Tales of Us Tour – Wikipedia

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2013–14 concert tour by Goldfrapp

Tales of Us: Tour
Associated album Tales of Us
Start date 23 June 2013
End date 31 July 2014
No. of shows 1 in North America
5 in Europe
15 in UK
21 total

Tales of Us is the sixth concert tour from British band Goldfrapp in support of their sixth studio album, Tales of Us, released in September 2013.

Development[edit]

The tour was announced in early June 2013, following the announcement of the release of their new album through their official website. The band announced dates in Europe and Australia. The first concert was a warm up show in Bristol at the Trinity Centre, with 2 further shows at the Albert Hall in Manchester, England as part of the Manchester International Festival and was the premiere of all songs from the new album along with some additional goldfrapp tracks. Also announced was a date at Somerset House as part of the “Summer Series” and 2 festival dates. The tour officially kicked off in Amsterdam in October, 2013.[1]

The band consists of 6 members (including Alison Goldfrapp).[2] These are:

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  • Alison Goldfrapp – vocals
  • Ellie Stanford – violin
  • Alex Lee – guitars
  • Angie Pollock – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Charlie Jones – bass guitar
  • Seb Sternberg – drums

Set lists[edit]

For the first 5 dates each set list varied. The Manchester shows was a showcase of their new album and included each song from it and a few others specifically from their previous albums Felt Mountain and Seventh Tree. London’s Somerset House concert featured a selection of songs from Tales of Us, in addition to tracks from all their previous studio albums – including “Number 1”, “You Never Know”, “Ooh La La”, “Paper Bag”, “Shiny and Warm”, “Ride a White Horse”, “A&E”, “Caravan Girl”, “Black Cherry”, “Train”, “Strict Machine” and others.

Main tour set list[edit]

The following set list is representative of most dates on the tour.

  1. Jo
  2. Drew
  3. Stranger
  4. Alvar
  5. Annabel
  6. Clay
  7. Yellow Halo
  8. Little Bird
  9. You Never Know
  10. Thea
  11. Number One
  12. Ride A White Horse
  13. Train
  14. Utopia
  15. Clowns
  16. Lovely Head
  17. Strict Machine

Reception[edit]

The reviews for the tour were extremely positive.

Billboard.com gave a positive review of the Beacon Theatre show in New York City and ended by saying “By the time the entire Beacon stood up for the celebratory finale, “Caravan Girl”, it was clear that the magic of Goldfrapp and the orchestra on Tuesday night would be hard to duplicate, even by a likely return to the States in 2014.”
The Independent reviewed the Somerset House with 4/5 rating although never criticising the band’s new music, they stated “They may find it a challenge touring their delicate new material, but Goldfrapp still put on a heck of a show.”[3]

The London Evening Standard reviewed Goldfrapp as part of their sum up of the Lovebox festival in London, by stating “Alison Goldfrapp re-established herself as Madonna’s stranger sister and her band brought Lovebox to a thrilling close”. At the end of their review they went on to say “None was better than Goldfrapp, who sent the punters home on a high. Without them, this would have felt less like a super Sunday and more like a superfluous one”.[4]

Tour dates[edit]

Cancelled shows[edit]

An Australian Festival Tour was announced in June 2013 but was cancelled on 16 September 2013 due to poor ticket sales of the Harvest Festival. Whilst some of the bands performed a headline tour of Australia instead of the festival, Goldfrapp tweeted that they were unable to tour Australia.

Box score[edit]

Venue City Tickets Sold / Tickets Available (73%) Gross (per venue)
Beacon Theatre New York 2024 / 2789 (73%) $114,140[5]
TOTAL 2024 / 2789 (73%) $114,140

Critical reception[edit]

Reviews for the tour have all been positive. With The Guardian giving the Manchester show 4/5 stars. Similarly, The Independent gave their Somerset House show 4/5 and acknowledged that the delicate new material may be challenging live, but they “still put on one heck of a show.”[6]

Sold-out shows[edit]

Eight of the 14 shows sold out.[1] Tickets for London’s Somerset House concert sold out very quickly.

References[edit]



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