Maroon V Tour

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Maroon V Tour
Tour by Maroon 5
Maroon 5 World Tour 2015 poster.jpg
Promotional poster for the tour
Location
  • North America
  • Europe
  • Asia
  • Oceania
  • Africa
  • Latin America
Associated albumV
Start dateFebruary 16, 2015 (2015-02-16)
End dateMay 12, 2018 (2018-05-12)
Legs14
No. of shows133
Maroon 5 concert chronology

The Maroon V Tour (also known as M5 On the Road Tour) was the ninth headlining concert tour by American band Maroon 5 in support of their fifth studio album V (2014). (pronounced: "five"). The tour began on February 16, 2015, in Dallas and concluded on May 12, 2018 in Zapopan, Mexico, comprising 133 concerts.

Background and development[]

The tour was announced in May 2014. The band stated that, through a contract with Live Nation, they are set to embark on a world tour in late 2014 through to early 2015 in support of the new album.[1] In June, the band posted a photo on their official Instagram account asking fans where they should perform "with a tour coming soon".[2] Also through Instagram, in August the band revealed with a series of photos the states where they will bring the tour. All the dates for North America and Europe were announced on September 2, 2014 and due to the high demand, second shows as well as brand new dates were later announced by the band.[3] During 2015, Maroon 5 announced shows in Asia, Oceania, Mexico and South America, as well as a second leg in North America which is scheduled to take place in cities where they have not performed during the first. In early 2016, new European shows were added. In September 2016, Maroon 5 confirmed the seven dates of the North American leg from September and October 2016, was postponed until February and March 2017.[4]

Opening acts[]

2015[]

  • Magic! (North America and Europe)
  • Rozzi Crane (North America)
  • Nick Jonas (North America)
  • Matt McAndrew (North America)
  • Phases (North America)[5]
  • Nick Gardner (Europe)
  • Mike Watson (Europe)
  • Ghita (Africa)
  • Dirty Loops (Asia and Oceania)
  • Conrad Sewell (Australia)

2016[]

2017[]

Setlist[]

This set list is representative of the show in Kansas City on March 21, 2015. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[10]

  1. "Animals"
  2. "One More Night" (contains elements of "Monster")
  3. "Stereo Hearts" (Gym Class Heroes cover)
  4. "Harder to Breathe"
  5. "Lucky Strike"
  6. "Wake Up Call"
  7. "Love Somebody"
  8. "Maps"
  9. "This Love"
  10. "Sunday Morning"
  11. "Makes Me Wonder"
  12. "Payphone"
  13. "Daylight"
  14. "It Was Always You"
  15. "She Will Be Loved"
  16. "Moves Like Jagger"
  17. "Sugar"
  18. "This Summer" (recorded music video on May 28)
Notes
  • During the show in Anaheim, California on April 6, 2015, The Lonely Island member and actor Andy Samberg makes appearance to the audience, right after the performance by Magic!, before introducing to Maroon 5 in the show.
  • During the show in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on March 20, 2016, Adam Levine performed "Garota de Ipanema (The Girl from Ipanema)", singing the first verse in portuguese and the rest in english.[11]
Special guests

The band performed duets with musical guests on most dates of the tour.

  • April 4, 2015 – Inglewood: "I Love L.A." with Randy Newman featuring a performance by the Laker Girls.[12]
Tribute song
  • During the show in Orlando, Florida, Adam Levine performed "She Will Be Loved", dedicated to the late Christina Grimmie. Also, Maroon 5 performed "Let's Go Crazy", dedicated to musician Prince.[13]

Shows[]

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
Leg 1 — North America[14]
February 16, 2015 Dallas United States American Airlines Center Magic!
Rozzi Crane
14,879 / 14,879 $1,296,614
February 17, 2015 Houston Toyota Center 12,554 / 12,554 $1,246,700
February 19, 2015 Atlanta Philips Arena 14,620 / 14,620 $1,296,760
February 24, 2015 Sunrise BB&T Center 14,641 / 14,641 $1,301,007
February 25, 2015 Tampa Amalie Arena 15,031 / 15,031 $1,034,559
February 27, 2015 Nashville Bridgestone Arena 16,574 / 16,574 $1,378,733
February 28, 2015 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse 14,539 / 14,539 $1,300,855
March 2, 2015 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center 15,183 / 15,183 $1,487,083
March 3, 2015 Boston TD Garden 14,662 / 14,662 $1,368,256
March 5, 2015 New York City Madison Square Garden 29,998 / 29,998 $2,852,671
March 6, 2015
March 8, 2015 East Rutherford Izod Center 16,624 / 16,624 $1,565,026
March 9, 2015 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 16,204 / 16,204 $1,602,385
March 11, 2015 Columbus Nationwide Arena 15,264 / 15,264 $1,387,961
March 13, 2015 Pittsburgh Consol Energy Center Magic! 15,546 / 15,546 $1,355,901
March 14, 2015 Louisville KFC Yum! Center Magic!
Rozzi Crane
17,645 / 17,645 $1,484,359
March 16, 2015 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 16,696 / 16,696 $1,629,143
March 18, 2015 Auburn Hills United States The Palace of Auburn Hills 15,649 / 15,649 $1,428,899
March 19, 2015 Chicago United Center 16,067 / 16,067 $1,479,650
March 21, 2015 Kansas City Sprint Center 15,086 / 15,086 $1,482,154
March 23, 2015 St. Paul Xcel Energy Center 15,502 / 15,502 $1,520,497
March 25, 2015 Saskatoon Canada SaskTel Centre 12,560 / 12,560 $942,790
March 26, 2015 Edmonton Rexall Place 13,950 / 13,950 $1,234,308
March 28, 2015 Tacoma United States Tacoma Dome 19,835 / 19,835 $1,522,061
March 29, 2015 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena 15,235 / 15,235 $1,275,236
March 31, 2015 San Jose United States SAP Center 14,992 / 14,992 $1,304,360
April 1, 2015 San Diego Viejas Arena 9,668 / 11,000 $896,360
April 3, 2015 Inglewood The Forum 26,876 / 34,000 $2,389,694
April 4, 2015
April 6, 2015 Anaheim Honda Center 12,091 / 12,091 $824,345
Leg 2 — Europe[15]
May 24, 2015 Paris France Zénith Paris N/A 5,988 / 5,988 $421,809
May 26, 2015 London England The SSE Arena Wembley Magic!
Nick Gardner
Mike Watson
19,180 / 19,666 $1,389,567
May 28, 2015
May 31, 2015 Birmingham Genting Arena 13,358 / 13,640 $871,586
June 1, 2015 Manchester Manchester Arena 13,764 / 15,000 $868,271
June 3, 2015 Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome 15,731 / 16,000 $817,151
Leg 3 — Africa[16]
June 6, 2015[a] Rabat Morocco OLM Souissi Ghita N/A N/A
Leg 4 — Europe[17]
June 9, 2015 Oberhausen Germany König Pilsener Arena Magic!
Nick Gardner
Mike Watson
10,331 / 10,331 $507,153
June 10, 2015 Munich Olympiahalle 11,601 / 11,601 $558,812
June 12, 2015 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum 10,826 / 10,826 $472,286
June 14, 2015 Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi 16,550 / 16,550 $895,401
June 15, 2015 Madrid Barclaycard Center 14,088 / 14,088 $854,642
June 17, 2015 Lisbon Portugal MEO Arena 17,913 / 17,913 $964,155
Leg 5 — North America[18]
August 15, 2015 Hershey United States Hersheypark Stadium Nick Jonas
Matt McAndrew
26,857 / 28,282 $1,694,801
August 16, 2015 Atlantic City Atlantic City Beach 37,418 / 55,000 $1,572,769
Leg 6 — Asia[19]
September 2, 2015 Yokohama Japan Yokohama Arena Dirty Loops 12,478 / 12,478 $1,303,079
September 4, 2015 Hong Kong AsiaWorld–Arena 14,038 / 14,038 $1,531,595
September 7, 2015 Seoul South Korea Olympic Gymnastics Arena 26,518 / 26,518 $2,653,948
September 9, 2015
September 10, 2015[b] Daegu Daegu Sub Stadium 10,536 / 12,538 $1,061,578
September 14, 2015 Taipei Taiwan Nangang Exhibition Hall 38,996 / 38,996 $3,607,637
September 15, 2015
September 17, 2015 Pasay Philippines Mall of Asia Arena 11,401 / 11,401 $1,703,200
September 19, 2015[c] Singapore Marina Bay Street Circuit N/A N/A N/A
September 21, 2015 Bangkok Thailand Impact Arena Dirty Loops 21,506 / 21,506 $2,039,541
September 22, 2015
Leg 7 — Oceania[20]
September 26, 2015 Melbourne Australia Rod Laver Arena Dirty Loops
Conrad Sewell
14,089 / 14,089 $1,093,930
September 28, 2015 Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre 11,142 / 11,142 $812,830
September 29, 2015 Sydney Allphones Arena 16,479 / 16,479 $1,254,595
October 1, 2015 Christchurch New Zealand Horncastle Arena Dirty Loops 8,761 / 8,761 $570,558
October 3, 2015 Auckland Vector Arena 23,773 / 23,773 $1,687,279
October 4, 2015
Leg 8 — North America[21]
December 30, 2015[d] Las Vegas United States Mandalay Bay Events Center Phases N/A N/A
December 31, 2015[d]
Leg 9 — Latin America[22]
February 25, 2016 Guadalajara Mexico Arena VFG Rey Pila 11,494 / 11,494 $872,531
February 26, 2016 Monterrey Auditorio Banamex 6,811 / 6,811 $746,369
February 29, 2016 Mexico City Foro Sol 117,296 / 117,946 $6,344,627
March 1, 2016
March 3, 2016 Bogotá Colombia Salitre Magico The Mills 24,988 / 24,988 $1,935,720
March 5, 2016 Buenos Aires Argentina Hipodromo de Palermo Foxley 27,144 / 27,144 $1,511,076
March 7, 2016 Santiago Chile Movistar Arena N/A 16,160 / 16,160 $1,238,040
March 9, 2016 Porto Alegre Brazil FIERGS Parking Dashboard Confessional
Dingo Bells
30,000 / 30,000 $1,649,605
March 11, 2016 Belo Horizonte Mineirão Stadium Dashboard Confessional 25,000 / 25,000 $1,410,566
March 13, 2016 Salvador Salvador Expo 36,000 / 36,000 $1,896,707
March 15, 2016 Fortaleza Marina Park Resort 30,000 / 30,000 $1,485,885
March 17, 2016 São Paulo Allianz Parque 91,868 / 91,868 $5,326,788
March 19, 2016
March 20, 2016 Rio de Janeiro Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí 35,000 / 35,000 $1,958,232
Leg 10 — Europe[23]
May 28, 2016[e] Lisbon Portugal Parque da Bela Vista N/A N/A N/A
May 29, 2016 Nice France Stade Charles-Ehrmann 15,798 / 16,000 $1,199,688
June 1, 2016 Kraków Poland Tauron Arena 16,700 / 16,700 $1,126,048
June 3, 2016 Moscow Russia Olimpiysky 15,326 / 17,000 $1,352,640
June 5, 2016 Bucharest Romania Piața Constituției 29,552 / 33,000 $1,417,856
June 7, 2016[f] Batumi Georgia Miracle Square 30,000 / 30,000 $1,037,050
June 9, 2016[g] Antalya Turkey Expo Festival Field 20,000 / 20,000 $203,184
Leg 11 — North America
July 13, 2016[h] Las Vegas United States T-Mobile Arena Elle King N/A N/A
Leg 12 — Latin America[24]
July 15, 2016 San Juan Puerto Rico Coliseo de Puerto Rico N/A 14,481 / 14,481 $1,687,568
July 17, 2016 Alajuela Costa Rica Parque Viva 18,404 / 18,404 $1,688,460
Leg 13 — North America[25]
September 3, 2016 San Antonio United States AT&T Center Tove Lo
R. City
15,262 / 15,476 $1,340,020
September 5, 2016 New Orleans Smoothie King Center 14,290 / 14,481 $1,413,946
September 7, 2016 Miami American Airlines Arena 14,286 / 14,533 $1,350,822
September 9, 2016 Orlando Amway Center 13,969 / 14,163 $1,285,601
September 10, 2016 Columbia Colonial Life Arena 12,597 / 13,084 $1,173,830
September 12, 2016 Memphis FedExForum 10,367 / 16,805 $786,407
September 14, 2016 Knoxville Thompson–Boling Arena 13,966 / 13,966 $1,232,189
September 16, 2016 Baltimore Royal Farms Arena 12,272 / 12,521 $1,208,346
September 17, 2016 Worcester DCU Center 11,542 / 11,744 $1,111,776
October 3, 2016 St. Louis Scottrade Center 14,182 / 14,463 $1,265,067
October 4, 2016 Lincoln Pinnacle Bank Arena 13,492 / 13,691 $1,189,881
October 6, 2016 Denver Pepsi Center Tove Lo
Phases
14,196 / 14,586 $1,393,631
October 8, 2016 Salt Lake City Vivint Smart Home Arena 15,332 / 20,142 $1,336,710
October 9, 2016 Boise Taco Bell Arena 9,403 / 9,567 $921,447
October 11, 2016 Seattle KeyArena N/A N/A
October 13, 2016 Portland Moda Center 13,634 / 15,224 $1,292,883
October 15, 2016 Sacramento Golden 1 Center 14,663 / 14,663 $1,560,840
October 16, 2016 Oakland Oracle Arena 15,081 / 15,081 $1,466,162
December 30, 2016[i] Las Vegas Mandalay Bay Events Center PJ Morton 15,383 / 18,000 $2,655,686
December 31, 2016[i] PJ Morton
Polly A
February 20, 2017[j] Milwaukee BMO Harris Bradley Center Tinashe
R. City
15,141 / 15,505 $1,306,657
February 22, 2017[k] Cleveland Quicken Loans Arena 13,969 / 17,349 $1,244,551
February 24, 2017[l] Montreal Canada Bell Centre 29,174 / 29,694 $1,965,776
February 25, 2017
February 27, 2017[m] Quebec City Videotron Centre 14,606 / 15,412 $1,175,272
March 1, 2017 Hamilton FirstOntario Centre 13,714 / 13,714 $1,006,505
March 3, 2017[n] Cincinnati United States U.S. Bank Arena 14,442 / 14,846 $1,257,948
March 5, 2017 Rochester Blue Cross Arena 10,269 / 10,504 $863,267
March 7, 2017[o] Albany Times Union Center 11,711 / 12,125 $1,079,029
March 8, 2017[p] Buffalo KeyBank Center 13,959 / 14,274 $1,365,102
April 29, 2017[q] New Orleans Fair Grounds Race Course N/A N/A N/A
May 13, 2017[r] Carson StubHub Center
May 26, 2017[s] Napa Napa Valley Expo
July 15, 2017[t] Pendleton Pendleton Roundup
September 3, 2017[u] Snowmass Snowmass Town Park The Roots
The Revivalists
Leg 14 — Latin America
September 12, 2017 Panama City Panama Estadio Nacional Rod Carew N/A N/A N/A
September 14, 2017 Curitiba Brazil Estadio Couto Pereira
September 15, 2017[v] Rio de Janeiro Barra Olympic Park
September 16, 2017[w]
September 19, 2017 Lima Peru Estadio Nacional de Lima Incubus
March 1, 2018 Quito Ecuador Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa N/A
March 3, 2018[x] Guatemala City Guatemala Explanada Cardales de Cayalá
May 12, 2018 Zapopan Mexico Estadio Omnilife
Total 1,864,417 / 1,926,840 (96.76%) $142,434,531

Cancelled shows[]

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason
May 29, 2015 Liverpool England Echo Arena Adam Levine's throat injury[32]
September 1, 2015 Osaka Japan Osaka-jō Hall Scheduling issues.[33]
September 12, 2015 Shanghai China Mercedes-Benz Arena No official reason given:[34]
Possibly banned by Chinese authorities due to support of Dalai Lama.[35][36]
September 23, 2015 Jakarta Indonesia Indonesia Convention Exhibition Celebration of Idul Adha[37]
September 11, 2016 Charlotte United States Spectrum Center Opposition of the Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act in North Carolina[38]
September 12, 2016 Raleigh PNC Arena
September 19, 2016 Hartford XL Center Upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child[39]
June 10, 2017[y] London England Wembley Stadium Scheduling conflict.[40]
September 9, 2017 Punta Cana Dominican Republic Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Due to Hurricane Irma[41]

Notes[]

  1. ^ The June 6, 2015 concert in Rabat, Morocco at OLM Souissi is part of Mawazine Festival 2015.
  2. ^ The September 10, 2015 show was originally scheduled to take place on September 6, 2015 but was delayed.
  3. ^ The September 19, 2015 concert in Singapore at Marina Bay Street Circuit is part of Singapore Grand Prix Concert.
  4. ^ a b The concerts on December 30 and 31, 2015, in Las Vegas is part of the New Year's Eve 2016 Festival.
  5. ^ The May 28, 2016 show in Lisbon at Parque da Bela Vista is part of Rock in Rio.
  6. ^ The June 7, 2016 show in Batumi at Miracle Square is part of the Check in Georgia project.
  7. ^ The June 9, 2016 show in Antalya is part of the Expo 2016.
  8. ^ The July 13, 2016 show in Las Vegas at T-Mobile Arena is part of Cisco Live!.
  9. ^ a b The concerts on December 30 and 31, 2016, in Las Vegas is part of the New Year's Eve 2017 Festival.
  10. ^ The concert of February 20, 2017 at the BMO Harris Bradley Center in Milwaukee was originally scheduled to take place on October 1, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  11. ^ The concert of February 22, 2017 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland was originally scheduled to take place on September 28, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  12. ^ The concert of February 24, 2017 at the Bell Centre in Montreal was originally scheduled to take place on September 23, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  13. ^ The concert of February 27, 2017 at the Videotron Centre in Quebec City was originally scheduled to take place on September 24, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  14. ^ The concert of March 3, 2017 at the U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati was originally scheduled to take place on September 29, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  15. ^ The concert of March 7, 2017 at the Times Union Center in Albany was originally scheduled to take place on September 21, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  16. ^ The concert of March 8, 2017 at the KeyBank Center in Buffalo was originally scheduled to take place on September 26, 2016, but was postponed due to upcoming birth of frontman Adam Levine's child.
  17. ^ The April 29, 2017 concert, in New Orleans is part of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
  18. ^ The May 13, 2017 concert, in Carson is part of Wango Tango.[26]
  19. ^ The May 26, 2017 concert, in Napa is part of the BottleRock Napa Valley Festival.[27]
  20. ^ The July 15, 2017 concert, in Pendleton is part of the Pendleton Whisky Music Fest Festival.[28]
  21. ^ The September 3, 2017 concert, in Snowmass is part of the Jazz Aspen Snowmass Experience.[29]
  22. ^ The September 15, 2017 show in Rio de Janeiro at Barra Olympic Park is part of Rock in Rio. Maroon 5 are stepping in for Lady Gaga as she is in hospital for severe pain.[30]
  23. ^ The September 16, 2017 show in Rio de Janeiro at Barra Olympic Park is part of Rock in Rio.
  24. ^ The March 3, 2018 show in Guatemala City at Explanada Cardales de Cayalá was originally scheduled to take place on September 21, 2017, but was postponed due to circumstances beyond their control.[31]
  25. ^ The June 10, 2017 concert in London at Wembley Stadium was originally to be part of the Summertime Ball, but was cancelled due to scheduling conflict.

References[]

  1. ^ "Everything You Need To Know About Maroon 5′s New Album". MTV. 19 May 2014.
  2. ^ "With a tour coming soon, we'd like to know from you where you'd like to see us play! #M5Tour". Archived from the original on 2021-12-24.
  3. ^ "MAROON 5 ANNOUNCE DETAILS FOR THEIR UPCOMING WORLD TOUR KICKING OFF IN FEBRUARY 2015". Facebook. September 2, 2014.
  4. ^ "Maroon 5 Reschedules Tour Dates Due to Impending Arrival of Baby Levine". ABC News Radio. September 2, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  5. ^ Maroon 5 (August 20, 2015). "Happy to announce that our friends @PHASESmusic will be opening up our NYE shows in Las Vegas!". Twitter. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c "Maroon 5 Will Return To The Road With All New Fall 2016 Tour". PRN Newswire. November 6, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Welcome PJ Morton and Polly A as our openers for our New Years Eve shows". Maroon 5.com. Archived from the original on November 25, 2016. Retrieved December 22, 2016.
  8. ^ "Jazz Aspen adds Hall & Oates, The Roots and Lake Street Dive to Labor Day lineup". Post Independent. February 3, 2017. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  9. ^ "Jazz Aspen adds The Revivalists to Labor Day lineup". The Aspen Times. March 14, 2017. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  10. ^ Bill Brownlee (March 22, 2015). "Maroon 5 reprises lightweight hits at Sprint Center show". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  11. ^ "Maroon 5 toca "Garota de Ipanema" em show no Rio de Janeiro | Mundo Itapema". Mundo Itapema. Retrieved 2016-03-22.
  12. ^ Chow, Jessica (April 19, 2015). "Maroon 5 thrills in live tour". The Brandeis Hoot. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  13. ^ Stein, Allie (September 15, 2016). "Maroon 5 concert review". The Trinity Voice. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  14. ^ Sources for shows in North America
  15. ^ Sources for shows in Europe
  16. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-11-04. Retrieved 2014-11-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ Spurces for shows in Europe:
  18. ^ Sources for shows in North America:
  19. ^ Sources for shows in Asia
  20. ^ Sources for shows in Oceania
  21. ^ "Maroon 5 Announces New Year's Eve Las Vegas Show: Exclusive". Billboard. July 13, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  22. ^ Sources for shows in Latin America
  23. ^ Sources for shows in Europe
  24. ^ Sources for shows in Latin America
  25. ^ Sources for shows in North America
  26. ^ "Maroon 5 Takes Us Back to 2002 at Wango Tango 2017". KIIS-FM. May 13, 2017. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  27. ^ Aidin Vaziri, Mariecar Mendoza and Esther Mobley (May 30, 2017). "The best moments from BottleRock 2017". SF Gate. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  28. ^ Lee, Stacy (March 3, 2017). "Maroon 5 to Headline Pendleton Whisky Festival July 15th". The Key 98.3. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  29. ^ "Maroon 5, Keith Urban, Nathaniel Rateliff to play Jazz Aspen Labor Day". The Aspen Times. December 17, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  30. ^ Blistein, Jon (September 14, 2017). "Lady Gaga Cancels 'Rock in Rio' Festival Appearance, Cites 'Severe Pain'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 15, 2017.
  31. ^ "Maroon 5 to Reschedule Their September 21st Guatemala City Show to March 3rd". Maroon 5's Official Website. September 20, 2017. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  32. ^ Jade Wright (May 29, 2015). "Maroon 5 cancel Liverpool Echo Arena show". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  33. ^ http://www.universal-music.co.jp/maroon5/news/2015-08-5/
  34. ^ "IT GETS WORSE...MAROON 5 SHOWS CANCELED IN SHANGHAI AND BEIJING". Smart Shanghai. July 14, 2015.
  35. ^ "Did Maroon 5 member's Dalai Lama tweet cost them China tour?". CNN. July 16, 2015.
  36. ^ "Maroon 5 Tour Dates in China Canceled: Report". Billboard. July 18, 2015. Retrieved July 19, 2015.
  37. ^ "Maroon 5 cancels show in Indonesia". June 23, 2015.
  38. ^ "We have announced that we will be canceling our upcoming shows in Charlotte and Raleigh, North Carolina". May 20, 2016. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016.
  39. ^ "MAROON 5 TO CANCEL UPCOMING CONCERT AT THE XL CENTER IN HARTFORD, CT THIS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th". September 16, 2016.
  40. ^ Maroon 5 (June 8, 2017). "Due to last minute scheduling conflicts, we will not be able to play this Saturday's Capital Summertime Ball at Wembley Stadium as planned". Twitter. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
  41. ^ "Maroon 5 Cancels Tour Date In Punta Cana, Dominican Republic". Facebook. September 5, 2017.
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