List of Madonna concerts

American singer Madonna has performed on twelve concert tours, nineteen one-off concerts, nine benefit concerts, and three music festivals. Madonna has been nicknamed by some publications as the "Queen of Concerts" or "Queen of Touring", recognizing her "years-deep involvement in the touring game" and stage shows.[1][2] Once the highest-grossing female touring artist according to Billboard Boxscore and Pollstar,[3][4] Madonna remains one of the highest-grossing live touring acts.

Madonna concerts
Collage of Madonna's concert tours
Collage depicting Madonna's eleven concert tours, beginning with 1985's the Virgin Tour and ending with the Madame X Tour (2019–2020)
Concert tours12
One-off concerts19
Benefit concerts9
Music festivals7

Her 1985 debut concert tour, the Virgin Tour, was held in North America only and went on to collect more than US$5 million.[5] In 1987 she performed on the worldwide Who's That Girl World Tour, which visited Europe, North America and Japan, and earned $25 million.[6][7] One of the tour's shows in Paris in front of 130,000 fans was the largest paying concert audience by a female artist at the time and remains the largest crowd of any concert in French history.[8][9] In 1990, she embarked on the Blond Ambition World Tour, which was dubbed the "Greatest Concert of the 1990s" by Rolling Stone.[10] BBC credited the tour with "invent[ing] the modern, multi-media pop spectacle".[11] In 1993, Madonna visited Israel and Turkey for the first time, followed by Latin America and Australia, with the Girlie Show.[7] A review in Time by Sam Buckley said: "Madonna, once the Harlow harlot and now a perky harlequin, is the greatest show-off on earth."[12]

Madonna did not tour again until the Drowned World Tour in 2001. She played the guitar and her costumes included a punkish tartan kilt and a geisha kimono. Some critics complained that the show concentrated on material from her most recent albums, but generally, the response was favorable.[7] She grossed more than US$75 million with summer sold-out shows and eventually played in front of 730,000 people throughout North America and Europe.[13][14] The Drowned World Tour was followed by the 2004 Re-Invention World Tour. Madonna was inspired to create the tour after taking part in an art installation called X-STaTIC PRo=CeSS, directed by photographer Steven Klein.[15] Billboard awarded Madonna the "Backstage Pass Award" in recognition of having the top-grossing tour of the year, with ticket sales of nearly US$125 million.[16]

Madonna's next tours broke world records, with the 2006 Confessions Tour grossing over US$194.7 million,[17] becoming the highest-grossing tour ever for a female artist at that time.[18] This feat was surpassed in 2008 with the Sticky & Sweet Tour, which at the time, became the highest-grossing tour ever by a solo artist, and the second highest-grossing tour of all time, with approximately US$411 million in ticket sales.[19] In 2012, the MDNA Tour was completed as the tenth highest-grossing tour of all time with US$305 million, the second highest among female artists at the time, only behind the Sticky & Sweet Tour.[20] Her 2015–16 Rebel Heart Tour was an all-arena tour which grossed $169.8 million from 1.045 million attendance.[21] Her Madame X Tour marked her first series of concerts in theaters since 1985,[22] while the Celebration Tour, which acted as Madonna's first retrospective show, became one of the world's fastest-selling concert tours. Billboard reported the tour to have grossed over $225.4 million from an audience of 1.1 million.[23] The final concert, a free concert in Rio de Janeiro, drew a crowd of over 1.6 million people, which became Madonna's largest crowd of her career and set records for the largest audience ever for a stand-alone concert and the largest all-time crowd for a female artist.[24]

Madonna has embarked on several promotional concerts to promote her studio albums, as well as performing award shows and benefit concerts like Live Aid (1985), Live 8 (2005) and Live Earth (2007). In 2012, she headlined the Super Bowl XLVI halftime show, which at that time was the most-watched halftime show in history. According to Billboard Boxscore, Madonna grossed over $1.31 billion in concert ticket sales between 1990 and 2016; she first crossed a billion gross with the MDNA Tour. Overall, Madonna ranks third, with just the Rolling Stones ($1.84 billion) and U2 ($1.67 billion) ahead of her.[21] During the London stop of her 2006 Confessions Tour, Madonna became the first performer to be inducted into the Wembley Arena Square of Fame.[25]

Concert tours

edit
Title Date Associated album(s) Continent(s) Shows Gross Gross adj.
in 2024[26]
Attendance Ref.
The Virgin Tour April 10, 1985 – June 11, 1985 Madonna
Like a Virgin
North America 40 $5,000,000 $14,660,455 400,000[a] [5]
[27][28]
Who's That Girl World Tour June 14, 1987 – September 6, 1987 True Blue
Who's That Girl
Asia
North America
Europe
38 $25,000,000 $69,430,677 1,317,663 [29]
[30]
Blond Ambition World Tour April 13, 1990 – August 5, 1990 Like a Prayer
I'm Breathless
Asia
North America
Europe
57 $62,700,000 $151,349,740 2,000,000[a] [31]
[32]
[33]
The Girlie Show September 25, 1993 – December 19, 1993 Erotica Europe
North America
South America
Asia
Oceania
39 $70,000,000 $152,833,979 1,279,123 [34]
[35]
Drowned World Tour June 9, 2001 – September 15, 2001 Ray of Light
Music
Europe
North America
47 $75,000,000 $133,683,474 732,606 [36]
[37]
Re-Invention World Tour May 24, 2004 – September 14, 2004 American Life Europe
North America
56 $124,790,787 $208,420,432 897,207 [38]
[39]
Confessions Tour May 21, 2006 – September 21, 2006 Confessions on a Dance Floor Europe
North America
Asia
60 $194,754,447 $304,780,083 1,209,593 [40]
[41]
Sticky & Sweet Tour August 23, 2008 – September 2, 2009 Hard Candy Europe
North America
South America
Asia
85 $411,000,000 $604,406,806 3,545,899 [19]
[42]
The MDNA Tour May 31, 2012 – December 22, 2012 MDNA Asia
Europe
North America
South America
88 $305,158,362 $419,328,584 2,212,345 [43]
[44]
Rebel Heart Tour September 9, 2015 – March 20, 2016 Rebel Heart North America
Europe
Asia
Oceania
82 $169,804,336 $223,210,487 1,045,479 [21]
Madame X Tour September 17, 2019 – March 8, 2020 Madame X North America
Europe
75 $51,361,008 $62,609,543 179,289 [45]
[46]
The Celebration Tour October 14, 2023 – May 4, 2024 Various Europe
North America
South America
81 $225,400,000 $225,400,000 1,127,658

[3]

One-off concerts

edit
Date Event City Venue Performed song(s) Ref.
October 13, 1983 Madonna promotional show London Camden Palace [47]
February 14, 1998 Ray of Light promotional show New York City Roxy NYC
[48]
November 5, 2000 Music promotional show Roseland Ballroom [49]
November 29, 2000 Music promotional show London Brixton Academy
  • "Impressive Instant"
  • "Runaway Lover"
  • "Don't Tell Me"
  • "What It Feels Like for a Girl"
  • "Holiday"
  • "Music"
[50]
April 22, 2003 Madonna: On Stage and on the Record New York City MTV Studios
[51]
April 23, 2003 American Life promotional show Tower Records
  • "American Life"
  • "X-Static Process"
  • "Mother and Father"
  • "Hollywood"
  • "Like a Virgin"
  • "American Life"
[52]
April 30, 2003 Absolut Madonna Cologne RTL Studio
  • "American Life"
  • "Hollywood"
  • "Music"
[53]
May 9, 2003 American Life promotional show London HMV Oxford Circus
  • "American Life"
  • "Hollywood"
  • "Nothing Fails"
  • "X-Static Process"
  • "Mother and Father"
  • "Like a Prayer"
  • "Don't Tell Me"
[54]
November 15, 2005 Confessions on a Dance Floor promotional show KOKO
[55]
November 19, 2005 Confessions on a Dance Floor promotional show G-A-Y
  • "Hung Up"
  • "Get Together"
  • "I Love New York"
  • "Let It Will Be"
  • "Everybody"
  • "Jump"
[56]
December 7, 2005 Confessions on a Dance Floor promotional show Tokyo Studio Coast
  • "Hung Up"
  • "Get Together"
  • "I Love New York"
  • "Let It Will Be"
  • "Everybody"
[57]
April 30, 2008 Hard Candy promotional show New York City Roseland Ballroom
[58]
May 6, 2008 Hard Candy promotional show Paris Olympia
  • "Candy Shop"
  • "Miles Away"
  • "4 Minutes"
  • "Hung Up"
  • "Give It 2 Me"
  • "Music"
[59]
May 10, 2008 Hard Candy promotional show Maidstone Mote Park [60]
February 2, 2012 Super Bowl XLVI halftime show Indianapolis Lucas Oil Stadium
[61]
March 10, 2016 Madonna: Tears of a Clown Melbourne Forum Theatre
[62]
November 7, 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign concert New York City Washington Square Park
[63]
May 7, 2018 Met Gala Metropolitan Museum of Art
[64]
June 30, 2019 Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC Pier 97, Hudson River Park
[65]
April 30, 2022 Medallo en el Mapa (Maluma hometown concert) Medellín Estadio Atanasio Girardot
[66]
June 24, 2022 NYC Pride March New York City Terminal 5 [67]

Benefit concerts

edit
Date Event City Performed song(s) Ref.
July 13, 1985 Live Aid Philadelphia
[68]
April 27, 1998 Rock for the Rainforest New York City
[69]
January 16, 2005 Tsunami Aid "Imagine" [70]
July 2, 2005 Live 8 London [71]
November 18, 2005 Children in Need 2005 [72]
July 7, 2007 Live Earth
[73]
January 22, 2010 Hope for Haiti Now New York City "Like a Prayer" [74]
December 2, 2016 Madonna: Tears of a Clown
(Raising Malawi Gala)
Miami
[75]
July 26, 2017 Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation Gala Saint-Tropez
[76]

Music festivals

edit
Date Event City Performed song(s) Ref.
February 22, 1995 Sanremo Music Festival Sanremo "Take a Bow" (with Babyface) [77]
February 24, 1998 Sanremo Music Festival Sanremo "Frozen" [78]
April 30, 2006 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival Indio
[79]
May 10, 2008 BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend Maidstone [80]
March 25, 2012 Ultra Music Festival Miami "Girl Gone Wild" (as a guest during Avicii's act) [81]
April 12, 2015 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival Indio
[82]
May 18, 2019 Eurovision Song Contest Tel Aviv

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ a b Estimated attendees

References

edit

Citations

edit
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  15. ^ Timmerman 2007, p. 23
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