The Summer Sixteen Tour was a co-headlining concert tour by Canadian rapper Drake, and American rapper Future.[2] It began on July 20, 2016 in Austin, and concluded with its final show in Toronto, Ontario on October 8, 2016. Scheduled for 60 performances across North America, the tour was produced by Apple Music in conjunction with Drake's fourth studio album, Views, Future's fourth studio album Evol, as well as their collaborative mixtape What a Time to Be Alive. Guest appearances included Rihanna, Fat Joe, 2 Chainz, Ty Dolla $ign, Young Thug, Kanye West, and more.[3] The tour had a total gross of $84.3 million off 54 shows, making it the highest-grossing hip-hop tour of all time,[4] until he broke this record with his own co-headlining Aubrey & the Three Migos Tour in 2018.[5]

Summer Sixteen Tour
Tour by Drake and Future
Associated albumViews
Evol
What a Time to Be Alive
Start dateJuly 20, 2016 (2016-07-20)
End dateOctober 8, 2016 (2016-10-08)
Legs1
No. of shows54
Box office$80.9 million ($102.71 million in 2023 dollars)[1]
Drake tour chronology
Would You Like a Tour?
(2013–15)
Summer Sixteen Tour
(2016)
Boy Meets World Tour
(2017)
Future tour chronology
Summer Sixteen Tour
(2016)
Nobody Safe Tour
(2017)

Background edit

Drake and Future first collaborated in 2012 on "Tony Montana". In 2015 the duo had a single called "Where Ya At", a song later to be used on Future's third studio album, DS2.[6] Since then, other notable collaborations between the pair include Drake's song, "Grammys" featuring Future, and 2015's "Jumpman". The duo also worked on a collaborative mixtape entitled What a Time to Be Alive, which was released on September 20, 2015.[7] Throughout 2013 and 2014, during Drake's Would You Like a Tour?, Future made multiple guest appearances, often appearing to perform alongside to Drake, or serve as the opening act of the show.[8] Rumours of a co-headlining tour from Drake and Future first circulated following the release of What a Time to Be Alive, leading Drake to post on Twitter that he was planning to embark on a tour with Future in the summer.

On April 25, 2016, the Summer Sixteen tour was announced with Future serving as the co-headlining act.[9] Later on the same day, several dates were added on Drake's website, with dvsn and Roy Woods all set to perform as opening acts.[10]

Set list edit

This set list is representative of the show on July 20, 2016 in Austin. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[11]

  1. "Summer Sixteen"
  2. "Still Here"
  3. "Started from the Bottom"
  4. "9"
  5. ""U With Me?"
  6. "Feel No Ways"
  7. "Headlines"
  8. "Trophies"
  9. "HYFR (Hell Ya Fucking Right)"
  10. "0 to 100 / The Catch Up" / "6 God" / "Worst Behavior" / "We Made It" / "Blessings" / "All Me" / "No Lie" / "Versace"/ "Pop That" / "Over" / "I'm on One" / "Up All Night" / "Miss Me" / "Crew Love"
  11. "With You"
  12. "Child’s Play"
  13. "Fire and Desire"
  14. "Come and See Me"
  15. "Faithful" (with dvsn)
  16. "Hotline Bling"
  17. "Hold On, We're Going Home"
  18. "The Motto"
  19. "Right Hand"
  20. "For Free"
  21. "My Way" (Fetty Wap cover)
  22. "Grammys"
  23. "Scholarships"
  24. "Love Me"
  25. "I'm the Plug"
  26. "Big Rings"
  27. "Jumpman"
  28. "Diamonds Dancing"
  29. "Work"
  30. "Take Care" / "Too Good" (verses)
  31. "Controlla"
  32. "One Dance"
  33. "Back to Back"
  34. "Pop Style"
  35. "Hype"
  36. "Know Yourself"
  37. "Energy"
  38. "Legend"
Notes

Tour dates edit

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, opening acts, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Opening acts Attendance Revenue
North America[2][12]
July 20, 2016 Austin United States Frank Erwin Center Roy Wood$
dvsn
11,318 / 11,318 $1,470,583
July 21, 2016 Dallas American Airlines Center 12,605 / 13,493 $1,563,490
July 23, 2016 Kansas City Sprint Center 12,983 / 13,364 $1,180,862
July 24, 2016 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center 13,624 / 14,014 $1,346,114
July 26, 2016 Chicago United Center 27,037 / 30,294 $3,214,405
July 27, 2016
July 31, 2016 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 30,070 / 30,070 $2,686,110
August 1, 2016
August 4, 2016 New York City United States Madison Square Garden 58,085 / 58,085 $6,804,352
August 5, 2016
August 6, 2016
August 8, 2016
August 10, 2016 Boston TD Garden 13,490 / 13,951 $1,463,377
August 12, 2016 Buffalo First Niagara Center 13,547 / 13,965 $1,540,131
August 13, 2016 Columbus Nationwide Arena 13,986 / 14,417 $1,510,033
August 14, 2016 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 15,931 / 15,931 $1,410,223
August 16, 2016 Detroit Joe Louis Arena 14,891 / 15,674 $1,504,752
August 17, 2016 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center 13,622 / 13,622 $1,351,855
August 19, 2016 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 27,663 / 28,584 $3,259,446
August 20, 2016
August 21, 2016 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 13,402 / 13,402 $1,752,511
August 23, 2016 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum 13,720 / 14,184 $1,304,350
August 25, 2016 Atlanta Philips Arena 28,864 / 28,864 $3,106,599
August 26, 2016
August 27, 2016 Tampa Amalie Arena 13,337 / 13,337 $1,401,166
August 30, 2016 Miami American Airlines Arena 26,608 / 27,806 $3,282,545
August 31, 2016
September 2, 2016 New Orleans Smoothie King Center 13,241 / 14,073 $1,243,871
September 3, 2016 Houston Toyota Center 24,507 / 24,507 $3,352,284
September 4, 2016
September 6, 2016 Phoenix Talking Stick Resort Arena 12,084 / 12,542 $1,310,117
September 7, 2016 Los Angeles Staples Center 40,155 / 40,227 $4,809,979
September 9, 2016
September 10, 2016
September 11, 2016 Las Vegas T-Mobile Arena 15,142 / 15,142 $2,089,942
September 13, 2016 Oakland Oracle Arena 24,956 / 25,831 $3,294,596
September 14, 2016
September 16, 2016 Tacoma Tacoma Dome 18,120 / 18,120 $1,748,350
September 17, 2016 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena
September 18, 2016
September 20, 2016 Edmonton Rogers Place
September 21, 2016
September 24, 2016 San Jose United States SAP Center 25,817 / 26,591 $3,099,176
September 25, 2016
September 27, 2016 Inglewood The Forum 42,316 / 42,316 $4,545,367
September 28, 2016
September 29, 2016
October 1, 2016 Denver Pepsi Center
October 2, 2016
October 4, 2016 Des Moines Wells Fargo Arena
October 5, 2016 Chicago United Center
October 7, 2016 Montreal Canada Bell Centre 15,731 / 15,731 $1,722,100
October 8, 2016 Toronto Air Canada Centre 15,485 / 15,485 $1,561,900
TOTAL 634,662 / 647,265 (98%) $71,238,937

Cancelled shows edit

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason/Additional Info
October 9, 2016 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre Drake's ankle injury[13]
October 11, 2016 Brooklyn United States Barclays Center
October 12, 2016
October 13, 2016 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center
October 15, 2016 Newark Prudential Center
October 16, 2016

References edit

  1. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use 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 Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Tour Dates". drakeofficial.com. Archived from the original on May 2, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2016.
  3. ^ Yoo, Noah. "Drake and Future Announce Summer Sixteen Tour". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved May 4, 2016.
  4. ^ "2016 Year End Top Worldwide Tours" (PDF). Pollstar. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 23, 2018. Retrieved January 6, 2017.
  5. ^ "BOX OFFICE: Drake — Aubrey & the Three Migos Tour". boxofficetours.wordpress.com. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  6. ^ "The Hot 100: The Week of August 8, 2015". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  7. ^ "Metro Boomin Explains How 'What A Time To Be Alive' Came Together". Complex.
  8. ^ Gore, Sydney. "Drake Announces U.S. Tour With Future & Miguel". Billboard.com. Billboard. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
  9. ^ @Drake (April 25, 2016). "Drake. Future. #SummerSixteenTour" (Tweet). Retrieved May 7, 2016 – via Twitter.
  10. ^ "Drake Announces 'Summer Sixteen Tour' With Future". Rap-Up. Retrieved May 7, 2016.
  11. ^ Oyeniyi, Doyin (July 21, 2016). "Drake Shows Love to Future & Texas at Summer Sixteen Tour Opener". Billboard. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  12. ^ Box score:
  13. ^ Stutz, Colin (October 10, 2016). "Drake Postpones Remaining Summer Sixteen Tour Dates Due to Ankle Injury". Billboard. Retrieved October 10, 2016.

External links edit