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Tickets were originally advertised by promoters as being priced from €86.50 ($95.74) (subject to service charge) for the Dublin gigs and from about £150 ($197.13) for the UK concerts. "I was ...
The tour was promoted by SJM Concerts, MCD Promotions and DF Concerts, all of which had links to Ticketmaster's parent company Live Nation Entertainment. [24] At 13:23 on the day of the public sale, Ticketmaster Ireland announced that their Dublin gigs had sold out, [25] and at 19:00, Oasis tweeted that all tickets had sold out. [26]
The Definitely Maybe Tour was a concert tour by English band Oasis in support of their hugely successful debut album Definitely Maybe.The tour, which spanned the UK, Europe, Japan, the US and Canada, included 143 shows over a period of several months in 1994 and 1995 amidst 10 different tour legs.
On Friday evening, Oasis tickets for Wembley Stadium were listed on Viagogo for up to £5,909 while some tickets at the London venue, listed under “Hospitality Club”, were on sale for £10,578 ...
The tour was in promotion of their album Don't Believe the Truth and they had booked many large venues and gigs. Their tour started on 10 May 2005 at the London Astoria [1] and ended on 31 March 2006 at the Palacio de los Deportes in Mexico City. The tour would be the group's most successful as it would go on without any major incidents like on ...
The Dig Out Your Soul Tour was a concert tour by English rock band Oasis to support their album Dig Out Your Soul. The tour started in Seattle, Washington , at the WaMu Theater on 26 August 2008 and was planned to continue until 30 August 2009, when they were scheduled to play their final tour show at the I-Day Festival in Milan , Italy.
The Be Here Now Tour was a concert tour by English rock band Oasis in support of their third album Be Here Now.The tour, which spanned the UK, Europe, North America, Asia, Oceania, and Latin America, included 85 shows over a period of several months in 1997 and 1998.
The tour started on 22 June 1995 with a pre-Glastonbury festival warm-up gig at the 1,400 capacity Bath Pavilion, [39] which featured the debut of new drummer Alan White and several new songs off the album, and ended on 4 December 1996 at the 11,800 capacity Mayo Civic Centre in Rochester, Minnesota, USA, [40] and included concerts at Earls ...