The Honeymoon Tour

The Honeymoon Tour
Tour by Ariana Grande
Associated album My Everything
Start date February 25, 2015 (2015-02-25)
End date October 25, 2015 (2015-10-25)
Legs 6
No. of shows
Attendance 808,667[1]
Box office US $100.8 million
Ariana Grande concert chronology

The Honeymoon Tour[2] was the second concert tour by American singer Ariana Grande, in support of her second studio album My Everything (2014). Officially announced on September 10, 2014, it traveled across North America, Europe, Asia, Australia, and South America. It began on February 26, 2015 in Kansas City, Kansas and concluded on October 25, 2015 in São Paulo, Brazil. The Honeymoon Tour grossed $100.8 million from 81 shows with a total attendance of 2,700,667.[1]

Background

On June 5, 2014, about a month before the release of "Break Free", the second single from My Everything (2014), Grande confirmed plans of a tour in support of the upcoming album via her Twitter account. Through her account, Grande stated that she had signed her tour contract and will be visiting continents other than North America, therefore making the tour her first world tour. During this time, there were many rumors of fellow recording artist Iggy Azalea joining Grande on tour due to their massive success on Grande's track, "Problem", but these rumors were proven false when Grande and Azalea announced separate headlining tours in September and December, respectively.[3]

About a week after the release of My Everything, on September 10, 2014, Grande officially announced the tour's title, which is a reference to the opening track off of Grande's debut album, Yours Truly (2013), and the tour's North American leg.[4] The first leg, which was promoted by Live Nation, visited twenty-six cities across North America beginning on February 25, 2015 in Independence, Missouri and concluding on April 16, 2015 in Vancouver, Canada. Tickets for the first leg of the tour went on sale to the general public on September 20, 2014 through Live Nation's website.[5] Supporting acts for the North American leg included English pop rock band Rixton, who were promoting their debut studio album, Let the Road (2015), and Norwegian EDM DJ Cashmere Cat.[6]

The European leg of the tour was announced on November 17, 2014, which was about a week after Grande's performance and multiple wins at the 2014 MTV Europe Music Awards, held in Glasgow, Scotland. The second leg of the tour started on May 14, 2015 in Paris, France and ended a month later on June 16, 2015 in Barcelona, Spain. Tickets for the second leg of the tour became available to the public four days after the announcement, on November 21, 2014.[7]

In the months leading up to the tour, Grande had been publicly tweeting to her followers from rehearsals teasing them about the tour. To show her devotion for the tour, Grande tweeted "These rehearsals are kicking my ass but I love it. Really want to make this show the best I'm capable of." Grande also shared a video from rehearsals that features her practicing with Mi.Mu Gloves, which she will be using onstage during her performances.[8] Mi.Mu Gloves, which were designed and created by Imogen Heap, are used to alter the wearer's voice by moving their hands in different directions. In the rehearsal video, Grande can be seen singing chords from songs such as "Why Try" while practicing with the technologically advanced gloves.[9] In another rehearsal video posted through the tour's official YouTube page, Grande shared the band arrangement of "One Last Time", the fifth and final single from My Everything, which includes an extended string intro and raised key change.[10]

On February 25, 2015, Grande shared an Instagram video of a conversation between herself and her now-deceased grandfather, in which he gives her advice and shows support of her career. It was then revealed during the opening night show that the same video posted is a part of a tribute dedicated to Grande's grandfather that takes place during every concert before she sings the ballad, "My Everything".[11] Also during the opening night of the tour, Cashmere Cat debuted a new collaboration between himself and Grande, which they had hinted at on Twitter weeks before the tour officially started.[12] About a week after the tour had started, the song, officially titled "Adore", was released to iTunes and became available to stream on Vevo on March 3, 2015.[13]

Commercial reception

Shortly after the tickets for the first leg of the tour went on sale, Forbes noted increasingly huge ticket prices for the tour. Jesse Lawrence from the business magazine reported that the average ticket price for the tour was about $225 on the secondary market after a couple of days of being on sale. He also mentioned that the most expensive date for the tour was in New York City with a price of $341 per ticket, which was 51% above the tour's ticket average on the secondary market. Also in his report, Lawrence mentioned that the cheapest show, which was in Dallas, had an average ticket price of $191, which was only 15% below the tour's average price per ticket on the secondary market. Also noted in the article was that the rising ticket prices of Grande's tour had surpassed the ticket prices of fellow pop stars Katy Perry and Lady Gaga. Tickets for Perry's Prismatic World Tour (2014-2015) averaged about $216 on the secondary market, which was 4% below Grande's tour average, and tickets for Gaga's ArtRave: The Artpop Ball (2014) were about $169 per ticket on the secondary market, which was around 25% lower than Grande's tour average at the time.[14]

However, in the following months the average ticket prices for the tour began to drop gradually. In late September 2014, the average price for a ticket on the secondary market was $201 according to TiqIQ. The most expensive date on the secondary market had changed from New York City to San Jose with a total of $456 per ticket.[15] A couple months later, in January 2015, it was reported that the average ticket price on the secondary market had dropped again, cashing in at about $178 per ticket on the secondary market.[16] By February 2015, the average ticket price for Grande's tour dropped to a total of $168 per ticket. The most expensive date shifted back to New York City and the least expensive date changed from Dallas to Independence, with a price of $91 per ticket, which was 44% below the tour's average price per ticket at the time. In comparison to other pop stars, Grande fell behind the likes of Perry and Taylor Swift, but managed to top other artists such as Meghan Trainor. Trainor's That Bass Tour (2015) averaged about $147 per ticket on the secondary market, which was 12.5% below Grande's average price per ticket. On the other end of the spectrum, Perry's tickets increased slightly to an average of $221 per ticket, and Swift's tickets for the 1989 World Tour (2015) added up to a total of $294 per ticket on the secondary market.[17]

At the end of 2015, the tour placed at number 40 on Pollstar's "2015 Year-End Top 100 Worldwide Tours" list, grossing $41.8 million from 81 shows with a total attendance of 808,667.[1]

Concert synopsis

Grande riding a floating chandelier while performing "Right There"

The concert starts with a video introduction showing Grande talking about the tour and leads into a minute-long countdown. She emerges from the stage to perform "Bang Bang" in a black bodysuit with a transparent skirt, followed by "Hands On Me". A short string interlude from the "Honeymoon Band" follows, which eventually transitions to "Best Mistake", which sees the screens splitting with her atop a floating cloud prop wearing a jacket designed to match with the backdrop behind her. She then performs the songs "Break Your Heart Right Back" and "Be My Baby" before going down the stage for a costume change. (In the second North American leg of the tour, Grande performed a mashup of Whitney Houston's "I'm Every Woman" and Madonna's "Vogue" before "Be My Baby").

The next act starts with the hype man of the tour, also Grande's co-musical director "DJ Dubz" tap-dancing and leads to a video interlude showing Grande getting ready for an unknown event in front of a mirror. This leads to the screens splitting once again and sees Grande riding a chandelier, wearing a sparkly short fringe-style dress accompanied with a feather boa, which drops her on the stage to perform "Right There", then performing the song "The Way" and eventually announcing she will be singing a very old song, "Pink Champagne", followed by the song "Tattooed Heart" before leaving the stage to change clothes. (For the Asian tour dates, Grande performed "Baby I" following "The Way". She performed it after "Hands On Me" for the rest of the tour.)

The next act starts with an interlude from the band, which leads to the screen showing the beginning of the music video for Grande's song "One Last Time", which she performs after in a silver two piece similar to the one she wore earlier, accompanied by a plain dark teal hood (white for later shows). Another video interlude follows, which shows artist Imogen Heap showing off Mi.Mu gloves and explaining how they work, which is followed by Grande using the gloves on-stage while performing "Why Try". This is followed by another video interlude which shows a conversation between Grande and her now-deceased grandfather, then singing "My Everything", where she sits on top of a white grand piano wearing a long transparent attachable petticoat covered in fake white roses. She proceeds to perform "Just A Little Bit Of Your Heart" in which after she goes down the stage. ("Just A Little Bit Of Your Heart" was removed from the setlist after the first few shows of the first leg of the tour.)

After an interlude from the crew dancing to her song "Lovin' It", she performs "Love Me Harder" which sees her atop a pedestal above the stage, followed by performing "All My Love" with a very upbeat and overworked choreography. This is followed by Grande thanking the audience for coming to the show before performing "Honeymoon Avenue" and she goes down the stage yet again. A video interlude features the beginning of the music video for "Break Free", which she performs after and goes down, thus ending the show.

For the encore, after around one minute of silence, the screen displays a spinning spiral in the form of black and white lines. This transitions to "Problem" in which Grande wears a black and white dress, reminiscent of the song's music video. After the song, Grande and the crew bid farewell to the audience and leave the stage.

Critical response

Grande, during the tour, in Jakarta

In a positive review of the opening show in Independence, Missouri, Timothy Finn of The Kansas City Star gave Grande praise for her energy and enthusiasm when singing and dancing along with her crew. Finn described the show as an "extravagant mix of music, dance, lasers, videos, pyrotechnics, and costume changes, akin to the kinds of audio-visual spectacles delivered by fellow pop-divas like Katy Perry and Britney Spears." He also noted that even though Grande proclaimed to be nervous, it didn't show. One complaint made by Finn was the level of volume in the arena. He proclaimed "The sound was an issue at times, mostly due to high volume." He went on to say that "During a few songs, it was so loud her voice was hard to hear over the music and other noise and lyrics were hard to decipher."[18]

In another positive review, Jhon Moser of The Morning Call stated that "Grande’s concert at Philadelphia’s was very good largely because of her voice", and said "she’s simply one of the most pristine, technically talented singers in all of music." Moser goes on to say "from the opening 'Bang Bang,' she immediately showed off her singing chops, offering skyrocket vocals amid actual fireworks." Moser enjoyed the show, but said "despite its grandeur, that presentation never upstaged the music. The biggest reason for that was that Grande’s four-octave voice was more than grand in itself – high and clear, hitting an ethereal note, and even doing some speedy rapping, on “Be My Baby.” Morse too praised Grande for her "stratospheric vocals" on Pink Champagne's performance. He continued on to say that "Grande clearly feels comfortable in her talent. She danced free-spirited and without inhibition, even in tall black heels on “Break Your Heart Right Back.” Moser liked the idea of making a proper show, "she successfully walked the line between sensuous and appropriate for the largely young-teen audience. and said "she also succeeded in making the concert classy instead of hyper-sexualized as most post-Disney and Nickelodeon singers have."[19]

Piet Levy of the The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel criticized the show heavily by stating Grande "isn't ready for the big leagues." Elaborating on his comment, Levy goes on to say that the performance "didn't signify the birth of the next superstar. Most of the time, it felt like a dress rehearsal." Levy continued to pick apart the performance by stating it was "uninspired and misguided", while also commenting Grande's "confused, uncertain, insecure" presence throughout the show. He also noted that Grande seemingly held back vocally on songs such as "Bang Bang" and "Why Try", which he also criticized for the use of the Mi.Mu Gloves stating "Who honestly thought chopping up and electronically manipulating Grande's pretty voice was a good idea?" Despite the harsh criticism, Levy applauded Grande for her "sensational vocals" during performances of the ballads "My Everything" and "Just a Little Bit of Your Heart".[20]

In another mixed review from Jon Bream of the Star Tribune, Bream simply stated that "Grande's not big enough to pull off [an] arena spectacle." He continued on to say that the performance "was too busy, dimly lit and just ill conceived." He also felt that "The emphasis should have been on the vocals, Grande's forte, and not on overcooked attempts at pizazz." Then he said praising the singer "what you want from Grande in concert is grand vocalizing, that four-octave range cascading with deep emotion. At times, it was evident, especially when there were no dancers onstage". Bream went on to compare some of the tour's aspects to the likes of Katy Perry, Cher, and Madonna, but not in a positive way. He also disliked the use of the Mi.Mu Gloves by stating "With such a terrific voice in an era of few stand-out female voices, why would Grande want to muck things up with technology?" Bream too praised Grande for her outstanding vocals on the track "Just a Little Bit of Your Heart" stating "It was her most focused and heartfelt vocal of the evening." Bream also complimented Grande on her "prodigious pipes" during up-tempo pieces such as "Love Me Harder", "Grande displayed her prodigious pipes on up-tempo pieces, too, including “Love Me Harder,” which started with her alone atop a pedestal that rose at the back of the stage."[21]

Set list

This set list is representative of the concert on February 28, 2015.[20] It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.

  1. "Bang Bang"
  2. "Hands On Me"
  3. "Best Mistake"
  4. "Break Your Heart Right Back"
  5. "Be My Baby"
  6. "Right There"
  7. "The Way"
  8. "Pink Champagne"
  9. "Tattooed Heart"
  10. "One Last Time"
  11. "Why Try"
  12. "My Everything"
  13. "Just A Little Bit Of Your Heart"
  14. "Love Me Harder"
  15. "All My Love"
  16. "Honeymoon Avenue"
  17. "Break Free"
  18. "Problem"

Shows

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, opening act, tickets sold, amount of available tickets, and gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Opening act Attendance Revenue
North America[32][33]
February 25, 2015 Independence United States Independence Events Center Rixton
Cashmere Cat
5,594 / 5,594 $305,063
February 28, 2015 Milwaukee BMO Harris Bradley Center 10,411 / 10,411 $484,877
March 1, 2015 St. Paul Xcel Energy Center 11,272 / 11,272 $596,866
March 3, 2015 Rosemont Allstate Arena 12,470 / 12,470 $635,053
March 5, 2015 Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena 11,553 / 11,553 $604,962
March 7, 2015 Detroit Joe Louis Arena 14,505 / 14,505 $659,749
March 8, 2015 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 13,666 / 13,666 $493,989
March 10, 2015 Pittsburgh United States Petersen Events Center 8,149 / 8,149 $427,937
March 12, 2015 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 14,334 / 14,334 $778,265
March 14, 2015 Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena 7,347 / 7,347 $326,102
March 15, 2015 Worcester DCU Center 10,337 / 10,337 $517,105
March 17, 2015[lower-alpha 1] Houston NRG Stadium 75,068 / 75,068 $1,234,716
March 20, 2015 New York City Madison Square Garden 28,520 / 28,520 $1,455,122
March 21, 2015
March 24, 2015 Atlanta Philips Arena 9,271 / 9,271 $510,404
March 26, 2015 Orlando Amway Center 12,661 / 12,661 $609,739
March 28, 2015 Miami AmericanAirlines Arena 13,646 / 13,646 $663,521
March 31, 2015 San Antonio AT&T Center 11,319 / 11,319 $544,146
April 1, 2015 Dallas American Airlines Center 12,248 / 12,248 $602,533
April 3, 2015 Oklahoma City Chesapeake Energy Arena 9,526 / 9,526 $461,343
April 6, 2015 Phoenix Talking Stick Resort Arena 12,530 / 12,530 $600,285
April 8, 2015 Inglewood The Forum 11,605 / 11,605 $534,176
April 10, 2015 Anaheim Honda Center 12,160 / 12,160 $581,827
April 12, 2015 San Jose SAP Center 12,717 / 12,717 $651,429
April 14, 2015 Seattle KeyArena 11,648 / 11,648 $508,121
April 16, 2015 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena 13,210 / 13,210 $477,295
Europe[35][36][37]
May 14, 2015 Paris France Zénith de Paris Rixton N/A N/A
May 15, 2015
May 19, 2015 Berlin Germany Max-Schmeling-Halle
May 21, 2015 Stockholm Sweden Ericsson Globe
May 22, 2015 Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum
May 25, 2015 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum
May 28, 2015 Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome
May 29, 2015
June 1, 2015 London England The O2 Arena 13,549 / 13,841 $762,868
June 4, 2015 Manchester Manchester Arena 11,506 / 11,765 $613,272
June 6, 2015[lower-alpha 2] London Wembley Stadium N/A N/A N/A
June 8, 2015 Glasgow Scotland The SSE Hydro Krishane
Melissa Steel
10,789 / 10,792 $555,723
June 9, 2015 Birmingham England Barclaycard Arena N/A N/A
June 12, 2015 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis Alvar & Millas 13,255 / 14,514 $563,577
June 13, 2015 Cologne Germany Lanxess Arena N/A N/A N/A
June 16, 2015 Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi Paula Rojo
North America[39][40][41]
June 28, 2015[lower-alpha 3] New York City United States Pier 26 N/A N/A N/A
July 16, 2015 Tampa Amalie Arena Prince Royce 5,651 / 7,214 $306,261
July 18, 2015 Sunrise BB&T Center N/A N/A
July 21, 2015 Charlotte Time Warner Cable Arena
July 23, 2015 Louisville KFC Yum! Center
July 25, 2015 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 7,996 / 10,361 $515,683
July 26, 2015 Hershey Hersheypark Stadium N/A N/A
July 29, 2015 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center
July 31, 2015 Albany Times Union Center
August 2, 2015 Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena 7,044 / 7,131 $470,758
August 4, 2015 Manchester Verizon Wireless Arena N/A N/A
August 6, 2015 Montreal Canada Bell Centre 10,533 / 10,533 $502,087
August 7, 2015 Ottawa Canadian Tire Centre N/A N/A
August 9, 2015 Toronto Air Canada Centre 10,703 / 10,703 $453,447
Asia[43]
August 15, 2015[lower-alpha 4] Chiba Japan Chiba Marine Stadium N/A N/A N/A
August 16, 2015[lower-alpha 4] Osaka Maishima Sports Island
August 19, 2015 Tokyo Tokyo International Forum
August 23, 2015 Manila Philippines Mall of Asia Arena Tom Taus
August 26, 2015 Jakarta Indonesia JIExpo N/A
North America[39][40]
August 29, 2015 Las Vegas United States Mandalay Bay Events Center Prince Royce N/A N/A
August 31, 2015 Fresno Save Mart Center 8,897 / 10,710 $416,264
September 2, 2015 Boise Taco Bell Arena N/A N/A
September 4, 2015 Portland Moda Center
September 8, 2015 Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheatre
September 9, 2015 Chula Vista Sleep Train Amphitheatre
September 10, 2015[lower-alpha 5] Sacramento Sleep Train Arena
September 11, 2015 Los Angeles Staples Center 13,573 / 13,745 $653,203
September 18, 2015 Houston Toyota Center Prince Royce
Who Is Fancy
9,939 / 10,124 $557,714
September 20, 2015 Birmingham Legacy Arena at The BJCC N/A N/A
September 22, 2015 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 7,775 / 8,045 $304,405
September 24, 2015 Raleigh PNC Arena N/A N/A
September 26, 2015 Brooklyn Barclays Center 21,510 / 21,510 $1,127,406
September 27, 2015
September 29, 2015 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena 7,822 / 7,822 $373,754
October 2, 2015 Chicago United Center N/A N/A
October 4, 2015 St. Louis Scottrade Center
October 6, 2015 Wichita Intrust Bank Arena 7,161 / 10,884 $371,124
October 7, 2015 Tulsa BOK Center N/A N/A
October 9, 2015 New Orleans Smoothie King Center
October 11, 2015 Dallas American Airlines Center 8,945 / 9,653 $377,291
October 13, 2015 Austin Frank Erwin Center Prince Royce 7,179 / 8,632 $351,128
October 15, 2015 El Paso El Paso County Coliseum N/A N/A
October 18, 2015 Mexico City Mexico Palacio de los Deportes N/A 16,109 / 16,349 $1,074,116
South America
October 21, 2015 Santiago Chile Movistar Arena N/A N/A N/A
October 23, 2015 Buenos Aires Argentina Complejo al Río Olivia Viggiano
October 25, 2015 São Paulo Brazil Allianz Parque N/A
Total 490,635 / 505,027 $24,379,990

Cancelled shows

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason/Additional Info
March 17, 2015 Fairfax United States Patriot Center Prior commitments[46]
April 3, 2015 Houston Toyota Center
July 11, 2015 Cincinnati Paul Brown Stadium Wisdom teeth removal, replaced by Demi Lovato[47]
October 29, 2015 San Juan Puerto Rico Coliseo de Puerto Rico Scheduling conflict
December 3, 2015 Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates Du Arena Unknown[48]
December 5, 2015 London England The O2 Arena
December 8, 2015 Saitama Japan Saitama Super Arena
December 9, 2015

Notes

  1. The March 17, 2015 concert in Houston, Texas at NRG Stadium was part of the 2015 Rodeo Houston[34]
  2. The June 6, 2015 concert in London, England at Wembley Stadium was part of the 2015 Summertime Ball.[38]
  3. The June 28, 2015 concert in New York City at Pier 26 was part of the 2015 LGBT Pride.[42]
  4. 1 2 The August 15, 2015 concert in Chiba, Japan at the Chiba Marine Stadium and the August 16, 2015 concert in Osaka, Japan at the Maishima Sports Island were both part of the Summer Sonic Festival.[44]
  5. The September 10, 2015 concert in Sacramento at the Sleep Train Arena was originally planned to take place on September 6, but was rescheduled due to Grande's illness.[45]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Pollstar Top 100 Worldwide Tours 2015" (PDF). Pollstar. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  2. Grande, Ariana. "Tour". arianagrande.com. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  3. Adejobi, Alicia (June 5, 2014). "Will Iggy Azalea Be Joining Her? Ariana Grande Announces First WORLD Tour". Entertainmentwise. Gigwise. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  4. Walker, John (September 10, 2014). "Will Ariana Grande 'Honeymoon' In Your Hometown?". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  5. Edwin, Ortiz (September 10, 2014). "Ariana Grande Announces "The Honeymoon" Tour & Dates". Complex. Rich Antoniello. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  6. Anderson, Trevor (September 22, 2014). "Rixton Announces 'Let the Road' LP, Will Open for Ariana Grande". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  7. Heath, Olivia (November 17, 2014). "Ariana Grande announces UK arena tour in 2015". Reveal UK. Hearst Corporation. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  8. Lindner, Emilee (January 16, 2015). "Ariana Grande Is Going Hard For The Honeymoon Tour: Here's Proof". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  9. Szubiak, Ali (January 12, 2015). "Ariana Grande Posts Behind-the-Scenes Video of Tour Prep + Acoustic Version of 'Love Me Harder'". PopCrush. Townsquare Media. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  10. Menyes, Carolyn (February 3, 2015). "Ariana Grande Teases Honeymoon Tour, New Single "One Last Time" with Behind-The-Scenes Rehearsal Footage". Music Times. Music Times LLC. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  11. Kaufman, Gil (February 25, 2015). "Ariana Grande Posts Beautiful Message From Her Late Grandpa Before Launching The Honeymoon Tour". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  12. Roth, Madeline (February 26, 2015). "Cashmere Cat Debuts New Ariana Grande Song During Honeymoon Tour Kickoff". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  13. Lindner, Emilee (March 3, 2015). "Ariana Grande's New Song With Cashmere Cat Will Have You Screaming 'My My Myyyyy My My My My!'". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  14. Lawrence, Jesse (September 18, 2014). "With Announcement Of Honeymoon Tour, Price of Ariana Grande Tickets Could Place Singer Among Pop's Elite". Forbes. Forbes LLC. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  15. Lawrence, Jesse (September 25, 2014). "Fleetwood Mac, Bob Dylan And Stevie Wonder Tickets Lead List Of Top Priced Upcoming Concert Tours". Forbes. Forbes LLC. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  16. Lawrence, Jesse (January 7, 2015). "Fleetwood Mac Leads Top Tours Of 2015 On Secondary Market". Forbes. Forbes LLC. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  17. Lawrence, Jesse (February 19, 2015). "Ariana Grande Rivaling Other Top Pop Stars On Ticket Market". The Huffington Post. HuffPost Entertainment. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  18. Finn, Timothy (February 26, 2015). "Ariana Grande delivers a grand spectacle at Independence Events Center". The Kansas City Star. Mi-Ai Parrish. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  19. "REVIEW: Supremely talented Ariana Grande gets it just right at Philadelphia's Wells Fargo Center". The Morning Call. Jhon J. Morse. March 13, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  20. 1 2 Levy, Piet (March 1, 2015). "Ariana Grande isn't ready for big leagues at BMO Harris Bradley Center". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Elizabeth Brenner. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  21. Bream, Jon (March 2, 2015). "Concert review: Grande's not big enough to pull off arena spectacle". Star Tribune. Michael J. Klingensmith. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  22. Vena, Jocelyn (March 4, 2015). "Watch Ariana Grande & Cashmere Cat Perform 'Adore'". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  23. Graff, Gary (March 8, 2015). "Big Sean Joins Ariana Grande Onstage in Detroit For Two Songs & Some PDA". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  24. Lindner, Emily (March 28, 2015). "Justin Bieber Joined Ariana Grande Onstage And She Rapped Big Sean's Part On 'As Long As You Love Me'". MTV. Viacom. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  25. "Watch Ariana Grande's Masterful Live Cover Of Whitney Houston's "I Have Nothing"". BuzzFeed.
  26. Piton, Quentin (May 16, 2015). "Kendji Girac s'invite sur scène au Zénith de Paris pour le concert d'Ariana Grande". Purebreak (in French). Retrieved May 16, 2015.
  27. "Ariana Grande sings spanglish version of The Way - Celeb & Music News - The Pop Zone". June 17, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2015.
  28. "Ariana Grande Sings Whitney Houston-Madonna Mashup At NYC Pride: Watch'". Idolator. SpinMedia. June 29, 2015. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  29. "Review: Ariana Grande thanks fans during dazzling tour opener at Tampa's Amalie Arena". Tampa Bay Times. Times Publishing Company. July 17, 2015. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  30. "Ariana Grande a big voice, so-so entertainer". The Courier-Journal. Wes Jackson. July 24, 2015. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  31. "WATCH: Ariana Grande sings Whitney Houston song in Manila concert". August 28, 2015. Retrieved August 28, 2015.
  32. North American box score:
  33. "Attendance". rodeohouston.com/. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
  34. Guerra, Joey (January 12, 2015). "Pop star Ariana Grande joins four other RodeoHouston first-timers". Houston Chronicle. Jack Sweeney. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  35. Europe box score:
  36. European leg information for The Honeymoon Tour:
  37. "Attendance". capitalfm.com/. Retrieved June 21, 2015.
  38. "Need A Superstar? No 'Problem'… Ariana Grande's Joined The Capital Summertime Ball 2015 Line Up". Capital. April 30, 2015. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
  39. 1 2 North American box score:
  40. 1 2 Cobo, Leila (March 30, 2015). "Ariana Grande Adds New Tour Dates With Prince Royce as Special Guest". Billboard. Retrieved April 4, 2015.
  41. Mcdonald, James. "Ariana Grande to Headline Dance on the Pier in NYC", Out.com, May 12, 2015; and "Ariana Grande Sells Out Dance on the Pier", nexusradio.fm, June 26, 2015
  42. "Ariana Grande Will Headline New York's Dance On The Pier In Honor Of LGBT Pride". The Huffington Post. HuffPost Entertainment. May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 11, 2015.
  43. "Ariana Grande's 'The Honeymoon Tour' to drop in Manila". Inquirer.net. March 24, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  44. "Ariana Grande and Olly Murs to play Japan's Summer Sonic festival". Pressparty. February 23, 2015. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
  45. "Ariana Grande concert at Sleep Train Arena rescheduled to Thursday". The Sacramento Bee. September 6, 2015. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
  46. Yahr, Emily (September 19, 2014). "Ariana Grande is on the brink of a major image problem. How can she fix it?". The Washington Post. Katharine Weymouth. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  47. Bacardi, Francesca (July 8, 2015). "Demi Lovato to Replace Ariana Grande at MLB All-Star Game Concert". E! Online. Retrieved July 8, 2015.
  48. "Sad News – It Appears Ariana Grande's Cancelled All Shows Outside Of The USA In December". Capital FM. December 1, 2015. Retrieved December 1, 2015.

External links

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