Britney Spears Oops I Did It Again Tour Album
| Bout past Britney Spears | |
| Autographed promotional poster for the tour | |
| Location |
|
|---|---|
| Associated album | Oops!... I Did It Over again |
| Outset date | June xx, 2000 (2000-06-20) |
| Stop date | January xviii, 2001 (2001-01-18) |
| Legs | 2 |
| No. of shows | 88 |
| Supporting acts |
|
| Attendance | 1.41 million |
| Box part | U$43.6 1000000 ($65.52 in 2022 dollars)[1] |
| Britney Spears concert chronology | |
The Oops!... I Did Information technology Once more Tour (billed as Oops!... I Did It Again Tour 2000) was the 3rd concert tour by American entertainer Britney Spears. It supported her second studio album, Oops!... I Did It Once again (2000), and visited Northward America, Europe and Brazil. The bout was appear in Feb 2000, while Spears was in the midst of the (Y'all Bulldoze Me) Crazy Bout. The stage was much more elaborative than her previous tours and featured video screens, fireworks and moving platforms. The setlist was equanimous by songs from her first two studio albums, ...Baby Ane More than Time and Oops!... I Did It Once more as well as a few covers. Showco was the sound company, who used the PRISM arrangement to adapt the show to each venue. Spears used a handheld microphone and a headset during the shows, while an ADAT was used to replace her vocalism during energetic dance routines.
The prove consisted of four segments with each segment existence followed by an interval to the adjacent segment, and information technology ended with an encore. The show began with Spears descending from a giant orb. Most of the songs displayed energetic dance routines with the exception of the second segment, which featured mostly ballads. The encore consisted of a performance with fireworks. The Oops!... I Did It Once again Tour received positive reviews from critics, who praised Spears's energy onstage as well as the band. It was also a commercial success, the reported dates by Billboard averaged $507,786 in grosses and nigh 15,841 in attendance, bringing a total of $43.six 1000000 and more than 1.four million of tickets and became i of the highest-grossing tours of 2000. The Oops!... I Did It Again Tour was broadcast by many channels around the world. Former Wishbone star Mikaila was one of the opening acts for the bout.[2]
Groundwork [edit]
On February 22, 2000, Spears announced a summer bout in support of her 2d studio album, Oops!... I Did Information technology Again (2000).[3] The bout marked the start time Spears toured Europe. She commented, "I'k going to become to Europe, and just basically get everywhere for six months, [...] I've never toured outside of the U.S. I've never experienced other fans in other places, and performing in front of them is going to be so exciting." Before the tour began, Forbes reported that concert promoter SFX Amusement guaranteed her a minimum of $200,000 per show.[5] Bout sponsors from the 2000 leg of the ...Infant One More Time Tour, Got Milk?, and Polaroid, remained. Clairol's Herbal Essences was also added as a sponsor.[half-dozen] Spears recorded a song for the latter called "I've Got the Urge to Herbal" to be used on their radio campaign, though she chose to not attend a photoshoot for the production when she decided to back up an 86-twenty-four hours strike past the Screen Actors Guild (SAG). She afterwards donated $1 from each ticket sold from her Inglewood, California show on July 28, 2000 to the wedlock.[7] For the European Leg of the Bout, Spears originally was going to exercise a co-headlining tour with NSYNC following the grouping'southward No Strings Attached Tour.[8] Spears ended upwardly touring the region solo.
Development [edit]
Jamie King was called as tour director.[9] Tim Miller and Kevin Antunes served as director of production and musical director, respectively.[10] Marker Foffano was chosen as the lightning director.[11] Spears described the tour as "like a Broadway bear witness".[7] The setlist included material from her first studio album ...Babe Ane More Time (1999) as well equally seven songs from Oops!... I Did Information technology Once more. Spears explained, "I've been singing the same material for and so long now. It'll be nice to modify it up a trivial bit."[12] She also talked virtually her expectations for the tour, saying, "I can't wait. I'll take a world tour. I'm going to have more dancers, a bigger phase, more pyro... just a lot bigger".[13] The proscenium stage was much more elaborate than the stage of her previous bout and included video screens, movable platforms and dissimilar props.[14] It cost $2.two 1000000 to build. The tone of the show variated from the showtime: for the performance of "Born to Make You Happy", Spears sang in a set resembling a children's bedroom, complete with large toys and a pillow fight routine. On the reverse, she unveiled a more sophisticated image for "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know", and followed it with raunchy performances for "...Baby One More Time" and "Oops!... I Did Information technology Again".[7]
The sound equipment was provided by Showco who used the PRISM system, which adjusted the show for each venue co-ordinate to its height, width and the coverage required. The sound was mixed by Front of firm engineer Monty Lee Wilkes on a combination of Yamaha PM4000 and PM3000 consoles, an unusual option for Spears'due south shows. He used dbx 903 compressors for kick and snare drums. The compressors were also used on Spears's microphones, a Shure Beta 58A handheld and a Crown CM-311AE headset-mounted capsule. Spears's vocals were mostly live—pre-recorded vocals ran in parallel on an ADAT machine during the shows, and were used to supervene upon her live microphone when the dance routines became too energetic for good phonation command.[15] Spears'due south ring, backline technicians and monitor engineer Raza Sufi were all fitted with in-ear monitors and headset mics, enabling rapid and clear communications around the stage area. Spears did non use them, preferring the ambient audio of a battery of eight Showco SRM wedges spread beyond the downstage area. These were augmented by Showco SS full-range sidefills and a pair of one-by-xviii-inch subs on each side of the stage. Sufi also used a dbx 160A to limit Spears's louder moments, while bankroll vocalists were controlled by a duo of BSS DPR901 dynamic equalizers. Effects were limited to vocal and pulsate reverbs. Amplification for the wedges and the FOH system were all Crown-based, with a pair of drum stool shakers completing the line-upward. All the cables used during the bout were brought from the United states, even in Europe, something unusual in sound product.[15]
Concert synopsis [edit]
The show began with the video introduction "The Britney Spears Experience", in which three images of Spears welcomed spectators to the show.[16] Then, a giant metal orb was lowered onstage and lifted over again to reveal Spears standing behind it, wearing a pink halter summit (some shows It was orange), a side silverish jacket, and glittery jeans.[17] Spears started with ii dance-oriented performances of "(You Drive Me) Crazy" and "Stronger". This was followed past "What U See (Is What U Get)" in which she removed her silver side jacket and she danced on a stripper pole wearing a pink cowboy hat.[18] The deed ended with Spears talking to the audience and sitting on a stool to perform "From the Bottom of My Broken Heart" with her guitarist Skip.
Subsequently she left the stage, there was a video interlude hosted by NSYNC (via screen) and Spears' 2 background singers (ii female person background dancers in Europe) in which contestants did different games in guild to run into Spears. She appeared onstage to meet the chosen fan and then welcomed the audience into her bedroom. Wearing white pajamas and slippers, she performed "Built-in to Make You Happy", which included a dance segment near the end. She then continued with "Lucky" featuring her two background singers (two female background dancers during all the European show) helping Spears getting ready for a typical mean solar day. Halfway through the song during the dance break, her male person dancers all dressed in navy sailor costumes practise a routine before Spears continues the remainder of the vocal dressed as a ship captain. "Sometimes", in which changed dorsum into her white pajamas and slippers (coincidentally an outfit similar to the i she wore in the music video of the song) and featured Spears' and her dancers throwing teddy bears, embankment balls, and squirting the audience with water guns. At the stop, she climbed the staircase and briefly spoke to the audition before moving into a functioning of "Don't Let Me Be The Last To Know", for which she wore a long white wearing apparel trimmed with boa feathers (dressed up much similar in the music video every bit Lucky).[7] [16]
A ring interlude showcasing a mix of funk and progressive rock from her band followed, and Spears reappeared to perform her cover of Sonny & Cher's "The Beat Goes On." During the performance, she was lifted into the air wearing a kimono that covered most of the stage. She continued with "Don't Go Knockin' on My Door" (loosing the kimono wearing a total purple jumpsuit) and her cover of The Rolling Stones's "(I Tin't Go No) Satisfaction", which ended with a dance sequence ready to the original version.
Next, there was a trip the light fantastic interval in which the dancers showed their individual moves while their names appeared on the screens. Spears took the stage again in a conservative schoolgirl outfit to perform "...Baby I More than Time." She ripped it off halfway through the song to reveal a cheerleader ensemble.[7] [16] Spears so thanked the audience, took a bow and left the phase. She returned shortly subsequently (wearing a black two-slice jumpsuit imprinted with orange flames) to perform "Oops!... I Did It Again", that included an extended dance break later on the second chorus, pyrotechnics and other special effects.[xvi] She ended the performance disappearing through a tunnel of burn.[7]
Reception [edit]
The show received positive reviews from critics. Andrew Miller of The Pitch stated "[the concert] at Sandstone proved that many [of Spears'south] criticisms are off-base observations from people who have never actually attended 1 of these stars' shows. The music came from a talented band, not a DAT, and the bass lines to such songs as "... Baby I More than Fourth dimension" and "The Beat Goes On" rose to a funky growl in the live setting. For another, Spears' vocals were the existent affair, as she sang in an alluringly low tone [...] merely capably hit the loftier notes [...], still, she left the upper-octave duties to her background singers [...] during Spears' most strenuous dance routines".[16] Richard Leiby of The Washington Post believed that the testify "[was] great".[19] Dan Aquilante of the New York Post said that Spears "seemed to be enjoying the show as much as her fans. Perhaps it was the Mariah-similar cowboy chapeau pushed dorsum on her noggin or possibly the stripper'south pole borrowed from Madonna'due south prop closet, [...] Spears was in her element and having a ball".[twenty] Letta Tayler of Newsday said "For half the testify, she remained the one-time Britney, the budding teen who dreamed of romance. Merely the rest of the time, she was a full-throttle tease, with sprayed- on wearing apparel, a hard-edged mental attitude and a harder edge to her techno and hip-hop- coated popular to match".[21]
Jon Pareles of The New York Times stated "What you lot go from this 18-year-old singer is a large grinning, a piddling voice, gushes of sincerity, hardworking trip the light fantastic toe routines, shameless advertisement and a decision to play both sides of pubescence for all they're worth".[17] Jim Farber of New York Daily News commented that "Despite such spicy bits, the core of Britney's concert suffered from the familiarity and cheesiness of all teen road shows these days. The sparklers, explosions and mandatory flying dancers conformed to the corniness of theme park entertainment".[18] The ticket prices were prepare at $32 in North America. The reported dates averaged $507,786 in grosses and 15,841 in omnipresence. Susanne Ault of Billboard also reported that many of the shows sold out in one 24-hour interval.[22] The tour had a total gross of $40.5 million.[23] Information technology became the tenth highest-grossing tour of the year in North America, as well as the second highest-grossing tour past a solo artist, only behind Tina Turner's 20 Four Seven Bout.[24] Roger Moore of the Orlando Sentinel analyzed Spears to emulate "a lot of Janet Jackson's old concert act and cleaned it upward for a younger audience", likewise noting choreography resembling "Rhythm Nation" precision."[25]
Broadcasts [edit]
On Nov 30, 2000, the September 20 concert at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans aired on Play tricks. The special was titled Britney Spears: In that location's No Identify Similar Habitation.[26] One of the shows performed at London Arena was filmed and broadcast by Sky1.[27] The prove at Rock In Rio was broadcast on DirecTV.[28]
Prepare listing [edit]
- "(You Drive Me) Crazy"
- "Stronger"
- "What U See (Is What U Get)"
- "From the Lesser of My Broken Heart"
- "Born to Make Y'all Happy"
- "Lucky"
- "Sometimes"
- "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know"
- "The Beat Goes On"
- "Don't Go Knockin' on My Door"
- "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
- "...Babe One More Fourth dimension"
- Encore
- "Oops!... I Did It Over again"
Source:[16]
Shows [edit]
| Engagement | Urban center | Country | Venue | Opening act(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America[29] | ||||
| June 20, 2000 | Columbia | The states | Merriweather Post Pavilion | BBMak Innosense No Authority |
| June 21, 2000 | Hartford | Meadows Music Theatre | ||
| June 23, 2000 | Darien | Darien Lake Performing Arts Center | ||
| June 24, 2000 | Hershey | Star Pavilion | ||
| June 25, 2000 | Scranton | Coors Light Amphitheatre | ||
| June 27, 2000 | Wantagh | Jones Beach Theater | ||
| June 28, 2000 | ||||
| June 29, 2000 | ||||
| June xxx, 2000 | ||||
| July 2, 2000 | Holmdel | PNC Bank Arts Center | ||
| July three, 2000 | ||||
| July 4, 2000 | Bristow | Nissan Pavilion | ||
| July 5, 2000 | Camden | Due east-Centre | ||
| July 7, 2000 | Tinley Park | World Music Theatre | ||
| July eight, 2000 | Milwaukee | Marcus Amphitheater | ||
| July 9, 2000 | Clarkston | Pino Knob Music Theatre | ||
| July 10, 2000 | ||||
| July 16, 2000 | Maryland Heights | Riverport Amphitheatre | Mikaila C-Note Nobody's Affections | |
| July 17, 2000 | Bonner Springs | Sandstone Amphitheater | ||
| July 19, 2000 | Dallas | Smirnoff Music Middle | Mikaila C-Note A-Teens Nobody's Affections | |
| July 20, 2000 | San Antonio | Alamodome | ||
| July 21, 2000 | The Woodlands | Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion | ||
| July 22, 2000 | ||||
| July 27, 2000 | Albuquerque | Mesa del Sol | ||
| July 28, 2000 | Phoenix | Blockbuster Desert Heaven Pavilion | ||
| July 29, 2000 | Irvine | Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre | 2Gether Mikaila C-Note A-Teens Nobody's Angel | |
| July 30, 2000 | Inglewood | Great Western Forum | 2Gether Mikaila Aaron Carter A-Teens | |
| July 31, 2000[a] | ||||
| August 1, 2000 | Concord | Concord Pavilion | Mikaila Aaron Carter A-Teens | |
| August 3, 2000 | San Diego | San Diego Sports Loonshit | 2Gether Aaron Carter Mikaila A-Teens | |
| August 4, 2000 | Las Vegas | MGM Grand Garden Arena | Mikaila Josh Keaton Aaron Carter A-Teens | |
| August five, 2000 | San Bernardino | Blockbuster Pavilion | ||
| August 6, 2000 | Wheatland | Sacramento Valley Amphitheatre | ||
| August 8, 2000 | Mountain View | Shoreline Amphitheatre | ||
| August 10, 2000 | Portland | Rose Garden | ||
| Baronial eleven, 2000 | George | The Gorge Amphitheatre | ||
| August 12, 2000 | Vancouver | Canada | General Motors Place | 2Gether Mikaila Josh Keaton Aaron Carter A-Teens |
| August 14, 2000 | Salt Lake City | United States | Delta Center | Mikaila Josh Keaton Aaron Carter A-Teens |
| August 21, 2000 | Burgettstown | Postal service-Gazette Pavilion | Sister 2 Sister Josh Keaton Take v | |
| August 22, 2000 | Toronto | Canada | Molson Amphitheatre | |
| August 23, 2000 | Montreal | Molson Centre | ||
| Baronial 24, 2000[b] | Syracuse | United states of america | Empire Expo Middle | |
| August 25, 2000 | Atlantic City | Etess Arena | ||
| Baronial 28, 2000 | Mansfield | Tweeter Center | Sister two Sister PYT 2Gether | |
| August xxx, 2000 | Saratoga Springs | Saratoga Performing Arts Center | Sister 2 Sister PYT Take 5 Innocence BBMak 2Gether | |
| August 31, 2000 | Cleveland | Gund Loonshit | Sister 2 Sister PYT Take 5 Innocence BBMak | |
| September 1, 2000 | Knoxville | Thompson–Boling Arena | ||
| September 2, 2000 | Noblesville | Deer Creek Music Center | Sister two Sister PYT Have five Innocence BBMak 2Gether | |
| September 3, 2000 | Columbus | Polaris Amphitheater | Sister 2 Sister PYT 2Gether | |
| September nine, 2000 | Orlando | TD Waterhouse Middle | Don Phillips PYT BBMak | |
| September 10, 2000 | West Palm Beach | Coral Sky Amphitheatre | Don Phillips Innosense PYT Take 5 | |
| September 12, 2000 | Raleigh | Alltel Pavilion | Don Phillips Innosense BBMak PYT Accept five | |
| September xiii, 2000 | Charlotte | Blockbuster Pavilion | Don Phillips Innosense PYT Take 5 | |
| September fourteen, 2000 | Virginia Beach | GTE Virginia Beach Amphitheater | Don Phillips Innosense BBMak PYT Take 5 | |
| September 15, 2000 | Burgettstown | Post-Gazette Pavilion | Don Phillips Innosense PYT Take 5 | |
| September 17, 2000 | Nashville | AmSouth Amphitheatre | Don Phillips Innosense BBMak PYT Take 5 | |
| September 18, 2000 | Atlanta | Coca-Cola Lakewood Amphitheatre | ||
| September twenty, 2000 | New Orleans | Louisiana Superdome | BBMak | |
| Europe[30] | ||||
| October 10, 2000 | London | England | Wembley Arena | North/A |
| Oct eleven, 2000 | ||||
| October 12, 2000 | ||||
| October 13, 2000 | Manchester | Manchester Evening News Arena | ||
| October 14, 2000 | ||||
| October 17, 2000 | Bremen | Germany | Stadthalle Bremen | |
| October 18, 2000 | Ghent | Belgium | Flanders Expo | |
| Oct xix, 2000 | Dortmund | Germany | Westfalenhallen | |
| October twenty, 2000 | Stuttgart | Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle | ||
| October 22, 2000 | Barcelona | Spain | Palau Sant Jordi | |
| October 24, 2000 | Milan | Italian republic | FilaForum | |
| October 25, 2000 | Zürich | Switzerland | Hallenstadion | |
| Oct 26, 2000 | Munich | Germany | Olympiahalle | |
| October 28, 2000 | Kiel | Ostseehalle | ||
| October 29, 2000 | Berlin | Velodrom | ||
| October xxx, 2000 | Hanover | Preussag Loonshit | ||
| November 1, 2000 | Leipzig | Mesehalle | ||
| November 2, 2000 | Frankfurt | Festhalle Frankfurt | ||
| November 4, 2000 | Arnhem | Netherlands | GelreDome | |
| November 7, 2000 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Scandinavium | |
| November 8, 2000 | Oslo | Norway | Oslo Spektrum | |
| November 9, 2000 | Stockholm | Sweden | Stockholm Earth Arena | |
| November 10, 2000 | Copenhagen | Kingdom of denmark | Valby-Hallen | |
| November 13, 2000 | Cologne | Germany | Kölnarena | |
| November 14, 2000 | Paris | French republic | Zénith de Paris | |
| Nov 15, 2000 | London | England | London Arena | |
| November 16, 2000 | ||||
| Nov 20, 2000 | Birmingham | NEC Arena | ||
| November 21, 2000 | ||||
| South America[31] [32] | ||||
| January 18, 2001[c] | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | City of Rock | N/A |
Cancelled shows [edit]
| Date | City | Land | Venue | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 26, 2000[29] | Denver | United States | Red Rocks Amphitheatre | Product difficulties[33] |
Box office score data [edit]
| City | Venue | Omnipresence | Revenue[34] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hershey | Hersheypark Stadium | 28,701 / 28,701 (100%) | $1,014,096 |
| Wantagh | Jones Beach Amphitheatre | 56,550 / 56,550 (100%) | $ii,055,861 |
| Woodlands | C. W. Mitchell Pavilion | 25,916 / 25,972 (99%) | $912,149 |
| Inglewood | The Forum | 25,756 / 29,000 (89%) | $977,849 |
| George | Gorge Amphitheatre | 20,000 / xx,000 (100%) | $814,630 |
| Atlanta | Coca-Cola Lakewood Amphitheatre | eighteen,254 / 18,954 (96%) | $596,110 |
| Total | 175,177 / 179,177 (98%) | $6,370,695 | |
Notes [edit]
- ^ The July 31, 2000 concert at Great Western Forum in Inglewood was originally scheduled to take place at the Hollywood Basin in Los Angeles.
- ^ The August 24, 2000 concert at the Empire Expo Center in Syracuse was role of the Dandy New York State Fair.
- ^ The Jan 18, 2001 concert at the City of Stone in Rio de Janeiro was office of the Stone in Rio.
References [edit]
- Blandford, James R. (2002). Britney. Omnibus Printing. ISBN978-0-7119-9419-5.
- ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Toll Alphabetize for Apply as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Existent Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Guild. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (approximate) 1800–". Retrieved January 1, 2020.
- ^ "Immature fans fueling Britney Spears' career". Oklahoman. 2000-07-23. Archived from the original on 2020-07-20. Retrieved 2021-08-28 .
- ^ Basham, David (Feb 22, 2000). "Britney Spears Announces Summertime Tour". MTV. Archived from the original on January eighteen, 2010. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ "New Stars of Money: Britney Spears tunes in to teen bucks". Forbes. 2000-03-xx. Archived from the original on 2021-03-06.
- ^ Kessler, Merle (2000-08-09). "The Britney identify". Salon.com. Archived from the original on 2000-08-sixteen. Retrieved January 21, 2010.
- ^ a b c d due east f Blandford 2002, p. 69
- ^ Gelman, Jason (April 21, 2000). "'N Sync Preparing For Bout And Filming New Video". Yahoo! Music. Archived from the original on Baronial 12, 2011. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
- ^ "Resumee & Awards". jamieking.com. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
- ^ Kenny, Tom (November 1, 2001). "Tour Profile". Mix. Archived from the original on January 31, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
- ^ "New Selected Credits for E.Thou.F. Lightning". emflightning.com. Archived from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved Jan 28, 2010.
- ^ Connelly, Chris. "Britney Spears: Doing It Again, Function II". MTV. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ MTV News Staff (Apr 12, 2000). "Britney Ponders "Baby" Follow-Upwardly". MTV. Archived from the original on September 26, 2004. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ Carter, Nick (July 10, 2000). "Spears' flashy show somehow both innocent and sexy". Milwaukee Journal Watch . Retrieved Jan xx, 2010.
- ^ a b Mann, Mike (February 2, 2001). "Bout Contour: Britney Spears in Europe". Mix. Archived from the original on March ix, 2009. Retrieved Jan 28, 2010.
- ^ a b c d eastward f Miller, Andrew (July xx, 2000). "Britney Spears/Mikaila". The Pitch. Archived from the original on Dec four, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ a b Pareles, Jon (June 29, 2000). "Popular REVIEW; The Oops Daughter With the Big Smile and the Little Voice". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 21, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ a b Farber, Jim (June 29, 2000). "SEXY BRITNEY Even so A MYSTERY". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved January twenty, 2010.
- ^ Leiby, Richard (July 6, 2000). "The Britney Gap". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on Baronial 28, 2017. Retrieved January twenty, 2010.
- ^ Aquilante, Dan (June 29, 2000). "BEACH BLANKET BRITNEY". New York Post. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved Jan 20, 2010.
- ^ Tayler, Letta (June 29, 2000). "Sugariness Popular Sound of Hard-Core Soft Sell". Newsday. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved Jan 20, 2010.
- ^ Ault, Susanne (February 7, 2004). "CCE Steers Spears' Tour Towards Changing Audition". Billboard. Archived from the original on May 29, 2013. Retrieved Dec 25, 2009.
- ^ "Britney Spears on 100 Meridian Celebrities". Forbes. 2000. Archived from the original on June 4, 2012. Retrieved January 21, 2010.
- ^ Hiatt, Brian (December 28, 2000). "Tina Turner, 'NSYNC Had Twelvemonth'southward Elevation-Grossing Tours". MTV. Archived from the original on February viii, 2010. Retrieved January 20, 2010.
- ^ "Teen Queen Britney Does It Once more!". Orlando Sentinel. Oct 9, 2000. Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
- ^ Bianculli, David (November 30, 2000). "Telly TONIGHT". New York Daily News . Retrieved Jan 21, 2010. [ dead link ]
- ^ "SKY TO AIR BRITNEY Show". Broadcast. September 22, 2000. Archived from the original on October i, 2012. Retrieved January 21, 2010.
- ^ "Big rockfest gets rollin' in Rio". Deseret News. January 31, 2001. Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved Jan 21, 2010.
- ^ a b Tour
- ^ Tour
- ^ Mancini, Roberto (August 4, 2000). "'NSYNC, Britney To Stone Rio". MTV. Archived from the original on Nov 7, 2012. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
- ^ "Britney and Madonna 'to sing duet'". 19 Jan 2001. Archived from the original on x October 2013. Retrieved thirty May 2014.
- ^ "Britney Spears cancels Denver show". Denver Mail service. Archived from the original on 2014-06-06. Retrieved 2014-06-02 .
- ^ Box office information for N American leg:
- https://books.google.com/books?id=kxEEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA16
- https://books.google.com/books?id=ZhAEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA18
- https://books.google.com/books?id=fBEEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA18
- https://books.google.com/books?id=QBIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA14
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oops!..._I_Did_It_Again_Tour
0 Response to "Britney Spears Oops I Did It Again Tour Album"
Postar um comentário