Concert Tour Name: | 4:44 Tour |
Border: | yes |
Artist: | Jay-Z |
Album: | 4:44 |
Type: | Continental |
Location: | North America |
Number Of Legs: | 1 |
Number Of Shows: | 33 |
Gross: | $48.7 million ($ million in dollars)[1] |
Last Tour: | On the Run Tour (2014) |
This Tour: | 4:44 Tour (2017) |
Next Tour: | OTR II Tour (2018) |
The Tour Jay:z 4:44 or simply 4:44 Tour was a concert tour by American rapper Jay-Z, in support of his thirteenth studio album 4:44 (2017). The tour began in Anaheim at the Honda Center on October 27, 2017, and concluded on December 21, 2017, in Inglewood at The Forum. Vic Mensa was the opening act for the whole tour.
Jay Z's North American run of his 4:44 Tour grossed $48,698,354 over the course of 32 dates. 426,441 tickets were sold in that span, with about $1.5 million grossed per show.[2]
On July 10, 2017, Jay-Z announced 32 tour dates across North America.[3] [4] [5]
This set list is representative of the show on November 3, 2017 in Phoenix. It does not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.[6]
Date | City | Country | Venue | Opening act | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America[7] | ||||||
October 27, 2017 | Anaheim | United States | Honda Center | Vic Mensa | 12,153 / 14,933 | $1,228,306 |
October 28, 2017 | Las Vegas | T-Mobile Arena | — | — | ||
November 1, 2017 | Fresno | Save Mart Center | — | — | ||
November 3, 2017 | Phoenix | Talking Stick Resort Arena | — | — | ||
November 5, 2017 | Denver | Pepsi Center | — | — | ||
November 7, 2017 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 14,497 / 15,955 | $1,330,471 | ||
November 8, 2017 | Houston | Toyota Center | — | — | ||
November 9, 2017 | New Orleans | Smoothie King Center | 12,731 / 14,812 | $1,072,797 | ||
November 11, 2017 | Orlando | Amway Center | — | — | ||
November 12, 2017 | Miami | American Airlines Arena | 15,735 / 15,735 | $1,770,249 | ||
November 14, 2017 | Atlanta | Philips Arena | 14,118 / 15,039 | $1,832,255 | ||
November 15, 2017 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 14,128 / 14,128 | $1,064,008 | ||
November 16, 2017 | Charlotte | Spectrum Center | 15,558 / 15,558 | $1,563,821 | ||
November 18, 2017 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | — | — | ||
November 19, 2017 | Cleveland | Quicken Loans Arena | — | — | ||
November 21, 2017 | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | — | — | |
November 22, 2017 | Toronto | Air Canada Centre | 25,270 / 25,270 | $2,301,650 | ||
November 23, 2017 | ||||||
November 25, 2017 | Boston | United States | TD Garden | — | — | |
November 26, 2017 | Brooklyn | Barclays Center | — | — | ||
November 27, 2017 | — | — | ||||
November 29, 2017 | Washington, D.C. | Capital One Arena | 18,147 / 18,147 | $2,199,885 | ||
December 1, 2017 | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | — | — | ||
December 2, 2017 | Uniondale | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | 13,292 / 13,292 | $1,315,634 | ||
December 5, 2017 | Chicago | United Center | — | — | ||
December 9, 2017 | Edmonton | Canada | Rogers Place | — | — | |
December 11, 2017 | Vancouver | Rogers Arena | 14,386 / 14,933 | $1,160,682 | ||
December 13, 2017 | Seattle | United States | KeyArena | 9,200 | $862,000 | |
December 14, 2017 | Portland | Moda Center | 10,840 / 13,548 | $803,170 | ||
December 16, 2017 | Oakland | Oracle Arena | 14,853 / 14,853 | $1,511,245 | ||
December 17, 2017 | Sacramento | Golden 1 Center | 11,459 / 15,370 | $954,552 | ||
December 19, 2017 | San Diego | Viejas Arena | — | — | ||
December 21, 2017 | Inglewood | The Forum | 16,084 / 16,084 | $2,012,730 | ||
Total | 426,441 | $48,698,354[8] | ||||