Take Off Your Pants and Jacket Tour explained

Concert Tour Name:Take Off Your Pants and Jacket Tour
Type:Continental
Artist:Blink-182
Album:Take Off Your Pants and Jacket
Location:North America
Start Date:July 4, 2001
End Date:September 21, 2001
Number Of Legs:1
Number Of Shows:44
Last Tour:2001 Honda Civic Tour
(2001)
This Tour:Take Off Your Pants and Jacket Tour
(2001)
Next Tour:Pop Disaster Tour
(2002)

The Take Off Your Pants and Jacket Tour was a concert tour by rock band Blink-182. Launched in support of the group's 2001 album Take Off Your Pants and Jacket, the tour visited amphitheatres and arenas between July and September 2001. The tour was supported by New Found Glory, Jimmy Eat World, Alkaline Trio and Midtown.

A planned European leg of the tour was postponed following the September 11 attacks, and cancelled when guitarist Tom DeLonge suffered a back injury.[1]

Background

The band partnered with Ticketmaster, setting up a special website where fans could purchase pre-sale tickets for each show.

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the band draped an American flag over a set of amplifiers and drummer Travis Barker played on a red, white, and blue drum kit. At one concert, DeLonge invited the crowd to join him in his cheers of "Fuck Osama bin Laden!"

Tour dates

DateCityCountry Venue
North America[2]
MolineUnited StatesMark of the Quad Cities
NoblesvilleVerizon Wireless Music Center
Tinley ParkTweeter Center
CincinnatiRiverbend Music Center
ColumbusPolaris Amphitheater
Cuyahoga FallsBlossom Music Center
Bonner SpringsSandstone Amphitheater
SomersetRivers Edge Amphitheatre
Maryland HeightsRiverport Amphitheatre
BurgettstownPost-Gazette Pavilion
ClarkstonDTE Energy Music Theatre
WantaghJones Beach Theater
Darien CenterDarien Lake Performing Arts Center
July 24, 2001ColumbiaMerriweather Post Pavilion
HolmdelPNC Bank Arts Center
CamdenTweeter Center at the Waterfront
BostonSuffolk Downs
ScrantonCoors Light Amphitheatre at Montage Mountain
RaleighAlltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek
West Palm BeachMars Music Amphitheatre
TampaIce Palace Arena
AntiochAmSouth Amphitheater
DallasSmirnoff Music Centre
The WoodlandsCynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
SelmaVerizon Wireless Amphitheater
Greenwood VillageCoors Amphitheatre
West ValleyE Center
NampaIdaho Center Amphitheater
PortlandMemorial Coliseum
GeorgeThe Gorge Amphitheatre
VancouverCanadaThunderbird Stadium
CalgaryPengrowth Saddledome
EdmontonTelus Field
TorontoMolson Amphitheatre
OttawaOttawa Civic Centre
Quebec CityColisée Pepsi
MontrealParc Jean-Drapeau
AllentownUnited StatesAllentown Fairgrounds
SyracuseNew York State Fairgrounds
Hartfordctnow.com Meadows Music Center
WheatlandSacramento Valley Amphitheatre
Mountain ViewShoreline Amphitheatre
PhoenixArizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Long BeachLong Beach Arena
Chula VistaCoors Amphitheatre
Festivals and other miscellaneous performances

Reception

Reception towards the Take Off Your Pants and Jacket Tour was generally positive. Jim DeRogatis of the Chicago Sun-Times was positive in his review of the band's concert at the Tweeter Center, writing, "There is a long and noble tradition in rock 'n' roll of hyperenergetic, ultramelodic, sha-la-la-la stupidity, and Blink has proven itself to be a worthy inheritor of this tradition—not as great as the mighty Ramones just yet, but at least as good as the Troggs or the Archies or Grand Funk Railroad."[3] The band's appearance at Radio 104 Fest in Hartford, Connecticut was reviewed by Roger Catlin of the Hartford Courant: "Blink-182 [...] has earned its place at the top. Both bassist Mark Hoppus and guitarist Tom DeLonge are tighter now from working with ace drummer Travis Barker for a few years. The show's focus is more their bracing, melodic songs rather than the childishly vulgar banter between them."[4]

Ed Masley of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called the trio "the Steely Dan of cartoon punk", feeling that "the [dirty] jokes were nearly overshadowed by musical highlights [...] Some, I'm sure, would argue that the show was worse than reprehensible. But unlike, say, Limp Bizkit, Korn or Eminem, these clowns did it all for the giggles. At a time when so much of teen culture is focused on hate and aggression, last night's show was practically refreshing."[5] Randy Lewis of the Los Angeles Times felt the concert tasteful in light of the then-recent September 11 attacks; "In some strange way Blink-182's concert Sunday at the Arrowhead Pond in Anaheim provided a kind of catharsis, or at least temporary escape, for the thousands of fans who turned out." He praised the group's inclusion of humor, while also comparing drummer Travis Barker to Keith Moon of The Who.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Back Injury Scotches Blink-182 Euro Tour. Billboard. December 21, 2001. January 31, 2015.
  2. Fans Get First Crack At Blink-182 Summer Tour Tix. Billboard. May 11, 2001. January 31, 2015.
  3. Web site: Jim DeRogatis. Blink-182 at the Tweeter Center. Chicago Sun-Times. July 9, 2001. January 31, 2015.
  4. Web site: Blink-182 The Leader Of The Pack At Radio 104 Fest. Hartford Courant. September 5, 2001. January 31, 2015. Roger Catlin.
  5. Web site: Concert Review: Blink-182's dirty jokes nearly hide the music. Hartford Courant. July 18, 2001. January 31, 2015. Roger Catlin.
  6. Web site: Randy Lewis. Blink-182 Gets Back to Its Punk Business. Los Angeles Times. September 18, 2001. January 31, 2015.