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Think Later World Tour

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Think Later World Tour
Tour by Tate McRae
Promotional poster for the tour
Location
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • North America
  • Oceania
Associated albumThink Later
Start dateApril 17, 2024 (2024-04-17)
End dateNovember 21, 2024 (2024-11-21)
No. of shows65
Supporting acts
Tate McRae concert chronology

The Think Later World Tour was the fourth concert tour by Canadian singer-songwriter Tate McRae in support of her sophomore studio album, Think Later (2023).[1] It began on April 17, 2024, in Dublin, and concluded on November 21, 2024, in Wellington, with shows across Asia, Europe, North America and Oceania. charlieonnafriday and Presley Regier served as opening acts.[2]

Background

[edit]

On November 6, 2023, McRae announced a 53-date European, North American, and Oceanian tour, titled the Think Later World Tour. The Think Later World Tour is McRae's fourth concert tour, and follows her third tour, Are We Flying Tour, which she embarked on in 2023, in support of her debut studio album I Used to Think I Could Fly. Alongside the announcement of the tour, it has been revealed that there would have been an artist presale going on sale on November 9, 2023 with the general sale going on sale on November 10, 2023.[3] On November 7, 2023, McRae announced an additional Boston date due to demand. On November 9, 2023, McRae announced an additional London date due to demand. On November 13, 2023, McRae announced additional Moore Park and Melbourne dates due to demand, as well as a venue upgrade for the Adelaide show. On December 14, 2023, it was announced that McRae would headline her hometown Cowboys Music Festival in Calgary.[4] On April 19, 2024, McRae added 4 Asia dates to her world tour.[5]

Setlist

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This set list is representative of the first show in Dublin, Ireland. It does not represent all dates throughout the tour.[6]

  1. "Think Later"
  2. "Hurt My Feelings"
  3. "Uh Oh"
  4. "What's Your Problem?"
  5. "Feel Like Shit"
  6. "Calgary"
  7. "Stay Done"
  8. "Messier"
  9. "Cut My Hair"
  10. "Rubberband"
  11. "Exes"
  12. "Grave"
  13. "Guilty Conscience"
  14. "We're Not Alike"
  15. "She's All I Wanna Be"
  16. "You Broke Me First"
  17. "Run for the Hills"
Encore
  1. "Greedy"

Alterations

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  • Starting with the show in Calgary, "10:35" was added to the set list. "Messier" and "Grave" were not performed for this show.[7]
  • During the show in Nashville, McRae performed "Tennessee Orange" with Megan Moroney.[8]
  • During the show in New York City, McRae performed an unreleased song "It's OK I'm OK", and performed "Without You" with The Kid Laroi.[9]
  • Starting with the show in Sydney, "2 Hands" was added to the setlist. "What's your problem?" was added back. "Calgary" and "10:35" were not performed.

Shows

[edit]
List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and opening acts
Dates
(2024)
City Country Venue Opening act(s) Attendance Revenue
April 17 Dublin Ireland 3Olympia Theatre charlieonnafriday
April 18
April 20 Glasgow Scotland O2 Academy Glasgow
April 22 London England Eventim Apollo
April 23
April 24 Manchester O2 Apollo Manchester
April 26 Wolverhampton Wolverhampton Civic Hall
April 28 Cologne Germany Palladium
April 29 Amsterdam Netherlands AFAS Live
April 30 Antwerp Belgium Lotto Arena
May 2 Stockholm Sweden Annexet
May 3 Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum
May 4 Frederiksberg Denmark Falkonersalen
May 6 Hamburg Germany Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
May 7 Berlin Uber Eats Music Hall
May 8 Prague Czech Republic Forum Karlín
May 10 Warsaw Poland Arena COS Torwar
May 12 Zürich Switzerland Halle 622
May 13 Vienna Austria Gasometer
May 14 Munich Germany Zenith
May 16 Milan Italy Fabrique
May 17 Paris France Zénith Paris
May 20 Barcelona Spain Sant Jordi Club
May 21 Madrid Palacio Vistalegre
May 22 Lisbon Portugal Coliseu dos Recreios
July 5[a] Calgary Canada Stampede Park
July 7 Woodinville United States Chateau Ste. Michelle Presley Regier 4,500 / 4,500 $377,836
July 9 San Francisco Bill Graham Civic Auditorium 8,512 / 8,512 $438,730
July 11 Los Angeles Greek Theatre 5,930 / 5,930 $487,622
July 14 Phoenix Arizona Financial Theatre 5,218 / 5,218 $360,832
July 17 Austin Moody Amphitheater 4,716 / 4,716 $338,584
July 19 Houston 713 Music Hall 4,899 / 4,899 $284,653
July 20 Irving Toyota Music Factory 7,745 / 7,745 $483,831
July 21 Rogers Walmart Arkansas Music Pavilion 10,916 / 10,916 $477,016
July 24 Cincinnati Andrew J. Brady Music Center 4,384 / 4,384 $266,346
July 27 Toronto Canada Budweiser Stage 16,017 / 16,017 $746,581
July 28 Sterling Heights United States Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre 8,301 / 8,301 $580,304
July 30 Maryland Heights St. Louis Music Park 4,618 / 4,618 $333,624
August 1 Minneapolis Minneapolis Armory 7,002 / 7,002 $398,685
August 3[b] Chicago Grant Park
August 6 Nashville Ascend Amphitheater Presley Regier 6,825 / 6,825 $391,510
August 7 Indianapolis Everwise Amphitheater 6,134 / 6,134 $338,504
August 9 Boston MGM Music Hall at Fenway
August 10
August 11 Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena
August 13 Washington, D.C. The Anthem
August 14 Philadelphia Skyline Stage
August 16 Raleigh Red Hat Amphitheater
August 17 Atlanta Cadence Bank Amphitheatre
August 19 Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center
August 22 New York City Madison Square Garden
September 28[c] Newark Prudential Center
October 29 Tokyo Japan Toyosu PIT
October 31 Singapore The Star Performing Arts Centre
November 2 Bangkok Thailand UOB Live
November 4 Quezon City Philippines New Frontier Theater
November 8 Perth Australia Red Hill Auditorium charlieonnafriday
November 10 Brisbane Riverstage
November 12 Sydney Hordern Pavilion
November 13
November 15[d] Adelaide Adelaide Entertainment Centre
November 16 Melbourne Margaret Court Arena
November 17
November 19 Auckland New Zealand Spark Arena
November 21 Wellington TSB Arena
Total 105,717 / 105,717 (100%) $6,304,658

Notes

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Show details

  1. ^ Part of Cowboys Music Festival
  2. ^ Part of Lollapalooza
  3. ^ Part of Audacy's We Can Survive.
  4. ^ The venue for this show was upgraded from the AEC Theatre following high demand.

References

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  1. ^ Paul, Larisha. "Tate McRae Announces New Album 'Think Later' and 2024 World Tour: 'I Can't Believe This is Happening'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved November 7, 2023.
  2. ^ Jones, Damian. "Tate McRae announces second album 'Think Later' and confirms 2024 tour". NME. Retrieved November 7, 2023.
  3. ^ Fu, Eddie (November 6, 2023). "How to Get Tickets to Tate McRae's "Think Later Tour"". Consequence. Retrieved November 7, 2023.
  4. ^ Kilburn-Smith, Emma. "Tate McRae is coming to Calgary for a hometown performance next year". Daily Hive. Retrieved December 20, 2023.
  5. ^ Seah, Nida (April 19, 2024). "Tate Mcrae announces first-ever Asia tour with Singapore stop in October 2024". SG Magazine.
  6. ^ "Here Is Tate McRae's 'Think Later World Tour' Setlist". Uproxx. April 18, 2024. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  7. ^ "How Long Are Tate McRae's 'Think Later World Tour' Concerts?". UPROXX. July 11, 2024. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
  8. ^ Aniftos, Rania (August 9, 2024). "Watch Tate McRae & Megan Moroney Perform 'Tennessee Orange' in Nashville". Billboard. Retrieved August 11, 2024.
  9. ^ Dailey, Hannah (August 23, 2024). "Tate McRae Premieres New Song, Duets With Boyfriend The Kid Laroi at Madison Square Garden". Billboard. Retrieved August 23, 2024.