Iowa World Tour




















Iowa World Tour

World tour by Slipknot

Slipknot at Summer Sonic.jpg
Slipknot performing at Summer Sonic during the Iowa World Tour.

Associated album Iowa

No. of shows
109

Slipknot concert chronology





  • World Domination Tour
    (1999–2000)



  • Iowa World Tour
    (2001–2002)




  • The Subliminal Verses World Tour
    (2004–2005)



Iowa World Tour was a worldwide concert tour in 2001 and 2002 headlined by Slipknot in support of their second studio album Iowa.




Contents






  • 1 Setlists


    • 1.1 Set list




  • 2 Kill The Industry


  • 3 Ozzfest 2001


  • 4 Pledge of Allegiance


  • 5 European leg


  • 6 Japanese leg


  • 7 European Open Air Leg


  • 8 References





Setlists



Set list



2001



  • "(515)"

  • "People = Shit"

  • "Liberate"

  • "Get This" / "Eeyore"

  • "Disasterpiece"

  • "Purity"

  • "My Plague" (Pledge of Allegiance Tour only)

  • "Gently"

  • "Eyeless"

  • "New Abortion"

  • "The Heretic Anthem"

  • "Spit It Out"

  • "Wait and Bleed"


-Encore-



  • "(sic)"

  • "Surfacing"


also "Everything Ends" was played in 2001 during the "Kill The Industry" Tour.



2002



  • "(515)"

  • "People = Shit"

  • "Liberate"

  • "Left Behind"

  • "Eeyore"

  • "Disasterpiece"

  • "Purity"

  • "Gently"

  • "Eyeless"

  • "My Plague"

  • "New Abortion"

  • "The Heretic Anthem"

  • "Spit It Out"

  • "Wait and Bleed"


-Encore-



  • "(sic)"

  • "Surfacing"


Note: "Get This" was played occasionally in place of "Eeyore".



Kill The Industry


Kill The Industry was a leg of the Iowa World Tour in Europe.[1] Musicians that accompanied the tour include Static-X, Mudvayne, Amen and Raging Speedhorn.[2]. The band was supposed to play at Dynamo Open Air, but the festival was cancelled. As a result, this date was replaced by an headlining show in 's-Hertogenbosch with some bands supposed to play at Dynamo that day opening. However, the band also cancelled their appearance at Rock am Ring and Rock im Park.











































































































Date
City
Country
Venue
May 17, 2001 Lisbon Portugal
Pavilhão Atlântico
May 18, 2001 Madrid Spain
Festimad
May 20, 2001 Milan Italy
Palavobis
May 21, 2001 Zürich Switzerland
Volkshaus
May 22, 2001 Munich Germany Colosseum
May 24, 2001 Tourhout Belgium Earect Festival
May 25, 2001 Lichtenvoorde Netherlands
Dynamo Open Air
's-Hertogenbosch
Maaspoort
May 26, 2001 Milton Keynes United Kingdom
Ozzfest
May 27, 2001 Bielefeld Germany Seidenstickerhalle
May 28, 2001 Oberhausen Turbinenhalle
May 29, 2001 Paris France
Zénith de Paris
May 31, 2001 Bremen Germany Pier 2
June 1, 2001 Nuremberg
Rock im Park
June 2, 2001 Vienna Austria Libro Music Hall
June 3, 2001 Nurburgring Germany
Rock am Ring
June 4, 2001 Katowice Poland
Spodek


Ozzfest 2001


Slipknot joined the 2001 Ozzfest, performing on the main stage after Papa Roach and before Marilyn Manson.




























































































































































































































Date
City
Country
Venue
June 8, 2001 Tinley Park, Illinois United States
Tweeter Center
June 9, 2001 East Troy, Wisconsin
Alpine Valley Music Theatre
June 10, 2001 Springfield, Missouri
Price Cutter Park (Off-date)
June 12, 2001 Noblesville, Indiana
Verizon Wireless Music Center
June 15, 2001 Moline, Illinois
MARK of the Quad Cities (Off-date)
June 16, 2001 Somerset, Wisconsin Float Rite Park Amphitheatre
June 18, 2001 Maryland Heights, Missouri
Riverport Amphitheatre
June 19, 2001 Bonner Springs, Kansas
Sandstone Amphitheater
June 21, 2001 Denver
Mile High Stadium
June 25, 2001 George, Washington
The Gorge Amphitheatre
June 27, 2001 Marysville, California
Sacramento Valley Amphitheatre
June 29, 2001 Mountain View, California
Shoreline Amphitheatre
June 30, 2001 San Bernardino, California
Blockbuster Pavilion
July 1, 2001 Phoenix, Arizona
Cricket Pavilion (Off-date)
July 3, 2001 Selma, Texas
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
July 4, 2001 Lubbock, Texas Canyon Amphitheatre (Off-date)
July 5, 2001 Dallas
Smirnoff Music Center
July 6, 2001 Antioch, Tennessee
AmSouth Amphitheater (Off-date)
July 7, 2001 Atlanta
HiFi Buys Amphitheatre
July 9, 2001 Camden, New Jersey
Tweeter Center at the Waterfront
July 10, 2001 North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
House of Blues (Off-date)
July 11, 2001 Lake Buena Vista, Florida
House of Blues (Off-date)
July 13, 2001 West Palm Beach, Florida
Mars Music Amphitheatre
July 14, 2001 St. Petersburg, Florida
Tropicana Field
July 15, 2001 Biloxi, Mississippi
Mississippi Coast Coliseum (Off-date)
July 17, 2001 Charlotte, North Carolina
Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
July 19, 2001 Virginia Beach, Virginia
GTE Amphitheatre (Off-date)
July 20, 2001 Bristow, Virginia
Nissan Pavilion
July 21, 2001 Camden, New Jersey
Tweeter Center at the Waterfront
July 22, 2001 Manchester, New Hampshire Singer Park (Off-date)
July 24, 2001 Toronto Canada
The Docks
July 25, 2001 Rochester, New York United States
Blue Cross Arena
July 26, 2001 Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Blossom Music Center
July 28, 2001 Burgettstown, Pennsylvania
Post-Gazette Pavilion
July 30, 2001 Clarkston, Michigan
DTE Energy Music Theatre
July 31, 2001
August 3, 2001 Columbus, Ohio
Polaris Amphitheater
August 5, 2001 Hartford, Connecticut
Meadows Music Theatre
August 6, 2001 Portland, Maine
Cumberland County Civic Center (Off-date)
August 7, 2001 Mansfield, Massachusetts
Tweeter Center
August 8, 2001
August 9, 2001 Wantagh, New York
Jones Beach Theater (Off-date)
August 11, 2001 Holmdel, New Jersey
PNC Bank Arts Center
August 12, 2001


Pledge of Allegiance


The Pledge of Allegiance Tour was a leg co-headlined by the heavy metal band System of a Down. Both groups used the tour as a promotion for their new albums.


The band played 27 shows all over the United States and had support from Rammstein, American Head Charge, Mudvayne and No One. The tour was scheduled to start on September 14 but was postponed for a week due to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, 5 dates were rescheduled and 4 dates were cancelled, the rest of the dates went ahead as originally scheduled.


Originally, No One were to open the tour and American Head Charge was to take their set for the second half of the tour. Due to the terrorist attacks, Mudvayne dropped off the tour leaving an open set on October 2. To fill the gap, American Head Charge came onto the tour early and No One stayed on for the entire tour.


A Pledge of Allegiance CD, reported by Metal Hammer to have been largely recorded at the Rosemont date in October, includes SOAD's 'Chop Suey!', 'Bounce' and 'Toxicity', Slipknot's 'People = Shit', 'The Heretic Anthem' and 'New Abortion', Mudvayne's 'Under My Skin' and 'Pharmaecopia', American Head Charge's 'Seamless' and No One's 'My Release'. However, complained Malcolm Dome, "Mudvayne's two tracks… are taken from their DVD L(ive) D(osage) 50: Live in Peoria. And, for reasons best known to themselves, Rammstein are completely absent. So this is far from being the complete live documentation of the tour many would have hoped and liked to experience on the CD."[3]















































































































































































































Date
City
Country
Venue
September 14, 2001 Rosemont, Illinois United States
Allstate Arena (Rescheduled)
September 15, 2001 Saint Paul, Minnesota
Xcel Energy Center (Rescheduled)
September 16, 2001 Omaha, Nebraska
Omaha Civic Auditorium (Cancelled)
September 18, 2001 Cedar Rapids, Iowa
U.S. Cellular Center (Rescheduled)
September 19, 2001 Madison, Wisconsin
Alliant Energy Center (Rescheduled)
September 21, 2001 Denver, Colorado
Denver Coliseum
September 22, 2001 Colorado Springs, Colorado
World Arena
September 25, 2001 Portland, Oregon Rose Garden Amphitheatre
September 26, 2001 Tacoma, Washington
Tacoma Dome
September 28, 2001 San Jose, California
Compaq Center
September 29, 2001 Inglewood, California
Great Western Forum
September 30, 2001 San Diego, California
Cox Arena
October 2, 2001 Paradise, Nevada
Thomas & Mack Center
October 3, 2001 Phoenix, Arizona
America West Arena (Moved to Paradise)
October 5, 2001 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Myriad Convention Center
October 6, 2001 Dallas, Texas
Reunion Arena
October 7, 2001 San Antonio, Texas
Alamodome
October 9, 2001 Rosemont, Illinois Allstate Arena
October 10, 2001 St. Louis, Missouri
Savvis Center (Rescheduled)
October 11, 2001 Saint Paul, Minnesota Xcel Energy Center
October 12, 2001 Madison, Wisconsin Alliant Energy Center
Tampa, Florida
Ice Palace (Cancelled)
October 13, 2001 St. Louis, Missouri Savvis Center
Orlando, Florida Orlando Centroplex (Cancelled)
October 14, 2001 Cedar Rapids, Iowa U.S. Cellular Center
Miami, Florida
Miami Arena (Cancelled)
October 16, 2001 Baltimore, Maryland
Baltimore Arena
October 17, 2001 Philadelphia
First Union Spectrum
October 18, 2001 Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
First Union Arena (Off-date)
October 19, 2001 Hartford, Connecticut
Hartford Civic Center
October 20, 2001 Albany, New York
Pepsi Arena
October 21, 2001 Portland, Maine
Cumberland County Civic Center
October 23, 2001
Detroit, Michigan

Cobo Arena
October 24, 2001 Cleveland, Ohio
CSU Convocation Center
October 26, 2001 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Mellon Arena
October 27, 2001 Peoria, Illinois
Peoria Civic Center
October 28, 2001 Grand Rapids, Michigan
Van Andel Arena
October 30, 2001 Worcester, Massachusetts
The Centrum
October 31, 2001 East Rutherford, New Jersey
Continental Airlines Arena
November 2, 2001 State College, Pennsylvania
Bryce Jordan Center


European leg


The European Iowa Tour was intended to begin around the September 11 attacks, but because of the incident, the tour was postponed to February 2002.[4] In mid-November 2001, the wife of the band's percussionist, Shawn Crahan, underwent surgery for Crohn's disease, which forced Crahan to not participate in Slipknot's live performances. However, the group announced that they plan to go ahead with their upcoming European tour, which had its start date moved ahead to January 2002.[5]


Slipknot arrived in Glasgow, Scotland for a performance on February 14, 2002 to kick off the European Iowa Tour, which was its penultimate leg.[6][7] On February 16, 2002, Slipknot performed at the London Arena, a show they filmed for their live DVD Disasterpieces, released November 22 of the same year. Despite significant tabloid coverage, the European Iowa Tour was not sold out.[8]








































































































































Date
City
Country
Venue
January 20, 2002 Helsinki Finland
Hartwall Areena
January 22, 2002 Stockholm Sweden
Hovet
January 24, 2002 Copenhagen Denmark
Valby-Hallen
January 25, 2002 Berlin Germany Arena
January 26, 2002 Essen
Grugahalle
January 27, 2002 Böblingen
Sporthalle
January 29, 2002 Hamburg
Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
January 30, 2002 Amsterdam Netherlands
Heineken Music Hall
February 1, 2002 Katowice Poland
Spodek
February 2, 2002 Prague Czech Republic Small Sports Hall
February 4, 2002 Milan Italy Alcatraz
February 5, 2002 Winterthur Switzerland
Eulachhalle
February 7, 2002 Leganés Spain
La Cubierta
February 8, 2002 San Sebastián Indoor Bullring
February 10, 2002 Paris France
Zénith de Paris
February 11, 2002
February 12, 2002 Leuven Belgium
Forest National
February 14, 2002 Glasgow Scotland
Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre
February 15, 2002 Manchester England
Manchester Evening News Arena
February 16, 2002 London
London Arena
February 18, 2002 Brighton Centre
February 19, 2002 Cardiff Wales
Cardiff International Arena
February 20, 2002 Birmingham England
National Exhibition Centre


Japanese leg


The Japanese leg kicked off on April 4, 2002 with two shows in the Tokyo Bay NK Hall in Tokyo.[9] The tour is part of a worldwide tour to promote Iowa; the Japan Iowa Tour was preceded by the European Iowa Tour.[10]






































Date
City
Country
Venue
March 18, 2002 Nagoya Japan
Rainbow Hall
March 19, 2002 Osaka Zepp
March 20, 2002
March 21, 2002
March 23, 2002 Tokyo
Tokyo Bay NK Hall
March 24, 2002
March 26, 2002 Kawasaki Club Citta
March 28, 2002 Tokyo Zepp


European Open Air Leg


This leg consisted of several festival appearances across Europe, beginning with the Festival Ilha Do Ermal on August 20, 2002, and ending with an appearance at the 2 Days a Week Festival in Austria. They also notably performed at the 2002 Reading and Leeds Festivals in the United Kingdom.


Because of the shorter set times available at festivals, "Gently" and "New Abortion" were removed from the setlist on this leg.
















































Date
City
Country
Venue
August 20, 2002 Vieira do Minho Portugal Festival da Ilha do Ermal
August 21, 2002 Gijón Spain Gijón Festival
August 23, 2002 Leeds United Kingdom
Temple Newsam Park
August 24, 2002 Glasgow
Glasgow Green
August 25, 2002 Reading
Richfield Avenue
August 27, 2002 Belfast
Odyssey Arena
August 29, 2002 Wiesen Austria 2 Days a Week


References





  1. ^ Killin, Cartiona (2002-01-25). "Rebels with a Cause". Daily Record. p. 62..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Mernagh, Matt (2001-06-18). "Slipknot Kill The Industry". Chart. Archived from the original on 2009-02-09. Retrieved 2009-02-12.


  3. ^ Metal Hammer, May 2002


  4. ^ "'Maggots,' rejoice: Slipknot is back". Green Bay Press-Gazette. 2001-11-08.


  5. ^ Guzman, Isaac (2001-11-24). "Masked Men". The Orlando Sentinel.


  6. ^ "Among the Maggots". The Guardian. 2002-02-22.


  7. ^ "Last year this band announced they were terrorists". The Herald and the Sunday Herald. 2002-01-06.


  8. ^ Bungey, John (2002-03-15). "In my day we had tunes". The Times.


  9. ^ Bartz, Simon (2002-04-03). "Slipknot unmasked!". The Japan Times.


  10. ^ Melissa, Myers (2002-03-05). "Slipknot singer slides into ritzy D.M. house". The Des Moines Register.










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