OU812 Tour

OU812 Tour
Tour by Van Halen
Start date September 30, 1988
End date February 4, 1989
Legs 3
No. of shows 46 played, 1 cancelled
Van Halen concert chronology

The OU812 Tour was a concert tour by hard rock band Van Halen. It was the second tour to include dates in Japan, and was the second with Sammy Hagar as vocalist (who had settled into the role more by this point). It followed the Monsters of Rock Tour 1988, which had formed the first part of the promotion for the OU812 album.

As evident, there were no scheduled shows in December 1988, as the band opted to take time off for the Holidays.

Setlist

Typical Setlist

  1. There's Only One Way To Rock
  2. Summer Nights
  3. Panama
  4. A.F.U. (Naturally Wired)
  5. Bass Solo
  6. Runnin With The Devil
  7. Why Can't This Be Love
  8. Mine All Mine
  9. Drum Solo
  10. Cabo Wabo
  11. Finish What Ya Started
  12. 5150
  13. When It's Love
  14. Eagles Fly
  15. I Can't Drive 55
  16. Best Of Both Worlds
  17. Guitar Solo
  18. Black And Blue
  19. Ain't Talkin Bout Love
  20. You Really Got Me
  21. Rock And Roll

Tour dates

[1]

Date City Country Venue
North America
September 30, 1988 Lexington, Kentucky United States Rupp Arena
October 1, 1988 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum
October 3, 1988 Atlanta Omni Coliseum
October 4, 1988 Antioch, Tennessee Starwood Amphitheatre
October 6, 1988 Greensboro, North Carolina Greensboro Coliseum
October 7, 1988 Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte Coliseum
October 8, 1988 Knoxville, Tennessee Thompson–Boling Arena
October 11, 1988 New York City Madison Square Garden
October 12, 1988 Uniondale, New York Nassau Coliseum
October 14, 1988 Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Civic Center
October 15, 1988 Syracuse, New York Carrier Dome
October 17, 1988 Providence, Rhode Island Providence Civic Center
October 18, 1988 Worcester, Massachusetts Worcester Centrum
October 20, 1988 Richmond, Virginia Richmond Coliseum
October 21, 1988 Norfolk, Virginia Norfolk Scope
October 22, 1988 Philadelphia Spectrum
October 25, 1988 Rosemont, Illinois Rosemont Horizon
October 26, 1988 Fort Wayne, Indiana Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
October 27, 1988
October 28, 1988 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Bradley Center
October 30, 1988 Notre Dame, Indiana Joyce Center
October 31, 1988 Cedar Rapids, Iowa Five Seasons Center
November 1, 1988 Ames, Iowa Hilton Coliseum
November 4, 1988 Valley Center, Kansas Kansas Coliseum
November 5, 1988 Lincoln, Nebraska Bob Devaney Sports Center
November 7, 1988 Peoria, Illinois Peoria Civic Center
November 8, 1988 St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis Arena
November 9, 1988
November 11, 1988 New Orleans, Louisiana Lakefront Arena
November 13, 1988 Austin, Texas Frank Erwin Center
November 15, 1988 El Paso, Texas El Paso County Coliseum
November 16, 1988 Tucson, Arizona Tucson Convention Center
November 17, 1988 Phoenix, Arizona Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
November 19, 1988 San Diego, California San Diego Sports Arena
November 21, 1988 Sacramento, California ARCO Arena
November 22, 1988 Reno, Nevada Lawlor Events Center
November 24, 1988 Portland, Oregon Memorial Coliseum
November 26, 1988 Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Palace
Asia
January 19, 1989 Tokyo Japan Tokyo Dome
January 23, 1989 Kyoto Pulse Plaza Hall
January 24, 1989 Osaka Osaka-jō Hall
January 25, 1989
January 27, 1989 Hiroshima Hiroshima Sun Plaza
January 30, 1989 Kyoto Pulse Plaza Hall
January 31, 1989 Nagoya Nagoya Rainbow Hall
February 1, 1989 Tokyo Tokyo Dome
February 2, 1989
Hawaii Concerts
February 4, 1989 Honolulu, Hawaii United States Neal S. Blaisdell Center
February 5, 1989

Notes and references

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 24, 2007. Retrieved September 1, 2007. Accessed on 31 August 2007
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.