Love On Tour

(Redirected from Love on Tour)

Love On Tour[4] was the second concert tour by English singer-songwriter Harry Styles, in support of his second and third studio albums, Fine Line (2019) and Harry's House (2022). The tour consisted of seven legs spreading over the course of 22 months starting on 4 September 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada, and concluded on 22 July 2023 in Reggio Emilia, Italy.

Love On Tour
Tour by Harry Styles
Location
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • North America
  • Oceania
  • South America
Associated albums
Start date4 September 2021 (2021-09-04)
End date22 July 2023 (2023-07-22)
Legs7
No. of shows169
Supporting acts
Box office$617.3 million[2][3]
Harry Styles concert chronology

After being postponed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the tour began on 4 September 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada supporting Fine Line, consisting of 42 announced US dates in total.[5] Styles later began touring internationally in June of the following year, promoting Fine Line as well as Harry's House. Love On Tour became one of the first full-capacity indoor arena concert tours to occur in the United States since the pandemic.[6] The first leg grossed a total of $95 million and sold 719,000 tickets from 42 shows performed in North America from September to November 2021. The tour made another $55 million and sold 638,000 tickets from the 23 shows performed in Europe from June to July 2022. In total, Love On Tour grossed $617.3 million and sold five million tickets.[7]

Background

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On 4 November 2019, Styles announced the release of his second studio album Fine Line, which was released on 13 December 2019;[8] the first single "Lights Up" was released on digital platforms on 11 October.[9] During a radio interview with Capital FM on the singer announced that he would tour the world through 2020.[10] Styles announced the album's support tour, Love On Tour on November 13, exactly a month before the album's release.[11][12]

In March 2020, it was announced that the European leg would be postponed to 2021, amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[13] In June of the same year, Styles pushed back the North American leg of the tour, including the planned "Harryween" event, to 2021.[14] In July 2021, it was announced that the dates for the US leg had been adjusted and would start in September 2021 instead of August.[15] Depending on the state legislature, the event organizer required proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative diagnostic test within 48 hours prior to entry, in addition to wearing a mask, in order to attend Styles' show.[16][17] On January 19, 2022, Styles announced European and South American tour dates.[18]

In October 2021, during the tour, Styles held a two-day Halloween event at New York City's Madison Square Garden arena, called "Harryween Fancy Dress Party", where all concertgoers dressed in costumes, with Styles himself dressed as Dorothy Gale and a Pierrot clown.[19] Many of the concertgoers were photographed on the scene by Vogue.[20] In August 2022, Styles announced additional European dates, to take place from 13 May to 22 July 2023.[21]

Critical reception

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The show received rave reviews from critics. Ramin Setoodeh of Variety praised Styles' performance during the show, highlighting the artist's energy and connection with the audience. Setoodeh noted that Styles was clearly enjoying himself and delivered a powerful setlist focused on his 2019 album Fine Line, along with tracks from his debut album and a One Direction hit, "What Makes You Beautiful".[22]

 
Harry Styles during his concert at Wembley Stadium in London on 17 June 2023.

Brittany Spanos of Rolling Stone defined Styles' post-pandemic return to the stage at Madison Square Garden as triumphant. The concert, delayed by the pandemic, showcased Styles' electrifying performance and strong bond with fans eagerly awaiting the event. Spanos also highlighted that the show emphasized communal experiences and inclusive gestures, reinforcing Styles' message of kindness. She also noted that the encore, featuring "Kiwi" underscored Styles' rockstar charisma, leaving the audience excited and fully embracing his call for self-expression and celebration.[23]

Jon Caramanica and Lindsay Zoladz of The New York Times attended Styles' 15-night residency at Madison Square Garden, examining how he wielded his star power and musical direction. Caramanica noted Styles' undeniable charisma and stage presence but questioned the depth of his musical impact, finding the performance more about showmanship than substance. Zoladz, contrasting with Caramanica, celebrated Styles as a consummate pop star catering to his fervent fanbase, highlighting his charismatic banter and stage engagement.[24]

The Guardian gave the show in Glasgow a five-star review stating that the show, which celebrates his third album Harry's House (2022), was marked by an incredibly positive poptimism, without elaborate tricks, sophisticated choreography or pyrotechnics, just Styles' dazzling charisma, backed by a six-piece band and a catalog of music that crosses genres.[25]

Will Richards of The Standard gave a four-star review of the show at Wembley Stadium in London, he stated that the atmosphere was marked by the exuberance of the fans, who dressed in vibrant colors and extravagant costumes. He also said the event was not just a concert, but a community celebration, where fans met in person for the first time and expressed support for each other, including with messages asking for help in coming out as gay. He stated that the show, although simple in terms of production, focused on fan interaction and celebrating authenticity.[26]

 
Audience for Styles' concert at Wembley Stadium in London on 19 June 2022.

Commercial performance

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"Love on Tour" was ranked second on Pollstar''s 2021 year-end list of worldwide tours, with a gross of 86.3 million dollars and a total of 669,051 tickets sold across 39 shows in its North American leg.[27] The tour sold out numerous shows and was a success. The tour's four shows at Wembley Stadium in London were ranked seventh on Pollstar's 2023 year-end list of the top 300 concert grosses, earning $37,341,665 with a total of 335,394 tickets sold. Several other shows from the tour also appeared on the list.[28] The tour grossed a total of $617.3 million according to Billboard, with over five million tickets sold. At the time, the tour ended as the fifth-highest grossing and eighth-most attended tour ever.[3]

Accolades

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Accolades for Love On Tour
Organization Year Category Result Ref.
Pollstar Awards 2021 Major Tour of the Year Won [29]
Best Pop Tour Nominated
2023 Major Tour of the Year Won [30]
Brand Partnership/Live Campaign of the Year Won
Per Cap Award Won
Live Music is Better Award Nominated
Residency of the Year Won
Pop Tour of the Year Nominated
iHeartRadio Music Awards 2022 Tour of the Year Won [31]
2023 Favorite Residency Won [32]
People's Choice Awards 2022 Concert Tour of 2022 Nominated [33]
Shorty Awards 2022 Social Media Campaign Nominated [34]
Webby Awards Best Campaign - Entertainment & Performances Nominated [35]
Best Campaign - Events & Livestreams Won [35]

Set list

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This set list is representative of the show on 3 October 2021 in New York City.[36] It does not represent all concerts for the tour.

  1. "Golden"
  2. "Carolina"
  3. "Adore You"
  4. "Only Angel"
  5. "She"
  6. "Two Ghosts / Falling"
  7. "Sunflower Vol. 6"
  8. "To Be So Lonely"
  9. "Woman"
  10. "Cherry"
  11. "Lights Up"
  12. "Canyon Moon"
  13. "Treat People With Kindness"
  14. "What Makes You Beautiful"
  15. "Fine Line"
Encore
  1. "Sign of the Times"
  2. "Watermelon Sugar"
  3. "Kiwi"

Additional notes

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  • Styles performed "Over the Rainbow" from The Wizard of Oz during the show in New York City on 30 October 2021.[37]
  • Styles performed "Toxic" by Britney Spears and "Medicine" during the show in New York City on 31 October 2021.[38] Styles performed Medicine during select dates throughout the tour.[39][40][41]
  • Beginning on the 11 June 2022 show in Glasgow, Styles added "Music for a Sushi Restaurant", "Daylight", "Cinema", "Keep Driving", "Matilda", "Boyfriends", "Satellite", "Late Night Talking", "Love of My Life" and "As It Was" to the set list; he removed "Carolina", "Only Angel", "She", "Two Ghosts", "Falling", "Sunflower Vol. 6", "To Be So Lonely", "Woman" and "Cherry".[42]
  • Styles performed "Hopelessly Devoted to You" from Grease during the show in Inglewood on 31 October 2022. He did so to honor Olivia Newton-John, who played the role of Sandy Olsson in the film.[43]
  • On 1 December 2022, Styles performed "Songbird" as a tribute to Christine McVie.[44]
  • Styles performed "The Horses" by Daryl Braithwaite during the show in Perth on 20 February 2023 and the show in Melbourne on 25 February 2023.[45][46] Braithwaite joined Styles for a surprise performance during the show in Sydney on 4 March of the same year.[47][48]
  • Beginning with the show in Horsens on 13 May 2023, Styles performed "Grapejuice" and "Stockholm Syndrome".[49]
  • On the final show, 22 July 2023 in Reggio Emilia, Styles performed a 10-minute instrumental piece he had written.[50]

Tour dates

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List of 2021 concerts[4][51][27]
Date (2021) City Country Venue Opening acts Attendance Revenue
4 September Las Vegas United States MGM Grand Garden Arena Jenny Lewis 13,413 / 13,413 $1,686,284
7 September Denver Ball Arena 17,347 / 17,347 $1,863,008
9 September San Antonio AT&T Center 17,298 / 17,298 $2,131,207
11 September Dallas American Airlines Center 17,682 / 17,682 $2,193,709
15 September St. Louis Enterprise Center 17,171 / 17,171 $2,745,557
17 September Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 18,995 / 18,995 $2,319,947
18 September Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena 18,903 / 18,903 $2,753,018
20 September Detroit Little Caesars Arena 18,204 / 18,204 $2,281,394
22 September Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center 18,114 / 18,114 $2,241,288
24 September Chicago United Center 39,387 / 39,387 $4,750,863
25 September
29 September Nashville Bridgestone Arena 32,627 / 32,627 $4,464,889
1 October
3 October New York City Madison Square Garden 56,392 / 56,392[a] $8,099,555[a]
4 October
7 October Orlando Amway Center 16,898 / 16,898 $1,904,939
8 October Sunrise FLA Live Arena 18,176 / 18,176 $2,350,545
10 October Tampa Amalie Arena 18,183 / 18,183 $2,029,171
12 October Raleigh PNC Arena 18,616 / 18,616 $2,238,542
14 October Pittsburgh PPG Paints Arena 18,369 / 18,369 $2,137,752
16 October New York City Madison Square Garden [a] [a]
18 October Cleveland Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse 17,786 / 17,786 $2,197,690
21 October Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena 18,159 / 18,159 $2,165,968
23 October
25 October Boston TD Garden 16,743 / 16,743 $2,306,243
27 October Atlanta State Farm Arena 31,146 / 31,146 $4,146,897
28 October
30 October New York City Madison Square Garden Madison Cunningham
Orville Peck
37,321 / 37,321 $5,714,220
31 October
3 November Milwaukee Fiserv Forum Jenny Lewis 16,881 / 16,881 $2,312,794
7 November Tacoma Tacoma Dome 21,469 / 21,469 $2,746,176
8 November Portland Moda Center 17,890 / 17,890 $2,125,697
10 November Sacramento Golden 1 Center 16,745 / 16,745 $2,292,473
11 November San Jose SAP Center 17,823 / 17,823 $2,244,533
13 November Glendale Gila River Arena 16,846 / 16,846 $2,036,487
15 November San Diego Pechanga Arena 13,728 / 13,728 $1,641,218
17 November Inglewood[b] The Forum 50,739 / 50,739 $6,602,191
19 November
20 November
23 November [c] Houston Toyota Center 16,541 / 16,541 $2,171,475
24 November North Little Rock Simmons Bank Arena 16,691 / 16,691 $2,525,863
28 November Elmont UBS Arena 16,777 / 16,777 $3,272,836
List of 2022 concerts
Date (2022) City Country Venue Opening acts Attendance Revenue
11 June Glasgow Scotland Ibrox Stadium Mitski 43,637 / 43,637 $4,229,885
15 June Manchester England Emirates Old Trafford 99,526 / 99,526 $9,179,139
16 June
18 June London Wembley Stadium 147,269 / 147,269 $14,479,293
19 June
22 June Dublin Ireland Aviva Stadium Arlo Parks 50,422 / 50,422 $5,006,395
26 June Hamburg Germany Volksparkstadion Wolf Alice 42,192 / 42,192 $3,494,578
29 June Stockholm Sweden Tele2 Arena 36,282 / 36,282 $3,068,314
1 July Oslo Norway Telenor Arena 23,784 / 23,784 $2,089,269
5 July Paris France Accor Arena 14,598 / 14,598 $1,030,721
7 July Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis 18,245 / 18,245 $1,207,376
9 July Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome 13,080 / 13,080 $1,056,199
11 July Munich Germany Olympiahalle 13,027 / 13,027 $991,358
13 July Budapest Hungary Budapest Sports Arena 12,070 / 12,070 $788,891
15 July Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena 15,616 / 15,616 $1,069,985
16 July Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle 10,910 / 10,910 $811,841
18 July Kraków Poland Tauron Arena 15,158 / 15,158 $1,654,068
20 July Berlin Germany Mercedes-Benz Arena 12,853 / 12,853 $1,026,787
22 July Cologne Lanxess Arena 16,069 / 16,069 $1,211,191
25 July Bologna Italy Unipol Arena 12,699 / 12,699 $912,467
26 July Turin Pala Alpitour 14,513 / 14,513 $923,185
29 July Madrid Spain WiZink Center 13,990 / 13,990 $964,164
31 July Lisbon Portugal Altice Arena 12,671 / 12,671 $747,179
15 August Toronto Canada Scotiabank Arena Madi Diaz 36,607 / 36,607 $6,864,299
16 August
20 August New York City United States Madison Square Garden Blood Orange 276,852 / 276,852 $63,102,676
21 August
22 August
26 August
27 August
28 August
1 September
2 September
3 September
7 September
8 September
10 September
14 September
15 September
21 September
25 September Austin Moody Center Gabriels 86,056 / 86,056 $19,175,231
26 September
28 September
29 September
2 October
3 October
8 October Chicago United Center Jessie Ware 112,400 / 112,400 $20,358,593
9 October
10 October [d]
13 October
14 October
15 October
23 October Inglewood[b] Kia Forum Ben Harper 204,916 / 204,916 $38,132,528
24 October
26 October
28 October
29 October
31 October
2 November
9 November
11 November
12 November
14 November
15 November
20 November Guadalajara Mexico Arena VFG Koffee 12,812 / 12,812 $1,116,186
22 November Monterrey Arena Monterrey 11,316 / 11,316 $832,767
24 November Mexico City Foro Sol 117,363 / 117,363 $7,563,097
25 November
27 November[e] Bogotá Colombia Coliseo Live 19,933 / 19,933 $1,418,653
29 November[f] Lima Peru Estadio Nacional 40,927 / 40,927 $3,006,682
1 December[g] Santiago Chile Estadio Bicentenario de La Florida DJ Kamila Govorčin
Koffee
25,505 / 25,505 $1,795,373
3 December Buenos Aires Argentina Estadio River Plate Koffee
Anita B Queen
123,942 / 123,942 $8,966,109
4 December
6 December São Paulo Brazil Allianz Parque Koffee 137,009 / 137,009[h] $11,113,075[h]
8 December Rio de Janeiro Área Externa da Jeunesse Arena[i] 33,260 / 33,260 $2,362,813
10 December Curitiba Pedreira Paulo Leminski 23,466 / 23,466 $2,268,067
13 December São Paulo Allianz Parque [h] [h]
14 December
List of 2023 concerts[28]
Date (2023) City Country Venue Opening acts Attendance Revenue
26 January[j] Inglewood United States Kia Forum Wet Leg 51,342 / 51,342 $9,623,023
27 January[k]
29 January[l]
31 January Thousand Palms Acrisure Arena Madi Diaz 20,939 / 20,939 $5,577,876
1 February
20 February Perth Australia HBF Park Wet Leg 30,849 / 30,849 $4,409,981
24 February Melbourne Marvel Stadium 114,616 / 114,616 $15,042,107
25 February
28 February Gold Coast Metricon Stadium 48,177 / 48,177 $6,550,585
3 March Sydney Accor Stadium 137,443 / 137,443 $16,445,460
4 March
7 March Auckland New Zealand Mount Smart Stadium Ny Oh
Wet Leg
41,979 / 41,979 $5,111,127
11 March Bangkok Thailand Rajamangala Stadium 27,492 / 27,492 $2,860,607
14 March Bocaue Philippines Philippine Arena 29,247 / 29,247 $3,337,289
17 March Singapore National Stadium 25,654 / 25,654 $4,696,429
20 March Seoul South Korea KSPO Dome 15,314 / 15,314 $1,949,014
24 March Tokyo Japan Ariake Arena 24,325 / 24,325 $3,274,769
25 March
13 May Horsens Denmark CASA Arena Horsens Wet Leg
14 May
17 May Munich Germany Olympiastadion 120,877 / 120,877 $12,496,890
18 May
22 May Coventry England Coventry Building Society Arena 72,026 / 72,026 $8,462,319
23 May
26 May Edinburgh Scotland BT Murrayfield Stadium 128,838 / 128,838 $14,335,817
27 May
1 June Saint-Denis[m] France Stade de France 132,880 / 132,880 $14,079,140
2 June
4 June Amsterdam Netherlands Johan Cruijff Arena 154,903 / 154,903 $16,498,991
5 June
6 June
10 June[n] Slane Ireland Slane Castle Inhaler
Annie Mac
Mitch Rowland
Wet Leg
83,310 / 83,310 $10,367,213
13 June London England Wembley Stadium Madi Diaz
Wet Leg
335,394 / 335,394 $37,341,665
14 June Ariza
Elin
Wet Leg
16 June Mitch Rowland
Wet Leg
17 June Pauli the PSM
Wet Leg
Yaffra
20 June Cardiff Wales Principality Stadium Wet Leg 115,047 / 115,047 $12,519,389
21 June
24 June Werchter Belgium Festivalpark Werchter
27 June Düsseldorf Germany Merkur Spiel-Arena 84,580 / 84,580 $9,808,564
28 June
2 July Warsaw Poland PGE Narodowy
5 July Frankfurt Germany Deutsche Bank Park 90,976 / 90,976 $9,834,218
6 July
8 July Vienna Austria Ernst-Happel-Stadion
12 July Barcelona Spain Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
14 July Madrid Nuevo Espacio Mad Cool
18 July Lisbon Portugal Passeio Marítimo de Algés
22 July Reggio Emilia Italy RCF Arena
Total 4,506,243 / 4,506,243 (100%) $563,321,605

Cancelled shows

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List of cancelled concerts
Date City Country Venue Reason
15 April 2020 Birmingham England Utilita Arena COVID-19 pandemic[56]
17 April 2020 Sheffield Utilita Arena
30 March 2021 Moscow Russia Megasport Sport Palace
16 August 2021 Vancouver Canada Rogers Arena
28 September 2021 Toronto Scotiabank Arena
29 September 2021
20 October 2021 Montreal Bell Centre
3 July 2022 Copenhagen Denmark Royal Arena 2022 Copenhagen mall shooting[57]

Personnel

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Personnel adapted via Capital FM.[58]

Band

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  • Yaffra – piano, keyboards, percussion
  • Sarah Jones – drums, backing vocals
  • Pauli Lovejoy – percussion, backing vocals
  • Ny Oh – piano, keyboards, rhythm guitar, theremin, backing vocals
  • Mitch Rowland – lead guitar, backing vocals
  • Elin Sandberg – bass, backing vocals
  • Ariza - guitar, keyboard, cello
  • Madi Diaz - guitar, backing vocals

Brass section

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  • Laura Bibbs – trumpet
  • Lorren Chiodo – saxophone
  • Paris Fleming – trumpet
  • Kalia Vandever – trombone

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d The box office data is representative of the three shows at Madison Square Garden on 3-4 and 16 October respectively.
  2. ^ a b Labeled as Los Angeles in promotional material.
  3. ^ Originally set to take place on 13 September 2021, but was rescheduled due to Tropical Storm Nicholas.
  4. ^ Originally set to take place on 6 October 2022, but was rescheduled due to band/crew illness.
  5. ^ The concert on 27 November 2022 in Bogotá was originally scheduled on 8 October 2020 at Movistar Arena,[52] but it was rescheduled and moved the Salitre Mágico, and then was moved again to Coliseo Live.[53]
  6. ^ The concert on 29 November 2022 in Lima was originally scheduled at the Jockey Club del Perú, but it was rescheduled and moved to the National Stadium.[54]
  7. ^ The concert on 1 December 2022 in Santiago was originally scheduled on 14 October 2020 at the Movistar Arena, but it was rescheduled and moved to the Estadio Bicentenario de La Florida.[55]
  8. ^ a b c d The box office data is representative of the three shows at Allianz Parque on 6 and 13–14 December respectively.
  9. ^ The show took place on a stage outside Jeunesse Arena.
  10. ^ Originally set to take place on 5 November 2022, but was rescheduled due to Styles having the flu.
  11. ^ Originally set to take place on 4 November 2022, but was rescheduled to 6 November 2022 due to band/crew illness. It was then rescheduled again due to Styles having the flu.
  12. ^ Originally set to take place on 7 November 2022, but was rescheduled due to Styles having the flu.
  13. ^ Labeled as Paris in promotional material.
  14. ^ The concert on 10 June 2023 is part of the Slane Festival.

References

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  28. ^ a b "Year-End Top 300 Concert Grosses" (PDF). Pollstar. 2023. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 February 2024. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
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  40. ^ "Harry Styles performs first UBS Arena concert". Newsday. 29 November 2021. Archived from the original on 18 January 2022. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  41. ^ "Harry Styles Gives New York the Wildest Party of the Summer with the Start of His 15-Night Stand". Rolling Stone. 23 August 2022. Archived from the original on 10 September 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  42. ^ Bourne, Dianne (13 June 2022). "Harry Styles at Emirates Old Trafford – stage times, support, setlist, parking". Manchester Evening News. United Kingdom: Reach plc. Archived from the original on 15 June 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  43. ^ "It's electrifying! Harry Styles cosplays as Danny Zuko, honors Olivia Newton-John at 'Harryween' show". Yahoo Entertainment. 1 November 2022. Archived from the original on 1 November 2022. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  44. ^ "Harry Styles pays tribute to Christie McVie with 'Songbird' cover". NME. 2 December 2022. Archived from the original on 30 January 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  45. ^ Mason, Melissa. "Harry Styles is Officially in Australia and He's Already Made Headlines with His Perth Show". Grazia. Italy: Reworld Media. Archived from the original on 6 March 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023. The part of his concert fans are raving about, though, was a surprise cover – of none other than Australian rock artist Daryl Braithwaite's 90s classic, 'Horses'. Yes, Harry Styles played 'Horses' at the Perth leg of his tour, which means you can probably expect to see him cover the pub hit at his other Australian gigs.
  46. ^ Miletic, Daniella (26 February 2023). "How Harry Styles unknowingly called in the cavalry for his cover of The Horses". The Age. Australia: Fairfax Media. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  47. ^ Segaert, Anthony (4 March 2023). "Daryl Braithwaite joins Harry Styles on stage in Sydney concert". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia: Nine Entertainment. Archived from the original on 6 March 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  48. ^ "Daryl Braithwaite performs 'The Horses' with Harry Styles". Sky News Australia. Australia. 5 March 2023. Archived from the original on 5 March 2023. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  49. ^ "HarryStyles Sings One Direction Favorite At First Show After 2-Month Hiatus: WATCH". iHeart. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
  50. ^ Iasimone, Ashley (2023-07-24). "Harry Styles Ends Love on Tour With New Instrumental Song, Heartfelt Speech in Italy". Billboard. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
  51. ^ Sources for tour dates:
  52. ^ "Harry Styles visitará 6 países en 2020 y Colombia será uno de ellos". ocesa.co (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2022-11-27. Retrieved 2022-11-27.
  53. ^ "El concierto de Harry Styles será trasladado al Coliseo Live" [Harry Styles concert to be moved to Coliseum Live]. El Espectador (in Spanish). 2 November 2022. Archived from the original on 2 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  54. ^ Live Nation Latin America [@livenationlatam] (August 26, 2022). "Debido a la increíble demanda, ¡el concierto de Harry Styles previamente programado para el martes 29 de noviembre en el Jockey Club se traslada al Estadio Nacional" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  55. ^ "Harry Styles reprograma concierto en Chile: será en el Estadio Bicentenario de La Florida" [Harry Styles reschedules concert in Chile: it will be at the Estadio Bicentenario in La Florida]. 24 Horas (in Spanish). 19 January 2022. Archived from the original on 13 May 2022. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  56. ^ Sources for cancelled dates:
  57. ^ Thomas, Megan Thomas (4 July 2022). "Harry Styles cancels Copenhagen show after shooting". CNN. Archived from the original on 4 July 2022. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  58. ^ Capital FM (6 September 2021). "Meet Harry Styles' new band members as Love On Tour begins". Capital FM. United Kingdom: Global Radio. Archived from the original on 10 November 2021. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
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