People vs. Money Tour

People vs. Money Tour
Tour by M.I.A.

M.I.A. performing at Bonnaroo festival, 2008
Associated album Kala (2007)
Start date 1 March 2008
End date 13 June 2008
Legs 1
No. of shows 2 in Mexico
27 in United States
29 in total
M.I.A. concert chronology

The People vs. Money Tour was a 2008 M.I.A. concert tour in support of her studio album Kala. Concerts also featured songs from her debut album Arular. It began on 26 April 2008 and ended on 13 June in Manchester, Tennessee. The tour featured dates in Central America, the USA and Canada. Her 2008 dates began with two performances at the MX Beat festival in Monterrey, Mexico in March, following the end of her Kala Tour. M.I.A. later cancelled the European dates of the tour, which ended at the Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tennessee on 13 June 2008.[1][2]

Tour details

The 2008 tour was announced by M.I.A. in April 2008 via her Myspace and official website.[3] A continuation of the Kala Tour, dates included concerts at music festivals, universities and club venues. The set consisted of M.I.A., back up singer Cherry, DJs Low Budget and in other concerts Million Dollar Mano, dancers and supporting vocalists. M.I.A.'s DJs also perform opening sets before her shows. She met backup dancer Cisko after viewing videos of his dances on YouTube.

Holy Fuck opened for M.I.A. from 26 April – 12 May 2008.[4] Egyptian Lover supported M.I.A. on a few dates during the tour, as well as Rye Rye who, along with MGMT, opened for M.I.A. on 11 April 2008.[5][6]

Continuing with a similar set to her KALA Tour concerts during 2007, M.I.A. selects programming, beats and videos using a Lemur Input Device.[7] A panoramic back screen features film footage of Koichi Toyama's speech, break-dancing street kids, strippers, tigers, war, video games, political rhetoric, graphs, globes, laughing women, animated graphics of M.I.A. performing and large concert crowds from her previous shows, images of her artwork and holographic patterns.

Shows

M.I.A.'s McCarren Park concert in June 2008.

The setlist featured songs from both her studio albums Arular (2005) and Kala (2007), although M.I.A. did not perform the same setlist at every concert. The set often began with Kala's opening track, "Bamboo Banga."[8] M.I.A. performed at the final date of the 2008 MX Beat festival in Toluca.[9] Prior to her Coachella festival appearance in April 2008, M.I.A. filmed from her New York apartment window and posted on YouTube an incident involving a black man being apprehended by white police officers, which elicited commentary debating the force used for the arrest.[10] At the show, she sang a segment from The Verve's "The Drugs Don't Work", changing the lyrics to "The cops don't work, they make things worse, but I know I'll see your face again,"[11] after police tried to shut the set down. Stating "They were on the backside of the stage and they were trying to shut me down...I was really thinking about the situation in New York", referencing the Sean Bell shooting incident, she felt "getting people to be interactive makes me feel more and more connected to my fans."[12]

In May 2008, she stated in an interview "I figured I might as well do a few more shows in America before I may not be allowed back in or ever get a chance to come back again – It's nice to tour around America and do every gig like it's your last gig."[13]

M.I.A. performed additional dates during her tour. On 3 May 2008 she performed at the JazzFest in New Orleans, U.S.,[14] and at an afterparty for the MTV Movie Awards in West Hollywood, California, U.S. on 1 June 2008. At the show, Arulpragasam pledged, with the money she earned from the gig, to build new schools in Liberia, telling the crowd "It costs $52,000 to build a school in Liberia for 1000".[15][16] Updates on the building progress have been posted on her MySpace blog.[17] She also performed at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, U.S. in June 2008, during which Mos Def performed with her onstage. Other performers there included past tour mates LCD Soundsystem. Proceeds from the event were donated towards benefitting the museum's general operating fund.[18][19][20] Arulpragasam announced her engagement at her Edmonton Events Centre concert in Canada.[21] Curating his first ever New American Music Union in August 2008, Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers described in an interview in May being very keen on Arulpragasam playing at the US festival, remarking "I think she's a rocking live performer. She wanted to play, she was very into it" but that she cancelled as she was getting married.[22]

Kat Bjelland, Kim Gordon and Susan Sarandon were among concert attendees.

Clothes

Clothes worn during this tour were inspired by prints and artwork Arulpragasam created for her websites, her album cover for Kala and songs such as "Bird Flu", and were taken from her clothing line.[23][24] In 2008, she launched a limited edition fashion line held to reflect her personal style.[25][26] The limited edition "KALA Tour/Okley Run" line included Mexican and Afrika jackets and leggings, Islamic hoodies as well as tour-inspired designs including "People Vs. Money Tour Tees" and "KALA Tour Tees". In some concerts, she wore T-shirts imprinted with images of artists such as Ian Curtis.[5] Short-shorts, head bandannas, neon, retro stripes and sequin-clad attendees populated her Aragon ballroom performance in Chicago, with Althea Legaspi of the Chicago Tribune noting that "If her fans' clothing is any indication, M.I.A.'s cultural influence – with her flair for outrageous fashion – may be growing beyond her music. Fortunately, Friday's performance showed her showmanship has improved along with her popularity."[27]

Set list

Below is the set list of Arulpragasam's concert at the Maplewood Myth. Throughout the People Vs. Money Tour, she played various combinations of these songs.

All Girls Went Up on Stage

All Boys Went Up on Stage

Encore

Tour dates

Date City Country Venue
1 March 2008 Monterrey Mexico MX Beat Sound Festival
8 March 2008 Mexico City MX Beat Sound Festival
10 April 2008 South Hadley, Massachusetts United States Mount Holyoke College[28]
11 April 2008 Poughkeepsie, New York Vassar College[29]
12 April 2008 Providence, Rhode Island Spring Weekend at Brown University[30]
26 April 2008 Indio, California Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival
28 April 2008 San Diego, California 4th & B
1 May 2008 Austin, Texas La Zona Rosa
2 May 2008 Dallas, Texas Palladium Ballroom
5 May 2008 Nashville, Tennessee City Hall
8 May 2008 Detroit, Michigan The Fillmore Detroit
9 May 2008 Chicago Aragon Ballroom
12 May 2008 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Turner Hall Ballroom
13 May 2008 Maplewood, Minnesota Myth
14 May 2008 Lawrence, Kansas Liberty Hall
17 May 2008 Denver, Colorado Fillmore Auditorium
18 May 2008 Salt Lake City, Utah The Depot
21 May 2008 San Francisco, California Music Concourse
23 May 2008 Portland, Oregon Roseland Theatre
24 May 2008 George, Washington Sasquatch! Festival at The Gorge
25 May 2008 Vancouver Canada PNE Forum
27 May 2008 Edmonton, Alberta Edmonton Events Centre
28 May 2008 Calgary, Alberta MacEwan Hall at the University of Calgary
30 May 2008 Winnipeg, Manitoba Burton Cummings Theatre
2 June 2008 Toronto Sound Academy
3 June 2008 Montreal Metropolis
5 June 2008 Philadelphia United States The Armory
6 June 2008 New York City McCarren Pool
13 June 2008 Manchester, Tennessee Bonnaroo Music Festival

Cancelled dates

Date City Country Venue
Europe
21 June 2008 Barcelona Spain Sonar by Night Festival
24 June 2008 Arendal Norway Hove Festival
27 June 2008 Dublin Ireland Red Box
1 July 2008 London United Kingdom The Roundhouse
4 July 2008 Roskilde Denmark Roskilde Festival
5 July 2008 Arvika Sweden Arvika Festival
6 July 2008 Gdynia Poland Heiniken Open'er Festival
8 July 2008 Montreux Switzerland Montreux Jazz Festival
10 July 2008 Novi Sad Serbia Exit Festival
11 July 2008 Leipzig Germany Splash! Festival
12 July 2008 Liège Belgium Les Ardentes
16 July 2008 Porto Portugal Casa da Música
19 July 2008 Madrid Spain Summercase
20 July 2008 Southwold United Kingdom Latitude Festival

References

  1. "M.I.A. info - June 2008 entry". MIAUK – M.I.A. Official Website. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
  2. "Potent Quotables:M.I.A. to go MIA". Spinner.com. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
  3. "M.I.A. – New Tour dates". MIAUK – M.I.A. Official Website. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
  4. "MIA and Holy Fuck hit the road together". NME. 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  5. 1 2 Murphy, Tom (2008-05-19). "Over the Weekend...M.I.A., the Egyptian Love, and Low B at The Fillmore". Westword. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  6. Reeves, Jackson (2008-04-10). "M.I.A.-ViCE, students prep for year's biggest concert". The Miscellany News. Vassar College. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  7. "M.I.A. travels the world on the back of a Lemur...". Dolphin Music. 2008-06-13. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  8. Tyler, Theresa (2008-05-28). "Concert Review:MacEwan Hall, Calgary". Jam! Canoe. Retrieved 2008-08-25.
  9. Hernandez, David (2008-03-10). "Bodies moving at MX Beat". LA Weekly blogs. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  10. Gajewski, Josh (2008-04-24). "M.I.A. can be found at Bed Stuy (and soon at Coachella)". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  11. "MIA orchestrates mass stage invasion at Coachella". NME. 2008-04-27. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  12. Baltin, Steve (2008-05-06). "Concert blog – M.I.A. Bashes Cops, References Sean Bell". Spinner.com. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  13. Lindsay, Cam (2008-05-28). "M.I.A. To Move To Canada?". Exclaim!. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  14. "Jazz Fest at Night". Allaboutjazz.com. 17 May 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2008.
  15. Wappler, Margaret (2008-06-02). "The Guide:Los Angeles Time Soundboard". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  16. Baltin, Steve (2008-06-04). "M.I.A. Takes the Money....for Charity". Spinner.com. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  17. Arulpragasam, Mathangi "Maya". "M.I.A. MySpace". MySpace. Retrieved 2008-10-24.
  18. O'Connell, Michael (2008-06-12). "BizBash New York – Rock Garden". BizBash. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  19. "Moma.org – Party in the Garden honouring Donald B. Marron and Mike Nichols". MOMA.org. 2008-06-10. Archived from the original on 2008-07-31. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  20. "M.I.A. to build schools in Liberia". NME. 2008-04-27. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  21. MacNeil, Jason (2008-05-31). "M.I.A. to W.E.D.". edmontonsun.com. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  22. Anderson, Kyle (2008-05-19). "Q&A: Anthony Kiedis". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
  23. Roberts, Michael (2008-05-14). "Q&A with M.I.A.". Westword.com. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  24. Sperounes, Sandra (2008-05-27). "More on M.I.A.". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  25. Sung, Hannah (2007). "M.I.A. is back in action". AOL Music Canada. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  26. "10 Deep's Women's Collection Resembles M.I.A.'s Style Aesthetic". Groove Efeect. 2007-08-06. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  27. Legaspi, Althea (2008-05-12). "M.I.A. packs punch at Aragon ballroom". Chicago Tribune.
  28. Gordon, Kim (2008-06-15). "Out of This World, Catchy or Good for Driving". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-06.
  29. Reeves, Jackson (2008-04-10). "Exclusive Interview with M.I.A.". The Miscellany News. Vassar College. Retrieved 2008-07-06.
  30. Sriskandarajah, Ike (April 2008). "Lady Lanka Comes Armed". The College Hill Independent – The Brown/RISD Weekly Arts Section. 26 (10). Retrieved 2008-07-06.
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