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Areíto World Tour

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Areito World Tour
Tour by Juan Luis Guerra
Associated albumAreíto
Start dateJuly 3, 1993
End dateOctober 16, 1993
Legs3
No. of shows40
Juan Luis Guerra concert chronology

Areíto World Tour is the second world tour by Dominican merengue superstar Juan Luis Guerra to promote his sixth studio album Areíto (1992). Consisting of three legs, covering the United States, South America and Europe, the tour started on July 3, 1993, at Radio City Music Hall in New York and ended on October 16, 1993, at Rotterdam Ahoy in the Netherlands. The tour marked Guerra's first concerts in Brazil, Portugal and the Netherlands.

Sponsored by soft drink Bitter Kas, it was Guerra's most intense tour at the time, performing over 40 shows on three months including nearly 30 shows in Spain. Following the end of the tour, Guerra announced his retirement from doing public presentations.

Background

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On July 4, 1992, Guerra announced that he would cancel the last leg of his Bachata Rosa World Tour to focus on recording a new album and release something fresh to the fans. Guerra also suffered an eye affliction and had surgery to correct it. Areíto was released on December 8, 1992, in the US and over two million of copies were shipped worldwide, one of the largest initial shipments ever for a Spanish-language album.[1][2]

John Lannert from the Artist & Music section of Billboard announced that the tour had 40 stops in the United States, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, England, and Germany. The tour was produced by Water Brother Productions. However, the concerts in England, Germany, Venezuela and Peru did not materialize for unknown reasons.[3] Guerra travelled with 18 musicians, 10 engineers, smoke machines and video screens.[4]

Reception

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Critical reception

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The tour received positive reviews by critics. Wilma Randle from the Chicago Tribune attended the concert at the Chicago Theater and wrote a positive review highlighting the setlist and energy on the stage.[5] Enrique Lopetegui from the Los Angeles Times praised the concert at the Greek Theater in an article titled "Guerra Gives Fans Satisfying Show".[6]

Commercial reception

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Ticket prices for the US concerts ranged between $30 and $40.[7] However, for the concert in Los Angeles tickets were up to $47. The concerts in the United States reported great attendance. The concerts at New York's Radio City Music Hall were reported sold out.[8] The concert at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles was not sold out, however, a large crowd were reported in the venue.[9] However, attendance at 9 July show at the James L. Knight Center in Miami was disappointing, 4,000 of the 6,000 seats, significantly less than the sold-out show in Miami Arena on the Bachata Rosa Tour in December 1991.[10]

In Argentina, he performed at the Estadio Obras in Buenos Aires from 23 to 25 July, with three sold-out shows.

In Spain, the tour visited 20 cities. Some cities had a second show due the high demand. The Madrid concerts on 14 and 15 September at Las Vegas were sold out with attendance of 40,000 fans and 9,000 fans at Sevilla on 22 September concert.[11][12] The two concerts in Barcelona at the Palau Sant Jordi on 5 and 6 October were sold out with 41,644 seats. A concert at the La Romareda in Zaragoza on 10 October had an attendance of 28,541 (of 30,000 seats) and the Las Palmas concert on 30 September at the Insular Stadium had attendance of 18,517 (of 20,000). Over 16,000 attended the concerts at Palacio de Conciertos y Granada.[13] In the Netherlands, the concert in the Ahoy in Rotterdam on 16 October was sold out, with over 10,000 tickets sold, becoming the first merengue artist to do so.[14]

Tour dates

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Date City Country Venue
North America
July 2, 1993[15] New York City United States Radio City Music Hall
July 3, 1993[7]
July 4, 1993
July 9, 1993 Miami James L. Knight Center
July 10, 1993[16] Chicago Chicago Theater
July 11, 1993[17] Los Angeles Greek Theater
South America
July 21, 1993[18] Santiago Chile Arena Santiago
July 23, 1993 Buenos Aires Argentina Estadio Obras
July 24, 1993
July 25, 1993
August 7, 1993 Lima Peru
August 10, 1993[19] São Paulo Brasil Olympia
August 11, 1993
August 12, 1993[20] Rio de Janeiro Hotel Rio Grande
August 14, 1993 Caracas Venezuela Poliedro de Caracas
Europe[21]
August 26, 1993[22][23] Benidorm Spain Plaza De Toros
August 28, 1993 Malaga Plaza de Toros Malaga
August 29, 1993 Puerto Real Colegio Lasalle
August 30, 1993[13] Granada Palacio de los Conciertos
August 31, 1993
September 3, 1993[24] Bilbao Plaza de Toros Vista Alegre
September 4, 1993 Gijon Hipodromo
September 6, 1993 A Coruña Coliseum da Coruña
September 7, 1993 Ourense Plazo Paca Paz
September 10, 1993 Cascais Portugal Plaza de Toros
September 11, 1993 Almendralejo Spain Plaza de Toros
September 12, 1993 Guadalajara Plaza de Toros
September 14, 1993 Madrid Plaza de Toros Las Vegas
September 15, 1993
September 18, 1993[25] Tenerife Estadio Municipal Francisco Peraza
September 22, 1993[26] Serville Auditorio Padro de San Sebastian
September 23, 1993
September 25, 1993 Cordoba Plaza de Toros
September 28, 1993[27] Valencia Plaza de Toros
September 30, 1993 Las Palmas Insular Stadium
October 5, 1993 Barcelona Palau Sant Jordi
October 6, 1993
October 8, 1993 Murcia Plaza de Toros de Murcia
October 9, 1993 Alicante
October 11, 1993 Zaragoza Estadio La Romareda
October 16, 1993 Rotherdam Netherlands Ahoy

Box office data

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City Country Attendance Box office
Barcelona Spain 41,644 / 41,644 (100%) $798,516[28]
Zaragoza 28,541 / 30,000 (95%) $438,141[28]
Las Palmas 18,517 / 20,000 (93%) $351,895[28]
Total 88,702 / 91,644 (97%) $1,588,552

References

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  1. ^ Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 1992-11-28.
  2. ^ Lannert, John. "Juan Luis Guerra Delivers Hotly Awaited Follow-up" (PDF). Billboard. p. 15.
  3. ^ Lannert, John (July 10, 1993). "Latin Notas" (PDF). Billboard. p. 26.
  4. ^ Lopetegui, Enrique (1993-07-03). "Guerra: The Hot Tropical Mixmaster". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
  5. ^ Randle, Wilma (July 12, 1993). "A Changed Guerra Gets Footloose and Fancy Free: [North Sports Final Edition]". p. 14. ProQuest 283594500.
  6. ^ "Guerra Gives Fans Satisfying Show: [Home Edition]". Los Angeles Times. July 13, 1993. ProQuest 281983487.
  7. ^ a b "Arts and Entertainment – Pop: [Schedule]". The New York Times. June 13, 1993. p. A24. ProQuest 429113758.
  8. ^ "Dominican Pop Star Returns to New York: [Nassau and Suffolk Edition]". Newsday. July 6, 1993. p. 51. ProQuest 278673674.
  9. ^ "Salsa that strikes a global nerve: [Morning Edition]". The Orange Country Register. July 13, 1993. pp. F03. ProQuest 272630175.
  10. ^ "Mario Bauzá: The Originator Of Cubop; 4.40 Holds Back; 'Tierra' Is Sky -High" (PDF). Billboard. July 24, 1993. p. 42.
  11. ^ "Juan Luis Guerra: "Camarón de la Isla y García Lorca son básicos en mi trabajo" – Tour Areito | El Correo de Andalucía" (in European Spanish). 21 September 1993. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
  12. ^ "El merengue triunfa en Las Ventas". El País (in Spanish). 1993-09-15. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
  13. ^ a b Hoy, Granada (2016-03-25). "25 años del Palacio de los Conciertos". Granada Hoy (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2023-11-18.
  14. ^ Llewellyn, Howell (September 18, 1993). "Merengue Star Sells Out Show In Rotterdam" (PDF). Billboard. p. 55.
  15. ^ "Ramiro Burr, Latin Notes Guerra set to launch 'Areito' world". San Antonio Express-News. June 6, 1993. ProQuest 261488184.
  16. ^ Obejas., Achy (July 9, 1993). "For Guerra, Music Is the Language: [North Sports Final, CN Edition]". Chicago Tribune. ProQuest 283566442.
  17. ^ Nagel, Juan Carlos (July 10, 1993). "Con un segundo aire: El cantante y compositor dominicano Juan Luis Guerra, se presentara en concierto manana domingo en Los Angeles". La Opinion. pp. 1E. ProQuest 368206063.
  18. ^ "Juan Luis Guerra pide que abaraten las entradas a sus actuaciones". El País (in Spanish). 1993-07-22. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  19. ^ "Juan Luis Guerra apresenta novo Show no Olympia". A Tribuna. July 15, 1993.
  20. ^ "A voz caliente de un dominicano". Jornal do Brasil. July 15, 1993.
  21. ^ "famosos en la publicidad juan luis guerra anunc – Compra venta en todocoleccion". www.todocoleccion.net. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
  22. ^ Cambio 16 (in Spanish). Información y Revistas, S.A. 1993.
  23. ^ "Tele 5 retransmitirá el miércoles el Festival de Benidorm". El País (in Spanish). 1993-08-23. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  24. ^ "juan luis guerra 4:40. entrada completa concier – Compra venta en todocoleccion". www.todocoleccion.net. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  25. ^ "Programa de 1993 de las fiestas del Stmo. Cristo de La Laguna". www.cristodelalaguna.org. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
  26. ^ ""Camaron de la Isla y Garcia son basicos de mi trabajo" – Juan Luis Guerra y 4:40 presentan esta semana en Sevilla el Tour Areito por partida doble". El Correo de Andalucia. September 21, 1993. p. 43.
  27. ^ "juan luis guerra – valencia – tour areito – bit – Compra venta en todocoleccion". www.todocoleccion.net. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
  28. ^ a b c "Amusement Business – Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. November 6, 1991.