Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Livin la Vida Loco

Livin la Vida Loco
Concert by Coal Chamber
LocationNorth America
Start dateJuly 31, 1999
End dateNovember 14, 1999
Legs1
No. of shows73
Coal Chamber concert chronology

Livin La Vida Loco, a play on the song title "Livin' la Vida Loca" by Ricky Martin,[1] was a concert tour in 1999. It was headlined by Coal Chamber,[2] and organized by the band's record label, Roadrunner Records. Other bands that were featured included Machine Head, Slipknot, Amen and Dope.[3][4] The tour was formed after Coal Chamber were thrown off a tour with the Insane Clown Posse, and picked up Nadja Peulen as an interim bassist during the tour.[5]

Tour dates

Date City Country Venue Other bands
August 16, 1999 Lawrence United States The Bottleneck Machine Head
Slipknot
Amen
August 19, 1999 Dallas Deep Ellum Live
August 20, 1999 Oklahoma City City Tower Theater
August 21, 1999 Maryland Heights Riverport Amphitheater
August 22, 1999 Saint Paul Roy Wilkins Auditorium
August 23, 1999 Lincoln The Royal Grove
August 25, 1999 Milwaukee The Rave
August 26, 1999 Peoria Madison Theatre
August 27, 1999 Kansas City City Market
August 28, 1999 Tulsa Mohawk Park
August 29, 1999 Amarillo Midnight Rodeo
August 31, 1999 Lubbock Liquid 2000
September 1, 1999 Killeen Club Oz
September 2, 1999 Corpus Christi Bucket's Sports Bar & Grill
September 3, 1999 Odessa Ector County Coliseum
September 4, 1999 Shreveport Malibu Beach Club
September 6, 1999 Memphis The New Daisy Theatre
September 7, 1999 Chicago Riviera Theatre
September 8, 1999 Madison Headliners
September 9, 1999 Grand Rapids Orbit Room
September 10, 1999 Detroit Harpos Concert Theatre
September 11, 1999 Cleveland Nautica Stage
September 12, 1999 Columbus Al Rosa Villa
September 13, 1999 Sauget Pop's
September 14, 1999 New York City Roseland Ballroom
September 15, 1999 Hartford Webster Theater
September 16, 1999 Scranton Tink's
September 17, 1999 Philadelphia Electric Factory
September 18, 1999 Asbury Park The Paramount Theatre at Asbury Park Convention Hall
September 19, 1999 Worcester LocoBazooka
September 20, 1999 Washington, D.C. 9:30 Club
September 22, 1999 Toronto Canada Warehouse
September 23, 1999 Montreal Le Spectrum
September 24, 1999 Lewiston United States Civic Center
September 25, 1999 Providence Lupo's
September 27, 1999 Spartanburg Ground Zero
September 28, 1999 Atlanta The Masquerade
September 29, 1999 Tampa Masquerade
October 1, 1999 Lake Buena Vista House of Blues
October 3, 1999 Fort Lauderdale Chili Pepper
October 9, 1999 Las Vegas Sam Boyd Complex Slipknot
Dope
Amen
October 11, 1999 San Bernardino Citrus Fair Sevendust
Machine Head
Slipknot
Dope
Orange 9mm
Amen
October 13, 1999 Albuquerque Sunshine Theater Slipknot
Dope
Amen
October 14, 1999 Colorado Springs Colorado Music Hall
October 15, 1999 Denver Ogden Theatre
October 17, 1999 Des Moines Super Toad Slipknot
Dope
October 18, 1999 Kansas City Beaumont Club
October 19, 1999 Sauget Pop's
October 20, 1999 Wichita Cotillion Ballroom
October 21, 1999 Austin Backroom
October 22, 1999 Houston International Ballroom
October 23, 1999 McAllen Villa Real Convention Center
October 24, 1999 San Antonio Tejano Texas
October 26, 1999 Birmingham Five Points Music Hall
October 27, 1999 New Orleans Tipitina's
October 30, 1999 Dallas Freaker's Ball (Starplex Amphitheater) Chevelle
Machine Head
Megadeth
Sevendust
Slipknot
Static-X
October 31, 1999 Tulsa Brady Theater Slipknot
Dope
November 1, 1999 Omaha Sokol Auditorium
November 2, 1999 Tea Twisters
November 3, 1999 Winnipeg Canada Rendezvous
November 5, 1999 Calgary McEvan Hall
November 6, 1999 Edmonton Golden Garter
November 8, 1999 Vancouver Croatian Cultural Centre
November 9, 1999 Seattle United States DV8
November 10, 1999 Portland Roseland Theater
November 11, 1999 Sacramento Crest Theatre Dope
November 12, 1999 Petaluma Phoenix Theatre Slipknot
Dope
November 13, 1999 San Francisco Maritime Hall
November 14, 1999 Los Angeles The Palace

References

  1. ^ Jones, Ryan (1999-09-10). "Hey Now, You're a Cuban All-Star". The Record (New Jersey).
  2. ^ Rose, Lisa (1999-09-17). "Band finds Coal comfort after rocky season". The Star-Ledger.
  3. ^ Catlin, Roger (1999-09-17). "Coal Chamber Dresses Metal Up for Halloween". The Hartford Courant.
  4. ^ Brown, Paul 'Browny' (2021-08-02). "An Icon Has Fallen – Joey Jordison: Unbendingly Loyal from Debut to Departure – Part Three by Robyn Doreian". Wall Of Sound. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  5. ^ "Coal Chamber/Type O Negative Tour Lined Up". MTV. 2000-01-27. Archived from the original on March 31, 2001. Retrieved 2009-02-12.