Kiss Farewell Tour

The Kiss Farewell Tour was a concert tour performed by the American group Kiss, four years after they reunited the group's original lineup for a record-breaking Reunion Tour in 1996, "Kiss Alive Worldwide". A follow-up tour in 1998 in support of their then recent release, Psycho Circus, saw lower ticket sales in the United States but did better overseas. Two years after this, the "Farewell Tour" was announced. This trek was more successful than the Psycho Circus World Tour and it covered the entire North American region and was brought overseas as well.

Kiss Farewell Tour
Tour by Kiss
Start dateMarch 11, 2000
End dateApril 13, 2001
Legs5
No. of shows142 played, 1 cancelled
Kiss concert chronology

It was intended to be Kiss' last tour, however, in late 2002 they announced that they were not going to retire as planned. Although Kiss continued performing after the conclusion of the tour, this was the final tour with the original, reunited lineup. Paul Stanley later revealed the tour was an attempt to "put Kiss out of its misery" following the legal troubles during production of Psycho Circus, and the reunited band having underwhelming live performances and "being virtually prisoners to doing the same songs every tour."[1] The initial Japanese leg of the Farewell Tour was announced by promoter UDO Artists on September 15, 2000, but cancelled six days later due to "scheduling problems". Peter Criss had effectively left the band following the final "Farewell" show in North Charleston, South Carolina, in October 2000; however, this was not publicly known at the time. His reunion contract had essentially expired and he and Kiss were unable to come to terms for him continuing with the band for the Japan–Australia 2001 tour. As a result, he was replaced by Eric Singer.

In an interview with Ace Frehley at the show in Ames, Iowa, he stated that after the Australian leg, there would be five final shows in New York City at Madison Square Garden. Those were cancelled. Skid Row and Ted Nugent were the opening acts for most of the shows on the US leg of the tour. One aspect of the tour was that for the first time since returning to wearing makeup, the band began to include songs not recorded with the original lineup in their set list. "Lick It Up" and "Heaven's On Fire" were played representing the bands' non-makeup era, and "I Love It Loud" was included from their late-makeup era which did not involve the original lineup.

Kiss opened the show by synchronizing an explosion sound with bursting lights as a large black curtain blocking the stage dropped away to reveal the band descending from the lighting rig on a chrome platform spewing sparks underneath. The group stepped off onto center stage, and it raised up back into the lighting rig as they began playing. Initially all four members rode the platform down, fists in the air; soon, however, the band was already playing the first song as it started to lower, and drummer Peter Criss descended on his own platform, playing his drum kit, in synch with the front platform. On June 27, 2000, the band filmed their show at East Rutherford, New Jersey, for a pay-per-view concert film, The Last KISS, which was released later on home video and is part of the Kissology set.

Setlist

  1. "Detroit Rock City"
  2. "Deuce"
  3. "Shout It Out Loud"
  4. "I Love It Loud"
  5. "Shock Me"
  6. "Firehouse"
  7. "Do You Love Me?"
  8. "Psycho Circus"
  9. "Calling Dr. Love"
  10. "Let Me Go, Rock 'n' Roll"
  11. "2,000 Man"
  12. "Heaven's on Fire"
  13. "Lick It Up"
  14. "God of Thunder"
  15. "Cold Gin"
  16. "100,000 Years"
  17. "Love Gun"
  18. "Black Diamond"

Encore

  1. "Beth"
  2. "Rock and Roll All Nite"
  • "I Stole Your Love" and "Into the Void" played only on US legs. "Talk to Me" played on Australian and Japan legs. Parts of "Forever" and "I Still Love You" occasionally played solo by Stanley before "Black Diamond", "Hard Luck Woman", "Shandi" or "I Want You" played in Australia solo by Stanley before "Black Diamond". "I Was Made for Lovin' You" was played only in Hamilton and Ottawa, Ontario as well as the Japanese and Australian legs replacing "Beth" after Peter Criss had left.
  • Some other songs from the 70's albums played on Australian and Japan legs into a brief "medley" during the encore included "New York Groove" "Goin' Blind", "Mr. Speed" (only in Melbourne, Australia) and, more typically, "Parasite", "She" and "Makin' Love", "Strutter", "Rocket Ride", "Hotter Than Hell", "Got to Choose" and "2,000 Man"
  • During the US leg Frehley would occasionally drop in snippets of songs during his spotlight-solo, e.g. "Talk To Me".

– Average Attendance (10,700)

Tour dates

[2]

Date City Country Venue Tickets Sold/Available
North America
March 11, 2000Phoenix, ArizonaUnited StatesBlockbuster Desert Sky Pavilion1 14,584 / 19,586 (74%)
March 12, 2000Tucson, ArizonaTucson Convention Center 8,220 / 8,220 (100%)
March 14, 2000Las Cruces, New MexicoPan American Center 10,051 / 10,051 (100%)
March 17, 2000Paradise, NevadaMandalay Bay Events Center 9,296 / 9,296 (100%)
March 18, 2000Anaheim, CaliforniaArrowhead Pond2 14,009 / 14,009 (100%)
March 19, 2000San Diego, CaliforniaSan Diego Sports Arena 10,818 / 12,509 (86%)
March 21, 2000Bakersfield, CaliforniaBakersfield Centennial Garden 9,343 / 9,343 (100%)
March 23, 2000Oakland, CaliforniaThe Arena in Oakland 14,494 / 15,885 (91%)
March 25, 2000Reno, NevadaLawlor Events Center 9,935 / 10,456 (94%)
March 27, 2000West Valley City, UtahE Center 9,573 / 9,573 (100%)
March 28, 2000Denver, ColoradoPepsi Center 15,287 / 17,000 (89%)
March 29, 2000Lubbock, TexasUnited Spirit Arena 11,592 / 13,000 (89%)
March 31, 2000San Antonio, TexasAlamodome 20,760 / 20,760 (100%)
April 1, 2000The Woodlands, TexasCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion 16,908 / 16,917 (99%)
April 2, 2000Dallas, TexasStarplex Amphitheatre 18,135 / 18,135 (100%)
April 4, 2000Oklahoma City, OklahomaMyriad Convention Center 12,533 / 12,533 (100%)
April 5, 2000North Little Rock, ArkansasAlltel Arena 10,080 / 12,500 (80%)
April 6, 2000Pensacola, FloridaPensacola Civic Center 7,226 / 7,226 (100%)
April 8, 2000West Palm Beach, FloridaMars Music Amphitheater 14,031 / 18,000 (77%)
April 9, 2000Estero, FloridaTECO Arena 6,527 / 6,527 (100%)
April 11, 2000Orlando, FloridaTD Waterhouse Centre 10,428 / 12,437 (83%)
April 12, 2000Tampa, FloridaIce Palace 12,245 / 14,033 (87%)
April 14, 2000Birmingham, AlabamaBJCC Arena 13,628 / 13,628 (100%)
April 15, 2000AtlantaPhilips Arena 14,495 / 14,495 (100%)
April 16, 2000New Orleans, LouisianaNew Orleans Arena 13,656 / 13,656 (100%)
April 18, 2000Columbia, South CarolinaCarolina Coliseum 8,798 / 9,227 (95%)
April 20, 2000Charlotte, North CarolinaCharlotte Coliseum 15,886 / 15,886 (100%)
April 21, 2000Greenville, South CarolinaBi-Lo Center 12,049 / 12,049 (100%)
April 22, 2000Greensboro, North CarolinaGreensboro Coliseum 17,685 / 17,685 (100%)
April 24, 2000Chattanooga, TennesseeUTC Arena 6,658 / 11,500 (57%)
April 25, 2000Memphis, TennesseePyramid Arena 14,259 / 14,259 (100%)
April 28, 2000Nashville, TennesseeAmSouth Amphitheater 16,503 / 17,000 (97%)
April 29, 2000Louisville, KentuckyFreedom Hall 14,467 / 14,868 (97%)
April 30, 2000Knoxville, TennesseeThompson–Boling Arena 13,040 / 13,040 (100%)
May 2, 2000Charleston, West VirginiaCharleston Civic Center 7,711 / 11,519 (66%)
May 3, 2000Roanoke, VirginiaRoanoke Civic Center 7,178 / 9,000 (79%)
May 5, 2000Cleveland, OhioGund Arena 26,698 / 35,000 (76%)
May 6, 2000
May 7, 2000Grand Rapids, MichiganVan Andel Arena 11,791 / 12,420 (94%)
May 9, 2000Toledo, OhioJohn F. Savage Hall 6,183 / 8,794 (70%)
May 11, 2000Rosemont, IllinoisAllstate Arena 22,951 / 22,951 (100%)
May 12, 2000
May 13, 2000Columbus, OhioPolaris Amphitheater 16,869 / 16,869 (100%)
May 15, 2000Peoria, IllinoisPeoria Civic Center 9,130 / 9,130 (100%)
May 16, 2000Moline, IllinoisMARK of the Quad Cities 11,360 / 11,360 (100%)
May 18, 2000Minneapolis, MinnesotaTarget Center 14,031 / 15,281 (91%)
May 19, 2000Milwaukee, WisconsinMarcus Amphitheatre 17,172 / 22,828 (75%)
May 21, 2000Noblesville, IndianaDeer Creek Music Theater 22,633 / 24,210 (93%)
May 22, 2000CincinnatiRiverbend Music Center 11,209 / 20,474 (54%)
May 24, 2000Auburn Hills, MichiganThe Palace of Auburn Hills 27,493 / 34,962 (78%)
May 25, 2000
May 26, 2000Burgettstown, PennsylvaniaPost-Gazette Pavilion 14,946 / 23,212 (64%)
North America
June 6, 2000Richmond, VirginiaUnited StatesRichmond Coliseum 7,019 / 8,000 (87%)
June 9, 2000Wantagh, New YorkJones Beach Amphitheater 23,542 / 28,220 (83%)
June 10, 2000
June 12, 2000Mansfield, MassachusettsTweeter Center 35,594 / 35,594 (100%)
June 13, 2000
June 15, 2000Portland, MaineCumberland County Civic Center 8,288 / 8,288 (100%)
June 16, 2000Camden, New JerseyBlockbuster Sony Entertainment Center 14,174 / 24,697 (57%)
June 19, 2000Erie, PennsylvaniaErie Civic Center 6,796 / 6,796 (100%)
June 20, 2000Saratoga Springs, New YorkSaratoga Performing Arts Center 9,427 / 20,000 (47%)
June 22, 2000MontrealCanadaMolson Centre 12,246 / 12,246 (100%)
June 23, 2000Toronto, OntarioAir Canada Centre 15,675 / 15,675 (100%)
June 24, 2000Buffalo, New YorkUnited StatesHSBC Arena 12,163 / 12,163 (100%)
June 27, 2000East Rutherford, New JerseyContinental Airlines Arena 27,910 / 30,000 (93%)
June 28, 2000
June 30, 2000Raleigh, North CarolinaAlltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek 10,385 / 20,119 (51%)
July 1, 2000Bristow, VirginiaNissan Pavilion 13,842 / 22,485 (61%)
July 2, 2000Virginia Beach, VirginiaGTE Virginia Beach Amphitheater 11,762 / 19,932 (59%)
July 5, 2000Hershey, PennsylvaniaHersheypark Stadium 18,232 / 28,824 (63%)
July 7, 2000Scranton, PennsylvaniaCoors Light Amphitheatre 15,119 / 16,000 (94%)
July 8, 2000Hartford, ConnecticutMeadows Music Theater 12,508 / 24,570 (50%)
July 11, 2000Madison, WisconsinKohl Center 6,259 / 13,838 (45%)
July 13, 2000Minneapolis, MinnesotaTarget Center 9,241 / 12,650 (73%)
July 14, 2000Fargo, North DakotaFargodome 8,540 / 12,000 (71%)
July 16, 2000WinnipegCanadaWinnipeg Arena 10,722 / 11,506 (93%)
July 17, 2000SaskatoonSaskatchewan Place 7,272 / 13,300 (54%)
July 19, 2000CalgaryCanadian Airlines Saddledome 13,264 / 18,800 (70%)
July 20, 2000EdmontonSkyreach Centre 13,074 / 17,403 (75%)
July 22, 2000George, WashingtonUnited StatesThe Gorge Amphitheatre 17,676 / 20,000 (88%)
July 24, 2000Portland, OregonRose Garden Arena 6,667 / 15,286 (43%)
July 26, 2000Nampa, IdahoIdaho Center 6,412 / 9,000 (71%)
July 28, 2000Mountain View, CaliforniaShoreline Amphitheatre 4,755 / 20,000 (23%)
July 29, 2000Sacramento, CaliforniaSacramento Valley Amphitheatre 6,043 / 18,005 (33%)
July 30, 2000Concord, CaliforniaChronicle Pavilion 8,729 / 12,500 (69%)
August 1, 2000Fresno, CaliforniaSelland Arena 6,380 / 8,000 (79%)
August 2, 2000Paradise, NevadaMandalay Bay Events Center 6,731 / 8,675 (77%)
North America
August 11, 2000Irvine, CaliforniaUnited StatesIrvine Meadows Amphitheatre3 6,363 / 15,416 (41%)
August 12, 2000San Bernardino, CaliforniaBlockbuster Pavilion 13,807 / 65,000 (21%)
August 14, 2000Greenwood Village, ColoradoFiddler's Green Amphitheater 6,198 / 17,916 (34%)
August 15, 2000Albuquerque, New MexicoTingley Coliseum 5,550 / 11,775 (47%)
August 17, 2000Austin, TexasFrank Erwin Center 7,445 / 11,000 (67%)
August 18, 2000Lafayette, LouisianaCajundome 8,632 / 10,000 (86%)
August 19, 2000Jackson, MississippiMississippi Coliseum 7,624 / 9,500 (80%)
August 21, 2000Biloxi, MississippiMississippi Coast Coliseum 4,219 / 5,000 (84%)
August 22, 2000The Woodlands, TexasCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion 9,236 / 12,651 (73%)
August 23, 2000Fort Worth, TexasFort Worth Convention Center 7,049 / 10,000 (70%)
August 25, 2000Bonner Springs, KansasSandstone Amphitheater4 11,512 / 18,000 (63%)
August 26, 2000Maryland Heights, MissouriRiverport Amphitheatre 11,719 / 21,000 (55%)
August 28, 2000Valley Center, KansasKansas Coliseum 6,668 / 9,500 (70%)
August 29, 2000Omaha, NebraskaOmaha Civic Auditorium 8,876 / 10,000 (88%)
August 30, 2000Ames, IowaHilton Coliseum 5,926 / 12,520 (47%)
September 1, 2000Carbondale, IllinoisSIU Arena 6,200 / 8,829 (70%)
September 2, 2000Cedar Rapids, IowaFive Seasons Center 6,361 / 8,769 (72%)
September 5, 2000Rockford, IllinoisRockford MetroCentre 3,868 / 5,445 (71%)
September 6, 2000East Lansing, MichiganBreslin Center 4,792 / 14,500 (33%)
September 8, 2000Lexington, KentuckyRupp Arena 6,762 / 16,500 (40%)
September 9, 2000Indianapolis, IndianaConseco Fieldhouse 8,819 / 15,086 (58%)
September 10, 2000Evansville, IndianaRoberts Municipal Stadium 4,581 / 12,912 (35%)
September 12, 2000Clarkston, MichiganPine Knob Music Theatre 13,456 / 15,274 (88%)
September 13, 2000Dayton, OhioErvin J. Nutter Center 5,994 / 11,500 (52%)
September 15, 2000Binghamton, New YorkBroome County Veterans Memorial Arena 3,228 / 6,800 (47%)
September 16, 2000Syracuse, New YorkOnondaga County War Memorial 5,938 / 7,500 (79%)
September 18, 2000Providence, Rhode IslandProvidence Civic Center5 8,241 / 10,500 (78%)
September 20, 2000Quebec City, QuebecCanadaColisée de Québec 6,804 / 7,500 (90%)
September 21, 2000Ottawa, OntarioCorel Centre 7,396 / 9,000 (82%)
September 23, 2000Hamilton, OntarioCopps Coliseum 8,328 / 9,000 (92%)
September 26, 2000Trenton, New JerseyUnited StatesSovereign Bank Arena 5,079 / 6,250 (81%)
September 27, 2000University Park, PennsylvaniaBryce Jordan Center 5,253 / 10,400 (50%)
September 29, 2000Columbus, OhioNationwide Arena 6,526 / 17,500 (37%)
September 30, 2000Tinley Park, IllinoisNew World Music Theatre 6,771 / 30,000 (22%)
October 1, 2000Champaign, IllinoisAssembly Hall 4,371 / 7,500 (58%)
October 3, 2000Uncasville, ConnecticutUncas Pavilion at Mohegan Sun 3,162 / 3,162 (100%)
October 4, 2000Columbia, MarylandMerriweather Post Pavilion 4,369 / 15,274 (28%)
October 6, 2000Charlotte, North CarolinaCharlotte Coliseum 9,116 / 9,958 (91%)
October 7, 2000North Charleston, South CarolinaNorth Charleston Coliseum6 7,888 / 8,652 (91%)
Asia
March 9, 2001YokohamaJapanYokohama Arena7 22,255 / 28,255 (78%)
March 10, 2001
March 13, 2001TokyoTokyo Dome 41,895 / 41,895 (100%)
March 16, 2001FukuokaKokusai Center 5,559 / 8,772 (63%)
March 18, 2001NagoyaNagoya Rainbow Hall 6,875 / 10,000 (68%)
March 20, 2001OsakaOsaka Castle Hall 17,000 / 17,000 (100%)
March 21, 2001
Australia
March 29, 2001PerthAustraliaBurswood Dome 16,391 / 16,407 (99%)
April 1, 2001AdelaideAdelaide Entertainment Centre 8,992 / 8,992 (100%)
April 3, 2001MelbourneRod Laver Arena 33,219 / 33,219 (100%)
April 4, 2001
April 5, 2001
April 7, 2001SydneySydney Superdome 29,694 / 29,694 (100%)
April 8, 2001
April 13, 2001Gold CoastCarrara Stadium8 20,457 / 30,000 (68%)

Postponed/Cancelled dates

Date City Country Venue Reason
May 17, 2000 Minneapolis United States Target Center The band was unable to fly out of Chicago due to poor weather conditions, rescheduled to May 18
September 24, 2000 Lake Placid, New York Olympic Center Poor ticket sales
November 13, 2000 Hiroshima Japan Sun Plaza Hall Cancelled due to ongoing contract issues with Peter Criss, all dates except Hiroshima rescheduled to March 2001
November 15, 2000 Osaka Osaka Castle Hall
November 16, 2000
November 17, 2000 Nagoya Nagoya Rainbow Hall
November 19, 2000 Tokyo Tokyo Dome
November 20, 2000 Yokohama Yokohama Arena
April 1, 2001 Adelaide Australia Hindmarsh Stadium Due to soccer match between Adelaide and Marconi at the stadium on March 30
  • ^Note 1 The band rehearsed at this venue several days before their debut show.
  • ^Note 2 This show was troubled by major production errors. During the opening to the song "Love Gun" each night, Paul Stanley would ride on wire with foot sling to a small second stage in the arena floor where he performed the song. At this show, he became stalled a few rows out from the main stage and hung over the audience, helpless for quite a while before the road crew were able to reverse the wire and edge him back to the main stage. Many other errors occurred as well.
  • ^Note 3 Ace Frehley was so late arriving to this show, the band was preparing to dress up Tommy Thayer to fill in. Frehley traveled by helicopter to make it.
  • ^Note 4 The band and manager Doc McGhee presented Gene Simmons with a surprise, a giant birthday cake in the shape of a woman's breasts. He turned 51 that day.
  • ^Note 5 Peter Criss' final drum solo in the song "100,000 Years". Criss had added a tear to his facepaint to signal his dissatisfaction with the band. He left the stage before the band took its group bow, so only Frehley, Stanley, and Simmons joined hands and bowed.
  • ^Note 6 Peter Criss’, after failed contract negotiations over what he was being paid, destroyed his drum kit at the show's conclusion in frustration, Peter’s last show with Kiss(until the Kiss symphony show in 2003)
  • ^Note 7 Eric Singer's first show, after a five-year absence. Donned Catman makeup and outfit for the very first time.
  • ^Note 8 Ace Frehley's last show

References

  1. PAUL STANLEY: 'The 'Farewell' Tour Was Us Wanting To Put KISS Out Of Its Misery', Blabbermouth
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 10, 2012. Retrieved November 25, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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