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From October 2022 to September 2023 Blackpink embarked on their second worldwide concert tour, the Born Pink World Tour, consisting of 66 concerts in 22 countries around the world. The tour attracted 1.8 million people, making it the most-attended concert tour by a K-pop girl group. [3]
The Born Pink World Tour was the second worldwide concert tour by South Korean girl group Blackpink in support of their second studio album Born Pink (2022). The tour began on October 15, 2022, in Seoul, South Korea, and a stadium encore tour began on July 15, 2023, in Saint-Denis, France.
During the two-day concert at Seoul, member Jennie performed for the first time her debut solo song "Solo", which was released later on November 12, 2018. [5] Blackpink released a 14-track live album recorded during the Seoul concerts, Blackpink 2018 Tour In Your Area Seoul, on August 30, 2019. [6]
Blackpink is returning to L.A. for an encore show at Dodger Stadium after making history as the first K-pop group to headline at ... Fans can register to buy presale tickets until early next week ...
The Show, officially titled YG Palm Stage ― 2021 Blackpink: The Show, [1] was the first online concert by South Korean girl group Blackpink in support of their debut Korean studio album, The Album. Background
On September 12, it was announced that the group would hold their first concert in Seoul, Blackpink 2018 Tour [In Your Area] Seoul x BC Card, at the Olympic Gymnastics Arena. [76] The concert was the first show of the In Your Area World Tour, which continued throughout 2019 and early 2020 in North America, Europe, Oceania and Asia. By the end ...
The Blackpink Arena Tour group's first Japanese concert began in July 2018, visited three cities in Japan and hosted a total of eight concerts, bringing together a total of 125,000 spectators. [9] This video album contains live videos of the final show at the Osaka Dome on December 24, 2018, with the participation of 50,000 fans. [10]
Pasquale Rotella, CEO of Insomniac events — which puts on big-name EDM festivals like Electric Daisy Carnival — agreed with Yousaf, telling HuffPost that there’s simply more men on the production side of EDM. “There are a lot of female agents, managers and publicists in the industry but most of them are pushing male artists,” he said.