Canadian recording artist Avril Lavigne has completed six concert tours beginning with the Try to Shut Me Up Tour in 2002–03. This was followed by the 13-month Bonez Tour in 2004–05 and The Best Damn World Tour in 2008. Her Love Sux Tour completed in May 2023. The following is a chronological list of her concert tours.

Try to Shut Me Up Tour

Bonez Tour

Bonez Tour
Tour by Avril Lavigne
Promotional poster for tour
Associated albumUnder My Skin
Start dateSeptember 26, 2004 (2004-09-26)
End dateSeptember 25, 2005 (2005-09-25)
Legs8
No. of shows41 in Europe
65 in North America
27 in Australasia
3 in Africa
9 in Latin America
145 total
Avril Lavigne concert chronology

The Bonez Tour is the second concert tour by Canadian recording artist, Avril Lavigne. In support of her second studio album Under My Skin (2004), the tour began in the fall of 2004. Playing over one hundred shows in Europe, the Americas, Australasia and Africa. The performances in 2004 ranked 97th on Pollstar's "Top Tours of 2004", earning over $5 million.[1] The tour was recorded at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Japan for the DVD set, Live at Budokan: Bonez Tour. The DVD featured the full concert with behind the scenes footage. The video was certified Gold in Japan.

Setlists

Europe / North America (2004)
  1. "He Wasn't"
  2. "My Happy Ending"
  3. "Freak Out"
  4. "Sk8er Boi"
  5. "Losing Grip"
  6. "Who Knows"
  7. "Together"
  8. "I'm with You"
  9. "Forgotten"
  10. "Mobile"
  11. "Unwanted"
  12. "Naked"
  13. "Fall to Pieces"
  14. "Nobody's Home"
  15. "Don't Tell Me"
Encore
  1. "Song 2"
  2. "Complicated"
  3. "Slipped Away"
Asia (2005)
  1. "He Wasn't"
  2. "My Happy Ending"
  3. "Take Me Away"
  4. "Freak Out"
  5. "Sk8er Boi"
  6. "Unwanted"
  7. "Anything but Ordinary"
  8. "Who Knows"
  9. "I'm with You"
  10. "Naked"
  11. "Losing Grip"
  12. "Together"
  13. "Forgotten"
  14. "Tomorrow"
  15. "Fall to Pieces"
  16. "Nobody's Home"
  17. "Don't Tell Me"
Encore
  1. "Complicated"
  2. "Slipped Away"
Australia / Africa (2005)
  1. "Losing Grip"
  2. "Unwanted"
  3. "My Happy Ending"
  4. "Mobile"
  5. "I Always Get What I Want"
  6. "Things I'll Never Say"
  7. "I'm with You"
  8. "Who Knows"
  9. "Don't Tell Me"
  10. "Take Me Away"
  11. "He Wasn't"
  12. "American Idiot"
  13. "Together"
  14. "Forgotten"
  15. "Tomorrow"
  16. "Nobody's Home"
  17. "Sk8er Boi"
Encore
  1. "Song 2"
  2. "Complicated"

Source:[2]

Europe / North America / South America (2005)
  1. "Sk8er Boi"
  2. "Unwanted"
  3. "My Happy Ending"
  4. "I Always Get What I Want"
  5. "Mobile"
  6. "I'm with You"
  7. "Fall to Pieces"
  8. "Don't Tell Me"
  9. "Together"
  10. "Forgotten"
  11. "Tomorrow"
  12. "Nobody's Home"
  13. "Who Knows"
  14. "Losing Grip"
  15. "Take Me Away"
  16. "He Wasn't"
Encore
  1. "All the Small Things"
  2. "Song 2"
  3. "Complicated"

The setlist from the May 8, 2005 / Johannesburg (Coca-Cola Dome) show; not the setlist from very show on the tour leg. Source:[3]

Notes

Tour dates

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Opening act(s) Attendance Revenue
Europe[4][5]
September 26, 2004 Munich Germany Olympiahalle Bowling for Soup
September 27, 2004 Düsseldorf Philipshalle
September 28, 2004 Paris France Zénith de Paris
September 30, 2004 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall Bowling for Soup
October 1, 2004 Brussels Belgium Forest National
October 3, 2004 Manchester England Manchester Evening News Arena Simple Plan
October 4, 2004 Birmingham National Indoor Arena
October 6, 2004 Belfast Northern Ireland Odyssey Arena
October 7, 2004 Glasgow Scotland SECC Concert Hall 4
October 9, 2004 Cardiff Wales Cardiff International Arena
October 10, 2004 London England Wembley Arena
October 11, 2004
October 12, 2004 Sheffield Hallam FM Arena
North America[4][5]
October 25, 2004 Dallas United States American Airlines Center Butch Walker[6]
October 26, 2004 San Antonio SBC Center
October 27, 2004 New Orleans UNO Lakefront Arena
October 28, 2004 Atlanta Philips Arena
October 30, 2004 Hampton Hampton Coliseum
October 31, 2004 Philadelphia Wachovia Spectrum Butch Walker
November 1, 2004 Boston FleetCenter 10,340 / 12,500 (83%) $350,947[7]
November 3, 2004 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 7,582 / 10,435 (73%) $261,198[8]
November 4, 2004 Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 14,632 / 14,632 (100%) $475,470[9]
November 5, 2004 Cleveland United States CSU Convocation Center
November 6, 2004 Cincinnati U.S. Bank Arena
November 8, 2004 East Rutherford Continental Airlines Arena Butch Walker
November 9, 2004 Fairfax Patriot Center
November 11, 2004 Chicago United Center
November 12, 2004 Milwaukee Bradley Center
November 14, 2004 Denver Pepsi Center
November 15, 2004 Salt Lake City Delta Center
November 16, 2004 Las Vegas Thomas & Mack Center
November 17, 2004 Glendale Glendale Arena 7,866 / 7,866 (100%) $189,985[10]
November 19, 2004 San Jose HP Pavilion
November 20, 2004 San Diego Cox Arena
November 21, 2004 Fresno Save Mart Center
November 23, 2004 Portland Rose Garden Butch Walker
November 24, 2004 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum 11,730 / 11,730 (100%) $375,648[11]
November 25, 2004 Kelowna Prospera Place Butch Walker
December 3, 2004[lower-alpha 1] Anaheim United States Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim
December 4, 2004[lower-alpha 2] Sacramento ARCO Arena 13,171 / 14,105 (93%) $416,025[14]
December 5, 2004[lower-alpha 3] Tacoma Tacoma Dome 11,246 / 16,978 (66%) $506,090[14]
December 8, 2004[lower-alpha 4] Houston Reliant Arena
December 11, 2004[lower-alpha 5] Minneapolis Target Center
Asia[18][19]
March 1, 2005 Osaka Japan Osaka-Jo Hall
March 2, 2005
March 4, 2005 Nagoya Nagoya Rainbow Hall
March 6, 2005 Yokohama Yokohama Arena
March 7, 2005 Hiroshima Hiroshima Green Arena
March 8, 2005 Fukuoka Marine Messe Fukuoka
March 10, 2005 Tokyo Nippon Budokan
March 11, 2005 Hamamatsu Hamamatsu Arena
March 12, 2005 Kobe World Memorial Hall
March 14, 2005 Tokyo Nippon Budokan
March 15, 2005
March 16, 2005 Nagoya Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium
March 18, 2005 Sapporo Hokkaido Prefectural Sports Center
March 20, 2005 Tokyo Zepp Tokyo
March 23, 2005 Seoul South Korea Olympic Fencing Gymnasium
March 25, 2005 Wan Chai Hong Kong HKCEC Hall 3
March 27, 2005 Bangkok Thailand Impact Arena Simple Plan
March 29, 2005 Taipei Taiwan Taipei Municipal Stadium
March 31, 2005 Taguig Philippines Fort Bonifacio Simple Plan
April 2, 2005 Kallang Singapore Singapore Indoor Stadium
April 4, 2005 Jakarta Indonesia Istora Senayan
Oceania[20]
April 6, 2005 Perth Australia Challenge Stadium
April 8, 2005 Adelaide Adelaide Entertainment Centre
April 9, 2005 Melbourne Rod Laver Arena
April 11, 2005 Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre
April 12, 2005 Sydney Sydney Entertainment Centre
April 13, 2005 Newcastle Newcastle Entertainment Centre
Africa[19]
May 8, 2005 Johannesburg South Africa Coca-Cola Dome Tweak[21]
May 10, 2005 Durban Westridge Park Tennis Stadium
May 13, 2005 Cape Town Bellville Velodrome
Europe[18][19][22]
May 16, 2005 Dublin Ireland Point Theatre
May 17, 2005 Glasgow Scotland Carling Academy Glasgow
May 18, 2005
May 20, 2005 London England Hammersmith Apollo
May 21, 2005
May 22, 2005 Birmingham NEC Arena
May 23, 2005 Brighton Brighton Centre
May 25, 2005 Lyon France Halle Tony Garnier
May 26, 2005 Marseille Le Dôme de Marseille
May 27, 2005 Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi No Children
May 29, 2005[lower-alpha 6] Milan Italy Piazza del Duomo
May 31, 2005 Naples Piazza del Plebiscito
June 2, 2005 Vienna Austria Bank Austria Halle
June 3, 2005 Prague Czech Republic T-Mobile Arena
June 5, 2005 Budapest Hungary Budapest Sports Arena
June 6, 2005 Katowice Poland Spodek
June 7, 2005 Bratislava Slovakia Incheba
June 9, 2005 Geneva Switzerland SEG Geneva Arena
June 10, 2005 Basel St. Jakobshalle
June 11, 2005 Frankfurt Germany Jahrhunderthalle
June 13, 2005 Bonn Museumsplatz
June 14, 2005 Berlin Arena Berlin
June 15, 2005 Böblingen Sporthalle Böblingen
June 16, 2005 Hamburg Stadtpark Freilichtbühne
June 18, 2005[lower-alpha 7] Copenhagen Denmark Parken Stadium
June 20, 2005 Helsinki Finland Helsinki Ice Hall
June 22, 2005 Stockholm Sweden Stockholm Globe Arena
June 26, 2005 Luxembourg City Luxembourg Den Atelier
North America[25][26][27][6]
July 12, 2005 Hamilton Canada Copps Coliseum Not By Choice
July 13, 2005 London John Labatt Centre
July 14, 2005 Ottawa Corel Centre 10,475 / 12,712 (82%) $510,004[28]
July 15, 2005 Toronto Air Canada Centre 14,028 / 14,632 (96%) $543,287[29]
July 17, 2005 Clarkston United States DTE Energy Music Theatre Butch Walker
July 19, 2005 Nashville Starwood Amphitheatre
July 21, 2005 Maryland Heights UMB Bank Pavilion
July 22, 2005 Kansas City Starlight Theatre
July 23, 2005 Moline MARK of the Quad Cities
July 25, 2005 Winnipeg Canada MTS Centre 11,080 / 11,780 (94%) $428,828[30]
July 26, 2005 Regina Agridome
July 27, 2005 Saskatoon Credit Union Centre
July 29, 2005 Edmonton Rexall Place 10,989 / 11,990 (92%) $423,058[7]
July 30, 2005 Calgary Pengrowth Saddledome
July 31, 2005 Kamloops Sport Mart Place
August 2, 2005 Kelowna Prospera Place
August 3, 2005 Prince George CN Centre
August 5, 2005 Victoria Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre
August 6, 2005
August 8, 2005 Auburn United States White River Amphitheatre Gavin DeGraw[27]
Butch Walker
August 10, 2005 Concord Chronicle Pavilion
August 11, 2005 Los Angeles Greek Theatre
August 12, 2005
August 13, 2005 Las Vegas The Joint Butch Walker
August 14, 2005 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum
August 16, 2005 The Woodlands Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion Gavin DeGraw
Butch Walker
August 17, 2005 Dallas Smirnoff Music Centre
August 19, 2005 Atlanta HiFi Buys Amphitheatre
August 20, 2005 Tampa Ford Amphitheatre
August 21, 2005 West Palm Beach Sound Advice Amphitheatre
August 23, 2005 Charlotte Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
August 24, 2005 Raleigh Alltel Pavilion
August 25, 2005 Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center
August 27, 2005 Wantagh Tommy Hilfiger at Jones Beach Theater
August 28, 2005 Saratoga Springs Saratoga Performing Arts Center
August 29, 2005 Mansfield Tweeter Center for the Performing Arts
August 31, 2005 Halifax Canada Halifax Metro Centre Butch Walker
September 1, 2005 Moncton Moncton Coliseum
September 2, 2005 Quebec City Colisée Pepsi
September 3, 2005 Montreal Bell Centre
Latin America[31]
September 11, 2005 Monterrey Mexico Auditorio Coca-Cola Tolidos 7,673 / 12,202 (63%) $405,565[32]
September 13, 2005 Mexico City Palacio de los Deportes
September 15, 2005 Santiago Chile Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo Gufi
September 17, 2005 Buenos Aires Argentina Estadio Obras Sanitarias Daniela Herrero[33]
September 18, 2005
September 22, 2005 Porto Alegre Brazil Gigantinho Gymnasium Leela[34]
September 23, 2005[lower-alpha 8] Curitiba Paulo Leminski Arena
September 24, 2005 Rio de Janeiro Praça da Apoteose
September 25, 2005 São Paulo Estádio do Pacaembu 34,437 / 45,000 (77%) $835,887[14]
Total 165,249 / 196,562 (84%) $5,721,992

The Best Damn World Tour

Black Star Tour

Black Star Tour
Tour by Avril Lavigne
Associated albumGoodbye Lullaby
Start dateApril 30, 2011
End dateFebruary 18, 2012
No. of shows17 in Asia
21 in North America
9 in South America
14 in Europe
61 total
Avril Lavigne concert chronology

The Black Star Tour was the fourth concert tour by Canadian recording artist Avril Lavigne. Visiting Asia, the Americas and Europe, the tour promoter the singer's fourth studio album, Goodbye Lullaby (2011). Before the tour started, Lavigne said that she wanted the show to be intimate and personal, with guitars, piano and voice. She also said that wanted to play in small venues, to have a bigger contact with her fans.

Commercial performance

The tour was successful on tickets sales. A week after the Asian dates had been released, it was announced that 13,000 tickets were sold for Osaka, Japan. It also went really well in South America, where more than 55,000 tickets were sold, with price averaging $75-$120. All the tickets that went on sale for the first show in São Paulo were completely sold out on the same day. The concert held in Rio de Janeiro and Caracas had the higher grossings for the South American leg. In China, extra concerts were added for the second Asian leg, in Beijing and Guangzhou where Lavigne played for 10,000 fans at Guangzhou Gymnasium. On August 24, 2011, Lavigne ranked #15 position at Billboard boxscore due both shows in São Paulo, which grossed $980,009 combined. The tour has grossed US$25 million, with 61 concerts.

Setlists

Europe
  1. "Black Star"
  2. "What the Hell"
  3. "I Can Do Better"
  4. "Sk8er Boi"
  5. "He Wasn't"
  6. "I Always Get What I Want"
  7. "Alice"
  8. "When You're Gone"
  9. "Stop Standing There"
  10. "Wish You Were Here"
  11. "Girlfriend"
  12. "My Happy Ending"
  13. "Don't Tell Me"
  14. "Smile"
  15. "I'm with You"
  16. "I Love You"
Encore
  1. "Hot"
  2. "Complicated"
Source:[36]
North America
  1. "Black Star"
  2. "What the Hell"
  3. "Sk8er Boi"
  4. "He Wasn't"
  5. "Don't Tell Me"
  6. "I Always Get What I Want"
  7. "Alice"
  8. "When You're Gone"
  9. "Wish You Were Here"
  10. "Girlfriend"
  11. "Smile"
  12. "My Happy Ending"
  13. "I'm with You"
Encore
  1. "Nobody's Home"
  2. "Everybody Hurts"
  3. "Complicated"
Notes
  • "Keep Holding On" and "I Love You" were performed at select concerts in South America.
  • "Everybody Hurts" was performed during the second concert in São Paulo.
  • During the North American leg, "Best Years of Our Lives", "Tomorrow", and "I Love You" were performed on select dates during the encore.

Tour dates

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Opening act(s) Attendance Revenue
Asia[37][38]
April 30, 2011[lower-alpha 9] Beijing China Yuyang International Ski Resort
May 2, 2011 Shanghai Shanghai Indoor Stadium
May 5, 2011 Seoul South Korea Melon-AX Hall
May 7, 2011 Chek Lap Kok Hong Kong AsiaWorld–Arena
May 9, 2011 Singapore Singapore Indoor Stadium
May 11, 2011 Jakarta Indonesia Kartika Expo Center
May 13, 2011 Taipei Taiwan TWTC Nangang Exhibition Hall
North America[38]
May 27, 2011[lower-alpha 10] Paradise Island The Bahamas Atlantis Grand Ballroom
May 28, 2011[lower-alpha 11] St. Petersburg United States Tropicana Field
Latin America[38][42][43]
July 18, 2011 Caracas Venezuela Terraza del C.C.C.T. Sonica[44] 2,217 / 6,000 (37%) $510,884[45]
July 20, 2011 Lima Peru Explanada del Monumental 5,189 / 10,000 (52%) $348,633[45]
July 22, 2011 Santiago Chile Movistar Arena 8,844 / 14,320 (62%) $439,345[46]
July 24, 2011 Buenos Aires Argentina Microestadio Malvinas Argentinas Cirse[47] 6,638 / 6,680 (99%) $462,151[48]
July 27, 2011[lower-alpha 12] São Paulo Brazil Credicard Hall 13,347 / 14,108 (95%) $980,009[46]
July 28, 2011
July 31, 2011 Rio de Janeiro Citibank Hall 7,725 / 7,784 (99%) $591,976[46]
August 2, 2011 Belo Horizonte Chevrolet Hall 5,186 / 5,500 (94%) $386,743[49]
August 4, 2011 Brasília Nilson Nelson Gymnasium 5,038 / 9,000 (56%) $397,879[49]
Asia
August 13, 2011[lower-alpha 13] Chiba Japan QVC Marine Field
August 14, 2011[lower-alpha 13] Osaka Maishima Sports Island
Europe[42][43][51][52]
September 4, 2011 Moscow Russia Dvorets Sporta Megasport
September 5, 2011 Saint Petersburg Yubileyny Sports Palace
September 8, 2011 Turin Italy Torino Palasport Olimpico
September 10, 2011 Rome PalaLottomatica
September 11, 2011 Milan Mediolanum Forum
September 13, 2011 Amsterdam Netherlands Heineken Music Hall MakeBelieve
September 14, 2011 Brussels Belgium Forest National Vienna
September 16, 2011 Paris France Parc Georges-Valbon
September 17, 2011 Zénith de Paris
September 19, 2011 Cologne Germany Palladium
September 21, 2011 London England HMV Hammersmith Apollo Lawson
September 22, 2011
September 23, 2011 Manchester O2 Manchester Apollo
North America[42][51][52][53][54]
October 1, 2011 Victoria Canada Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre
October 3, 2011 Vancouver Rogers Arena
October 5, 2011 Prince George CN Centre
October 6, 2011 Kamloops Interior Savings Centre
October 8, 2011 Kelowna Prospera Place
October 10, 2011 Edmonton Rexall Place 5,484 / 9,037 (61%) $200,017[55]
October 11, 2011 Calgary Scotiabank Saddledome
October 13, 2011 Regina Brandt Centre
October 14, 2011 Winnipeg MTS Centre
October 16, 2011 Sudbury Sudbury Community Arena
October 17, 2011 Ottawa Scotiabank Place
October 19, 2011 Moncton Moncton Coliseum 1,988 / 2,580 (77%) $95,825[55]
October 20, 2011 Halifax Halifax Metro Centre 3,320 / 3,493 (95%) $162,175[56]
October 22, 2011 London John Labatt Centre 4,934 / 5,716 (86%) $199,784[56]
October 24, 2011 Toronto Air Canada Centre 6,383 / 6,383 (100%) $297,092[45]
October 25, 2011 Montreal Bell Centre 3,809 / 4,790 (80%) $185,384[55]
December 7, 2011[lower-alpha 14] Philadelphia United States Wells Fargo Center
December 10, 2011[lower-alpha 15] Sunrise BankAtlantic Center
December 13, 2011[lower-alpha 16] Lake Buena Vista House of Blues
Asia[51][53][59]
February 4, 2012[lower-alpha 17] Saitama Japan Saitama Super Arena
February 5, 2012[lower-alpha 17]
February 6, 2012[lower-alpha 17] Nagoya Nippon Gaishi Hall
February 8, 2012[lower-alpha 17] Fukuoka Marine Messe Fukuoka
February 9, 2012[lower-alpha 17] Osaka Osaka-Jo Hall
February 11, 2012 Guangzhou China Guangzhou Gymnasium
February 14, 2012 Beijing Wukesong Culture & Sports Center
February 16, 2012 Quezon City Philippines Smart Araneta Coliseum Somedaydream
February 18, 2012 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Stadium Merdeka
Total 80,102 / 105,391 (78%) $5,257,897

The Avril Lavigne Tour

Head Above Water Tour

Love Sux Tour

Footnotes

  1. The December 3, 2004 concert in Anaheim was part of "KIIS-FM Jingle Ball"[12]
  2. The December 4, 2004 concert in Sacramento was part of the "107.9 The End's Jungle Ball"[13]
  3. The December 5, 2004 concert in Tacoma was part of the "Kiss 106.1 Jingle Bell Bash"[15]
  4. The December 8, 2004 concert in Houston was part of the "KDWB 101.3's Jingle Ball"[16]
  5. The December 11, 2004 concert in Minneapolis was part of the "KRBE 104.1's Jingle Jam"[17]
  6. The May 29, 2005 concert in Milan was part of the "Cornetto Free Music Festival"[23]
  7. The June 18, 2006 concert in Copenhagen was part of "Zulu Rocks"[24]
  8. The September 23, 2005 concert in Curitiba was part of the "Curitiba Rock Festival"[34]
  9. The April 30, 2011 concert in Beijing was part of the "China Valley International Music Festival"[39]
  10. The May 27, 2011 concert in Paradise Island was part of "Atlantis Live"[40]
  11. The May 28, 2011 concert in St. Petersburg was part of the "Tampa Bay Rays Summer Concert Series"[41]
  12. On July 26, 2011, Lavigne got stuck at Ezeiza Airport in Buenos Aires due to a volcano, almost making her cancel the July 27 concert in São Paulo. However, she was able to arrive in Brazil just four hours before the concert time.
  13. 1 2 The August 13 and 14, 2011 concerts were part of "Summer Sonic Festival"[50]
  14. The December 7, 2011 concert in Philadelphia was part of "Q102's Jingle Ball".
  15. The December 10, 2011 concert in Sunrise was part of "Y100's Jingle Ball"[57]
  16. The December 13, 2011 concert in Lake Buena Vista was part of "XL 106.7's XLent Xmas"[58]
  17. 1 2 3 4 5 The dates on February 4–6 and 8-9, 2012, in Japan were originally scheduled to take place in May 2011, but were rescheduled due to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.

References

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  2. Coetzer, Diane (May 11, 2005). "Avril Lavigne / May 8, 2005 / Johannesburg (Coca-Cola Dome)". Billboard. Archived from the original on November 18, 2007. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
  3. "Avril Lavigne lota estádio no último show no Brasi" [Avril Lavigne last stadium in Brazil] (in Portuguese). Terra Networks. September 25, 2005. Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
  4. 1 2 "Avril Lavigne Headline Tour". News Corporation. IGN. September 17, 2004. Archived from the original on January 16, 2006. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  5. 1 2 Jeckell, Barry A.; Cohen, Jonathan (September 16, 2004). "Avril 'Bonez' Up For Arena Action". Billboard. Archived from the original on September 17, 2004. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
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  8. "Billboard Boxscore: Concert Grosses". Billboard. Vol. 116, no. 51. New York. December 18, 2004. p. 22. ISSN 0006-2510. Archived from the original on December 24, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  9. "Billboard Boxscore: Concert Grosses". Billboard. Vol. 116, no. 48. New York. November 27, 2004. p. 26. ISSN 0006-2510. Archived from the original on December 24, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  10. "Jobing.com Arena Boxscores". Archived from the original on June 29, 2013. Retrieved May 14, 2013.
  11. "Billboard Boxscore: Concert Grosses". Billboard. Vol. 117, no. 2. New York. January 8, 2005. p. 19. ISSN 0006-2510. Archived from the original on December 24, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  12. MTV News Staff (November 3, 2004). "For The Record: Quick News On Nick And Jessica, Eminem, Avril Lavigne, Christina Milian, Simple Plan, & More". MTV News. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  13. "Did Jingle Ball rock? No doubt – loudly". The Sacramento Bee. December 6, 2004. p. E1.
  14. 1 2 3 "Billboard Boxscore: Concert Grosses". Billboard. Vol. 117, no. 47. New York. November 19, 2005. p. 23. ISSN 0006-2510. Archived from the original on December 24, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  15. "Month of Merrymaking". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. November 16, 2004. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
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  24. Lundkvist, Brian (June 21, 2005). "Zulu Rocks, Parken, med Nik & Jay, Avril Lavigne og Nephew, lørdag d. 18. juni 2005" [Zulu Rocks, Parken, with Nik & Jay, Avril Lavigne and Nephew, Saturday June 18, 2005]. Gaffa (in Danish). Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
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  26. Additional sources for Bonez Tour in North America:
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  35. Rocha, Ursula (August 1, 2011). "Avril Lavigne: show no Rio teve hit 'Everybody hurts' a pedido dos fãs" [Avril Lavigne: show in Rio was a hit. 'Everybody Hurts' at the request of the fans]. SRZD (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on April 6, 2012. Retrieved September 15, 2011.
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