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Pages in category "1974 concert tours" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Paris, Leslie. "Happily Ever After: Free to Be ... You and Me, Second-Wave Feminism, and 1970s American Children's Culture". pp. 519–538. Rotskoff, Lori, and Laura L. Lovett. When We Were Free to Be... Looking Back at a Children's Classic and the Difference It Made. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0-807-83755-9.
Sacrament Tour; Sam's Town Tour; See You on the Other Side World Tour; Showgirl: The Homecoming Tour; The Silent Force Tour (Within Temptation) Silent Shout Tour; Something to Be Tour; Soul2Soul II Tour; Stadium Arcadium World Tour; Streisand (concert tour) The Sufferer & the Witness Tour; Sugar Water Festival; Summer Tour (Erykah Badu)
As Dylan's first full-fledged tour since 1966, the announcement received an enormous amount of coverage from the music and general press. The average ticket price was $8 ($48 adjusted for inflation). [2] Top-dollar tickets were $9.50 (roughly $58 in 2022), considered quite a lot for a rock concert in 1974. [5]
Tour Dates Number of shows; 1974 Bob Dylan and The Band Tour: January 3 – February 14, 1974 40 This tour reunited Dylan with The Band on stage after the release of the Dylan's Band-backed Planet Waves album. This was a high-profile comeback for both sides of the bill. While virtually all the songs here were familiar and might be considered ...
Kiss took most of August off from the tour to record their follow-up album, Hotter than Hell. In the tour program for the band's final tour, Simmons reflected on the tour: Being in Kiss in the very first year and touring around the United States, we felt like we were taking off. It was like somebody pushing you into the deep end of the pool ...
The 1974 tour was the first in North America by a former member of the Beatles since the band's 1966 visit. [5] [8] Raising expectations further among fans and the media, it marked the first live performances by Harrison since his successful staging of the 1971 Concert for Bangladesh shows, [13] which had also featured Shankar and Preston. [14]
(UK 1; US 6) was released in 1970; it was declared by critic Lester Bangs to be the best live album ever. [3] The biggest concert the band gave was in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, part of the A Bigger Bang Tour, in 2006. The second largest was in 2016, when the band played for the first time in Cuba, during their América Latina Olé tour. An ...