Taylor Swift 1989 World Tour Live Download

A subreddit for Taylor Swift news, music, discussion, etc. Jump to content. My subreddits. Edit subscriptions. 1989 World Tour Live - Sydney Audio (dropbox.com) submitted 3 years ago by taylor-swift13. 32 comments; share; save; hide. The trick is to hit add to my library then click on the cloud thing in your library to. Taylor Swift – The 1989 World Tour (Live) [Apple Music Rip M4V] The 1989 World Tour was the fourth concert tour by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, in support of her fifth studio album, 1989 (2014).

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The 1989 World Tour
Tour by Taylor Swift
Associated album1989
Start dateMay 5, 2015
End dateDecember 12, 2015
Legs6
No. of shows
  • 63 in North America
  • 8 in Europe
  • 7 in Asia
  • 7 in Oceania
  • 85 total
Attendance2.28 million
Box officeUS $258.7 million
Taylor Swift concert chronology
  • The Red Tour
    (2013–14)
  • The 1989 World Tour
    (2015)
  • Reputation Stadium Tour
    (2018)

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The 1989 World Tour was the fourth concert tour by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, in support of her fifth studio album, 1989 (2014). The tour's European and North American dates, as well as two shows in Japan, were announced in November 2014, followed by the Oceania dates in December 2014. Additional dates for Singapore and Shanghai were announced in June 2015 with a third and final Melbourne show announced in July 2015. The tour began on May 5, 2015, in Tokyo, Japan, and concluded on December 12, 2015, in Melbourne, Australia, the day before Swift's 26th birthday. The tour became Swift's highest grossing and most attended tour, mobilizing 2,278,647 fans and $250,733,097 in revenue but was later surpassed by her Reputation Stadium Tour (2018).

On her birthday, December 13, 2015, Swift announced that she had partnered with Apple Music to release a concert film entitled The 1989 World Tour Live on December 20. It was filmed at ANZ Stadium in Sydney, Australia on November 28 with 75,980 attendees.

  • 3Commercial reception

Background and development[edit]

Swift performing in Detroit, Michigan in May 2015.

The tour was announced via Swift's Twitter on November 3, 2014 in which Swift said: '#The1989WorldTour is happening!' before giving a link to her website where fans could find out the list of dates. It was also revealed that Vance Joy would be joining Swift on tour, and that tickets would go sale on for North American fans on November 14.[1]

In an interview with Time Magazine, Swift said that 'the setlist will be predominantly songs from 1989. [...] I have so many things I've been dreaming up for this. If you look at the makeup of my previous music, as far as production elements go, there are a lot of live drums, acoustic guitars, electric guitars, and live bass. And if you look at the landscape of 1989, it's mostly synths and automated drums and these kind of big epic synth pad sounds, and key bass, and layered vocals. I have a very big band, there are, what, 14 of us, so what you’re going to end up with is more of a live feel in that it's going to be filled in and more dramatic with more layers to it, but never to the point where it's going to feel noisy or overcrowded.'[2]

Live

Swift also acknowledged the challenge of playing to stadiums, stating that 'the challenge with a stadium show is making those people in the very top row feel like they got an intimate, personal experience.'[2] The following month in an interview with KIIS-FM, she revealed that she knew what the stage would look like, as well as knowing that 'all the fans seem to be saying that they really don't want any song [from 1989] left off the setlist'.[3]

The tour took seven months to plan before three months of music rehearsals, four weeks of stage rehearsals and ten days of two-a-days dress rehearsals.[4] It traveled with 26 semi-trailer trucks and 11 buses carrying 146 people from city to city. Additionally, about 125–150 people were hired in each city to help with the load in and stage setup. The entire load in and stage setup process took between 6 and 8 hours for arenas, with stadiums requiring an additional day. Many of the traveling crew members had worked on Swift's tours since the Fearless era.[5] Swift chose two designs for the trucks' vinyl wrap; 13 carry one design and 13 have the other.[6]

Filming[edit]

Taylor Swift 1989 World Tour Live Download Full

Signs were displayed at the sold out Sydney concert on November 28, 2015 at ANZ Stadium which said 'Today's events are being recorded and filmed for global streaming, and may also form part of a television program... for commercial and promotional purposes.' Although there was no further information about what the filming was for at the time, there was speculation that it would form a DVD of the 1989 World Tour to be released once the tour concludes its run in Melbourne in late 2015. Later speculation involved an Apple Music Video launch, which was proved to be correct. Coincidentally, 'All You Had To Do Was Stay' and 'This Love' were added back into the show after having been left off the set list for several months. This makes the Sydney setlist identical to that of Tokyo when the tour premiered.[7]

On December 13, 2015 (Swift's 26th birthday), she announced she had partnered with Apple Music to release a concert film entitled The 1989 World Tour Live on December 20. Filmed in front of 75,980 fans during her stop at ANZ Stadium in Sydney on November 28, it shows the entire performance and never-before seen footage from backstage and from rehearsals with some of the musical and surprise guests from previous shows.[8] It was directed by Jonas Γ…kerlund.

Commercial reception[edit]

Ticket sales[edit]

Pre-sales for European shows started on November 4, public on-sale for this leg started on November 7, tickets for London were sold later on November 10. First round of pre-sales on select North American shows start on November 7 and general sales for fans in North America started from November 14, 2014; Australia started from December 12, 2014; Japan started from December 13, 2014; Singapore and Shanghai started from June 30, 2015. Swift was the sixth most-searched artist on Ticketmaster in 2014.[9]

Sellout status occurred in many cities when general sales for the tour started. Swift announced 9 extra dates as well as the new show in Houston for North American leg. Los Angeles had the most extra dates with 3 shows at Staples Center, cities which had one extra date were East Rutherford, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, St. Paul, Santa Clara. In St. Louis, Swift was originally performing on October 13 and 14, 2015, but after adding Houston to the schedule, St. Louis shows downsize from two to one and she would play in this city only on September 28, 2015 and tickets go on sale at 10 am on January 30, 2015.[10] However, tickets for St. Louis show was sold out within minutes, this resulted in a second date being added there on September 29 at the same venue.[11] Swift also added more dates to European leg due to vast popularity, one for Cologne and one for Dublin.[12] In Dublin, tickets for both concert sold out within 55 minutes although the second show was just added after 6 minutes when the first show was sold out.[13]

Taylor Swift 1989 World Tour Live

In Australia, over 30,000 tickets for the first show (December 11, 2015) in Melbourne was sold out less than an hour.[14] Soon after, Swift announced 2 extra dates for this leg, one for Melbourne and one for Adelaide.[15] Due to popular demand, in July 2015, Swift added the third show for Melbourne after 2 first shows were sold out and became the first female artist to play 3 shows at AAMI Park.[16]

In January 2015, Forbes reported that The 1989 World Tour was one of the most expensive concert tours of 2015 on secondary market, just behind Fleetwood Mac's On with the Show and Maroon 5's Maroon V Tour.[17] In the US, the average ticket price was $380 according to TiqIQ, and the cheapest date was the show at the Fargodome on October 12, where the average ticket price was $182.95 with a get-in of $79.[18] The show on June 29, 2015 in Dublin was the most expensive European date, where the average ticket price was $285, with a get-in price of $198.[19] The Sydney show has the cheapest get-in price for Taylor Swift tickets in Australia at $130 Australian ($100 USD). The most expensive show is the final concert in Melbourne – Saturday, December 12, 2015 – with a get-in price of $249 Australian ($193 USD). In total, The Red Tour tickets averaged $176 across all tour stops, whereas the 1989 World Tour averaged at about $392 per concert, a 123% increase. Tickets for the 1989 World Tour were the most expensive ever for Taylor Swift.[18]

Boxscore[edit]

Swift's five shows from the North American run (May 20 – June 6, 2015, not including Baton Rouge) generated a total of US$16.8 million from 149,708 ticket sales.[20] It topped the Billboard Hot Tours chart for the second week, earning $15.2 million with a total of 129,962 tickets sold from three shows in Charlotte and Philadelphia.[21] As of August 1, 2015, the tour had grossed US$86.2 million, at 20 performances in the U.S. and Canada with 771,460 tickets sold at seven arenas and nine stadiums. On September 9, the magazine reported that the tour had grossed over US$130 million, with 1.1 million tickets sold, and stated it could become Swift's highest-grossing tour.[22] The 1989 World Tour officially surpassed The Red Tour in October 2015 when Billboard reported that the tour grossed over US$173 million, the tour also returned to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Tours recap, Swift's sixth turn in 2015 atop the weekly tally of highest-grossing touring artists thanks to ticket sales totaling $13.6 million from the shows in Toronto, St. Louis and Des Moines.[23]

According to Billboard, after finishing the North American leg in Tampa, the tour had grossed more than US$217 million with 71 shows, surpassing One Direction's On the Road Again Tour and became the highest-grossing Pop tour in 2015. Swift's 2 shows at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey ranked at number 8 on the list 'Top 25 Boxscores', the tour also had other 6 positions on this list, including the shows in Santa Clara, Foxborough, Philadelphia, Chicago, Tokyo and Washington, D.C.[24]

After concluding in Melbourne, the tour grossed over US$250 million and became the highest-grossing tour in 2015, was top on '2015 Year-End Top 20 Worldwide Tours',[25] '2015 Year-End Top 100 Worldwide Tours',[26] '2015 Year-End Top 200 North American Tours'[27] of Pollstar. Specially, The 1989 World Tour grossed over US $199.4 million in North America alone, breaking the previous all-time high of $162 million set by The Rolling Stones in 2005, Swift became the first female artist in music history to do so. Swift's record-setting year also gives her three notches in the list of the 25 highest-grossing North American tours, the most ever for a woman but third all time.[28]

Two shows in Tokyo's Tokyo Dome ranked at number 9 on the list '2015 Year-End Top 100 International Boxoffice' of Pollstar, appearing on this list along with 2 shows in Tokyo were the shows in Melbourne, Sydney, Shanghai and Brisbane.[29] The 1989 World Tour also had 24 position on another list of Pollstar – '2015 Year-End Top 200 Concert Grossed [in North America]' – with the highest position of the tour which ranked at number 5 was 2 shows at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford and the lowest position was 2 shows at Pepsi Center in Denver which ranked at number 160.[30]

1989 World Tour Live Download

Set list[edit]

This set list is representative of the show on May 5, 2015 in Tokyo. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[31]

  1. 'Welcome to New York'
  2. 'New Romantics'
  3. 'Blank Space'
  4. 'I Knew You Were Trouble'
  5. 'I Wish You Would'
  6. 'How You Get the Girl'
  7. 'I Know Places'
  8. 'All You Had to Do Was Stay'
  9. 'You Are in Love'
  10. 'Clean'
  11. 'Love Story'
  12. 'Style'
  13. 'This Love'
  14. 'Bad Blood'
  15. 'We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together'
  16. 'Wildest Dreams' (contains elements of 'Enchanted')
  17. 'Out of the Woods'

Encore

  1. 'Shake It Off'

The following songs were performed by Swift in place of 'You Are In Love':

  • During the shows in Las Vegas, Bossier City, Pittsburgh, and the second performance in Cologne; 'Wonderland'.
  • During the second show in Dublin, 'Holy Ground'.
  • During the second shows in East Rutherford, Washington, Denver, Columbus, Los Angeles, Adelaide, and Shanghai; the first shows in Toronto, Nashville, Kansas City, St. Louis, Foxborough, and Singapore; and the shows in Des Moines and Salt Lake City; 'You Belong with Me'.
  • During the first shows in Chicago, Omaha, Denver, St. Paul, and Edmonton; the second shows in Melbourne, Toronto, St. Louis, Foxborough, Nashville, Kansas City, and Glendale; the third show in Los Angeles, and the shows in Lexington, Arlington, Fargo, Miami, Greensboro, Atlanta, Tampa, and Indianapolis; 'Fifteen'.
  • During the second shows in Chicago and St. Paul, the fifth show in Los Angeles, and the shows in Seattle and Houston; 'Mean'.
  • During the show in Vancouver, 'Sparks Fly'.
  • During the second show in Edmonton, the first show in Omaha, and the show in San Diego; 'Fearless'.
  • During the first show in Santa Clara, 'Should've Said No'.
  • During the second show in Santa Clara, 'Never Grow Up'.
  • During the first show in Glendale, 'Ronan'.
  • During the first show in Los Angeles, 'All Too Well'.
  • During the first show in Columbus, 'Red'.
  • During the show in Brisbane, 'Mine'.[32]
  • During the third show in Melbourne, 'Long Live'.

Swift performed duets with musical guests on most dates of the tour. Other special guests also include co-stars from the 'Bad Blood' music video and friends who join Swift on the runway while performing 'Style'.

  • May 15, 2015 – Las Vegas: 'Tenerife Sea' with Ed Sheeran.[33]
  • May 30, 2015 – Detroit: 'Radioactive' with Dan Reynolds of Imagine Dragons;[34]Martha Hunt & Gigi Hadid.[35]
  • June 6, 2015 – Pittsburgh: 'Pontoon' with Little Big Town.[36]
  • June 12, 2015 – Philadelphia: 'Cool Kids' with Echosmith; Cara Delevingne & Mariska Hargitay.[37]
  • June 13, 2015 – Philadelphia: 'Fight Song' with Rachel Platten; Mariska Hargitay.[38]
  • June 27, 2015 – London: Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner, Serena Williams, Martha Hunt, Karlie Kloss and Cara Delevingne.[39]
  • July 10, 2015 – East Rutherford: 'Can't Feel My Face' with The Weeknd; Heidi Klum and United States women's national soccer team; Lily Aldridge, Lena Dunham, Gigi Hadid and Hailee Steinfeld.[40]
  • July 11, 2015 – East Rutherford: 'Jealous' with Nick Jonas; Gigi Hadid, Martha Hunt, Lily Aldridge, Candice Swanepoel, Behati Prinsloo, Karlie Kloss, and Uzo Aduba.[41]
  • July 13, 2015 – Washington, D.C.: 'Royals' with Lorde.[42]
  • July 14, 2015 – Washington, D.C.: 'Want to Want Me' with Jason Derulo.[43]
  • July 18, 2015 – Chicago: 'Honey, I'm Good.' with Andy Grammer; Serayah.[44]
  • July 19, 2015 – Chicago: 'Take Your Time' with Sam Hunt; Andreja PejiΔ‡ & Lily Donaldson.[45]
  • July 24, 2015 – Foxborough: 'Shut Up and Dance' with Walk the Moon.[46]
  • July 25, 2015 – Foxborough: 'Classic' with MKTO.[47]
  • August 1, 2015 – Vancouver: 'Am I Wrong' with Nico & Vinz.[48]
  • August 8, 2015 – Seattle: 'Trap Queen' with Fetty Wap;[49]Ciara and Russell Wilson.[50]
  • August 14, 2015 – Santa Clara: 'Worth It' with Fifth Harmony.[51]
  • August 15, 2015 – Santa Clara: 'Black Magic' with Little Mix; Joan Baez and Julia Roberts.[52]
  • August 21, 2015 – Los Angeles: 'Counting Stars' with Ryan Tedder of OneRepublic; Kobe Bryant presenting Swift with a banner hung on the Staples Center rafters in honor of Swift's 16 sold out shows, the most of any recording artist at the arena.[53]
  • August 22, 2015 – Los Angeles: 'White Horse' with Uzo Aduba; Chris Rock, Matt LeBlanc and Sean O'Pry; 'Doubt' and 'Family Affair' with Mary J. Blige.[54]
  • August 24, 2015 – Los Angeles: 'Goodbye Earl' with Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks; Ellen DeGeneres; 'You Oughta Know' with Alanis Morissette.[55]
  • August 25, 2015 – Los Angeles: 'Dreams' with Beck and St. Vincent; 'All of Me' with John Legend.[56]
  • August 26, 2015 – Los Angeles: 'Good for You' with Selena Gomez; 'Smelly Cat' with Lisa Kudrow; 'Mirrors' with Justin Timberlake.[57]
  • August 29, 2015 – San Diego: 'Cheerleader' with OMI; 'Complicated' with Avril Lavigne.[58]
  • September 9, 2015 – Houston: 'See You Again' with Wiz Khalifa.[59]
  • September 16, 2015 – Indianapolis: 'If I Die Young' with The Band Perry.[60]
  • September 18, 2015 – Columbus: 'Cool Kids' with Sydney Sierota of Echosmith.[61]
  • September 21, 2015 – Kansas City: 'Every Mile a Memory' with Dierks Bentley.[62]
  • September 25, 2015 – Nashville: 'Love Me Like You Mean It' with Kelsea Ballerini; 'I Don't Want to Miss a Thing' with Steven Tyler of Aerosmith; 'When You Say Nothing at All' with Alison Krauss.[63]
  • September 26, 2015 – Nashville: 'Bleeding Love' with Leona Lewis; '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' with Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones.[64]
  • September 29, 2015 – St. Louis: 'The Fix' with Nelly, and 'Hot in Herre' with Nelly and Haim. To celebrate Haim's last night on the tour, Swift invited them to join her onstage as back-up dancers for Nelly.[65]
  • October 2, 2015 – Toronto: 'John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16' and 'Somebody Like You' with Keith Urban.[66]
  • October 3, 2015 – Toronto: 'Boom Clap' with Charli XCX.[67]
  • October 17, 2015 – Arlington: 'Love Me like You Do' with Ellie Goulding.[68]
  • October 21, 2015 – Greensboro: 'Little Red Wagon' with Miranda Lambert.[69]
  • October 24, 2015 – Atlanta: 'Talking Body' with Tove Lo.[70]
  • October 27, 2015 – Miami: Dwyane Wade presenting Swift a '13' numbered jersey in honor of Swift's lucky number and his 13th season with the Miami Heat; 'Give Me Everything' with Pitbull; 'Livin' la Vida Loca' with Ricky Martin.[71]
  • October 31, 2015 – Tampa: 'Here' with Alessia Cara; 'Let It Go' with Idina Menzel. During 'Style', before 'Let It Go' was performed, Swift wore an Olaf costume while Menzel wore her in-voice character Elsa, both from Frozen, in honor of Halloween.[72]

Shows[edit]

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, opening acts, tickets sold, amount of available tickets and gross revenue
DateCityCountryVenueOpening actsAttendanceRevenue
Leg 1 - Asia[73]
May 5, 2015TokyoJapanTokyo DomeN/A100,320 / 100,320$10,586,828
May 6, 2015
Leg 2 - North America[74][75]
May 15, 2015[a]Las VegasUnited StatesCity of RockN/AN/AN/A
May 20, 2015Bossier CityCenturyLink CenterVance Joy12,459 / 12,459$1,458,197
May 22, 2015Baton RougeLSU Tiger StadiumVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
50,227 / 50,227$4,119,670
May 30, 2015DetroitFord Field50,703 / 50,703$5,999,690
June 2, 2015LouisvilleKFC Yum! CenterVance Joy16,242 / 16,242$1,863,281
June 3, 2015ClevelandQuicken Loans Arena15,503 / 15,503$1,732,041
June 6, 2015PittsburghHeinz FieldVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
54,801 / 54,801$5,836,926
June 8, 2015CharlotteSpectrum CenterVance Joy15,024 / 15,024$1,627,798
June 9, 2015RaleighPNC Arena13,886 / 13,886$1,653,762
June 12, 2015PhiladelphiaLincoln Financial FieldVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
101,052 / 101,052$11,987,816
June 13, 2015
Leg 3 - Europe[76][77][78]
June 19, 2015CologneGermanyLanxess ArenaJames Bay29,020 / 29,020$2,054,690
June 20, 2015
June 21, 2015AmsterdamNetherlandsZiggo Dome11,166 / 11,166$800,829
June 23, 2015GlasgowScotlandSSE HydroVance Joy11,021 / 11,021$1,119,300
June 24, 2015ManchesterEnglandManchester Arena14,773 / 14,773$1,478,760
June 27, 2015[b]LondonHyde ParkRae Morris
Vance Joy
Ellie Goulding
John Newman
N/AN/A
June 29, 2015DublinIreland3ArenaVance Joy25,188 / 25,188$1,975,510
June 30, 2015
Leg 4 - North America[79]
July 6, 2015OttawaCanadaCanadian Tire CentreVance Joy13,480 / 13,480$1,325,480
July 7, 2015MontrealBell Centre14,770 / 14,770$1,499,040
July 10, 2015East RutherfordUnited StatesMetLife StadiumVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
Haim
110,105 / 110,105$13,423,858
July 11, 2015
July 13, 2015Washington, D.C.Nationals Park85,014 / 85,014$9,730,596
July 14, 2015
July 18, 2015ChicagoSoldier Field110,109 / 110,109$11,469,887
July 19, 2015
July 24, 2015FoxboroughGillette Stadium116,849 / 116,849$12,533,166
July 25, 2015
August 1, 2015VancouverCanadaBC PlaceVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
41,463 / 41,463$4,081,820
August 4, 2015EdmontonRexall PlaceVance Joy26,534 / 26,534$2,387,080
August 5, 2015
August 8, 2015SeattleUnited StatesCenturyLink FieldVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
55,711 / 55,711$6,050,643
August 14, 2015Santa ClaraLevi's Stadium102,139 / 102,139$13,031,146
August 15, 2015
August 17, 2015GlendaleGila River ArenaVance Joy26,520 / 26,520$3,029,628
August 18, 2015
August 21, 2015Los AngelesStaples CenterVance Joy
Haim
70,563 / 70,563$8,961,681
August 22, 2015
August 24, 2015
August 25, 2015
August 26, 2015
August 29, 2015San DiegoPetco ParkVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
44,710 / 44,710$5,475,237
September 4, 2015Salt Lake CityEnergySolutions ArenaVance Joy14,131 / 14,131$1,589,686
September 5, 2015DenverPepsi Center27,126 / 27,126$2,868,991
September 6, 2015
September 9, 2015[c]HoustonMinute Maid ParkVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
40,122 / 40,122$5,202,196
September 11, 2015Saint PaulXcel Energy CenterVance Joy45,126 / 45,126$5,514,863
September 12, 2015
September 13, 2015
September 16, 2015IndianapolisBankers Life Fieldhouse14,010 / 14,010$1,550,268
September 17, 2015ColumbusNationwide Arena29,936 / 29,936$3,369,693
September 18, 2015
September 21, 2015Kansas CitySprint Center27,857 / 27,857$2,967,558
September 22, 2015
September 25, 2015NashvilleBridgestone ArenaVance Joy
Haim
28,917 / 28,917$3,354,844
September 26, 2015
September 28, 2015[d]St. LouisScottrade Center29,688 / 29,688$3,452,940
September 29, 2015[e]
October 2, 2015TorontoCanadaRogers CentreVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
99,283 / 99,283$8,670,990
October 3, 2015
October 8, 2015Des MoinesUnited StatesWells Fargo ArenaVance Joy13,969 / 13,969$1,566,321
October 9, 2015OmahaCenturyLink Center Omaha29,622 / 29,622$3,121,421
October 10, 2015
October 12, 2015[f]FargoFargodome21,067 / 21,067$2,219,188
October 17, 2015ArlingtonAT&T StadiumVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
62,630 / 62,630$7,396,733
October 20, 2015LexingtonRupp ArenaVance Joy17,084 / 17,084$1,870,471
October 21, 2015GreensboroGreensboro Coliseum15,079 / 15,079$1,662,171
October 24, 2015AtlantaGeorgia DomeVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
56,046 / 56,046$6,034,846
October 27, 2015MiamiAmerican Airlines ArenaVance Joy14,044 / 14,044$1,527,919
October 31, 2015TampaRaymond James StadiumVance Joy
Shawn Mendes
56,987 / 56,987$6,202,515
Leg 5 - Asia[82]
November 7, 2015SingaporeSingapore Indoor StadiumN/A17,726 / 17,726$3,217,569
November 8, 2015
November 10, 2015ShanghaiChinaMercedes-Benz Arena37,758 / 37,758$5,917,348
November 11, 2015
November 12, 2015
Leg 6 - Oceania[82]
November 28, 2015SydneyAustraliaANZ StadiumVance Joy75,980 / 75,980$6,571,683
December 5, 2015BrisbaneSuncorp Stadium46,881 / 46,881$4,759,471
December 7, 2015AdelaideAdelaide Entertainment Centre20,090 / 20,090$2,407,499
December 8, 2015
December 10, 2015MelbourneAAMI Park98,136 / 98,136$10,421,553
December 11, 2015
December 12, 2015
Total2,278,647 / 2,278,647
(100%)
$250,733,097

Notes[edit]

  1. ^The concert on May 15, 2015 at City of Rock in Las Vegas was part of Rock in Rio USA.
  2. ^The concert on June 27, 2015 at Hyde Park in London was part of the British Summer Time.
  3. ^The concert of September 9, 2015 in Houston at Minute Maid Park was originally planned to take place on October 13, but was moved backward to September 9 to avoid any potential scheduling conflict with the Houston Astros potentially making the 2015Major League Baseball postseason.[80]
  4. ^The concert of September 28, 2015 in St. Louis at the Scottrade Center was originally planned to take place on October 13, but was moved forward to September 28 after Swift added Houston to the schedule.[10]
  5. ^The concert of September 29, 2015 in St. Louis at the Scottrade Center was originally planned to take place on October 14, but was moved forward to September 29 after Swift added Houston to the schedule. After Houston was added, St. Louis shows downsized from two to one. However, due to overwhelming demand, the second show was added again.[11]
  6. ^The concert of October 12, 2015 in Fargo at the Fargodome was originally planned to take place on September 9, but was postponed to October 12 to avoid any potential scheduling conflict with the Houston Astros potentially making the 2015 Major League Baseball postseason.[80][81]

Personnel[edit]

Adapted from The 1989 World Tour Book[83]

Show

Taylor
  • Erica Worden – tour manager
  • Tree Paine – publicist
  • Arhtur Kemish – production manager
  • Chris Rowe – audio
  • Dewey Shepard – stage manager
  • Donna Edmondson – hair and make-up
  • Jemma Muradian – hair stylist
  • Lorrie Turk – make-up artist
  • Scott Coraci – video engineer
  • Tyce Diorio – choreographer
  • Tricia Miranda – assistant choreographer

Band

  • Taylor Swift – lead vocals, guitar, piano, keyboard
  • David Cook – musical director, keyboards
  • Matt Billingslea – drums, electronic percussion
  • Amos Heller – bass, synth bass, vocals
  • Eliotte Henderson – background vocalist
  • Kamilah Marshall – background vocalist
  • Michael Meadows – guitars, keyboards, vocals
  • Melanie Nyema – background vocalist
  • Paul Sidoti – guitar, vocals
  • Clare Turton-Derrico – background vocalist
  • Dane Laboyrie – trumpet
  • Brendan Champion – trombone
  • James Mackay – tenor saxophone
  • Jimmy Garden – baritone saxophone

Dancers

  • Christian Henderson
  • Jacob Kodish
  • Christian Owens
  • Maho Udo
  • Austin Spacy
  • Mark Villaver
  • Nolan Padilla
  • Remi Bakkar
  • Richard Cutler
  • Giuseppe Giofre
  • Robert Green

Wardrobe

  • Floyd Williamd
  • Joseph Cassell
  • Jessica Jones
  • Shannon Summers
  • Tyler Green
  • Todd Cantrell
  • Pamela Lewis

Executive producers

  • Andrea Swift
  • Robert Allen
  • Austin Fish

Production designers

  • Taylor Swift
  • Baz Halpin
  • Chris Nyfield

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Taylor Swift's '1989' World Tour Dates Announced'. Billboard. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
  2. ^ abDickey, Jack (November 13, 2014). 'Taylor Swift on 1989, Spotify, Her Next Tour and Female Role Models'. Time. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
  3. ^'Taylor Swift Gives Details On Her New World Tour'. KIIS-FM.
  4. ^'The 1989 World Tourβ„’ Stage Creation'. YouTube. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  5. ^'The 1989 World Tourβ„’ Load In'. YouTube. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  6. ^'The 1989 World Tourβ„’ Tour Travel'. YouTube. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  7. ^Julia (November 28, 2015). 'The Real Reason There Were No Special Guests At Taylor Swift's Concert'. 2DayFM.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^'Taylor Swift Birthday: Announces 1989 Concert Film'. People. December 13, 2015.
  9. ^'Luke Bryan Tops One Direction on Ticketmaster's Most-Searched List'. Billboard. January 5, 2015.
  10. ^ ab'Taylor Swift's St. Louis concerts downsize from two nights to one'. January 11, 2015.
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External links[edit]

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Tracklist

Track numberPlayLovedTrack nameBuyOptionsDurationListeners
1 Welcome to New York 3:32 146,604 listeners
2 New Romantics 3:50 108,360 listeners
3 Blank Space 3:51 284,224 listeners
4 I Knew You Were Trouble 3:39 262,106 listeners
5 I Wish You Would 3:27 127,475 listeners
6 How You Get the Girl 4:07 124,728 listeners
7 I Know Places 3:15 122,062 listeners
8 All You Had to Do Was Stay 3:13 139,785 listeners
9 You Are in Love 4:27 89,710 listeners
10 Clean 4:31 118,480 listeners
11 Love Story 3:55 623,502 listeners
12 Style 3:51 208,172 listeners
13 This Love 4:10 116,423 listeners
14 Bad Blood 3:31 191,832 listeners
15 We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together 3:11 436,231 listeners
16 Enchanted / Wildest Dreams 8:11 39 listeners
17 Out of the Woods 3:55 158,771 listeners
18 Shake It Off 3:39 382,553 listeners

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