24 Hrs Tour
2017 concert tour by Olly Murs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 24 Hrs Tour (advertised as Spring Tour 2017 and Summer Tour 2017) was the fifth concert tour by English recording artist, Olly Murs. The tour supports his fifth studio album, 24 Hrs (2016). Beginning March 2017, the tour played over 50 concerts in Europe and Asia.
Background
The tour was announced September 2016 on Murs various social media platforms. The first left of dates sold well, prompting a second leg of outdoor shows revealed in November 2016. Rehearsals began February 2017 in Brighton.[1] Discussing his open air dates, Murs stated:
"A summer tour is not something I've done in a long time and there's places on it that I haven't been to in a while, so it'll be good to get out and see those people. The outdoor shows are always that little bit crazier. When you're in an arena, you can create more of a story on the stage, but for a festival or a park, it's all just about the live performance."[2]
Critical reception
Summarize
Perspective
Shows in the UK were high praised amongst local critics. Lorna Hughes (Liverpool Echo) gave Murs performance in Liverpool five out of five stars. She wrote: "Olly is the consummate entertainer, and at times seems to be having even more fun than the audience. Between songs he shares how much he loves Liverpool and how a very honest Scouse lady in catering pointed out the giant spot on his face."[3]
In Birmingham, Justine Halifax (Birmingham Mail) gave the concert four out of five stars. "He then delivered the party atmosphere that he had promised when he took to the stage. Accompanied by an amazing nine-piece band and four backing singers, the former X-Factor runner up, who announced that he was 'feeling a little bit frisky', then romped through hits from his five albums."[4]
Matilda Egere-Cooper (London Evening Standard) gave the shows in London three out of five stars. She states: "With nods to Robbie Williams and Justin Timberlake, his gig was 90 minutes of fun-filled showmanship from a singer who's learned he's better off sticking to his strengths. Strokes of laddish humour, dad-dancing and chart-toppers such as Heart Skips a Beat and Dance With Me Tonight all appeared among the fancy visuals and pyrotechnics."[5]
Opening acts
- Louisa Johnson (Leg 2)[6] - Most locations & dates
- Bodg & Matt (Newcastle)[7]
- James Cusack (Leeds)[7]
- Simon Morykin (Sheffield)[7]
- Simon Pinkham (Nottingham)[7]
- Dave Kelly (Liverpool)[7]
- Mike Toolan (Manchester—17 March)[7]
- Rob Ellis (Manchester—18 March)[7]
- Matt Lissack (Cardiff)[7]
- Dan Kelly (Birmingham—23 March)[7]
- Rob & Katy (Birmingham—24-25 March)[7]
- Steve Power (Bournemouth—28 March)[7]
- Mark Wright (TV personality) (London—30 March)[7]
- Scott Mills (London—31 March-1 April)[7]
- Pete Snodden (Dublin)[7]
- Eoghan McDermott (Belfast)[7]
Setlist
The following setlist was obtained from the concert, held on 17 March 2017, at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England. It does not represent all concerts during the tour.[8]
- "You Don't Know Love"
- "Wrapped Up"
- "Unpredictable" (with Louisa Johnson)
- "Grow Up"
- "Flaws"
- "Up"
- "Back Around" (contains excerpts from "What's Love Got to Do with It")
- "I Need You Now"
- "Heart Skips a Beat"
- "24 Hrs"
- "Deeper"
- "Dear Darlin'"
- "That's the Way (I Like It)" / "Never Too Much" / "She's Got That Vibe" / "Jump Around" / "U Can't Touch This" / "Can't Stop the Feeling!"
- "Troublemaker"
- "Dance with Me Tonight"
- Encore
- "Kiss Me" (contains elements of "Starving")
- "Years & Years"
Tour dates
- Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A Teenage Cancer Trust Concert[12]
- B Ladies Day[13]
- C Forestry Commission Live Music[14]
- D Summer Music Saturday[15]
- E Sure Big Gig in the Park[16]
- F Concerts at the Castle[17]
- G Live in the City[18]
- H Lytham Festival[19]
- I Kings Park Summer Concerts
- J An Evening at the Races[20]
- K Newmarket Nights[21]
- L Carfest South[22]
- M Big Feastival[23]
- N Victorious Festival[24]
Box office score data
Venue | City | Tickets sold / available | Gross revenue |
---|---|---|---|
SSE Hydro | Glasgow | 20,834 / 20,834 (100%) | $1,272,650[25] |
Metro Radio Arena | Newcastle | 15,397 / 15,397 (100%) | $895,611[25] |
First Direct Arena | Leeds | 10,917 / 10,917 (100%) | $637,312[25] |
Sheffield Arena | Sheffield | 23,362 / 23,362 (100%) | $1,337,880[25] |
Motorpoint Arena | Nottingham | 13,447 / 13,447 (100%) | $800,572[25] |
Echo Arena | Liverpool | 9,397 / 9,397 (100%) | $572,906[25] |
Manchester Arena | Manchester | 26,362 / 26,362 (100%) | $1,587,440[25] |
Motorpoint Arena | Cardiff | 12,837 / 12,837 (100%) | $687,358[25] |
Genting Arena | Birmingham | 33,849 / 33,849 (100%) | $2,045,570[25] |
Windsor Hall | Bournemouth | 5,698 / 5,698 (100%) | $344,032[25] |
The O2 Arena | London | 42,833 / 42,833 (100%) | $2,679,570[25] |
3Arena | Dublin | 8,527 / 8,527 (100%) | $525,470[25] |
SSE Arena | Belfast | 14,123 / 14,123 (100%) | $816,321[25] |
TOTAL | 237,583 / 237,583 (100%) | $14,202,692 | |
- Accolades
- Ranked #1 on Billboard's "Hot Tours" for the week ending on 18 April 2017.[26]
External links
References
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