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Tour news: Gaga, The Weeknd, Cyndi Lauper and more

Lady Gaga has announced her return to Singapore with four shows at the National Stadium this spring.

The superstar’s four-night run on 18, 19, 21 and 24 May – promoted by Live Nation – will mark her first shows in Singapore since her 2012 Born This Way Ball Tour. 

The 38-year-old recently announced two stadium shows at Estadio GNP Seguros in Mexico City on 26 and 27 April and a historic free concert at Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana Beach on 3 May. Last Friday, Gaga released her seventh studio album, Mayhem.

The Weeknd, meanwhile, has announced the addition of a second Las Vegas date on his 2025 After Hours Til Dawn Stadium Tour.

The newly added show will take place on Friday 4 July at Allegiant Stadium with support from Playboy Carti, and takes the total number of shows on the North America tour to 43.

The Live Nation-produced outing, which runs from 9 May to 3 September, supports The Weeknd’s full album trilogy, including the latest instalment Hurry Up Tomorrow, which was released on 31 January 2025.

Cyndi Lauper has also announced a North American outing for this summer – the final leg of her Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour.

Lauper’s international Farewell Tour – her first major headlining run in a decade – kicked off in North America last October

The 25-date run kicks off on 15 July, visiting amphitheatres and performing arts centres across the country, before concluding on 30 August. American pop musician and songwriter Jake Wesley Rogers will join as the tour opener.

Lauper’s international Farewell Tour – her first major headlining run in a decade – kicked off in North America last October and included her first-ever headline show at Madison Square Garden, which sold out.

The Live Nation-produced tour recently visited the UK and Europe and will head to Australia and Japan in April.

American rock band Counting Crows are also planning to hit the road this summer in support of their forthcoming album Butter Miracle, The Complete Sweets!

The Complete Sweets! Tour will comprise a whopping 68 dates across North America and Europe between June and November.

The North American leg of the tour kicks off on 10 June at the Pinnacle in Nashville and wraps on 23 August at Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre in Englewood, Colorado.

The European and UK leg then starts on 21 September in Brussels and ends on 1 November in London – making stops in cities including Munich, Oslo, Leeds, Barcelona, Amsterdam and Dublin on the way.

The Gaslight Anthem will support Counting Crows during the majority of the North American leg of the tour.

Finally, Billy Joel’s upcoming concert dates, including two shows in the UK, have been rescheduled due to a medical condition. Originally slated for June 2025, the two exclusive performances – at Edinburgh’s Scottish Gas Murrayfield and Liverpool’s Anfield Stadium – will now take place the following year on 6 June and 20 June, respectively.

 


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Covid puts the brakes on big US recovery

A swathe of concerts, festivals and tours in the US have been cancelled or postponed in the last week amid concerns over the spread of the delta variant of Covid-19.

New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival was officially cancelled on Sunday 8 August “as a result of the current exponential growth of new Covid cases in New Orleans and the region and the ongoing public health emergency”.

The AEG festival, which would’ve taken place between 8–17 October 2021, typically attracts around 500,000 attendees across the seven days.

The 2021 edition was rescheduled in January to October, from its traditional spring dates of 22 April – 2 May. The festival’s lineup included Dead & Company, Stevie Nicks, Foo Fighters, Jimmy Buffett, Lizzo, Demi Lovato and more.

Artists including Michael Bublé, Limp Bizkit, Randy Bachman and Burton Cummings have exercised similar caution, postponing or cancelling late summer and early august 2021 dates due to uncertainty surrounding Covid.

“I do not want to put my fans, band or crew at risk by putting them in a situation that could possibly affect their health”

Last week, Michael Bublé announced the postponement of a string of August shows in the US, citing the current surge in new Covid-19 cases in the country – which are at the highest rate since early February, according to a New York Times database.

The August shows have now been rescheduled to take place in the second half of October. For now, Bublé’s September shows in the US are still going ahead as planned.

“I do not want to put my fans at risk, nor my band and crew, by putting them in a situation that could possibly affect their health and therefore their friends and family. It is better for me to reschedule these shows to a time when all of us are confident that we can relax and enjoy the show,” he said in a press statement.

Rock band Limp Bizkit has also announced the cancellation of their remaining August tour dates, citing concern over the rising tide of Covid-19 infections.

“Out of an abundance of caution and concern for the safety of the band, crew and most of all the fans, the Limp Bizkit August tour is being cancelled. Refunds are available from your point of purchase,” a statement from the tour said.

“Out of an abundance of caution and concern for the safety of the band, crew and most of all the fans, the tour is cancelled”

Affected dates include eight shows in August, including performances at Stubbs BBQ in Austin, the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, and Irving Plaza in New York.

Canadian rock legends Randy Bachman and Burton Cummings have followed suit, announcing that the US leg of their ‘Together Again – Live In Concert’ tour has been cancelled, again, due to the ongoing uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus pandemic.

Slated to start 1 September at the Foellinger Theatre in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the tour was scheduled to run through the rest of the month before finishing at the Smith Centre in Las Vegas on 24 September.

“While Randy and Burton have been looking forward to reuniting for their fans throughout the United States, they extend their love and appreciation to all of the fans that were planning to come to these shows, and they cannot wait to see you all again when things are more predictable in terms of travel in and out of Canada.”

The growing concerns about artists’ health and safety while gigging during the pandemic have been validated by a slate of cancellations due to touring members testing positive for Covid-19.

Counting Crows pulled out of their Boston show mere hours before the show after a touring member tested positive

On Sunday (8 August), American rock band Counting Crows pulled out of their Boston show mere hours before they were due on stage after a member of the band’s touring party tested positive for Covid-19.

The band were forced to postpone the concert at Leader Bank Pavilion, as well as their gig in Youngstown Foundation Amphitheatre, Ohio, two nights later.

In a post on social media, they noted that the entire band and crew have been vaccinated and have been taking precautions to be as safe as possible.

Similarly, rock stalwarts Lynyrd Skynyrd postponed four upcoming performances on their current summer tour after the band’s longtime guitarist Rickey Medlocke tested positive for Covid-19.

Affected shows include 9 August performance at Tom Beson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio; 10 August at the Jackson County Fair in Jackson, Michigan; Cellairis Amphitheatre at Lakewood in Atlanta on 13 August; and Rock The South in Culman, Alabam on 14 August.

The US is averaging more than 124,000 new virus cases each day – the highest rate since early February

Sebastian Bach also announced he had tested positive after several shows and days earlier, Fall Out Boy pulled out of their spots on the ‘Hella Mega’ tour (with Green Day and Weezer) in Boston, New York, and Washington DC.

The US is averaging more than 124,000 new virus cases each day, more than double the levels of two weeks ago and the highest rate since early February, according to a New York Times database.

As the Delta variant tears through the US, more key players from the country’s live sector are implementing mandates to keep staff and artists safe.

Yesterday (9 August), Live Nation announced it is allowing artists performing at its US venues to require all attendees and staff to be fully vaccinated or to show a negative test result to gain entry, where permitted by law.

While New York became the first major city to require proof of being vaccinated for anyone who wants to attend an indoor live show – reinforcing similar requirements already set by venues such as Madison Square Garden.

 


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