Simply Deeper Tour Explained

Concert Tour Name:Simply Deeper Tour
Artist:Kelly Rowland
Location:Europe
Album:Simply Deep
Number Of Legs:1
Number Of Shows:17
Start Date:September 13, 2003
End Date:October 6, 2003
This Tour:Simply Deeper Tour
(2003)
Next Tour:Ms. Kelly Tour
(2007)

The Simply Deeper Tour was the debut concert tour by American R&B recording artist Kelly Rowland. It was launched in support of her debut solo album Simply Deep (2002). The Simply Deeper Tour only reached Europe.

History

This was Rowland's first concert tour as a solo artist and it was used to promote her debut solo studio album, Simply Deep. The concert embarked on a seventeen date tour, hitting up seventeen European cities between September 2003 and October 2003.[1] [2] While Rowland enjoyed moderate success in North American countries such as the U.S. and Canada, her album was a commercial success in the European market and was certified gold or platinum in six countries. Simply Deep also peaked in the top twenty within nine European countries, peaking at number one in both the U.K. and Ireland. Rowland was originally set to embark on her tour at the beginning of April 2003, but pushed the tour back to September 2003 because of fears regarding the ongoing wars with Afghanistan and Iraq.[1]

Critical response

While the tour received limited reviews, the Simply Deeper Tour's London show appeared to be well received. Melisa Tang of the U.K. online entertainment webazine, The Situation, states, "Even though the Hammersmith Apollo was smaller than other venues this girl is probably used to, Kelly had given it her all, and it had certainly paid off. Everyone left the auditorium buzzing with delight, and even I was surprised at how this once shy teenager had blossomed into a strong, confident young woman."[3] Lisa Verrico of The Times had mixed reviews of Rowland’s London show. "There’s no question that Rowland has an outstanding voice and there were a surprising number of good songs in her set."[4] Verrico acknowledges before claiming, "The snag was that they weren’t as good as DC’s best."[4]

Opening acts

Set list

  1. "Simply Deep"
  2. "Love/Hate"
  3. "Can't Nobody"
  4. "Dilemma"
  5. "(Love Lives In) Strange Places"
  6. "Everytime You Walk Out That Door"
  7. "Train on a Track"
  8. "Destiny's Child Medley:
    1. "Emotion" (contains excerpts from "How Deep Is Your Love")
    2. "Bootylicious"
  9. "Make U Wanna Stay"
  10. "Beyond Imagination"
  11. "Stole"
  12. "Past 12" (Encore)

Tour dates

DateCityCountryVenue
Europe
September 11, 2003DublinIrelandVicar Street
September 13, 2003GlasgowUnited KingdomClyde Auditorium
September 14, 2003NewcastleNewcastle City Hall
September 16, 2003WolverhamptonWolverhampton Civic Hall
September 17, 2003BristolColston Hall
September 19, 2003ManchesterManchester Apollo
September 20, 2003SheffieldSheffield City Hall
September 21, 2003LondonHammersmith Apollo
September 24, 2003ZürichSwitzerlandVolkshaus
September 25, 2003MunichGermanyCirkus Krone
September 27, 2003BerlinColumbiahalle
September 28, 2003HamburgGroße Freiheit
September 29, 2003CopenhagenDenmarkVega
October 1, 2003FrankfurtGermanyJahrhunderthalle
October 2, 2003AmsterdamNetherlandsHeineken Music Hall
October 3, 2003DüsseldorfGermanyPhillipshalle
October 4, 2003AntwerpBelgiumTMF Awards
October 6, 2003ParisFranceL'Olympia

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New Kelly Rowland Dates. tourdates.co.uk. June 6, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20110717074429/http://www.tourdates.co.uk/news/2147-new-kelly-rowland-dates. dead. July 17, 2011.
  2. Web site: Special Simply Deeper Tour Coverage . kellyrowland.net . June 3, 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090519102727/http://kelly-rowland.net/tour/ . May 19, 2009 .
  3. Web site: Kelly Rowland concert review. thesituation.co.uk. June 3, 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080706130250/http://www.thesituation.co.uk/concerts/kelly_rowland/kelly_rowland.html. July 6, 2008.
  4. News: Kelly Rowland Pop Hammersmith Apollo, W6. timesonline.co.uk. June 6, 2009 . London . Lisa . Verrico . September 23, 2003. https://web.archive.org/web/20110617011710/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/article1161874.ece. dead. June 17, 2011.