Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour
Tour by Red Hot Chili Peppers | |
Promotional poster for December 7, 1991 | |
Associated album | Blood Sugar Sex Magik |
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Start date | January 24, 1991 |
End date | February 24, 1993 |
Legs | 7 |
Number of shows | 145 |
Red Hot Chili Peppers concert chronology |
The Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour was a concert tour by the American rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers in support of their highly successful 1991 breakthrough album Blood Sugar Sex Magik. The tour had been the band's biggest in their career at the time. Uncomfortable with the group's growing fame, guitarist John Frusciante, who only after 4 1/2 years of being a member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, decided to quit in May 1992. Arik Marshall would replace Frusciante and continue out the remainder of the tour.
Background
After many years of hardcore touring and building up a loyal following, the band finally started to generate more attention with Mother's Milk in 1989. The album brought more television and radio exposure, helping them break through to a much wider audience and garner awareness from major labels. The band was involved in a major bidding war with labels but ultimately decided to sign with Warner Bros. in 1991 to record Blood Sugar Sex Magik. The band and management knew they had a very successful album in their hands and it was evident from the album's first single, "Give It Away" and the even bigger follow-up single, "Under The Bridge". Both singles received heavy airplay on television and radio. Due to the success of these singles, the group began to sell out the majority of their shows. For opening acts at the start of the tour, the Chili Peppers invited up and coming groups such as Pearl Jam, Nirvana and Smashing Pumpkins.These tour dates were landmarks for not only the groups but also for Alternative rock.By year's end all three bands were headlining their own show and dominating television and radio.
At the time the band was riding an all-time high; however, behind the scene, problems between Anthony Kiedis and John Frusciante were starting to escalate. The band was invited to perform on Saturday Night Live but after the show, Kiedis accused Frusciante of trying to sabotage the performance by playing different notes and singing off key. Frusciante completely denied this but troubles continued to follow the band for the next few months. Frusciante was also now refusing to support the opening acts such as Nirvana, which at one point he claimed to be a fan of but due to Frusciante's attitude and stubbornness he felt the band wasn't worth his time. Years later Frusciante admitted that he was being immature at the time and regretted how selfish he was towards his band and the opening acts.
By the time the band began the Japan leg, tension had started to manifest itself and stress on the group's relationship with each other had grown incredibly. Things had gotten so bad that Frusciante was beginning to isolate himself from everyone, beginning the road towards his 6-year period of living as a virtual recluse. While on tour, John secluded himself with his then-girlfriend, mainly staying backstage. It was in this period of isolation that he began his problems with drugs, specifically heroin and cocaine, which were unknown to the band at the time. On May 7, 1992, Frusciante informed the manager at the time, Lindy Goetz that he was quitting the band. Goetz informed the rest of the band and they urged Frusciante to play the show that night, which they later called one of their worst ever. The band was forced to cancel the rest of their Japanese leg. The band quickly scrambled and put out calls to various guitarists including Dave Navarro, who was going through the breakup of Jane's Addiction and major drug problems. Navarro turned down the band's offer however he would eventually join the band a year later. The band flew guitarist Zander Schloss out to Australia to audition however after a few days of practicing, the band felt the chemistry just wasn't there and decided to cancel the Australian leg of the tour. In June the band hired Arik Marshall to replace Frusciante. Marshall performed his first show with the band on July 4, 1992 and the entire summer was spent with the band headlining the 1992 Lollapalooza tour which further gave a boost to album sales and only made the band bigger. Marshall finished out the remainder of the tour which included various awards shows and European dates in 1993. Following the tour, the band regrouped and attempted to begin writing for the next album however Marshall was fired due to chemistry problems with the other three members. He was briefly replaced by Jesse Tobias, but his tenure didn't last long. Finally, he was replaced with Dave Navarro in 1993.
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue |
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Warm-Up Show | |||
January 24, 1991 | Los Angeles | United States | City Hall |
February 1, 1991 | New York City | The China Club | |
February 8, 1991 | Honolulu | Aloha Tower | |
February 9, 1991 | |||
April 18, 1991 | Los Angeles | Hollywood Palladium | |
September 27, 1991 | Music Machine | ||
North American Leg I | |||
October 16, 1991 | Madison | United States | Oscar Mayer Theater |
October 17, 1991 | DeKalb | Duke Ellington Ballroom | |
October 19, 1991 | Ames | Stephens Auditorium | |
October 20, 1991 | Omaha | Peony Park | |
October 22, 1991 | Milwaukee | Central Park Ballroom | |
October 23, 1991 | East Lansing | M.S.U. Auditorium | |
October 25, 1991 | Pittsburgh | A. J. Palumbo Center | |
October 26, 1991 | Cleveland | Public Auditorium | |
October 27, 1991 | Rochester | Auditorium Theatre | |
October 29, 1991 | Toronto | Canada | Concert Hall |
October 30, 1991 | |||
November 1, 1991 | Boston | United States | Walter Brown Arena |
November 2, 1991 | Burlington | Memorial Auditorium | |
November 3, 1991 | Springfield | Springfield Civic Center | |
November 5, 1991 | Troy | Houston Field House | |
November 7, 1991 | Syracuse | Landmark Theatre | |
November 8, 1991 | Upper Darby | Tower Theater | |
November 9, 1991 | Washington, D.C. | Bender Arena | |
November 11, 1991 | New York City | Roseland Ballroom | |
November 12, 1991 | |||
November 13, 1991 | Warwick | Rocky Point Palladium | |
November 15, 1991 | New York City | Roseland Ballroom | |
November 16, 1991 | |||
November 17, 1991 | State College | Rec Hall | |
November 19, 1991 | Columbus | Veterans Memorial Auditorium | |
November 20, 1991 | Kalamazoo | Kalamazoo State Theater | |
November 22, 1991 | Detroit | The State Theatre | |
November 23, 1991 | |||
November 24, 1991 | Indianapolis | Indiana Convention Center | |
November 26, 1991 | Normal | Redbird Arena | |
November 27, 1991 | Cincinnati | Cincinnati Gardens | |
November 29, 1991 | Chicago | Veterans Memorial | |
November 30, 1991 | St. Paul | Roy Wilkins Auditorium | |
December 2, 1991 | St. Louis | American Theater | |
December 3, 1991 | |||
December 4, 1991 | Kansas City | Soldiers and Sailors Memorial | |
December 6, 1991 | New Orleans | Municipal Auditorium | |
December 7, 1991 | Houston | The Unicorn | |
December 8, 1991 | Austin | City Coliseum | |
December 11, 1991 | Dallas | Bronco Bowl | |
December 12, 1991 | Norman | Hollywood Theater | |
December 14, 1991 | Denver | Denver Coliseum | |
December 27, 1991 | Los Angeles | Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena | |
December 28, 1991 | San Diego | O'Brien Pavilion | |
December 29, 1991 | Tempe | ASU Activity Center | |
December 31, 1991 | San Francisco | MTV Studios | |
December 31, 1991 | Daly City | Cow Palace | |
January 2, 1992 | Salem | Salem Armory | |
January 3, 1992 | Seattle | Seattle Center Coliseum | |
January 4, 1992 | Vancouver | Canada | Pacific Coliseum |
European Leg I This leg was titled the Less Whores More Museums Tour. April 4 was the final U.S. show with John Frusciante. | |||
February 1, 1992 | Seattle | United States | Seattle Center Coliseum |
February 2, 1992 | Vancouver | Canada | Pacific Coliseum |
February 3, 1992 | |||
February 11, 1992 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Ahoy Rotterdam |
February 12, 1992 | Hamburg | Germany | Docks |
February 13, 1992 | |||
February 15, 1992 | Brussels | Belgium | Deinze |
February 16, 1992 | Paris | France | Le Zénith |
February 22, 1992 | New York City | United States | Saturday Night Live |
February 25, 1992 | Munich | Germany | Theaterfabrik |
February 26, 1992 | |||
February 27, 1992 | Frankfurt | Kongresshalle | |
February 29, 1992 | Paris | France | Pavilion Gabriel |
March 1, 1992 | Milan | Italy | Palatrussardi |
March 4, 1992 | Birmingham | England | Hummingbird |
March 5, 1992 | Liverpool | Royal Court Theatre | |
March 7, 1992 | Dublin | Ireland | SFX City Theatre |
March 8, 1992 | Belfast | Northern Ireland | Ulster Hall |
March 10, 1992 | Glasgow | Scotland | Barrowland Ballroom |
March 11, 1992 | Manchester | England | Carling Academy |
March 13, 1992 | London | Brixton Academy | |
March 14, 1992 | |||
March 16, 1992 | Bielefeld | Germany | PC69 |
March 18, 1992 | Ludwigsburg | Forum Am Schlosspark | |
March 19, 1992 | Düsseldorf | Philipshalle | |
March 20, 1992 | Neumarkt | Jurahalle | |
March 22, 1992 | Berlin | Die Halle | |
March 25, 1992 | Poznań | Poland | Hala Arena |
March 26, 1992 | Warsaw | 10th-Anniversary Stadium | |
April 4, 1992 | Los Angeles | United States | Hollywood Palladium |
Japanese Leg On May 7 (following the performance), guitarist John Frusciante quit the band and the remaining two Japanese dates were cancelled. The band attempted to audition Zander Schloss but the chemistry wasn't right and the planned Australian leg, which the band would have played after the Japanese leg, was cancelled. | |||
May 1, 1992 | Yokohama | Japan | Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium |
May 3, 1992 | Osaka | Moda Hall | |
May 4, 1992 | |||
May 6, 1992 | Nagoya | Diamond Hall | |
May 7, 1992 | Saitama | Sonic City | |
May 8, 1992 | Tokyo | Shibuya Public Hall (CANCELLED) | |
May 10, 1992 | Kyoto | Kyoto Memorial Hall (CANCELLED) | |
North American Leg II - Lollapalooza tour The band took a brief amount of time off after John Frusciante quit, and hired replacement guitarist Arik Marshall. | |||
July 4, 1992 | Werchter | Belgium | Rock Werchter |
July 5, 1992 | |||
July 18, 1992 | Mountain View | United States | Shoreline Amphitheatre |
July 19, 1992 | |||
July 21, 1992 | Vancouver | Canada | UBC Field |
July 22, 1992 | Bremerton | United States | Kitsap County Fairgrounds |
July 25, 1992 | Greenwood Village | Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre | |
July 27, 1992 | Maryland Heights | Riverport Amphitheater | |
July 28, 1992 | Cincinnati | Riverbend Music Center | |
July 29, 1992 | Cuyahoga Falls | Blossom Music Center | |
July 31, 1992 | Clarkston | Pine Knob Amphitheatre | |
August 1, 1992 | |||
August 2, 1992 | Tinley Park | World Amphitheater | |
August 4, 1992 | Detroit | Saratoga Performing Arts Center | |
August 5, 1992 | Toronto | Canada | Molson Amphitheatre |
August 7, 1992 | Mansfield | United States | Great Woods |
August 8, 1992 | |||
August 9, 1992 | Wantagh | Nikon at Jones Beach Theater | |
August 11, 1992 | |||
August 12, 1992 | Stanhope | Waterloo Village | |
August 14, 1992 | Reston | Lake Fairfax Park | |
August 16, 1992 | Burgettstown | Starlake Amphitheater | |
August 18, 1992 | Raleigh | Walnut Creek Amphitheater | |
August 20, 1992 | Atlanta | Lakewood Amphitheater | |
August 22, 1992 | Miami | Bicentennial Park | |
August 23, 1992 | Orlando | Central Fairgrounds | |
August 25, 1992 | Charlotte | Blockbuster Pavilion | |
August 28, 1992 | Minneapolis | Harriet Island Pavilion | |
August 29, 1992 | East Troy | Alpine Valley Music Theatre | |
September 1, 1992 | Atlanta | Lakewood Amphitheater | |
September 4, 1992 | New Orleans | UNO Soccer Field | |
September 5, 1992 | Houston | Ft. Bend County Fairgrounds | |
September 6, 1992 | Dallas | Starplex Amphitheatre | |
September 8, 1992 | Phoenix | Desert Sky Pavilion | |
September 9, 1992 | Los Angeles | MTV Video Music Awards | |
September 11, 1992 | Irvine | Irvine Meadows | |
September 12, 1992 | |||
September 13, 1992 | |||
September 27, 1992 | Los Angeles | Hollywood Palladium | |
Australia/New Zealand Leg | |||
October 6, 1992 | Brisbane | Australia | Brisbane Entertainment Centre |
October 7, 1992 | |||
October 9, 1992 | Sydney | Sydney Entertainment Centre | |
October 10, 1992 | |||
October 13, 1992 | |||
October 15, 1992 | Adelaide | Adelaide Entertainment Centre | |
October 17, 1992 | Perth | Perth Entertainment Centre | |
October 20, 1992 | Melbourne | National Tennis Centre at Flinders Park | |
October 21, 1992 | |||
October 27, 1992 | Wellington | New Zealand | Winter Show Buildings |
October 28, 1992 | Auckland | Mt Smart Stadium Supertop | |
1993 Shows The band played their final full show with Arik Marshall on February 9 and their last performance with him was at the 1993 Grammy Awards on February 24 where they were joined onstage by George Clinton and the P-Funk All Stars while performing Give It Away. The band was forced to cancel the remainder of the tour due to Flea being forced to rest for 12 months after being diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome. Marshall was eventually fired after the tour and his short-term replacement was Jesse Tobias though Dave Navarro, who originally turned down the offer to replace Frusciante suddenly became available so Tobias was fired and Navarro was hired. | |||
January 15, 1993 | São Paulo | Brazil | Hollywood Rock Festival |
January 22, 1993 | Rio de Janeiro | ||
January 25, 1993 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Estadio Obras Sanitarias |
January 26, 1993 | |||
February 9, 1993 | New Orleans | United States | The Quad |
February 24, 1993 | Los Angeles | Shrine Auditorium | |
June 25, 1993 | Glastonbury | England | Glastonbury Festival (CANCELLED) |
June 26, 1993 | Dublin | Ireland | Dalymount Park (CANCELLED) |
July 4, 1993 | Roskilde | Denmark | Roskilde Festival (CANCELLED) |
July 5, 1993 | Stockholm | Sweden | Sjöhistoriska museet (CANCELLED) |
July 10, 1993 | Sankt Goarshausen | Germany | Bizarre Festival (CANCELLED) |
August 14, 1993 | Winnipeg | Canada | Glimby Park (CANCELLED) |
Opening acts
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Songs performed
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Other (non-album songs)
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- "After Hours" (Velvet Underground)
- "Anarchy In The U.K." (Sex Pistols)
- "Atomic Dog" (Parliament Funk)
- "Bullet Proof" (George Clinton)
- "Cosmic Slop" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Crosstown Traffic" (Jimi Hendrix)
- "Dazed And Confused" (Led Zeppelin)
- "Fopp" (Ohio Players)
- "Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" (Black Flag)
- "Good God" (James Brown)
- "Good To Your Earhole" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Happy #12 & #35" (Thelonious Monster)
- "Heard It On The X" (ZZ Top)
- "If You Got Funk, You Got Style" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "My Automobile" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "The Needle And The Damage Done" (Neil Young)
- "New Age" (Velvet Underground)
- "No Head No Backstage Pass" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Orange Claw Hammer" (Captain Beefheart)
- "Poptones" (Public Image Ltd)
- "Pot Sharing Tots" (George Clinton)
- "Rapper's Delight" (Sugar Hill Gang)
- "Red Hot Mama" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Sammy Hagar Weekend" (Thelonious Monster)
- "Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Sunday Morning" (Velvet Underground)
- "Sweet Jane" (Velvet Underground)
- "Ten To Butter Blood Voodoo" (John Frusciante)
- "What Is Soul?" (Parliament Funkadelic)
Tour overview
Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour was the band's biggest tour at the time and took them across the entire world although the loss of John Frusciante in 1992 nearly halted the band's tour and rise to success but they carried on with Arik Marshall never missing a beat. The tour saw them playing bigger venues than ever before and became one of the most important tours of the Alternative rock era especially due to the opening acts the tour featured such as Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Smashing Pumpkins who all would eventually be headlining their own arena tours within the next year and even become just as big if not bigger than the Chili Peppers themselves. Arguably the tour's highlight came with a headlining slot on the 1992 Lollapalooza tour which was one of the biggest tours of the summer. The band's setlists featured a heavy dose of the band's first five albums with songs like "Catholic School Girls Rule" getting a one time performance and vanishing from the band's setlist until fourteen years later on the Stadium Arcadium World Tour. Out of the seventeen songs on the album, "Apache Rose Peacock", "The Greeting Song", "Mellowship Slinky in B Major" and "The Righteous & The Wicked" are the only songs to never be performed however they have been teased. "Naked in the Rain" was performed only twice with it being performed once during the 'Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour' . "Funky Monks" has been performed three times and only once on the Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour. It would not return to the setlist for another fourteen years on the Stadium Arcadium World Tour when a fan requested it during a radio contest. The band performed it once more the following night.
This tour marked the last time "Get up and Jump", "Magic Johnson", "Naked In The Rain", "Party on Your Pussy", "Subway to Venus" and "Thirty Dirty Birds" have been performed live.
Personnel
- Flea - bass, backing vocals
- John Frusciante - guitar, backing vocals (January 24, 1991 - May 7, 1992)
- Anthony Kiedis - lead vocals, backing guitar on "Give it Away"
- Chad Smith - drums
- Arik Marshall - guitar, backing vocals (July 4, 1992 - February 24, 1993)
External links
References
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