Frontiers Tour

The Frontiers Tour was a concert tour by Journey. It was in support of their new album Frontiers. It is to date the band's most successful tour ever. It was also the last tour with bassist Ross Valory until 1998, and drummer Steve Smith until 2016; they would later return in 1996 for Journey's comeback album Trial By Fire.

Frontiers Tour
Tour by Journey
Associated albumFrontiers
Start dateFebruary 22, 1983
End dateSeptember 6, 1983
Legs2
No. of shows110
Journey concert chronology

Bryan Adams served as the opening act for the tour, supporting his breakthrough album, Cuts Like a Knife; during the tour, he penned "Heaven", which was heavily influenced by Journey's "Faithfully."

Personnel

  • Steve Perry – lead vocals
  • Neal Schon – lead guitar, backing vocals
  • Ross Valory – bass, backing vocals
  • Jonathan Cain – keyboards, rhythm guitar, backing vocals
  • Steve Smith – drums, percussion

Setlist

Tour dates

Date City Country Venue Tickets sold / Available Revenue
Asia
February 22, 1983NagoyaJapanAichi Prefectural Gymnasium
February 24, 1983OsakaOsaka Prefectural Gymnasium
February 25, 1983
February 26, 1983FukuokaKyuden Memorial Gymnasium
February 28, 1983KyotoKyoto Prefectural Gymnasium
March 1, 1983TokyoNippon Budokan
March 2, 1983
March 4, 1983YokohamaYokohama Cultural Gymnasium
North America
March 28, 1983SeattleUnited StatesSeattle Center Coliseum15,000 / 15,000$210,000
March 30, 1983Provo, UtahMarriott Center12,160 / 12,160$152,000
March 31, 1983Salt Lake CitySalt Palace12,677 / 12,677$157,837
April 1, 1983Casper, WyomingCasper Events Center9,838 / 9,838$125,087
April 3, 1983DenverMcNichols Sports Arena28,597 / 36,000$376,944
April 4, 1983
April 6, 1983Lincoln, NebraskaBob Devaney Sports Center13,918 / 13,918$170,865
April 7, 1983Des Moines, IowaVeterans Memorial Auditorium11,282 / 11,282$135,835
April 9, 1983Terre Haute, IndianaHulman Center10,464 / 10,464$110,812
April 10, 1983Carbondale, IllinoisSIU Arena10,816 / 10,816$129,953
April 11, 1983St. LouisCheckerdome17,118 / 17,118$201,007
April 13, 1983CincinnatiRiverfront Coliseum16,445 / 16,445$215,840
April 14, 1983Murfreesboro, TennesseeMurphy Center23,602 / 23,602$318,611
April 15, 1983
April 18, 1983Valley Center, KansasKansas Coliseum
April 20, 1983AtlantaThe Omni29,917 / 34,034$442,364
April 21, 1983
April 23, 1983Orlando, FloridaRock Super Bowl XVII50,022 / 60,000$792,139
April 24, 1983MiamiRock Super Bowl XVII30,000 / 32,000$464,954
April 26, 1983Charlotte, North CarolinaCharlotte Coliseum12,900 / 12,900$160,000
April 27, 1983Birmingham, AlabamaBJCC Coliseum16,709 / 16,709$204,112
April 28, 1983Mobile, AlabamaMobile Civic Center15,875 / 15,875$198,437
April 30, 1983 Columbia, South Carolina Carolina Coliseum11,893 / 11,893$148,662
May 1, 1983Charleston, West VirginiaCharleston Civic Center13,202 / 13,202$159,875
May 2, 1983Landover, MarylandCapital Centre37,400 / 37,400$467,500
May 3, 1983
May 5, 1983East Rutherford, New JerseyBrendan Byrne Arena58,593 / 61,533$721,546
May 6, 1983
May 7, 1983
May 8, 1983Uniondale, New YorkNassau Coliseum16,914 / 16,914$219,362
May 13, 1983Hartford, ConnecticutHartford Civic Center48,807 / 48,807$692,317
May 14, 1983
May 15, 1983
May 17, 1983Worcester, MassachusettsWorcester Centrum49,700 / 49,700$608,834
May 18, 1983
May 19, 1983
May 20, 1983
May 22, 1983Buffalo, New YorkBuffalo Memorial Auditorium17,450 / 17,450$206,050
May 24, 1983Richfield, OhioRichfield Coliseum56,382 / 56,382$704,775
May 25, 1983
May 26, 1983
May 28, 1983PittsburghCivic Arena34,050 / 34,050$387,250
May 29, 1983
May 30, 1983Lexington, KentuckyRupp Arena16,028 / 16,028$211,226
June 1, 1983IndianapolisMarket Square Arena16,000 / 18,278$208,983
June 2, 1983South Bend, IndianaAthletic & Convocation Center9,000 / 12,283$113,491
June 4, 1983PhiladelphiaJFK Stadium60,000 / 75,000$1,030,977
June 5, 1983Rochester, New YorkHolleder Memorial Stadium30,000 / 30,000$371,962
June 10, 1983Rosemont, IllinoisRosemont Horizon44,008 / 54,358$581,505
June 11, 1983
June 12, 1983
June 14, 1983Saratoga Springs, New YorkSaratoga Performing Arts Center34,000 / 34,000$322,680
June 15, 1983
June 17, 1983East Troy, WisconsinAlpine Valley Music Theatre21,226 / 21,226$227,815
June 18, 1983Saint Paul, MinnesotaSt. Paul Civic Center53,316 / 53,316$694,639
June 19, 1983
June 21, 1983
June 23, 1983DetroitJoe Louis Arena59,054 / 59,054$733,159
June 24, 1983
June 25, 1983
June 26, 1983Thornville, OhioLegend Valley16,000 / 16,000$256,000
July 1, 1983HoustonThe Summit
July 2, 1983
July 3, 1983
July 5, 1983Austin, TexasFrank Erwin Center17,319 / 17,319$209,275
July 6, 1983San AntonioSan Antonio Convention Center
July 8, 1983DallasReunion Arena55,655 / 55,655$689,681
July 9, 1983
July 10, 1983
July 12, 1983Kansas City, MissouriKemper Arena29,949 / 29,949$360,195
July 13, 1983
July 14, 1983Valley Center, KansasKansas Coliseum
July 16, 1983Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum11,542 / 11,542$173,130
July 17, 1983New OrleansRock 'N Roll Super Bowl30,000 / 30,000$519,197
July 19, 1983Norman, OklahomaLloyd Noble Center35,000 / 35,000$467,424
July 20, 1983
July 21, 1983
July 23, 1983Albuquerque, New MexicoTingley Coliseum10,656 / 10,656$143,856
July 24, 1983Phoenix, ArizonaArizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum50,359 / 50,359$679,846
July 25, 1983
July 26, 1983
July 29, 1983Daly City, CaliforniaCow Palace
July 30, 1983Oakland, CaliforniaDay on the Green51,983 / 60,000$915,047
July 31, 1983Fresno, CaliforniaRatcliffe Stadium25,000 / 25,000$387,500
August 5, 1983Inglewood, CaliforniaThe Forum76,122 / 77,432$1,141,830
August 6, 1983
August 7, 1983
August 9, 1983
August 10, 1983
August 11, 1983San DiegoSan Diego Sports Arena13,378 / 13,378$167,237
August 13, 1983Las VegasAladdin Theatre
August 14, 1983
August 16, 1983Boise, IdahoBSU Pavilion
August 17, 1983Pocatello, IdahoMinidome
August 18, 1983Pullman, WashingtonBeasley Coliseum
August 19, 1983Tacoma, WashingtonTacoma Dome
August 21, 1983Eugene, OregonGrand Slam Summer Jam 1983
September 1, 1983HonoluluNeal S. Blaisdell Center42,654 / 42,654$551,893
September 2, 1983
September 3, 1983
September 4, 1983
September 6, 1983
gollark: So it could be programmed with some sort of "personal day night cycle" option.
gollark: Well, it's relative to when you sleep or something, right? Or meals?
gollark: I mean, if you're saying "it is 3 hours after noon", you probably *mean* something like "it's a reasonable time to do X". So say that.
gollark: In what context would they say that, though?
gollark: Hmm, yes, it is possible that people will be beelike about this.

References

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