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List of Nightwish concert tours

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nightwish ending a concert in 2022. From left to right: Koskinen, Holopainen, Jansen, Donockley, Hahto, and Vuorinen.

This is thelist of concert tours played by the Finnishsymphonic metal bandNightwish.

Nightwish was formed in 1996 by lead songwriter and keyboardistTuomas Holopainen, guitaristEmppu Vuorinen, and lead singerTarja Turunen, soon joined by drummerJukka Nevalainen in 1997 and then bassistSami Vänskä in 1998.[1] In 2001 Vänskä was replaced byMarko Hietala, who also took over the male vocalist role, and in 2005 Turunen was fired to be replaced byAnette Olzon in 2007 and eventually byFloor Jansen in 2012.[1] In July 2019, Nevalainen, who had been inactive since 2014 due to health issues, announced that he would not be returning to the band, withKai Hahto, who had acted as his replacement since 2014, becoming the official drummer.[1] Hietala parted ways with the band in January 2021, andJukka Koskinen was announced as his replacement in August 2022.[2] Multi-instrumentalistTroy Donockley, who had been joining the band in studio and live since 2007, was made an official member in 2013.[1]

Nightwish is the third-best-selling band and musical entity in Finland withcertified sales of nearly 900,000certified copies and is also the most successful Finnish band worldwide, selling more than 10 million records.[3] From 1997 until the touring hiatus which began in 2024, the band has performed almost 1000 shows around the world.[4]

The First Tour of the Angels

[edit]
The First Tour of the Angels
Tour byNightwish
Location
  • Europe
Associated album
Start dateDecember 31, 1997
End dateNovember 13, 1998
No. of shows8
Nightwish concert chronology
  • The First Tour of the Angels
    (1997–1998)
  • Summer of Wilderness
    (1999)

After releasing their debut studio album,Angels Fall First, in November 1997, the band played their first show in their hometownKitee for around 400 people on 31 December 1997, but after that they were able to play only seven more shows across Finland the following year as Turunen was still finishing her studies at the time, and both Holopainen and Vuorinen had their military obligations to fulfill.[1] These early concerts were later dubbed "The First Tour of The Angels" by the band, and they would only start gigging heavily after the release of theirOceanborn album in December 1998.[1]

Samppa Hirvonen joined them as a sessional live member as a bass guitarist, while Marianna Pellinen was also a sessional live member as an additional keyboard player and a backing vocalist for Turunen.[5]Sami Vänskä would later join the band instead of Hirvonen.[1]

Set list

[edit]
  1. "Elvenpath"
  2. "The Carpenter"
  3. "Tutankhamen"
  4. "Angels Fall First"
  5. "Know Why the Nightingale Sings"
  6. "Astral Romance"
  7. "Beauty and the Beast"

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 1997 and 1998 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
31 December 1997KiteeFinlandHuvikeskus
9 January 1998HelsinkiLepakko Club
13 February 1998Tavastia Club
14 February 1998PoriJungle Jane
25 February 1998JoensuuKellari Club
27 February 1998JyväskyläLutakko Club
6 March 1998SiilinjärviHuvikumpu Club
13 November 1998KiteeHuvikeskus

Band

Additional musicians

  • Samppa Hirvonen – bass
  • Marianna Pellinen – additional keyboards, backing vocals

Summer of Wilderness

[edit]
Summer of Wilderness
Tour byNightwish
Location
  • Europe
Associated album
Start dateJanuary 22, 1999
End dateAugust 14, 1999
No. of shows28
Nightwish concert chronology
  • The First Tour of the Angels
    (1997–1998)
  • Summer of Wilderness
    (1999)
  • Oceanborn Europe Tour
    (1999)

After releasing their second studio album,Oceanborn, in December 1998, the band played a few shows in early 1999 before started touring more often in May, gigging heavily across Finland until late August, in a series of shows the band dubbed "Summer of Wilderness", playing not only headlining dates but also taking part in open air festivals as well as supporting big names at the time, such asStratovarius andTarot.[5] It was their first tour with bassistSami Vänskä, andTapio Wilska, who recorded vocals onOceanborn for the tracks "Devil and the Deep Dark Ocean" and "Pharaoh Sails to Orion", usually joined the band onstage to perform these two songs.[1]

Later that year the band would tour Europe for the first time supportingRage.[1]

Set list

[edit]
  1. Sacrament of Wilderness"
  2. "Elvenpath"
  3. "Stargazers"
  4. "Passion and the Opera"
  5. "Know Why the Nightingale Sings"
  6. "Devil & the Deep Dark Ocean"
  7. "Walking in the Air"(Howard Blake cover)
  8. "Gethsemane"
  9. "Astral Romance"
  10. "The Pharaoh Sails to Orion"
    Encore
  11. "Beauty and the Beast"

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 1999 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
22 January 1999HelsinkiFinlandTavastia Club
13 February 1999TurkuFeeniks Club
6 March 1999HelsinkiLepakko Club
31 March 1999TamperePakkahuone Theatre
10 April 1999NivalaTuiskula Club
21 May 1999VantaaVernissa Club
22 May 1999LappajärviHalkosaari Club
27 May 1999LieksaBrahesale Theater
28 May 1999JoensuuSilva Metsämessut
4 June 1999HelsinkiTavastia Club
5 June 1999SomeroSommerstock Festival
6 June 1999KarisKattoparkkirock Fest
11 June 1999EuraEurastock Festival
12 June 1999KauhajokiCity Kasino
19 June 1999SeinäjokiProvinssirock Festival
24 June 1999JämsäHimos Festival
25 June 1999KalajokiHiekkasärkkä Club
PudasjärviJyrkkäkoski Club
26 June 1999NurmijärviNummirock Festival
KouvolaMidnight Party Planet
3 July 1999EnoKanavarantarock Fest
7 July 1999TampereTammerfest
9 July 1999HelsinkiTuska Open Air
RuovesiNotarock Festival
16 July 1999KiuruvesiKorpeerock Festival
18 July 1999JoensuuIlosaarirock
30 July 1999LiperiSuvisouturock Fest
31 July 1999UtajärviUntorock Fest
7 August 1999SuomussalmiSuviyön Sumutus
8 August 1999KorsoAnkkarock Festival
14 August 1999LohjaKesärock Festival
SaloVuohisrock Festival

Band

Oceanborn Europe Tour

[edit]
Oceanborn Europe Tour
Tour byNightwish
Location
  • Europe
Associated album
Start dateNovember 12, 1999
End dateDecember 12, 1999
No. of shows25
Nightwish concert chronology
  • Summer of Wilderness
    (1999)
  • Oceanborn Europe Tour
    (1999)
  • Wishmaster World Tour
    (2000–2001)

After gigging heavily across Finland until August 1999, the band was hired to support German bandRage across Europe after their Oceanborn album also charted inGermany.[5] The two bands got along fine, but as the tour progressed Nightwish's popularity also grew, with people often leaving after Nightwish's set, which led to tensions between crews, with Nightwish's set soon being shortened, and also on the last dates, they were denied a soundcheck.[5] Despite this, Nightwish enjoyed the tour which helped them to hone their act and grow tighter as a band.[5]

Rage's drummer at the time,Mike Terrana, would eventually join Tarja's support band for her eventual solo career in 2007.[6]

Set list

[edit]
  1. "Stargazers"
  2. "Gethsemane"
  3. "Passion and the Opera"
  4. "Devil & the Deep Dark Ocean"
  5. "Sacrament of Wilderness"
  6. "Swanheart"
  7. "The Pharaoh Sails to Orion"
  8. "Walking in the Air"(Howard Blake cover)
  9. "Elvenpath"
  10. "Astral Romance"
  11. "Know Why the Nightingale Sings"

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 1999 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
12 November 1999MarkneukirchenGermanySchützenhaus
13 November 1999KatowicePolandMega Club
14 November 1999SprembergGermanyMTS Club
15 November 1999BerlinKesselhaus
16 November 1999HamburgMarkthalle
18 November 1999GroningenNetherlandsVera Club
19 November 1999OsnabrückGermanyWorks Club
20 November 1999VosselaarBelgiumBiebob Club
21 November 1999BochumGermanyZeche Club
22 November 1999SaarbrückenGarage Club
24 November 1999BarcelonaSpainSala Mephisto
25 November 1999MadridSala Macumba
26 November 1999AvilésQuattro Club
27 November 1999BergaraSala Jam
28 November 1999ValenciaGarage Club
30 November 1999GenevaSwitzerlandUndertown Club
1 December 1999PrattelnZ7 Club
2 December 1999TurinItalySupermarket Club
3 December 1999ViennaAustriaPlanet Music
4 December 1999KaufbeurenGermanyZeppenlinhalle
6 December 1999OffenbachHafenbahn Club
8 December 1999BraunschweigFBZ Club
9 December 1999CologneLive Music Hall
10 December 1999Bad SalzungenKeller Werk
11 December 1999FreibergTrivoli Club
12 December 1999LudwigsburgRockfabrik

Band

Wishmaster World Tour

[edit]
Wishmaster World Tour
Tour byNightwish
Nightwish live atRuisrock on July 7, 2001
Location
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • North America
  • South America
Associated album
Start dateMay 15, 2000
End dateSeptember 15, 2001
No. of shows86
Nightwish concert chronology
  • Oceanborn Europe Tour
    (1999)
  • Wishmaster World Tour
    (2000–2001)
  • World Tour of the Century
    (2002–2003)

The band's third studio album,Wishmaster, hit Number 1 in Finland and also charted inGermany andFrance, thus allowing the band to host a headlining world tour.[5] In July, they became the second finnish band to do a headlining tour inSouth America, afterStratovarius in 1996, where they enjoyed a huge popularity and attracted over 4 thousand people for their show inSão Paulo, also becoming the first European band to play inPanama and later that year would be the first Finnish metal band to host shows inCanada.[5] For their European tour between October and November, they were supported by supergroupSinergy, whose bassist,Marko Hietala, would eventually join Nightwish.[5] The last show of the year inTampere was recorded and later released asFrom Wishes to Eternity, the first live DVD by a Finnish group.[1]

In 2001, the band released theOver the Hills and Far Away EP and spend most of the year touring mostly in Finland, but also played headlining and festival dates in Europe, also performing inSouth Korea in a festival in front of over 50 thousand people.[5] The last show of 2001 in the Finnish city ofNivala was also their last show with Sami Vänskä, later replaced by Hietala, and this was also the last tour where Holopainen sang lead vocals, with Hietala also taking over the lead male vocals after joining.[1]

Set lists

[edit]

2000

  1. She Is My Sin"
  2. Gethsemane"
  3. The Kinslayer"
  4. Deep Silent Complete"
  5. The Pharaoh Sails to Orion"
  6. Come Cover Me"
  7. Wanderlust"
  8. Crimson Tide"(Hans Zimmer cover) / Deep Blue Sea(Trevor Rabin cover)(medley, instrumental)
  9. Swanheart"
  10. "Elvenpath" / "FantasMic"(part 3)
  11. "Dead Boy's Poem"
  12. "Sacrament of Wilderness"
    Encore
  13. "Walking in the Air"(Howard Blake cover)
  14. "Beauty and the Beast"
  15. "Wishmaster"

2001

  1. The Kinslayer"
  2. "She Is My Sin"
  3. "10th Man Down"
  4. "Elvenpath" / "FantasMic"(part 3)
  5. "Over the Hills and Far Away"(Gary Moore cover)
  6. "Come Cover Me"
  7. "Deep Silent Complete"
  8. "Sleeping Sun"
  9. "Sacrament of Wilderness"
    Encore
  10. "Walking in the Air"(Howard Blake cover)
  11. "Wishmaster"

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 2000 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
15 May 2000VosselaarBelgiumBiebob Club
20 May 2000KiteeFinlandIce Hall
24 May 2000OuluWoodoo Night Club
25 May 2000KuopioClone Club
26 May 2000MikkeliZicZac Club
27 May 2000ImatraOnnenpäivät Halle
31 May 2000HelsinkiNosturi Club
1 June 2000KouvolaRubin Fest
2 June 2000TamperePakkahuone Theatre
3 June 2000VirratHiekkaranta Halle
12 June 2000LeipzigGermanyWave-Gotik-Treffen
22 June 2000NurmijärviFinlandNummirock Festival
23 June 2000JoensuuEastpop Festival
24 June 2000JämsäHimos Festival
1 July 2000TurkuRuisrock
7 July 2000HelsinkiTuska Open Air
8 July 2000AitooKirkastusjuhlat Fest
9 July 2000JoensuuIlosaarirock
14 July 2000CuritibaBrazilStudio 1250
15 July 2000São PauloTom Brazil
16 July 2000Porto AlegreOpinião Club
19 July 2000SantiagoChileTeatro Providencia
22 July 2000Buenos AiresArgentinaAlcatraz Club
25 July 2000Panama CityPanamaDali Club
28 July 2000GuadalajaraMexicoRoxy Club
29 July 2000Mexico CitySalon Ideal
30 July 2000MoreliaArena
5 August 2000WackenGermanyWacken Open Air
1 September 2000TampereFinlandTeatro Tullikamari
2 September 2000NivalaTuiskula Club
8 September 2000UusikaupunkiAquarius Club
9 September 2000LappajärviHalkosaari Club
15 September 2000HelsinkiTavastia Club
16 September 2000KauhajokiCity Kasino
22 September 2000JyväskyläLutakko Club
23 September 2000KuopioAkateeminen Startti
5 October 2000HamburgGermanyMarkthalle
6 October 2000BremenTivoli Club
7 October 2000HerfordKreck Club
9 October 2000BochumZeche Club
10 October 2000FrankfurtBatschkapp
11 October 2000LudwigsburgRockfabrik
13 October 2000EbersdorfHellraiser Club
14 October 2000Bad SalzungenKalle Werk
16 October 2000StrasbourgFranceLa Laiterie
17 October 2000LilleLe Splendid
18 October 2000ParisÉlysée Montmartre
20 October 2000LyonTeatro Rail
21 October 2000MarseilleJas de Rod
22 October 2000BarcelonaSpainSala Mephisto
24 October 2000PrattelnSwitzerlandZ7 Club
25 October 2000GrazAustriaOrpheum Theatre
26 October 2000ViennaPlanet Music
28 October 2000WelsAlter Schlachthof
29 October 2000BudapestHungaryE-klub
31 October 2000BerlinGermanyRazzle Dazzle
1 November 2000PragueCzech RepublicPalac Akropolis
4 November 2000KaufbeurenGermanyZeppelinhalle
5 November 2000VosselaarBelgiumBiebob Club
7 November 2000AmsterdamNetherlandsMelkweg
8 November 2000BraunschweigGermanyFBZ Club
9 November 2000CologneLive Music Hall
25 November 2000MontrealCanadaLe Medley
26 November 2000
29 November 2000TampereFinlandPakkahuone Theatre
List of 2001 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
27 January 2001LeviFinlandHallo Poro Rock
2 February 2001NokiaIisoppi Hotel
3 February 2001EvijärviNuorisoseuran Talo
5 February 2001StockholmSwedenGOOM-Cruise
7 February 2001TurkuFinlandFeenix Club
8 February 2001HelsinkiTavastia Club
14 June 2001JyväskyläLutakko Club
16 June 2001SeinäjokiProvinssirock
21 June 2001KouvolaMidnight Party Planet
22 June 2001NurmijärviNummirock Festival
23 June 2001JämsäHimos Festival
24 June 2001VaasaVantarock Festival
7 July 2001TurkuRuisrock
8 July 2001AitooKirkastusjuhlat Fest
12 July 2001TampereTammerfest
21 July 2001KoriaRoll Festival
4 August 2001WackenGermanyWacken Open Air
5 August 2001PrattelnSwitzerlandZ7 Club
6 August 2001ViennaAustriaPlanet Music
7 August 2001BudapestHungarySziget Festival
11 August 2001BusanSouth KoreaInternacional Rock Festival
24 August 2001MoscowRussiaGorbunova Culture Club
25 August 2001Saint PetersburgLDM Center
1 September 2001HelsinkiFinlandCan You Festival
6 September 2001TurkuFeenix Club
7 September 2001TamperePakkahuone Theatre
8 September 2001AlavusAulava Club
13 September 2001KuopioPuijonsarvi Club
14 September 2001JoensuuHuvitörmä Club
15 September 2001NivalaTuiskula Club

Band

World Tour of the Century

[edit]
World Tour of the Century
Tour byNightwish
Location
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • North America
  • South America
Associated album
Start dateJune 22, 2002
End dateSeptember 27, 2003
No. of shows58
Nightwish concert chronology
  • Wishmaster World Tour
    (2000–2001)
  • World Tour of the Century
    (2002–2003)
  • Once Upon a Tour
    (2004–2005)

The band's second world tour was much shorter compared to others, before and after, due to many personal issues, including the birth of Hietala's twins and Turunen's studies inGermany.[5] Still, their popularity was rising and allowed them to play successful South American and European tours in 2002 with a show for over six thousand people inSão Paulo,[7] also playingEngland and theUnited States for the first time in 2003, when they also played their first arena concerts in Germany.[5]

Set lists

[edit]

2002

  1. "Bless the Child"
  2. "End of All Hope"
  3. "Come Cover Me"
  4. "The Kinslayer"
  5. "Dead to the World"
  6. "Deep Silent Complete"
  7. "10th Man Down"
  8. "Crazy Train"(Ozzy Osbourne cover)
  9. "Sacrament of Wilderness"
  10. "Slaying the Dreamer"
  11. "Beauty of the Beast"
  12. "Over the Hills and Far Away"(Gary Moore cover)
    Encore
  13. "Sleeping Sun"
  14. "Beauty and the Beast"
  15. "Wishmaster"

2003

  1. "Bless the Child"
  2. "End of All Hope"
  3. "Come Cover Me"
  4. "The Kinslayer"
  5. "Dead to the World"
  6. "Ever Dream"
  7. "Sleeping Sun"
  8. "The Pharaoh Sails to Orion"(featuringTapio Wilska)
  9. "Crazy Train"(Ozzy Osbourne cover)
  10. "Beauty of the Beast"
  11. "She Is My Sin"
  12. "Slaying the Dreamer"
  13. "Wishmaster"
    Encore
  14. "Walking in the Air"(Howard Blake cover)
  15. "Over the Hills and Far Away"(Gary Moore cover)

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 2002 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
22 June 2002JämsäFinlandHimos Festival
23 June 2002JyväskyläLutakko Club
28 June 2002BalingenGermanyBang Your Head Festival
1 July 2002HelsinkiFinlandTuska Open Air
14 July 2002JoensuuIlosaarirock
16 July 2002Mexico CityMexicoCirco Volador
17 July 2002SantiagoChileTeatro Providencia
18 July 2002Buenos AiresArgentinaHangar
20 July 2002São PauloBrazilCredicard Hall
21 July 2002BrasíliaCamping Show
24 July 2002Porto AlegreOpinião Club
26 July 2002CuritibaMoinho São Roque
27 July 2002Belo HorizonteLapa Multi Show
28 July 2002Rio de JaneiroATL Hall
4 August 2002VantaaFinlandAnkkarock Festival
5 August 2002BudapestHungarySziget Festival
9 August 2002BusanSouth KoreaInternational Rock Festival
13 August 2002MoscowRussiaGorbunova Culture Club
16 August 2002HelsinkiFinlandTavastia Club
17 August 2002
20 August 2002AntwerpBelgiumTrix HofterLoo
22 August 2002DortmundGermanyWestfalenhallen 2
23 August 2002AbtsgmündSummer Breeze Open Air
24 August 2002ViennaAustriaMind Over Matter Festival
27 August 2002HamburgGermanyGroße Freiheit
28 August 2002AmsterdamNetherlandsParadiso Club
30 August 2002BarcelonaSpainRazzmatazz 1
31 August 2002BergaraSala Jam
2 September 2002ParisFranceÉlysée Montmartre
3 September 2002CologneGermanyLive Music Hall
4 September 2002TilburgNetherlands013 Club
6 September 2002BerlinGermanyColumbiahalle
7 September 2002LeipzigHaus Auensee
14 November 2002StockholmSwedenStora Arenan
15 November 2002Klubben
List of 2003 concerts, showing date, city, country and venue
DateCityCountryVenue
11 January 2003OberhausenGermanyKönig-Pilsener-Arena
12 January 2003MunichLe Zenith
4 June 2003HelsinkiFinlandStella Star Club
5 June 2003BudapestHungarySummer Rocks Fest
7 June 2003Banská BystricaSlovakiaPKO Open Air
20 June 2003RaumaFinlandRMJ Party Camp
4 July 2003OsloNorwayRockefeller Music Hall
5 July 2003
11 July 2003VillarrobledoSpainMetal Mania Festival
2 August 2003HultsfredSwedenGates of Metal Festival
9 August 2003HildesheimGermanyM'era Luna Festival
15 August 2003ErfurtVantarock Festival
16 August 2003PrattelnSwitzerlandZ7 Club
17 August 2003
29 August 2003BiddinghuizenNetherlandsLowlands Festival
30 August 2003DerbyEnglandBloodstock Open Air
31 August 2003LondonAstoria 2
5 September 2003AtlantaUnited StatesProgPower USA
6 September 2003MontrealCanadaLe Medley
7 September 2003New York CityUnited StatesL'Amours Brooklyn
9 September 2003Mexico CityMexicoCirco Volador
26 September 2003Saint PetersburgRussiaYubileyny Sports Palace
27 September 2003MoscowGorbunova Culture Club

Band

Once Upon a Tour

[edit]
Main article:Once Upon a Tour

The band's fifth studio album,Once, was their commercial breakthrough album, topping the charts in four European countries and entering the top 10 in other five countries, also becoming their first album to chart in the USA and in the UK, eventually selling 1 million copies until the end of 2005.[8] It spawned two hit singles, "Nemo" and "Wish I Had An Angel".

The success of the album allowed the band to tour worldwide, hosting their first US Tour, playing for the first time inAustralia andJapan, playing arena shows in Europe and stadium festival shows in SouthAmerica, in a total of over 130 shows in two years.[5] The last show, atHelsinki'sHartwall Areena, was later released as theEnd of an Era DVD.

This was their last tour with Tarja Turunen, fired after the last show in Helsinki.[9]

Dark Passion Play World Tour

[edit]
Main article:Dark Passion Play World Tour

Swedish singerAnette Olzon was announced as the new lead singer forNightwish in May 2007,[10] with the band's sixth studio album,Dark Passion Play, later being released in September that year. Between 2007 and 2008 the band played over 100 shows around the world, inEurope,Asia,Australia, North America and South America.[4]

After a three month break, the band resumed touring in March 2009, a series of shows dubbed the "Deja Vu Tour", in European arenas and festivals and US clubs and theatres, with the last concert of the tour again atHelsinki'sHartwall Areena.[4] A live EP,Made in Hong Kong was released in March 2009.[11]

Imaginaerum World Tour

[edit]
Main article:Imaginaerum World Tour

In 2011, Nightwish released their seventh studio album,Imaginaerum, later released asa movie with the same name and itssoundtrack.[12] The band started touring in 2012, but during a North American tour in September,Anette Olzon was fired and quickly replaced by Dutch singerFloor Jansen, originally announced only as a live replacement for that specific tour.[13]

Bye the end of the tour in 2013, both Jansen andTroy Donockley, who had been accompanying the band live and in studio since 2007, were made official members of the band.[14] It was also the last tour with drummerJukka Nevalainen, who retired from touring due to health issues.[15] The show atWacken Open Air on 3 August 2013 was released as theShowtime, Storytime DVD.

Endless Forms Most Beautiful World Tour

[edit]
Main article:Endless Forms Most Beautiful World Tour

During the recording of the band's eighth studio album,Endless Forms Most Beautiful, drummerJukka Nevalainen announced his retirement from recording and touring with the band due to health issues, andKai Hahto was announced as his replacement.[16]

The band toured heavily between 2015 and 2016, with the concerts at theRatina Stadium inTampere and at theWembley Arena inLondon later released as theVehicle of Spirit DVD.[17]

Decades: World Tour

[edit]
Main article:Decades: World Tour

To celebrate their 20 year anniversary, the band released a compilation,Decades, and played a special tour across Europe, North America and South America in 2018. The band presented a special set list for this tour, featuring rare songs from the earlier era to revisit with some new twists.[18] It is the final tour to featureMarko Hietala who later departed from the band in January 2021.[19]

The show at theEstadio Malvinas in Argentina was later released as theDecades: Live in Buenos Aires DVD.[20]

Human. :II: Nature. World Tour

[edit]
Main article:Human. :II: Nature. World Tour

After releasing their ninth studio album,Human. :II: Nature, the first dates for the tour were announced for 2020, but were later postponed or canceled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. In January 2021, bassistMarko Hietala announced he was leaving the band due to personal and health issues, withJukka Koskinen later joining the band as his replacement.[21]

After two virtual shows watched online by over 150 thousand people in May 2021, the band was back on stage in July and toured until June 2023, concluding with two stadium shows in Finland. At the conclusion of the tour, the band began a touring hiatus which is set to last between 'two to three years' following the release of the band's tenth studio album,Yesterwynde.[22]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijk"Band- Nightwish story".Nightwish.com. Retrieved19 June 2025.
  2. ^"Nightwish will kick off their 2021 tour with a gig in an imaginary pub".Louder. December 17, 2020. RetrievedDecember 17, 2020.
  3. ^"An Evening With Nightwish in a Virtual World Announced". Nightwish.com.
  4. ^abc"Tour- past shows".Nightwish.com. Retrieved19 June 2025.
  5. ^abcdefghijklOnce Upon a Nightwish: Official Biography 1996–2006
  6. ^My Winter Storm (CD Booklet).Tarja Turunen. Berlin, Germany:Universal Music Group 0602517466876. 2007.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  7. ^Fernando de Santis (20 July 2002)."Nightwish: Iniciando a divulgação de Century Child no Brasil".Whiplash.net (in Portuguese). Retrieved20 June 2025.
  8. ^Ewing, Jerry (11 June 2021)."Nightwish announce remastered reissue of Once".Prog Magazine. Retrieved11 June 2021.
  9. ^Dennii Leivers (5 June 2024).""The whole thing was such a shock, because it came out of nowhere." A public letter, tears and the Finnish Prime Minister: inside the crazy day Nightwish parted ways with Tarja Turunen".Prog Magazine. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  10. ^"NIGHTWISH Announces New Singer".Blabbermouth. 24 May 2007. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  11. ^"NIGHTWISH: Entire 37-Minute 'Made In Hong Kong' DVD Documentary Posted Online".Blabbermouth. 13 March 2009. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  12. ^Natasha Scary (30 November 2020)."The story of Nightwish's Imaginaerum".Loudersound. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  13. ^"Nightwish - Part Ways With Singer Anette Olzon".MetalStorm. 1 October 2012. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  14. ^Mary Ouellette (9 October 2013)."Nightwish Add Floor Jansen and Troy Donockley to Permanent Lineup".Loudwire. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  15. ^"Nightwish Drummer Jukka Nevalainen Forced To Take Break From Band Due To Health Issues".Blabbermouth.net. August 6, 2014. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  16. ^"Jukka Nevalainen steps down as drummer for Nightwish, Kai Hahto becomes full-time member".MetalGoddesses. 19 July 2019. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  17. ^"REVIEW: Nightwish – Vehicle of Spirit (Musicalypse Archive)".TuonelaMagazine. 10 December 2016. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  18. ^"NIGHTWISH To Launch Nine-Month 'Decades: World Tour' Next March In North America". Blabbermouth. June 9, 2017. RetrievedJune 9, 2017.
  19. ^"Marko Hietala leaves Nightwish".Metal Hammer. 12 January 2021. Retrieved20 June 2021.
  20. ^"NIGHTWISH: São Paulo And Buenos Aires Concerts To Be Filmed For Upcoming DVD". Blabbermouth. September 17, 2018. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  21. ^"Nightwish paljasti uuden basistinsa".Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). 28 May 2021. Retrieved20 June 2025.
  22. ^Mäenpää, Arto (January 23, 2024).""There won't be any Nightwish shows within the next two or three years" – Exclusive interview with Kai Hahto from Nightwish / Wintersun".Chaoszine. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2024.

Sources

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Concert tours
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