Have a Nice Day Tour

Have a Nice Day Tour
Tour by Bon Jovi

Location North America, Asia, Europe
Associated album Have a Nice Day
Start date November 2, 2005
End date July 29, 2006
Legs 4
No. of shows 17 in Europe
66 in North America
6 in Asia
89 in Total
Box office US $131.4 million ($154.50 in 2016 dollars)[1]
Bon Jovi concert chronology

The Have a Nice Day Tour was a worldwide concert tour by American rock band Bon Jovi. It took place between November 2005 and July 2006. The tour supported their ninth studio album Have a Nice Day.

The tour was a significant commercial success, as the group played to ~2,000,000 fans, and the tour grossed a total $132 million.[2] The tour was the third-highest-grossing tour of 2006, just behind The Rolling Stones' A Bigger Bang World Tour and Madonna's Confessions Tour.

The show

Dublin May 2006

The set lists greatly varied between concerts, so after each show its set list was posted on the official website. Most concerts began with the song "Last Man Standing" from the Have a Nice Day record, with the show beginning as Jon Bon Jovi suddenly appeared on a small platform in the middle of the audience at the far end from the stage, followed by "You Give Love a Bad Name". "Livin' on a Prayer" was almost always played as the finalé before any encores.

At some shows, Jennifer Nettles performed with the band in the song "Who Says You Can't Go Home".

On one show in the National Bowl at Milton Keynes, 1500 fans sat in the bar watching England play and win their first-round match in the 2006 FIFA World Cup; Jon Bon Jovi performed the encore in a red England 'away' top.

At the concert in Düsseldorf, Germany, the band played their longest song, "Dry County", for the first time in over ten years.

The final concert of the tour at New Jersey's Giants Stadium was the only concert at which the band played the Have a Nice Day song "I Am", so that they would fulfill their commitment of playing every song from the album on the tour.

At several of the band's summer stadium shows, the band was known to play extremely long setlists, some of them running nearly three hours, totaling approximately 25 songs, including encores that sometimes had as much as seven songs.

Opening acts

For the first North American leg of the tour as well as the United Kingdom dates of the European leg, each city had a local band open for Bon Jovi; the band had decided this for a chance to promote local talent. Canadian band Nickelback, who had great success with their latest release (All The Right Reasons) supported Bon Jovi on the European leg of the tour, as well as on the band's summer stadium tour in North America.

Personnel

Bon Jovi

Additional musicians

Set list

As in most Bon Jovi tours, Bon Jovi changed their set-list every night, but they have similarities. Especially during the first North American leg of the tour the various set-list only had minor differences. While most songs played were from the album "Have a Nice Day", the title track and Who Says You Can't Go Home were even played at every concert, older hits like Livin' on a Prayer, You Give Love a Bad Name, It's My Life, Bad Medicine and Wanted Dead or Alive were also present at every single gig. Here the average set-list:

  1. "Last Man Standing"
  2. "You Give Love a Bad Name"
  3. "Complicated"
  4. "Born to Be My Baby"
  5. "Story of My Life"
  6. "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead"
  7. "Runaway"
  8. "The Radio Saved My Life Tonight"
  9. "Novocaine"
  10. "I Won't Back Down" (Tom Petty cover)
  11. "Have a Nice Day"
  12. "Who Says You Can't Go Home?"
  13. "It's My Life"
  14. "I'll Be There for You"
  15. "Blaze of Glory" (cover)
  16. "Bed of Roses
  17. "Bad Medicine"
  18. "Raise Your Hands"
  19. "Livin' on a Prayer"

Encore:

  1. "Welcome to Wherever You Are"
  2. "Everyday"
  3. "Wanted Dead or Alive
  4. "Treat Her Right" (Roy Head cover)
  5. "Someday I'll Be Saturday Night"

Shows

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, amount of available tickets and gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
North America[3]
November 2, 2005 Des Moines United States Wells Fargo Arena 13,499 / 13,499 $926,882
November 4, 2005 Chicago United Center 30,908 / 30,908 $2,442,056
November 5, 2005
November 8, 2005 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena N/A N/A
November 9, 2005 Columbus Value City Arena 12,015 / 12,015 $829,168
November 11, 2005 Minneapolis Target Center 13,684 / 13,684 $960,181
November 12, 2005 Omaha CenturyLink Center Omaha 14,788 / 14,788 $1,051,694
November 16, 2005 Madison Kohl Center 12,462 / 12,462 $827,653
November 18, 2005 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 30,169 / 30,169 $1,990,713
November 19, 2005
November 26, 2005 Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena 7,889 / 8,212 $751,635
November 28, 2005 New York City Madison Square Garden 30,040 / 30,040 $2,420,274
November 29, 2005
December 2, 2005 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 31,134 / 31,134 $2,579,183
December 3, 2005
December 6, 2005 Pittsburgh Mellon Arena 12,633 / 12,633 $969,090
December 7, 2005 Uniondale Nassau Coliseum 12,771 / 14,000 $1,052,653
December 9, 2005 Boston TD Garden 27,941 / 27,941 $2,230,413
December 10, 2005
December 12, 2005 Albany Times Union Center 12,060 / 12,060 $809,463
December 14, 2005 Montreal Canada Bell Centre 29,860 / 29,860 $2,542,409
December 15, 2005
December 17, 2005 Washington, D.C. United States Verizon Center 15,128 / 15,128 $1,179,297
December 19, 2005 East Rutherford Izod Center 52,075 / 52,075 $3,915,607
December 21, 2005
December 22, 2005
January 14, 2006 Oklahoma City Chesapeake Energy Arena 15,236/ 15,236 $1,068,439
January 15, 2006 Dallas American Airlines Center 15,373 / 15,373 $1,105,187
January 17, 2006 Atlanta Philips Arena 14,262 / 14,262 $1,095,715
January 18, 2006 Charlotte Time Warner Cable Arena 14,628 / 14,628 $938,136
January 20, 2006 Buffalo First Niagara Center 15,124 / 15,124 $972,789
January 21, 2006 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 65,690 / 65,690 $5,871,898
January 23, 2006
January 24, 2006
January 27, 2006 Saint Paul United States Xcel Energy Center 15,531 / 15,531 $1,204,593
January 28, 2006 Milwaukee BMO Harris Bradley Center 15,106 / 15,106 $1,023,297
January 30, 2006 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre [lower-alpha 1] [lower-alpha 1]
February 1, 2006 Uncasville United States Mohegan Sun Arena 8,284 / 8,284 $812,395
February 2, 2006 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 14,911 / 14,911 $1,158,696
February 4, 2006 Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall 12,752 / 12,942 $1,112,210
February 8, 2006 Greenville Bon Secours Wellness Arena 11,575 / 11,575 $689,595
February 10, 2006 Sunrise BB&T Center 14,895 / 14,895 $1,123,956
February 14, 2006 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 14,980 / 14,980 $1,138,949
February 15, 2006 Duluth Arena at Gwinnett Center 10,852 / 10,852 $935,394
February 17, 2006 Tampa Amalie Arena 29,498 / 29,498 $2,130,484
February 18, 2006
February 21, 2006 Houston Toyota Center 12,723 / 12,723 $800,988
February 23, 2006 Denver Pepsi Center 14,023 / 14,023 $1,012,082
February 25, 2006 Anaheim Honda Center 13,056 / 13,056 $935,066
February 27, 2006 San Jose SAP Center at San Jose 13,076 / 13,076 $949,183
March 1, 2006 Fresno Save Mart Center 11,734 / 11,734 $841,575
March 3, 2006 Los Angeles Staples Center 13,753 / 13,753 $1,007,231
March 5, 2006 Portland Moda Center 13,240 / 13,240 $863,768
March 6, 2006 Seattle KeyArena 12,649 / 12,649 $949,10
March 9, 2006 Glendale Gila River Arena 14,885 / 14,885 $1,124,277
March 11, 2006 Paradise MGM Grand Garden Arena 14,230 / 14,230 $1,573,953
Asia
April 8, 2006 Tokyo Japan Tokyo Dome N/A N/A
April 9, 2006
April 12, 2006 Nagoya Nagoya Dome
April 14, 2006 Osaka Osaka Dome
April 15, 2006
April 18, 2006 Sapporo Sapporo Dome
Europe[4]
May 13, 2006 Düsseldorf Germany LTU Arena 47,862 / 47,862 $3,325,809
May 15, 2006 Linz Austria Linzer Stadion 32,002 / 32,002 $2,063,255
May 17, 2006 Koblenz Germany Schloßplatz 26,509 / 26,509 $1,524,278
May 20, 2006 Dublin Ireland Croke Park 81,327 / 81,327 $6,414,434
May 24, 2006 Hessisch Lichtenau Germany Hessentag 29,007 / 29,007 $1,579,140
May 25, 2006 Nijmegen Netherlands Goffert Park 39,815 / 39,815 $2,594,671
May 27, 2006 Stuttgart Germany Cannstatter Wasen 63,020 / 63,020 $3,654,201
May 28, 2006 Munich Olympiastadion 71,467 / 71,467 $4,622,221
May 30, 2006 Innsbruck Austria Olympia Stadium 25,660 / 25,660 $1,734,771
May 31, 2006 Bern Switzerland Stade de Suisse 38,762 / 38,762 $3,354,198
June 3, 2006 Glasgow Scotland Hampden Park 42,488 / 42,488 $2,853,220
June 4, 2006 Manchester England Etihad Stadium 58,698 / 58,698 $3,744,610
June 7, 2006 Coventry Ricoh Arena 36,293 / 36,293 $2,300,799
June 9, 2006 Southampton St Mary's Stadium 34,783 / 34,783 $2,365,643
June 10, 2006 Milton Keynes National Bowl1 85,112 / 85,112 $6,489,043
June 11, 2006
June 13, 2006 Kingston upon Hull KC Stadium1 N/A N/A
North America[5]
July 10, 2006 Hollywood United States Seminole Hard Rock Live N/A N/A
July 13, 2006 Montreal Canada Parc Jean-Drapeau 21,150 / 21,150 $1,483,759
July 15, 2006 Philadelphia United States Citizens Bank Park 39,409 / 44,238 $2,764,310
July 18, 2006 East Rutherford Giants Stadium 164,975 / 164,975 $11,352,051
July 19, 2006
July 21, 2006 Chicago Soldier Field 52,612 / 52,612 $3,988,455
July 23, 2006 Pittsburgh Heinz Field N/A N/A
July 27, 2006 Foxborough Gillette Stadium 45,874 / 45,874 $3,384,804
July 29, 2006 East Rutherford Giants Stadium [lower-alpha 2] [lower-alpha 2]
TOTAL[6] $131,388,461 1,823,834

^Note 1 : These performances were originally scheduled at the new Wembley Stadium in London (the band were due to be the first band to play at the new stadium, having closed the old stadium with their Crush Tour in August 2000), however they were moved when the completion of the stadium was delayed until 2007.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 The score data is representative of the four shows in Toronto, Ontario at the Air Canada Centre on January 21, January 23, January 24, and January 30 respectively.
  2. 1 2 The score data is representative of the three shows in East Rutherford, New Jersey at the Giants Stadium on July 18, July 19, and July 29 respectively.

References

  1. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
  2. http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/949447/bon-jovi-billboards-top-touring-act-of-the-year
  3. North America box score:
  4. "Billboard, Vol. 118, Num. 33, 19 august 2006".
  5. "Billboard, Vol. 118, Num. 33, 19 august 2006".
  6. "Billboard, Vol. 118, Num. 51, 23 december 2006".

External links

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