The Get Loose Tour was the third concert tour by Canadian singer-songwriter Nelly Furtado. The tour showcased material from her third studio album, Loose (2006). A live album, Loose: The Concert, originated from the April 4, 2007, concert in Toronto.[1]

Get Loose Tour
Tour by Nelly Furtado
Promotional poster for the tour
Associated albumLoose
Start dateOctober 17, 2006 (2006-10-17)
End dateJuly 15, 2008 (2008-07-15)
No. of shows67
Nelly Furtado concert chronology
  • Come as You Are Tour
    (2004)
  • Get Loose Tour
    (2006–08)
  • Mi Plan Tour
    (2010)

Background edit

After Loose garnered considerable sales and attention, Nelly Furtado announced a tour of Europe and North America. Nelly stated:[2]

For the last eight years I’ve never really traveled with a full production of lights, visuals and dancers – and this tour I’ve got all of it. I’ve spent eight years building my musicality so that now I can rely on that, but then I also have a great backup up there with all the production, which is a treat for me.

The set consisted of a white stage, a multi-leveled band setup with LCD screens, two parallel multi-story white palm trees, a large LED screen, and a white stage curtain.

The show is inspired by Miami. There's palm trees on the set, white palm trees and a white stage, and it's got a little bit of drama to it. I think the show's a little more sensual or sophisticated, but I keep the primary focus on the songs.

Furtado was backed by four dancers and her six-piece band, including Toronto rapper Saukrates on percussion who also fills in for Loose producer Timbaland on some of the tracks from Loose.

The Get Loose Tour started in North America with seven shows, followed by Europe with 23 shows over five weeks. The Canadian leg began shortly afterward in Victoria, B.C. (Furtado's birthplace) where the mayor proclaimed March 21 as Nelly Furtado Day. After the first leg was completed plans were announced for Furtado to visit the United States.

The second leg in the United States consisted of a more budget production. The LED screen was replaced by a light-up disco ball, the white curtains were replaced by a large LED sheet, and most notably the palm trees vanished. Furtado also wore her hair differently for these shows and changed her costumes.

The third leg consisted of a number of open air festivals during the summer season in Europe. Costumes for this leg of the tour were provided by a famous French designer.

Setlist edit

  1. "Say It Right"
  2. "Turn off the Light"
  3. "Powerless (Say What You Want)"
  4. "Do It" / "Wait for You"
  5. "Showtime"
  6. "Crazy"
  7. "In God's Hands"
  8. "Try"
  9. "All Good Things (Come to an End)"
  10. "Give it to Me"
  11. "I'm like a Bird"
  12. "Glow" / "Heart of Glass"
  13. "Força"
  14. "Promiscuous"
  15. "Party" / "No Hay Igual"
  16. "Maneater"

Shows edit

List of 2006 concerts[3]
Date City Country Venue
December 2, 2006 Indianapolis United States Pepsi Coliseum
December 7, 2006 Anaheim Honda Center
December 9, 2006 Sacramento ARCO Arena
December 10, 2006 Tacoma Tacoma Dome
December 13, 2006 Camden Tweeter Center at the Waterfront
December 15, 2006 New York City Madison Square Garden
December 16, 2006 Sunrise BankAtlantic Center
List of 2007 concerts[4][5][6][7][8]
Date City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
February 16, 2007 Manchester England Men Arena
February 17, 2007 Glasgow Scotland Clyde Auditorium
February 18, 2007 Nottingham England Arena
February 20, 2007 Birmingham NEC
February 21, 2007 London Hammersmith Apollo
February 24, 2007 Paris France Olympia
February 25, 2007 Düsseldorf Germany Philipshalle
February 26, 2007 Brussels Belgium Forest National
February 28, 2007 Milan Italy Alcatraz
March 3, 2007 Winterthur Switzerland Eishalle Deutweg
March 5, 2007 Stuttgart Germany Porsche Arena
March 6, 2007 Munich Olympiahalle
March 7, 2007 Vienna Austria Gasometer
March 8, 2007 Leipzig Germany Arena
March 10, 2007 Frankfurt Jahrhunderthalle Frankfurt
March 11, 2007 Hamburg Sporthalle
March 12, 2007 Berlin Arena Treptow
March 13, 2007 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall
March 15, 2007
March 16, 2007 Copenhagen Denmark Valby Hall
March 17, 2007 Stockholm Sweden Hovet
March 21, 2007 Victoria Canada Save on Foods Memorial Centre
March 22, 2007 Vancouver General Motors Place 8,529 / 13,754 $407,758
March 23, 2007 Kelowna Prospera Place
March 25, 2007 Grande Prairie Crystal Centre
March 26, 2007 Edmonton Shaw Conference Centre
March 27, 2007 Calgary Pengrowth Saddledome 6,758 / 6,758 $310,086
April 4, 2007 Toronto Air Canada Centre 11,373 / 11,373 $508,780
April 5, 2007 Montreal Bell Centre
April 6, 2007 Ottawa Scotiabank Place
May 30, 2007 Hollywood United States Hard Rock Live
May 31, 2007 Orlando Hard Rock Live
June 1, 2007 Atlanta Fox Theatre
June 3, 2007 Portsmouth NTELOS Pavilion
June 4, 2007 Sayreville Starland Ballroom
June 5, 2007 Boston Agganis Arena
June 7, 2007 New York City Wamu Theater at Madison Square Garden
June 8, 2007 Fairfax Patriot Center
June 9, 2007 Cleveland Tower City Amphitheater
June 11, 2007 Detroit Detroit Opera House
June 12, 2007 Rosemont Rosemont Theatre
June 13, 2007 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center
June 15, 2007 Denver The Fillmore Auditorium
June 17, 2007 Grand Prairie Nokia Live at Grand Prairie
June 19, 2007 Phoenix Dodge Theatre
June 20, 2007 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
June 21, 2007 Oakland Paramount Theatre
June 23, 2007 Las Vegas Red Rock Casino Resort Spa
July 14, 2007[a] Paris France Champ de Mars
July 27, 2007 Albufeira Portugal E.M. Albufeira
July 28, 2007 Cantanhede Expofacic
List of 2008 concerts[3][10]
Date City Country Venue
February 23, 2008[b] Viña del Mar Chile Anfiteatro de la Quinta Vergara
July 4, 2008 Amsterdam Netherlands Westerpark
July 6, 2008 Bucharest Romania B'est Fest
July 8, 2008 Munich Germany Reitstadion
July 9, 2008 Wiesbaden Bowling Green
July 10, 2008 Dresden Elbufer
July 11, 2008 Poznań Poland Malta Lake Summer Stage
July 13, 2008 Moscow Russia Olympiski
July 15, 2008 Kyiv Ukraine MBZ

Notes edit

  1. ^ This concert was part of Concert de La Fraternte.[9]
  2. ^ The concert was part of the Viña del Mar International Song Festival.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ "Top four in music: Ryan Adams & The Cardinals and more". Metronews.ca. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  2. ^ "Nelly Furtado's Get Loose Tour". Popdirt.com. June 1, 2007. Retrieved April 9, 2009.
  3. ^ a b "Nelly Furtado announces US and Canadian shows". NME. November 27, 2006.
  4. ^ "Nelly Furtado". Archived from the original on January 16, 2007.
  5. ^ "Nelly Furtado". Archived from the original on May 20, 2007.
  6. ^ "Billboard". April 21, 2007.
  7. ^ "Billboard". May 12, 2007.
  8. ^ "Billboard". June 2, 2007.
  9. ^ "600.000 personnes à Paris pour le concert du 14 Juillet". Lefigaro.fr. July 15, 2007.
  10. ^ "Nelly Furtado". Archived from the original on July 1, 2008.
  11. ^ "Nelly Furtado transformó a Viña en un escenario del mundo". Emol.com. February 23, 2008. Retrieved May 22, 2023.