of Maine | Let's Active B. Willie Smith | |
October 15, 1983 | Waterville | Colby College | Let's Active | |
October 17, 1983 | Syracuse | Drumlins | ||
October 20, 1983 | Boston | The Metro | ||
October 21, 1983 | New York City | Queens College | The Neats | |
October 22, 1983 | New London | Connecticut College | Let's Active | |
October 31, 1983 | New York City | Peppermint Lounge | The Fuzztones The Cramps | |
November 10, 1983 | San Francisco | Kabuki Nightclub | The Neats Let's Active | |
November 11, 1983 | Beverly Hills | Warner Beverly Hills Theater | ||
November 12, 1983 | San Diego | Montezuma Hall | Let's Active | |
Europe | ||||
November 19, 1983 | London | England | Dingwalls | Recognition |
November 22, 1983 | Marquee Club | Jerry Floyd | ||
November 23, 1983 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Paradiso | N/A |
November 24, 1983 | Paris | France | Les Bains Douches | Feedback |
November 25, 1983 | Rouen | Exo 7 | N/A | |
1984
Tour by R.E.M. | |
Location | Europe, North America, Asia |
---|---|
Associated album | Reckoning |
Start date | April 8, 1984 |
End date | December 6, 1984 |
Legs | 5 |
No. of shows |
32 in Europe 73 in North America 4 in Asia 109 in Total |
R.E.M. returned to Europe in April 1984, this time in support of their second studio album, Reckoning, with a tour titled the "Little America tour" ("Little America" being a track on the album).[1] They tour their homeland between June and November, before visiting Asia for the first time in mid-November. This was followed with a few more shows in the UK and Norway during late November and early January 1985.[1]
Setlist
This set list is representative of the performance in Rouen, France. It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.
- "Radio Free Europe"
- "Harborcoat"
- "Pilgrimage"
- "Driver 8"
- "Talk About the Passion"
- "Hyena"
- "7 Chinese Bros."
- "So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"
- "Letter Never Sent"
- "Auctioneer (Another Engine)"
- "Gardening at Night"
- "9-9"
- "Windout"
- "Old Man Kensey"
- "Pretty Persuasion"
- "Little America"
- "Femme Fatale"
- "Riders in the Sky"
- "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville"
- "Wolves, Lower"
- "Moon River"
- "Wendell Gee"
- "See No Evil"
- "Just A Touch"
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening act(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Europe | ||||
April 8, 1984 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Paradiso | My Bloody Valentine |
April 9, 1984 | Utrecht | Vrije Vloer | ||
April 10, 1984 | Eindhoven | Effenaar | ||
April 12, 1984 | Munich | Germany | The Odeon | |
April 13, 1984 | Hamburg | Knust Hamburg | ||
April 14, 1984 | ||||
April 15, 1984 | Cologne | Luxor | ||
April 17, 1984 | Rouen | France | Exo 7 | Flooflash |
April 18, 1984 | Lyon | Club West Side | ||
April 19, 1984 | Clermont-Ferrand | Mansion de Peuples | Les Innocents | |
April 20, 1984 | Paris | Eldorado Club | ||
April 24, 1984 | Birmingham | England | Tin Can Club | 154 |
April 25, 1984 | Manchester | The Gallery | ||
April 26, 1984 | Leeds | The Warehouse | ||
April 27, 1984 | Glasgow | Scotland | Night Moves | |
April 29, 1984 | Worthing | England | The Carioca | American Girls Bright Young Things |
April 30, 1984 | London | Marquee Club | The American Girls | |
May 1, 1984 | The Escape Club | |||
North America | ||||
June 16, 1984 | Fresno | United States | Star Palace | The Dream Syndicate |
June 17, 1984 | Santa Cruz | The Catalyst | ||
June 18, 1984 | Santa Barbara | Mission Theater | ||
June 19, 1984 | Los Angeles | Hollywood Palace | N/A | |
June 20, 1984 | Del Mar | Del Mar Fairgrounds | Army of Love | |
June 22, 1984 | Los Angeles | Hollywood Palladium | The Dream Syndicate | |
June 24, 1984 | San Francisco | The Warfield | ||
June 26, 1984 | Portland | Starry Night | ||
June 27, 1984 | Seattle | McCaw Hall | ||
June 28, 1984 | Vancouver | Canada | Commodore Ballroom | |
June 29, 1984 | Boise | United States | Mardi Gras Ballroom | |
July 1, 1984 | Salt Lake City | Fairpark Coliseum | ||
July 2, 1984 | Glenwood Springs | Bamboo Bar | ||
July 3, 1984 | Denver | Rainbow Music Hall | ||
July 5, 1984 | Minneapolis | Orpheum Theatre | ||
July 6, 1984 | Milwaukee | Summerfest | N/A | |
July 7, 1984 | Chicago | Aragon Ballroom | The Dream Syndicate | |
July 8, 1984 | Royal Oak | Royal Oak Music Theatre | ||
July 10, 1984 | Cleveland | The Variety Theatre | ||
July 11, 1984 | Rochester | Minett Hall | ||
July 12, 1984 | Montreal | Canada | Le Spectrum de Montréal | |
July 13, 1984 | Toronto | Masonic Temple | ||
July 15, 1984 | Buffalo | United States | Salty Dog Skyroom | |
July 16, 1984 | Diamond Beach | Playpen | ||
July 17, 1984 | East Setauket | Port Haven Music Hall | ||
July 19, 1984 | Boston | Orpheum Theatre | ||
July 20, 1984 | West Hartford | Agora Ballroom | ||
July 21, 1984 | New York City | Beacon Theatre | ||
July 22, 1984 | ||||
July 24, 1984 | Washington, D.C. | Warner Theatre | ||
July 25, 1984 | Virginia Beach | Pavilion Towers Ballroom | ||
July 27, 1984 | Greensboro, North Carolina | War Memorial Auditorium | ||
July 28, 1984 | Atlanta | Fox Theatre | ||
August 2, 1984 | Mexico City | Mexico | Margos Touch | N/A |
August 3, 1984 | N/A | |||
August 4, 1984 | N/A | |||
Cancellations and rescheduled shows
June 14, 1983 | Los Angeles, California | Music Machine | Cancelled. Band refused to play. |
December 1, 1984 | Brighton, England | Brighton Polytechnic | Cancelled due to Stipe straining his neck. |
1985
A "Pre-Construction" tour in April and May took the band around several eastern states. After the release of Fables of the Reconstruction in June, the band traveled to Europe. The following month, they returned to North America for a two-month tour. The "Reconstruction I" tour began in Oregon in July and ended in New Jersey in August.[1]
October's "Reconstruction II" tour took the band back to Europe, beginning in the Netherlands and ending in Scotland.[1]
In November, "Reconstruction III" commenced in Colorado.[1]
1986
"Pageantry Tour", in support of Lifes Rich Pageant album.
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003
Other (non-album songs)
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1987
"Work Tour", in support of the album Document.[1] R.E.M. did not perform any shows throughout the following year, and signed to Warner Bros. for the release of their sixth studio album Green. R.E.M. remained with Warner Bros. until their breakup in 2011.
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1989
R.E.M.'s first major tour, as well as their biggest most visually developed tour to date, featured back-projections and art films playing on the stage during the band's shows.
The final show of the tour, at the Fox Theater in Atlanta, featured the band performing their first full-length album, Murmur in order, from start to finish, followed by Green in order, from start to finish. The night was concluded by an encore set performed by Mike & the Melons with Michael Stipe fronting the road crew. It marked the only live performance of The Wrong Child, and one of the few live performances of Hairshirt.
A concert video called Tourfilm is a compilation of footage from various locations on these tours.
R.E.M. would not tour again until their 1994 release Monster. Subsequent tours would feature backing musicians assuming instrumental roles, which became more prominent especially after Bill Berry's departure in 1997.
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Other (non-album songs)
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1995
After refusing to tour in support of their two previous releases Out of Time and Automatic for the People, the band agreed to tour in support of Monster. The tour was critically and commercially successful, though a handful of shows were either cancelled or postponed due to health problems associated with the band members.[2]
The concert video Road Movie is a compilation of footage taken from the final three nights of the tour, in Atlanta.
New Adventures in Hi-Fi, the band's tenth studio album, was released in 1996 without a supporting tour, though a handful of material was performed during this tour. Eight-track recorders were brought to capture its shows, and used the recordings as the base elements for that album.
This was the final tour to feature Bill Berry, though he briefly reunited with them during a show in 2003. This was also the first tour to feature involvement from Seattle-based multi-instrumentalist Scott McCaughey, who remained active with the group on recordings of albums from New Adventures in Hi-Fi to Collapse Into Now, as well as subsequent tours.
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003
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1998/1999
After initially stating they would not tour behind this year's Up, the band changed their mind. A small television-and-radio tour around North America and Europe occurred between October and December. A larger, six-month tour around the same continents began in February in Europe the following year. The North American leg began in August.[1] [1]
"Airportman" was performed at a benefit show before the promo tour commenced in 1998, but not during any tours throughout the band's career. "You're In the Air" and "Diminished" (despite the "I'm Not Over You" coda being performed) were never performed live either.
Regular additional tour musicians were Joey Waronker (drums), Ken Stringfellow (keyboards) and Scott McCaughey (guitars).
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003 Other (non-album songs)
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2001
Supporting Reveal, R.E.M. undertook a small tour that took in New York City, Toronto, Japan, Australia and California.[1]
Although "Saturn Return" was never performed live, Michael Stipe performed the song entirely himself during a show at Carnegie Hall in March 2011.
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2003
A tour in support of the band's Warner Bros. compilation In Time took place in Europe between June and August, then in North America between August and October.[1]
The concert video Perfect Square was taken from footage captured from a show in Wiesbaden, Germany on this tour.
At a concert in Raleigh, North Carolina, Berry made a surprise appearance, performing backing vocals on "Radio Free Europe". He then sat behind the drum kit for a performance of the early R.E.M. song "Permanent Vacation", marking his first performance with the band since his retirement, though he still refused to rejoin the group regardless.
This was the first tour to feature Bill Rieflin, who later recorded the next three albums released from the band and performed with the group on tours supporting two of those three album releases.
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003
Other (non-album songs)
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2004/2005
A promo tour for Around the Sun began in Europe in September.[1] Prior to the release of the album, the band partook in the political "Vote for Change" tour, which included shows in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Florida and Washington, D.C.[1]
A post-album tour commenced in October in North America.[1]
A European tour began in Europe in 2005, then extended to South Africa, Japan, Hong Kong, Australia and New Zealand. The final leg of the tour took the band back to Europe.[1]
A concert CD/DVD featuring footage from the final shows of this tour in Dublin titled R.E.M. Live was released in 2007.
Around the Sun was a commercial and critical failure, and band members later expressed disappointment in the album after the tour ended. A majority of material from Around the Sun was largely absent in their subsequent tour.
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003
Other (non-album songs)
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Accelerate Tour
Tour by R.E.M. | |
Location | North America, Europe, South America |
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Associated album | Accelerate |
Start date | May 23, 2008 |
End date | November 18, 2008 |
Legs | 4 |
No. of shows |
19 in North America 48 in Europe 10 in South America 77 in Total |
R.E.M.'s final tour was the "Accelerate Tour", which took place between March and November 2008.[2]
In 2007, before the release of Accelerate and the supporting tour behind it in 2008, R.E.M. held five night "rehearsals" in front of a live audience at The Olympia in Dublin to test out new material from Accelerate and to revisit and perform old favorites, many of which hadn't been played live in nearly two decades. The resulting live album and DVD, Live at The Olympia, was released in 2009.
Accelerate was met with much critical enthusiasm, especially from fans of their back catalog who praised the "back-to-basics" direction that was undertaken with the album. Given the lukewarm reception of their previous album in comparison, the band ignored everything from Around the Sun during a majority of shows during the tour.
R.E.M. disbanded in September 2011 and did not perform any shows after the conclusion of this tour. Their final Collapse into Now release was never performed live, though Michael Stipe did a solo performance of "Every Day Is Yours to Win" at Carnegie Hall in March 2011.
Set list
This set list is representative of the performance in Mexico City and does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.
- "Living Well Is the Best Revenge"
- "I Took Your Name"
- "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"
- "Fall on Me"
- "Drive"
- "Man-Sized Wreath"
- "Ignoreland"
- "Disturbance at the Heron House"
- "Hollow Man"
- "Imitation of Life"
- "Electrolite"
- "The Great Beyond"
- "Everybody Hurts"
- "The One I Love"
- "Find the River"
- "Let Me In"
- "Bad Day"
- "Horse to Water"
- "Orange Crush"
- "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"
- "Supernatural Superserious"
- "Losing My Religion"
- "I Believe"
- "Country Feedback"
- "Life and How to Live It"
- "Man on the Moon"
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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003
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Opening acts
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Shows
Live releases
Videos and DVDs
- Tourfilm (1990)
- Road Movie (1996)
- Perfect Square (2004)
- R.E.M. Live (2007)
- Live at The Olympia (This Is Not a Show) (2009)
CDs and Digital Releases
- Vancouver Rehearsal Tapes (2003)
- R.E.M. Live (2007)
- Live from London (2008)
- Live at Larry's Hide-Away (Murmur 2008 Deluxe Edition bonus disc)
- Live at the Aragon Ballroom (Reckoning 2009 Deluxe Edition bonus disc)
- Live at The Olympia (2009)
This list includes only official releases made up exclusively and entirely of live performances. Various other live performances by R.E.M. can be found as B-sides, compilation tracks, bonus tracks, promotional EPs, bootlegs, etc.