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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Design and production  





3 Planning, itinerary, and ticketing  





4 Setlist  





5 Tour dates  





6 Notes  





7 References  














Worldwide Texas Tour: Difference between revisions






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|September 21, 1976

|September 21, 1976

|[[Salt Lake City]]

|[[Salt Lake City]]

|[[Salt Palace]]

|[[Salt Palace (arena)|Salt Palace]]

|Roadwork

|Roadwork

|-

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Revision as of 22:13, 4 April 2023

Worldwide Texas Tour
ConcertbyZZ Top
LocationUnited States
Associated albumFandango!, Tejas
Start dateMay 29, 1976 (1976-05-29)
End dateDecember 31, 1977 (1977-12-31)
Legs5
No. of shows98 (100 scheduled)
ZZ Top concert chronology

The Worldwide Texas Tour was a concert tour by American rock band ZZ Top. Arranged in support of their 1975 album Fandango!, the band visited arenas, stadiums, and auditoriums from 1976 to 1977. The elaborate stage production was designed to bring Texas to national audiences, with regional fauna and flora.

Encompassing five legs and 97 shows, the tour began in Winston-Salem, North Carolina on May 29, 1976 and ended in Fort Worth, Texas on December 31, 1977. The band's 1976 album Tejas, which elaborated on the tour's artistic theme, was recorded during a break in the tour, and its songs were played in 1977. In 2008, Guitar World′s Alan di Perna called it "one of the most ambitious and bizarre tours in all of rock history".[1]

Background

ZZ Top's 1973 album Tres Hombres and supporting single "La Grange" brought them commercial and critical success in the United States. They gained a reputation as one of the top rock acts in the country and earned them the nickname "that little ol' band from Texas".[2] On September 1, 1974, ZZ Top performed at Texas Memorial StadiuminAustin. The concert—photographs of which were used for their 1975 Fandango! album—was the last at the stadium until the Eagles performed there in 1995, as the artificial turf was damaged by rowdy fans.[2] In 2008, guitarist and vocalist Billy Gibbons recalled the concert as a "great, great event".[3]

Design and production

The Worldwide Texas Tour stage was designed by Bill Narum, who also designed ZZ Top's album covers and tour posters.[4] Whereas ZZ Top had previously used simple productions, the tour stage was an elaborate setup designed to "bring Texas to the people".[5] It included a 63-by-48 foot (19-by-15 m) stage that was tilted at a four-degree angle, which resembled the shape of Texas and weighed 35 tons (70,000 lbs), costing a reported US$100,000. The stage was constructed in a seven-hour process with the help of 40 crew members. The set's backdrop was a 180-foot (55 m) three-dimensional panorama that used five scrims measuring 36-by-20 feet (11-by-6 m), which were hand-painted and individually lit to show dawn and dusk effects.[6]

The presentation also included live animals such as a longhorn steer, black buffalo, two vultures, and two rattlesnakes, and plants such as yucca, agave, and cacti. Over US$140,000 was spent to ensure that the animals were healthy, traveling under the supervision of an animal expert and veterinarian. The set used 260 speakers and 130 light fixtures, using over 136,000 watts of power. A crew of 50 people traveled in a series of 13 vehicles to transport 75 tons (150,000 lbs) of equipment. The entire production and crew were insured for $10 million.[6]

Planning, itinerary, and ticketing

Rehearsals began in May 1976 at AstroarenainHouston. The band and crew spent a week rehearsing the show, constructing and adjusting the stage set. Unlike many of the group's previous tours, which began around the release of a new album, the Worldwide Texas Tour started over a year after Fandango! was released, allowing fans the opportunity to familiarise themselves with the songs. By opening night, the album had already been certified gold in the United States and sold over one million copies in Canada.[7] The first leg of the tour, 30 shows in the US, alternated between stadiums and arenas. Concerts in Europe, Japan, Australia, and Mexico were cancelled due to quarantine restrictions for buffalo.[7]

The band's recorded their 1976 album Tejas during a break in the tour, and played its songs in 1977. By the time the third US leg began, Tejas had sold more than half a million copies in the US. The leg, which began in February 1977, was the band's first full arena leg of the tour. Four days of heavy rain and hailstorms preceded the opening show at Groves Stadium, which decreased ticket sales to 20,000.[5] Tickets for two shows at The Summit in Houston sold out in less than twelve hours.[6] Ticket prices for outdoor venues were US$8.50 in advance and $10 on the day of the show, while indoor venues were $6 in advance and $7 at the door.[5] At its conclusion, the Worldwide Texas Tour sold over 1.2 million tickets.[8] In 2008, Guitar World′s Alan di Perna called it "one of the most ambitious and bizarre tours in all of rock history".[1]

Setlist

March 8, 1977: Binghamton, New York
  1. "Thunderbird" (The Nightcaps cover)
  • "Chevrolet"
  • "Precious and Grace"
  • "Waitin' for the Bus"
  • "Jesus Just Left Chicago"
  • "Enjoy and Get It On"
  • "Pan Am Highway Blues"
  • "It's Only Love"
  • "Ten Dollar Man"
  • "Move Me on Down the Line"
  • "Heard It on the X"
  • "Arrested for Driving While Blind"
  • "Nasty Dogs and Funky Kings"
  • "She's a Heartbreaker"
  • "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers"
  • "Blue Jean Blues"
  • "Rattlesnake Shake" (Fleetwood Mac cover)
  • "La Grange" (contains excerpts of "Sloppy Drunk Blues" and "Bar-B-Q")
  • "Mexican Blackbird"
  • "Backdoor Love Affair"
  • "Tush"
  • "Goin' Down to Mexico"
  • "Backdoor Medley" (contains excerpts of "Backdoor Love Affair", Little Walter's "Mellow Down Easy", and "Long Distance Boogie")
  • "Shiek"
  • March 17, 1977: Boston, Massachusetts
    1. "Thunderbird"
  • "Chevrolet"
  • "Precious and Grace"
  • "Waitin' for the Bus"
  • "Jesus Just Left Chicago"
  • "Enjoy and Get It On"
  • "Pan Am Highway Blues"
  • "Move Me on Down the Line"
  • "It's Only Love"
  • "Ten Dollar Man"
  • "Heard It on the X"
  • "Arrested for Driving While Blind"
  • "Balinese"
  • "Nasty Dogs and Funky Kings"
  • "She's a Heartbreaker"
  • "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers"
  • "Blue Jean Blues"
  • "Rattlesnake Shake"
  • "La Grange/Sloppy Drunk Blues/Bar-B-Q"
  • "Mexican Blackbird"
  • "El Diablo"
  • "Tush"
  • April 3, 1977: Birmingham, Alabama
    1. "Thunderbird"
  • "Chevrolet"
  • "Precious and Grace"
  • "Waitin' for the Bus"
  • "Jesus Just Left Chicago"
  • "Enjoy and Get It On"
  • "Pan Am Highway Blues"
  • "Move Me on Down the Line"
  • "It's Only Love"
  • "Ten Dollar Man"
  • "Heard It on the X"
  • "Arrested for Driving While Blind"
  • "Balinese"
  • "Nasty Dogs and Funky Kings"
  • "She's a Heartbreaker"
  • "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers"
  • "Blue Jean Blues"
  • "Rattlesnake Shake"
  • "La Grange/Sloppy Drunk Blues/Bar-B-Q"
  • "Mexican Blackbird"
  • "El Diablo"
  • "Goin' Down to Mexico"
  • "Tush"
  • "Backdoor Medley"
  • December 30, 1977: San Antonio, Texas
  • "Neighbor, Neighbor"
  • "Precious and Grace"
  • "Waitin' for the Bus"
  • "Jesus Just Left Chicago"
  • "Down Brownie"
  • "Ko Ko Blues"
  • "It's Only Love"
  • "Ten Dollar Man"
  • "Heard It on the X"
  • "Arrested for Driving While Blind"
  • "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers"
  • "Blue Jean Blues"
  • "La Grange/Sloppy Drunk Blues/Bar-B-Q"
  • "Mexican Blackbird"
  • "Tush"
  • Tour dates

    List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
    Date City Country Venue Opening Act(s) Attendance Revenue
    Leg 1: arenas and stadiums in the United States
    May 29, 1976 Winston-Salem United States Groves Stadium Lynyrd Skynyrd, Point Blank
    June 2, 1976 Norfolk Norfolk Scope Wet Willie 8,309 / 12,000
    June 3, 1976 Richmond Richmond Coliseum
    June 5, 1976 Atlanta Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium Marshall Tucker Band, Elvin Bishop 45,000 / 65,000 $425,000
    June 6, 1976 Knoxville Knoxville Civic Coliseum
    June 7, 1976 Louisville Freedom Hall
    June 12, 1976 Pittsburgh Three Rivers Stadium Aerosmith, Point Blank 47,705 / 65,000 $425,000
    June 20, 1976 Jacksonville Jacksonville Memorial Coliseum Elvin Bishop, Jay Boy Adams
    June 23, 1976 Niagara Falls Niagara Falls Convention Center Blue Öyster Cult, Starz
    June 24, 1976 Binghamton Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena
    June 25, 1976 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum Blue Öyster Cult, Starz
    June 26, 1976 Philadelphia Philadelphia Spectrum Blue Öyster Cult, Ted Nugent 18,209 / 19,500 $104,568
    June 28, 1976 Richfield Coliseum at Richfield Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band
    June 29, 1976 Charleston Charleston Civic Center Blue Öyster Cult
    July 4, 1976 Memphis Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Outlaws 32,000 / 60,000 $320,000
    July 9, 1976 Omaha Omaha Civic Auditorium
    July 11, 1976 Kansas City Arrowhead Stadium Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Jay Boy Adams
    July 14, 1976 St. Louis Kiel Auditorium Pure Prairie League, Jay Boy Adams
    July 17, 1976 New Orleans Tulane Stadium The J. Geils Band, Jay Boy Adams 51,000 / 60,000 $500,000
    July 21, 1976 Duluth Duluth Arena Auditorium
    July 23, 1976 Milwaukee MECCA Arena
    July 25, 1976 South Bend Athletic & Convocation Center
    July 26, 1976 Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre REO Speedwagon
    July 27, 1976
    August 1, 1976 Denver McNichols Sports Arena Blue Öyster Cult, The Outlaws 17,102 / 17,102 $136,816
    August 4, 1976 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum Jay Boy Adams
    August 7, 1976 Anaheim Anaheim Stadium Blue Öyster Cult, Johnny & Edgar Winter 49,169 / 60,000 $498,040
    August 9, 1976 San Diego San Diego Stadium
    August 10, 1976 Fresno Selland Arena
    August 14, 1976 Daly City Cow Palace Ted Nugent 14,500 / 14,500 $79,844
    Leg 2: arenas and stadiums in the United States
    September 10, 1976 Waterloo United States McElroy Auditorium The Boys 5,000 / 7,000 $24,900
    September 11, 1976 Bloomington Metropolitan Sports Center Pure Prairie League, Jay Boy Adams
    September 12, 1976 Detroit Cobo Center
    September 17, 1976 Bismarck Bismarck Civic Center REO Speedwagon 4,200 / 8,000
    September 18, 1976 Billings Yellowstone METRA 10,086 / 13,000
    September 19, 1976 Laramie War Memorial Fieldhouse
    September 21, 1976 Salt Lake City Salt Palace Roadwork
    September 22, 1976 Las Vegas Las Vegas Convention Center
    September 24, 1976 Tucson Tucson Community Center
    September 25, 1976 Nashville Tennessee State Fairgrounds The Band, Cate Brothers $13,744
    September 30, 1976 Lakeland Lakeland Civic Center Point Blank
    October 2, 1976 Hollywood Hollywood Sportatorium
    October 9, 1976 Tallahassee Doak Campbell Stadium Wet Willie, Point Blank 11,600 / 40,500 $82,000
    October 14, 1976 Dayton University of Dayton Arena Wet Willie
    October 16, 1976 Charlotte Charlotte Coliseum Styx 13,500 / 13,500
    October 17, 1976 Columbia Carolina Coliseum
    October 21, 1976 Portland Portland Memorial Coliseum Elvin Bishop
    October 22, 1976 Spokane Spokane Coliseum 6,506 / 8,500
    October 23, 1976 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum
    October 28, 1976 Pocatello ASISU MiniDome 7,368 / 12,000
    October 31, 1976 Kansas City Kansas City Municipal Auditorium Rory Gallagher
    November 2, 1976 Oklahoma City Oklahoma State Fair Arena
    November 4, 1976 Wichita Levitt Arena The Fools
    November 7, 1976 Evansville Roberts Municipal Stadium 8,007 / 12,732 $51,686
    November 9, 1976 Toledo Toledo Sports Arena Montrose
    November 11, 1976 Landover Capital Centre Styx, Elvin Bishop
    November 25, 1976 Houston The Summit Rory Gallagher
    November 26, 1976
    November 27, 1976 Fort Worth Tarrant County Convention Center
    November 28, 1976
    November 30, 1976 Tulsa Tulsa Assembly Center Pure Prairie League
    Leg 3: arenas and auditoriums in the United States
    February 16, 1977 Madison United States Dane County Memorial Coliseum Head East
    February 17, 1977 Indianapolis Market Square Arena Elvin Bishop
    February 19, 1977 Chicago Chicago Stadium Atlanta Rhythm Section
    February 22, 1977 Fort Wayne Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
    February 23, 1977 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum Cate Brothers 11,951 / 17,556 $78,764
    February 24, 1977 Detroit Cobo Center Atlanta Rhythm Section
    March 3, 1977 Portland Cumberland County Civic Center The Blend 7,489 / 9,500
    March 8, 1977 Binghamton Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena The Dictators
    March 9, 1977 Springfield Springfield Civic Center Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band
    March 16, 1977 Boston Boston Garden Santana
    March 17, 1977
    March 19, 1977 Jackson Mississippi Coliseum Point Blank
    March 23, 1977 Lake Charles Lake Charles Civic Center
    March 25, 1977 Springfield Hammons Center Arena
    March 26, 1977 Lincoln Pershing Auditorium Styx
    March 27, 1977 Normal Horton Fieldhouse Point Blank
    April 1, 1977 Savannah Savannah Civic Center
    April 2, 1977 Mobile Mobile Municipal Auditorium
    April 3, 1977 Birmingham Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center
    April 7, 1977 Richmond Richmond Coliseum Nils Lofgren
    April 8, 1977 Hampton Hampton Coliseum Atlanta Rhythm Section, Nils Lofgren
    April 9, 1977 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum Nils Lofgren
    April 10, 1977 Roanoke Roanoke Civic Center The Outlaws
    April 13, 1977 Kalamazoo Wings Stadium Rush
    April 15, 1977 Johnson City Freedom Hall Civic Center Blackfoot 5,688 / 8,500 $39,501
    April 16, 1977 Clemson Littlejohn Coliseum
    April 18, 1977 Columbia Hearnes Center
    April 21, 1977 Rochester Rochester Community War Memorial Pure Prairie League
    April 23, 1977 Manchester John F. Kennedy Memorial Coliseum The Dictators
    April 24, 1977 Waterbury Palace Theater Piper 3,800 / 3,800 $28,500
    April 30, 1977 Providence Providence Civic Center Foghat
    May 6, 1977 Hays Gross Memorial Coliseum
    May 7, 1977 Lawrence Allen Fieldhouse Foreigner
    Leg 4: arenas and auditoriums in the United States
    June 7, 1977 Albuquerque United States Tingley Coliseum Pure Prairie League, Climax Blues Band
    June 8, 1977 Tucson Tucson Community Center
    June 9, 1977 Tempe ASU Activity Center
    June 11, 1977 Inglewood Inglewood Forum Elvin Bishop
    June 14, 1977 Bakersfield Bakersfield Civic Auditorium
    June 15, 1977 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena 9,921 / 14,800 $65,768
    June 18, 1977 El Paso El Paso County Coliseum Point Blank
    June 21, 1977 Fresno Selland Arena Elvin Bishop
    June 22, 1977 San Bernardino Swing Auditorium
    June 24, 1977 Daly City Cow Palace 9,167 / 14,000 $62,039
    July 1, 1977 Honolulu Neal S. Blaisdell Center Yellow Rose Band
    July 2, 1977
    July 9, 1977 Fargo North Dakota State University
    July 10, 1977 Rapid City Rushmore Plaza Civic Center Burton Cummings
    Leg 5: arenas and auditoriums in the United States
    December 28, 1977 Shreveport United States Hirsch Memorial Coliseum Sea Level
    December 29, 1977 Abilene Taylor County Expo Center Muddy Waters, Jay Boy Adams
    December 30, 1977 San Antonio San Antonio Convention Center Muddy Waters, The Fools
    December 31, 1977 Fort Worth Tarrant County Convention Center Muddy Waters
    January 1, 1978 Amarillo Amarillo Civic Center

    Notes

    1. ^ a b di Perna, Alan (July 2008). "ZZ Top: Cars, Guitars, & Three Unlikely Rock Stars". Guitar World. Vol. 29, no. 7.
  • ^ a b The Alcalde 1995.
  • ^ Texas Monthly Talks 2008.
  • ^ Gray 2009.
  • ^ a b c Billboard 1976.
  • ^ a b c Orb 1976.
  • ^ a b Clark 1994.
  • ^ Kerrang! 1981.
  • References


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Worldwide_Texas_Tour&oldid=1148234074"

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