The Red Tour was the thirdconcert tour by the American singer-songwriterTaylor Swift, in support of her fourth studio album,Red (2012). It began inOmaha, Nebraska, on March 13, 2013, and concluded inSingapore, on June 12, 2014. The tour covered 86 shows that spanned 12 countries across Asia–Pacific, Europe, and North America.
Theset list consisted of songs mostly fromRed, with a few numbers taken from Swift's previous albums,Fearless (2008) andSpeak Now (2010). Swift played various instruments such aselectric guitar, acoustic guitar,banjo, and piano to perform several numbers, while other songs were accompanied by costume changes, bands, and choreographies. During several shows, Swift invited surprise guests onstage to sing with her, and she performed surprise songs outside the regular set list on acoustic guitar. The Red Tour was generally well received in the press, with critics praising her stage presence and songwriting while also opining that it demonstrated Swift's pop-star prowess that was outgrowing hercountry music origins.
Swift had integrated partnerships withDiet Coke,Keds, andElizabeth Arden to promote the Red Tour. TheSoutheast Asian leg was additionally promoted via tie-ins withCornetto andAirAsia. The Red tour was attended by 1.7 million people and grossed $150.2 million in revenue, becoming the highest-grossing North American tour of 2013 and the highest-grossing country tour of all time, surpassingTim McGraw andFaith Hill'sSoul2Soul II Tour. In Australia, it made Swift the first female artist to headline a stadium tour sinceMadonna in 1993 and the first female artist to sell out Sydney'sAllianz Stadium in its history. The tour won Top Package at theBillboard Touring Awards in 2013.
In May 2013, Swift announced Australian and New Zealand dates of the Red Tour, visiting four stadiums inMelbourne,Sydney,Perth, andBrisbane, and one arena inAuckland.[14]Neon Trees andGuy Sebastian were confirmed as these dates' supporting acts.[15][16] She further announced dates for England and Germany upon finishing the North American leg in September 2013,[17][18] withthe Vamps confirmed as theLondon opening act the following month.[19] In February 2014, Swift announced the Asian leg of the tour, with shows inJakarta,Manila,Bangkok,Kuala Lumpur, andSingapore slated for June.[20] She later announced additional dates forTokyo[21] andShanghai.[22] On May 24, 2014, the tour promoterBEC-Tero announced that the sold-out Bangkok show had to be cancelled, citing the2014 Thai coup d'état and surrounding political instability.[23]
"When I was conceptualizing [the Red Tour] from the very beginning, I thought about how if [Speak Now and Red tours] were to exist in two different worlds, I picture the Speak Now tour existing in aMidsummer Night's Dream/Romeo and Juliet-inspired fantasyland, and I picture this taking place in New York City. And so you've got high intensity excitement and you've got the darkness of all of it and you've got all the fleeting moments of reality, and it's a little bit less of a fairy tale."
Planning for the Red Tour began in the summer of 2012, around eight months prior to its kickoff.[25] The planning encompassed stage design,set list creation, costume design, dancer selection, and rehearsals that lasted one month.[26] Swift said that she wanted the Red Tour to convey a different experience than her last tour, theSpeak Now World Tour: whereas her previous tour embodied a "fantasy oriented, a very princessy vibe", the Red Tour would include not as many gowns or theatrical elements.[27] She thought of the Red Tour as "mature and a bit more sophisticated".[28]
Red shades dominated the props and settings of the concerts, including musical instruments, microphones, costumes, stages, and audience lighting.[29][30] Swift collaborated with the producer Baz Halpin to design and direct the stage of the Red Tour, having worked with him on the Speak Now World Tour.[31][32] According to Halpin, he designed the stage to accompany Swift's desire to stay connected with her audience as much as possible, and she was involved in selecting all options in the early design stage. Each number was accompanied with a distinctive aesthetic: acarousel on which the band performed for "Stay Stay Stay" and "Mean", a haunted house for "I Knew You Were Trouble", a circus for "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together", a New York cityscape for "Holy Ground", and a 1920sHollywood backdrop for "The Lucky One".[31][33]
Swift's seven-member band included a pianist, two guitarists, a violinist, a bass guitarist, a multi-string instrumentalist, and a drummer.[34] Supporting Swift on stage were four backing vocalists who had performed "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" with her at the2012 MTV Video Music Awards and 15 dancers selected by Swift and her mother from over 400 people through auditions in early 2013.[25][35] After six months of the concert run, three dancers left to join another tour, leaving the number of dancers to 12.[36] Talking toRolling Stone in August 2013, Swift said that she strived to perform better to serve her fans and that having stadium concerts made her more mature as a performer.[24]
The main stage featured three staircases, projecting screens, and three aisles surrounding two spaces for standing tickets.
The B stage was elevated using a hydraulic system; Swift is seen performing withEd Sheeran.
The concerts included two stages;[29] the main stage included three staircases and an extended stage towards the audience.[33][37] It was semicircular, divided into three aisles surrounding two empty spaces for standing tickets in the middle.[29][33][38] The aisle in the middle of the stage contained a runway that could be raised a few feet and rotated by a hydraulic system.[24][38][39] The stage was equipped with a fireworks system, aLED lighting system, nine large screens (including a curved videowall made up of five small screens blocking the stage), and two elevators to take Swift up and down backstage.[33][35][24][37][40] For stadiums, Swift rented a canopy system built on four steel pillars fromStageco for the main stage.[41]
The drum set used in "Holy Ground" glowed up when Swift and the dancers beat on them using fluorescent cylinders; this set consisted of two parts: one onstage with Swift and the other hanging from the ceiling.[42][43] The smaller B stage was located on the other side of the performance venue, with a circular rotating platform in the middle also using a hydraulic system, which could be raised about 15 feet, where Swift performed songs on acoustic guitar.[33][39][44] The arena shows also included a flying cage that carried Swift over the audience to move her from the B stage back to the main stage.[45][46] Inside the backstage was "Club Red", a room decorated with images and costumes she had worn on stage, where Swift met and interacted with some selected fans and the media before or after the show.[24][47]
The Red Tour traveled across North America with 24 tractors carrying stage installation equipment and lighting, along with 15 buses carrying 80 staff members.[37] If the concert took place at outdoor stadiums, the fleet also included a truck carrying a steel frame structure to build the canopy for the stage.[41] At each venue, the tour management team hired 120–150 local workers to help with the setup.[48] The dismantling process began immediately after the performance ended and usually took about four hours to complete.[37] Many props, musical instruments, and costumes used in the tour were later displayed in some music museums,[49] and in a series of exhibitions titled "The Taylor Swift Experience" at theGrammy Museum at L.A. Live.[50][51]
There were 73 musical instruments used in the tour, 13 of which were Swift's.[48] Eighth Day Sound Systems provided the sound system and equipment for the Red Tour, which used threeDiGiCo SD7 digitalmixing consoles and a d&b audiotechnik speaker system from JPJ Audio.[52][53] David Payne, a sound engineer who had worked with Swift for over four and a half years, chose the SD7 mixing console because of its layout, quality, and ability to handle sound effects and integrate with theSoundGrid wave bundling system.[52] Every member onstage had a separatein-ear monitor, except for the dancers who shared one ear mix. The tour carried an additional spare room with 8 d&b audiotechnik M4 monitoring speakers for the opening act and special guests duetting with Swift. The sound team worked with about 96 input channels from the stage (mostly from wireless microphones and instruments) plus 12 audience microphones arranged around the performance venue for the Pro Tools recording tool. Swift used four separate microphones at different times.[52]
Eighth Day Sound Systems collaborated with JPI Audio to provide the sound system for the concerts in Australia. There were 11 sound engineers working per night, including two engineers on each side of the stage, two monitoring engineers, two engineers in charge of audio delay, onefront of house (FOH) engineer, one system/FOH engineer, and oneRF engineer cum technical team leader. Three trucks were used to transport the sound system.[53] Halpin usedSGM's multi-color XC-5s LED lights for the Red Tour. There were 42 XC-5 lights used in the lighting system, provided by Production Resource Group.[32]
Marina Toybina was the main costume designer for the Red Tour. There were 128 costumes used, including 23 for Swift and 103 for the dancers.[54] Swift's wardrobe was provided by different fashion brands: black high-waisted leather shorts from Bleulab, acummerbund fromKate Spade,oxford shoes fromMiu Miu andLanvin, dresses fromJ. Mendel, boots from LaDuca, and a white corset fromMoschino.[55] According to Toybina, she designed the costumes after Swift created the set list and discussed the choreography, believing that they reflected the inspirations of each song as well as her individuality. After Swift approved the designs, Toybina and her team proceeded with fabric selection, sewing, and creating additional accessories. It took Toybina a little more than three weeks to complete the wardrobe.[54]
Costumes used in the Red Tour were strongly tied with the album's theme: the white shirt and brimmed hat of the album cover, striped shirts, oxford shoes,pork pie hats, and high-waisted shorts.[56] According toVogue Germany, Swift's outfits on the Red Tour showcased a more urban and sporty aesthetic than her previous country image: T-shirts and shorts paired with flat shoes, although some dresses were paired with high heels as well.[57] In an interview withKeds, one of the tour's sponsor, Swift said her favorite costume was the first outfit of the show: a white lacedOxford shirt, black high-waisted leather shorts, a black hat, and oxford shoes. She added that she was not only concerned with the appearance of the costumes, but also their "functionality": "Can I run around in this? Is this something that I can throw my hair around in?" Regarding makeup, Swift said that red lipstick was a must and that she preferred using long-lasting lipstick over regular oil-based lipstick, and that she wanted a "perfectly angled cat eye look".[58]
AEG Live was the tour's promoter in North America and Asia,[59][60] whileFrontier Touring promoted it in Australia and New Zealand,[61] and Semmel Concerts and Peter Rieger Konzertagentur in Germany.[62] Swift had integrated sponsorships with three brands for the North American leg:Diet Coke, Keds, andElizabeth Arden.[63] The Diet Coke deal provided fans "extraordinary access to Swift",[64] while the Keds deal included a limited-edition Champion series featuring the names of each city that the tour visited,[65] and the Elizabeth Arden deal launched Swift-branded fragrances.[66] In Australia and New Zealand,Qantas was the tour's official airline.[67]
Sponsors for the Southeast Asian shows included the ice cream brandCornetto and the airlineAirAsia.[68] Cornetto also partnered withSony Music to create the "Ride to Fame Competition" where participants had a chance to become an opening act for Swift.[68] AirAsia served as the official tour airline with a specializedAirbus A320 aircraft that carried Swift and her crew across the Southeast Asian stops. The airline also designed a Taylor Swift livery for the aircraft that featured her name and photos for one year.[69]AIA andHotLink were additional sponsors in Malaysia,[70][71] andFox andStar World in the Philippines.[72]Toyota was the official automotive sponsor for the tour in Southeast Asia, collaborating with Swift to campaign for the company's firstASEAN road safety initiative that included educational videos for young people in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.[73]
Swift playing "Red" on a redLes Paul electric guitar
Swift wearing red gown and gloves for "The Lucky One"
The performance began as five screens blocking the stage slowly rose and Swift's silhouette appeared on a large red screen as she prepared to perform "State of Grace".[75] The large screen was quickly pulled up to reveal the entire stage, and Swift performed the song in a white shirt, black shorts, a black hat, and red sequined shoes.[76] The number ended with fireworks falling from the ceiling.[76][77] She followed with "Holy Ground", where she and the dancers performed with a set of illuminated drums.[29] She put on a red sparklingLes Paul electric guitar to perform "Red" while the dancers carried red flags running around the stage.[29][43][74] Towards the end of "Red", Swift played a guitar solo with a band member who also played a red glittery guitar.[29]
The five screens were lowered, and Swift along with four backing vocalists dressed like a 1960s girl group to perform "You Belong with Me", which was transformed from a country pop track to aMotown-styled number interspersed with heavy bass.[78][79][a] The performance of "The Lucky One" was introduced by a black-and-white film featuring Swift sitting in a 1920s Hollywood-styled chamber and her monologue about the dangers of fame.[79][82] She appeared onstage to perform the song in a full-red outfit that consisted of a long-tailed dress, shorts, arms-long gloves, and boots, surrounded by dancers dressed as paparazzi in trench coats.[43][55][57] Returning to the stage after changing the long dress into a white short skirt,[80][83] Swift played "Mean" on a banjo, sitting on a treasure chest, accompanied by aset piece where her band members portrayed different characters on a carousel.[29][47] She followed with "Stay Stay Stay", which contained portions of "Ho Hey" bythe Lumineers towards its end.[78]
Swift performed acoustic numbers on the B stage (left) before moving back to the main stage in a flying cage while performing "Sparks Fly" (right).
The concert continued with a short film that documented Swift's evolution from childhood to age 21.[84] It introduced the next number, "22", which featured Swift in a white striped T-shirt, red pants, and aponytail, and an energetic choreography.[39][85][86] Towards the end of "22", she was carried to the B stage on the shoulders of her backup dancers.[87] On the B stage, which was a rotating platform, Swift performed songs on an acoustic guitar, sitting on a red barstool. She opened the acoustic segment with a different song each night, having read fan requests via social media such asTwitter to learn about what her fans wanted to hear live.[29] She continued with "Everything Has Changed" with Ed Sheeran and "Begin Again"[39][88][89] before concluding this segment with "Sparks Fly", which she performed on a12-string guitar briefly before entering a flying cage that carried her way back to the main stage.[29][45][88][b]
The next number, "I Knew You Were Trouble", began with the fiddler playing solo as fog swirled around her.[90][91] Swift began the song, wearing aVictorian-inspired white gown interspersed with gold accents.[75][76] The dancers wore masks and dressed asmasquerade ball attendees, performing aGothic-inspired choreography.[46][79] Midway through the act, her dancers ripped off the gown to reveal an outfit combining a black leather top with gold embroidery on the sides, high-waisted pants, and knee-high boots.[85][92] After finishing the song, Swift put on a black laced dress and performed "All Too Well" on a red piano.[86][89]
The next number, "Love Story", opened with dancers dressed as dolls emerging from amusic box.[58][93][94] Swift wore a long white dress as she stepped out of the box barefoot and, along with the dancers, reenacted the playRomeo and Juliet with a happy ending.[39][46] After quickly changing costumes, Swift returned to the stage in a black sparkling backless top and a whitetutu skirt to perform "Treacherous" barefoot on a narrow arm in the center of the stage that rose up several feet from the second half of the song.[29][33][55][95]
The concert concluded with "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together". The performance was staged like a circus, inspired by the novelAlice's Adventures in Wonderland, with dancers dressed as various characters: a clown walking on stilts holding a red umbrella, a jester in red and white checkered clothes, a fairy in a tutu skirt, and rabbits; Swift was dressed as the ringmaster, in a red sequined jacket and a tall hat.[43][46][90] The runway between the stage rose and spun over the audience's heads, and Swift asked the audience to sing along with her and ended the song with confetti and fireworks.[39] After saluting the audience with her band, Swift went up the stairs and disappeared from the stage before the five screens lowered and the words "Thank You :)" scrolled across.[38][43][96]
Tickets for the Red Tour went on sales on November 16, 2012, for shows in North America,[97] May 21, 2013, for Australia and New Zealand,[61] October 4, 2013, for the UK,[17] and October 25, 2013, for Germany.[29] Ticket sales for the Asian shows depended on each location's organizers.[21][60] Tickets for many concerts sold out quickly: 14 dates sold out within one day of sale;[59] theSan Diego show and initial two Los Angeles shows sold out within 60 seconds; theToronto, twoWashington, D.C. shows, and twoAtlanta shows in 5 minutes; theDetroit show in 10 minutes; and theChicago show in under 30 minutes.[98] Swift added shows in Toronto,Foxborough,Philadelphia, and Los Angeles in response to the high demand.[98][99]
Swift performing "Love Story" atthe O2 Arena inLondon; high demand for the tour made her extend the London gig to five shows.[19]
Sold-out dates also led to additional concerts announced for Auckland[100][101] and London,[19][102] while most Asian dates—Manila, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok (later cancelled), Tokyo—sold out within hours.[103][104][105][106] All 18,000 tickets for the Shanghai show sold out within one minute, registering the Red Tour as the fastest-selling concert in Chinese history.[107][108] After canceling the Bangkok show due to political unrest, Swift added a second show in Singapore to replace that concert for June 9, 2014, with priority given to those who had purchased tickets in Bangkok.[103][109] The Red Tour's four sold-out dates atStaples Center in Los Angeles brought Swift's total number of sold-out concerts at this arena to 11, making her the female artist with the most sold-out shows there.[110] Swift also became the first female artist in 20 years to tour Australian stadiums sinceMadonna withthe Girlie Show in 1993[14] and the first female artist to sell outAllianz Stadium in Sydney since it opened in 1988.[111]
Box office data for the Red Tour were reported byBillboard andPollstar. InBillboard's mid-year report of "Top 25 Tours" published in July 2013, the Red Tour garnered $38.9 million in revenue from 29 shows.[112] According toPollstar's mid-year statistics as of July 2013, the tour earned $58.5 million from 37 shows.[113][114] By the end of 2013, the Red Tour ranked seventh inBillboard's report for the top global tours of the year, reaching $115.4 million from 66 sold-out dates;[115][116]Pollstar reported $112.7 million from 1,335,308 tickets sold.[117] After the Australasian leg concluded, the Red Tour grossed $131 million from 1,481,900 concertgoers, 73 shows, and 52 cities, becoming 2013's eighth-highest-grossing global tour and highest-grossing North American tour.[118][119] According toBillboard, Swift earned nearly $30 million in 2013, from touring in the US alone.[63]
Upon its conclusion,Billboard reported that the Red Tour grossed $150.2 million from 1,702,933 tickets sold. It surpassed the record of $141 million set byTim McGraw andFaith Hill'sSoul2Soul II Tour (2006–2007) to become the highest-grossing tour of all time by a country artist.[120] The Red Tour registered several venue records. Its 21 shows from 13 different venues were included inPollstar's 2013 year-end ranking of the 200 highest nightly concert grosses in North America.[121][122][123]Billboard highlighted the shows in Foxborough ($9.4 million, 110,712 tickets), London ($5.8 million, 74,740 tickets),Fargo ($1.7 million, 21,073 tickets), Shanghai ($1.8 million, 12,793 tickets), andPittsburgh ($4.7 million, 56,047 tickets) as among the most lucrative of the tour,[120] whilePollstar also highlighted the show in Melbourne ($4.6 million, 47,257 tickets).[124]
The Red Tour received generally positive reviews, with particular praise for the stage presence and emotional connection that Swift brought to her audience.Rolling Stone'sRob Sheffield complimented the various emotions that she portrayed through her songs "with so much wit and empathy" and hailed her stage persona as a "true arena-rock goddess at an amazing peak".[42] Eric Sundermann fromThe Village Voice remarked that Swift was in total control of the room and that her intermittent speeches about her life lessons to the audience were a testament to her "endless appealing nature as a performer".[125] Lydia Jenkin ofThe New Zealand Herald was impressed by Swift's noticeable passion for performing that kept "the entire crowd on their feet right from the top".[43] Jordan Kretchmer ofThe Guardian gave the Sydney show four stars out of five; he said that although Swift's "folksy chat" with her young female fans "would be easy to [be mocked at]", it was targeted at the right audience.[84] Also fromThe Guardian, Rebecca Nicholson gave the first London show a five-star rating. She described Swift as a "consummate crowd pleaser" and a "professional big sister", highlighting her interactions with fans in the crowd.[93]
There were also compliments for the production elements, with multiple comparisons toBroadway productions.[125][126][127] InThe New York Times,Jon Caramanica contended that although the albumRed was a "distracting" record musically, it translated into "a king-size spectacle" with visual and theatrical power.[78] Several commentators, including Kretchmer,[84] Jenkin,[43] and Owen R. Smith ofThe Seattle Times contended that the Red Tour showcased Swift's evolving status from a country musician to a pop star.[128] Mike Ross of theEdmonton Sun and Ben Walsh fromThe Independent both commented that Swift's charisma and steady command of the stage helped her navigate the multiple production elements with ease,[127][129] while Philippa Hawker ofThe Sydney Morning Herald wrote that some "rambling, inconsequential, even sentimental" moments all contributed to Swift's every-girl appeal.[44]
In a profile forNew York,Jody Rosen commented that the Red Tour had "all the trappings of a stadium-pop blockbuster" but "the heart of a Taylor Swift show is intimacy".[35] ForThe Globe and Mail's J.D. Considine, while the visual spectacles of the Red Tour were impressive, Swift's songcraft and emphasis on the emotions of her songs were even more so.[75]Billboard's Chris Payne thought that Swift "struck a comfortable balance" by only using simple choreography for certain numbers, and he highlighted the acoustic segment as the most well-received from the crowd.[130] In congruence, Craig S. Semon of theTelegram & Gazette wrote that Swift's acoustic numbers on guitar alone "proved she could captivate a crowd without elaborate dance sequences, special-effects and razzle-dazzle".[39]Digital Spy's Emma Dibdin considered the tour a success because it "capitalises on exactly what makes Swift such a powerful figure for her audience, the sincere blend of aspirational and relatable".[46] Nicholson added that Swift's performances where she played instruments reminded the "quality of the songcraft".[93]
There were not as welcoming reviews, some having conflicting opinions on Swift's live vocals. Caramanica thought that her singing became stronger and sturdier than in the past,[78] and Ross considered her voice "sweet and powerful" and appreciated that there was nolip syncing.[127] On a less positive side, Alice Vincent ofThe Daily Telegraph found Swift's voice "shaky" during some numbers.[131] Marc Hirsh ofThe Boston Globe thought that Swift's volume was inconsistent throughout the show and she sometimes sounded as if she were struggling even if her voice was in the right pitch.[132] Rebecca Ford ofThe Hollywood Reporter thought that some songs were distracting and Swift's voice "has a habit of faltering or being too soft to hear over the band" despite having become stronger than in the past.[76] For Randall Roberts of theLos Angeles Times, the show was a "well-choreographed mega-production" with seamless transitions "spun with the consistent beauty of a ballet dancer in full pirouette". However, Roberts thought that the show was too calculated that Swift sometimes seemed "more a symbol than human".[77]
The Sydney Morning Herald ranked Swift's Red Tour concert in Brisbane as one of the city's top 10 music moments of 2013.[133] Caramanica selected the March 27, 2013, concert in Newark as one of the year's most memorable.[134] At the 2013Billboard Live Music Awards, the Red Tour won Top Package.[135]
"Our Song": During the second shows in Orlando[144] and Kansas City;[145] the shows in Columbus,[146] Arlington,[147] Salt Lake City[148] Pittsburgh,[149] and the first show in Nashville[150]
"Fifteen": During the second shows Los Angeles[151] and London;[152] and the shows in Jakarta[153] and San Diego;[154]
^abテイラー・スウィフト 1夜限りの来日公演が決定 [Taylor Swift will perform in Japan for only one night].Billboard Japan (in Japanese). February 20, 2014.Archived from the original on August 22, 2018. RetrievedMay 29, 2025.
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