ITHINK Financial Amphitheatre

The iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre is a 20,000-seat open-air (Approx. 8,000 seats under cover and approx. 12,000 lawn seats) music venue in West Palm Beach, Florida. The facility, owned by the South Florida Fairgrounds, is a modern amphitheatre used primarily for concerts and other performances. The loading dock and backstage area is sometimes used for concerts that are general admission standing room only (mostly heavy metal concerts), while the amphitheatre stage is used as the backstage area in these situations.

iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
Entrance to the venue (c.2015)
Full nameiTHINK Financial Amphitheatre at the South Florida Fairgrounds
Former namesCoral Sky Amphitheatre (1996–2000; 2002–03; 2015, 2017–2020)
Mars Music Amphitheatre (2000–02)
Sound Advice Amphitheatre (2003–08)
Cruzan Amphitheatre (2008–15)
Perfect Vodka Amphitheatre (2015–17)
Address601-7 Sansburys Way
West Palm Beach, FL 33411-3660
LocationSouth Florida Fairgrounds
OwnerSouth Florida Fair & Palm Beach County Expositions, Inc.
OperatorLive Nation
Capacity20,000
Construction
OpenedApril 26, 1996 (1996-04-26)
Construction cost$10 million
($16.8 million in 2019 dollars[1])

History

The venue opened on April 26, 1996.[2] Since opening, the venue has gone through numerous name changes. It was initially named Coral Sky Amphitheatre because the seats face into the west, often in view of a colorful sunset. After many years becoming familiar with that name, people still use that name despite the various sponsorships and name changes since then. The first sponsor was Mars Music (making the venue Mars Music Amphitheatre on January 6, 2000),[3] but when Mars filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2002, the Mars Music name was removed in August 2002 and the venue reverted to its previous name until 2003.[4] After a short return to the Coral Sky name, it changed again when Sound Advice became the new sponsor, and was renamed Sound Advice Amphitheatre on June 1, 2003.[5] In early 2008, the venue was renamed again following a new sponsorship agreement with Cruzan Rum, becoming the Cruzan Amphitheatre on February 1, 2008.[6] Effective as of February 11, 2015, LiveNation.com sent a press release announcing that the venue would revert to its original name, the Coral Sky Amphitheatre..[7] However, the release says "that it is looking for a new brand partner" so another name change would be a distinct possibility. Like the last reversion to the Coral Sky name, this one also proved to be short-lived. In June, the venue succeeded in securing new sponsorship, and announced it would now be called the Perfect Vodka Amphitheatre at the South Florida Fairgrounds. August 4, 2017. it is announced that the Perfect Vodka Amphitheatre will be name-changed back to the Coral Sky Amphitheatre, making it the most name-changed amphitheatre in the United States. As of January 16, 2020, it's now called iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre.

Performances

Other events include The Buzz Bake Sale, Curiosa, Lilith Fair, The Gigantour, Projekt Revolution, Christ Fellowship's Easter services, Ozzfest, Crüe Fest, Crüe Fest 2, The Mayhem Festival and The Vans Warped Tour, among others.

On November 2, 1996, Phish played the amphitheatre as part of their 1996 fall tour. They were joined by Karl Perazzo (of Santana fame) on percussion for the entire show. Portions of this performance were released to the syndicated radio program The Album Network. This show was released as the Coral Sky DVD in 2010 and is available as a download from LivePhish.

On June 15, 1998, the Spice Girls kicked off the US leg of the Spiceworld Tour; two weeks prior, Geri Halliwell had left the group.

On September 4th, 2003 Tori Amos played her last concert of her Scarlet's Walk tour here. It was filmed and released on DVD one year later, in May 2004, called Welcome to Sunny Florida.

The venue was scheduled to host the final Ozzfest tour date of 2004, on September 4, but the show was cancelled due to Hurricane Frances.

Because of the Palm Beaches' climate, many major concert tours that would visit arenas in other cities usually stop at Perfect Vodka Amphitheatre, enabling it to be used as a year-round concert venue.

May 20, 2017 the band Muse played there along with 30 Seconds to Mars and Pvris.

May 27, 2017 the band Train played at the amphitheater for their "Play that song" world tour, along with Natasha Bedingfield and O.A.R

Since 1996 Dave Matthews Band has performed at the amphitheater more than 30 times, playing two-night stands at the venue beginning in 2002.

gollark: Well, I don't, because I am not on your server, yes.
gollark: Nobody is an "objective person".
gollark: Yours basically just leaves it entirely up to your discretion.
gollark: Seriously? That's your problem with these rules, but your 3-rule ruleset is FINE?
gollark: There are 10 of them, look.

See also

References

  1. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  2. Francalancia, Angie (April 27, 1996). "Sun Smiles for Opening Night at Coral Sky". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida: Cox Enterprises. p. 1B.
  3. Soivak, Irwin (January 7, 2000). "Corl Sky is Now the Mars Amphitheater". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida: Cox Enterprises. p. 5B.
  4. Passy, Charles (August 23, 2002). "Amphitheater Reverts to Previous Name: Coral Sky". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida: Cox Enterprises. p. 1D.
  5. Piccoli, Sean (April 9, 2003). "Coral Sky Venue Renamed Again". Sun-Sentinel. Tribune Company. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
  6. Yee, Ivette Y. (February 2, 2008). "Sound Advice's new name is Cruzan". Sun-Sentinel. Tribune Company. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
  7. Tracy, Liz (February 11, 2015). "Cruzan Is Changing Its Name Back to Coral Sky Amphitheater". Broward/Palm Beach New Times. New Times BPB, LLC. Retrieved February 22, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.