Jump to content

Gold Cobra Tour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gold Cobra Tour
Tour by Limp Bizkit
2011 European Tour
Location
  • North America
  • Europe
Associated albumGold Cobra
Start dateApril 24, 2010
End dateSeptember 24, 2011
Legs3
No. of shows
  • 56 (39 cancelled)
  • 43 in Europe
  • 6 in North America (28 cancelled)
  • 7 in Latin America (11 cancelled)
Limp Bizkit concert chronology

The Gold Cobra Tour was a tour by American rap rock band Limp Bizkit, taking place in support of their album Gold Cobra, beginning in 2010. It was the band's first promotional tour for the new album after their original line-up reunion tour in 2009, and their first North American tour since the Results May Vary Tour in 2004.

The tour started with a few warm-up North American festival dates in May 2010, with a full North American leg soon following in July, though this North American leg was soon cancelled due to the band's dislike of theatres and was never rescheduled for in-door venues like promised by the band.[1][2] The band went on a European leg instead, between August–October 2010.

The band announced a Latin American tour for October–November 2010, though this tour was soon cancelled following Fred Durst hurting his neck.[3] The band resumed the tour in 2011, announcing more European dates for summer 2011, beginning on June 24, 2011, at the Sonisphere Festival in Basel, Switzerland, to coincide with the album's release on June 28, 2011. The European leg, which consists mostly of festival appearances, is the band's first in support of Gold Cobra since its long delayed release in June 2011.

On July 21, 2011, the band is set to start the first Latin American leg in support of Gold Cobra, a rescheduled leg to make-up for the cancelled October–November 2010 tour, though the new tour includes only 7 dates while the original tour was set to include 11 dates. Dates in Ecuador, Venezuela, Colombia and Costa Rica were not rescheduled. In September 2011, a Japan leg was announced. Limp Bizkit would tour Japan on October 14, 15 and 17. The band played at Epicenter 2011 in California in September 2011.

Setlist

[edit]
Europe 2010

Encore

Europe 2011
  • "Introbra"
  • "Hot Dog"
  • "Gold Cobra"
  • "Shotgun"
  • "Douche Bag" / "Get a Life" (Varied between shows)
  • "Bring It Back"
  • "Why Try"
  • "My Generation"
  • "Livin' It Up"
  • "My Way"
  • "Break Stuff"
  • "Boiler"
  • "Almost Over" (Not played on every date)
  • "Take a Look Around"
  • "Nookie"
  • "Walking Away"
  • "Full Nelson"

Encore

Tour dates

[edit]
Date City Country Venue
Warm-up dates
April 24, 2010 Tampa United States 98RockFest
April 30, 2010 Memphis Beale Street Music Festival
May 1, 2010 Frisco Edgefest
May 2, 2010 Houston Buzzfest
May 5, 2010 New York City Blender Theater at Gramercy
May 23, 2010 Columbus Rock on the Range
North America, Leg #1[4]
July 3, 2010 Holmdel United States PNC Bank Arts Center
July 5, 2010 Cleveland Time Warner Cable Amphitheater
July 7, 2010 Cincinnati PNC Pavilion at Riverbend
July 8, 2010 Charlotte Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
July 10, 2010 Biloxi Mississippi Coast Coliseum
July 11, 2010 Atlanta Lakewood Amphitheatre
July 13, 2010 Bristow Jiffy Lube Live
July 15, 2010 Tinley Park First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre
July 17, 2010 Noblesville Verizon Wireless Music Center
July 18, 2010 Cadott Rock Fest
July 20, 2010 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Pavilion
July 21, 2010 Toronto Canada Molson Amphitheatre
July 23, 2010 Clarkston United States DTE Energy Music Theatre
July 24, 2010 Corfu Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
July 25, 2010 Mansfield Comcast Center
July 27, 2010 Camden Susquehanna Bank Center
July 28, 2010 Virginia Beach Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
July 30, 2010 Wallingford Oakdale Theatre
July 31, 2010 Syracuse K-Rockathon
August 1, 2010 Atlantic City Trump Taj Mahal
August 2, 2010 Maryland Heights Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
August 5, 2010 Greenwood Village Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
August 7, 2010 Phoenix Cricket Wireless Pavilion
August 8, 2010 Chula Vista Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre
August 10, 2010 Albuquerque Journal Pavilion
August 12, 2010 Irvine Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
August 13, 2010 Wheatland Sleep Train Amphitheatre
August 15, 2010 Auburn White River Amphitheatre
Europe, Leg #1[4][5]
August 18, 2010 Eindhoven Netherlands Effenaar
August 20, 2010 Hasselt Belgium Pukkelpop
August 21, 2010 Gampel Switzerland Gampel Open Air Festival
August 24, 2010 Dublin Ireland Olympia Theatre
August 26, 2010 Glasgow Scotland O2 Academy Glasgow
August 28, 2010 Leeds England Leeds Festival
August 29, 2010 Reading Reading Festival
August 31, 2010 Frankfurt Germany Jahrhunderthalle
September 2, 2010 Vienna Austria Two Days a Week Festival
September 3, 2010 Stuttgart Germany Porsche Arena
September 5, 2010 Düsseldorf Philipshalle
September 6, 2010 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall
September 8, 2010 Paris France L'Olympia
September 9, 2010 Villeurbanne Le Transbordeur
September 11, 2010 Bilbao Spain Santana 27
September 12, 2010 Madrid La Riviera
September 14, 2010 Lisbon Portugal Pavilhão Atlântico
September 16, 2010 Barcelona Spain Razzmatazz
September 18, 2010 Milan Italy PalaSharp
September 20, 2010 Munich Germany Zenith
September 21, 2010 Leipzig Haus Auensee
September 23, 2010 Berlin Columbiahalle
September 24, 2010 Hamburg Sportshalle
September 26, 2010 Copenhagen Denmark K.B. Hallen
September 27, 2010 Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum
October 1, 2010 Saint Petersburg Russia Ice Palace
October 3, 2010 Moscow Olympic Stadium
October 5, 2010 Minsk Belarus Minsk Sports Palace
October 7, 2010 Kyiv Ukraine Kyiv Expo Plaza
October 9, 2010 Warsaw Poland Stodola
Latin America, Leg #1[6][7]
October 14, 2010 San José Costa Rica Autódromo La Guacima
October 16, 2010 Panama City Panama Figali Convention Center
October 19, 2010 Bogotá Colombia Coliseo Cubierto El Campín
October 22, 2010 São Paulo Brazil Via Funchal
October 24, 2010 Belo Horizonte Chevrolet Hall
October 26, 2010 Buenos Aires Argentina Luna Park
October 28, 2010 Santiago Chile Teatro Caupolican
October 30, 2010 Asunción Paraguay Jockey Club
November 2, 2010 Lima Peru Estadio Monumental "U"
November 4, 2010 Quito Ecuador Coliseo General Rumiñahui
November 6, 2010 Caracas Venezuela Terraza del C.C.C.T.
Europe, Leg #2[8]
June 24, 2011 Basel Switzerland Sonisphere Festival
June 25, 2011 Mannheim Germany SAP Arena
June 27, 2011 Oberhausen König Pilsener Arena
June 28, 2011 Munich Tollwood Sommerfestival
July 1, 2011 Arras France Main Square Festival
July 2, 2011 Sulingen Germany Reload Festival
July 4, 2011 Leipzig Haus Auensee
July 5, 2011 Vienna Austria Gasometer
July 7, 2011 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall
July 8, 2011 Liège Belgium Les Ardentes
July 10, 2011 Knebworth England Sonisphere Festival
July 12, 2011 Codroipo Italy Villa Manin
July 16, 2011 Istanbul Turkey Rock'n Coke
Latin America, Leg #1 (Rescheduled)[9]
July 21, 2011 Santiago Chile Movistar Arena
July 23, 2011 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Fundição Progresso
July 26, 2011 São Paulo Via Funchal
July 29, 2011 Asunción Paraguay Jockey Club
August 1, 2011 Buenos Aires Argentina Microestadio Malvinas Argentinas
August 3, 2011 Lima Peru Estadio Monumental "U"
August 6, 2011 Panama City Panama Figali Convention Center
Epicenter Festival
September 24, 2011 Irvine United States Verizon Wireless Amphitheater

Support acts

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Limp Bizkit : News : LBN 1 - Limp Bizkit News". Archived from the original on 2010-11-21. Retrieved 2010-12-13.
  2. ^ "Limp Bizkit Scrap Tour To Stage Better Shows". Ultimate-guitar.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Borland Says New Limp Bizkit Will Be Out In 2021 | Gun Shy Assassin". 11 March 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 24 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ a b "LIMP BIZKIT 2010 tour | Tour Dates, Concerts, Tickets". tour-dates.info. Archived from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  5. ^ "LIMP BIZKIT | Official Site". Archived from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
  6. ^ "Limp Bizkit Announce Routing For Winter South American Tour". Theprp.com. 21 July 2010. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Fred Durst Leaks Limp Bizkit South American Tour Dates". concertconfessions.com. Archived from the original on 21 November 2010. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  8. ^ "Limp Bizkit". Festivalseurope.wordpress.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  9. ^ "Limp Bizkit Expand Summer South American Touring Plans". Theprp.com. 15 June 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2021.