Wiki Article
From Zero World Tour
Nguồn dữ liệu từ Wikipedia, hiển thị bởi DefZone.Net
| World tour by Linkin Park | |
Promotional poster example | |
| Location |
|
|---|---|
| Associated album | From Zero |
| Start date | September 11, 2024 |
| End date | June 30, 2026 |
| No. of shows | 101 |
| Supporting acts |
|
| Producer | Live Nation[1] |
| Box office | $179 million (60 shows)[a] |
| Linkin Park concert chronology | |
The From Zero World Tour is a concert tour by the American rock band Linkin Park in support of their eighth studio album From Zero (2024).[5] The tour was announced on September 5, 2024, following the release of the album's lead single, "The Emptiness Machine". The tour commenced on September 11, 2024, in Inglewood, California, and is scheduled to conclude on June 30, 2026, in Zurich, Switzerland.[6]
This tour is the band's first in seven years, and the first without vocalist Chester Bennington, drummer and co-founder Rob Bourdon, and lead guitarist Brad Delson. The lattermost remains a member of the band, but has stepped back from touring.[7]
Critical reception
[edit]Chris Willman of Variety gave the Inglewood show a positive review, noting that "when a woman is very unexpectedly put at the top of the ticket, things very unexpectedly go right."[8] Ali Shutler of The Guardian gave the London show four out of five stars, commenting that "the hybrid metallers have found a new audience and a reinvigorated sense of purpose".[9]
Set list
[edit]The following set list was obtained from the concert held on January 31, 2025, in Mexico City.[10] It may not represent all concerts for the duration of the tour.
Act 1 – Inception
Act 2 – Creation
- "The Catalyst"
- "Burn It Down"
- "Over Each Other"
- "Waiting for the End"
- "Castle of Glass"
- "Two Faced"
- "Empty Spaces"
- "When They Come for Me" / "Remember the Name"
- "Casualty"
- "One Step Closer"
Act 3 – Collapse
- "Lost"
- "Good Things Go"
- "What I've Done"
Act 4 – Kintsugi
- "Overflow"
- "Numb"
- "In the End"
- "Faint"
Act 5 – Resolution (Encore)
- "Papercut"
- "A Place for My Head"
- "Heavy Is the Crown"
- "Bleed It Out"
Tour dates
[edit]| Date (2024) | City | Country | Venue | Supporting acts | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 11 | Inglewood[b] | United States | Kia Forum | grandson | 16,641 / 16,641 | $2,129,559 |
| September 16 | Brooklyn[c] | Barclays Center | 15,993 / 15,993 | $2,128,536 | ||
| September 22 | Hamburg | Germany | Barclays Arena | 13,752 / 13,752 | $1,534,615 | |
| September 24 | London | England | The O2 Arena | 19,330 / 19,330 | $2,275,184 | |
| September 28 | Incheon[d] | South Korea | Inspire Arena | N/a | 13,639 / 13,639 | $1,354,575 |
| November 3 | Nanterre[e] | France | Paris La Défense Arena | Sleep Token | 39,255 / 39,255 | $4,529,465 |
| November 8 | Arlington[f] | United States | Globe Life Field | Bad Omens Jean Dawson Helmet |
31,962 / 31,962 | $3,354,774 |
| November 11 | Bogotá | Colombia | Coliseo MedPlus | N/a | 19,887 / 19,887 | $1,647,641 |
| November 15 | São Paulo | Brazil | Allianz Parque | Ego Kill Talent | 96,927 / 96,927 | $8,601,259 |
| November 16 | ||||||
| December 12[g] | Riyadh | Saudi Arabia | Banban | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Supporting acts | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 31 | Mexico City | Mexico | Estadio GNP Seguros | AFI | 64,442 / 64,442 | $5,564,610 |
| February 3 | Zapopan[h] | Estadio Tres de Marzo | 23,056 / 23,056 | $2,289,976 | ||
| February 5 | Monterrey | Estadio Banorte | 19,944 / 19,944 | $2,009,723 | ||
| February 11 | Saitama | Japan | Saitama Super Arena | N/a | 39,730 / 39,730 | $5,964,927 |
| February 12 | ||||||
| February 16 | Jakarta | Indonesia | Gelora Bung Karno Madya Stadium | 20,793 / 20,793 | $3,494,768 | |
| April 26 | Austin | United States | Moody Center | grandson | — | — |
| April 28 | Tulsa | BOK Center | — | — | ||
| May 1 | Grand Rapids | Van Andel Arena | — | — | ||
| May 3 | Baltimore | CFG Bank Arena | — | — | ||
| May 6 | Raleigh | Lenovo Center | — | — | ||
| May 8 | Greenville | Bon Secours Wellness Arena | — | — | ||
| May 10[i] | Columbus | Historic Crew Stadium | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
| May 17[j] | Daytona Beach | Daytona International Speedway | N/a | N/a | ||
| June 12[k] | Nickelsdorf | Austria | Panonia Fields | N/a | N/a | |
| June 14[l] | Hradec Králové | Czech Republic | Hradec Králové Airport | N/a | N/a | |
| June 16 | Hannover | Germany | Niedersachsenstadion | Architects grandson |
41,213 / 41,213 | $5,300,000 |
| June 18 | Berlin | Olympiastadion | — | — | ||
| June 22[m] | Clisson | France | Val de Moine | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| June 24[n] | Milan | Italy | Ippodromo La Maura | N/a | N/a | |
| June 26 | Arnhem | Netherlands | Gelredome | Spiritbox | — | — |
| June 28 | London | England | Wembley Stadium | Spiritbox JPEGMafia |
75,600 / 75,600 | $10,600,000 |
| July 1 | Düsseldorf | Germany | Merkur Spiel-Arena | Architects JPEGMafia |
44,963 / 44,963 | $6,189,659 |
| July 3[o] | Werchter | Belgium | Werchter Festivalpark | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| July 5[p] | Gdynia | Poland | Gdynia-Kosakowo Airport | N/a | N/a | |
| July 8 | Frankfurt | Germany | Deutsche Bank Park | Architects JPEGMafia |
88,200 / 88,200 | $11,800,000 |
| July 9 | ||||||
| July 11 | Saint-Denis[e] | France | Stade de France | One OK Rock JPEGMafia |
74,300 / 74,300 | $9,100,000 |
| July 29 | Brooklyn | United States | Barclays Center | Pvris | — | — |
| July 31 | Boston | TD Garden | — | — | ||
| August 1 | ||||||
| August 3 | Newark | Prudential Center | — | — | ||
| August 5 | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | — | — | |
| August 6 | ||||||
| August 8 | Toronto | Scotiabank Arena | — | — | ||
| August 11 | Chicago | United States | United Center | — | — | |
| August 14 | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | — | — | ||
| August 16 | Philadelphia | Xfinity Mobile Arena | Jean Dawson | — | — | |
| August 19 | Pittsburgh | PPG Paints Arena | — | — | ||
| August 21 | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | — | — | ||
| August 23 | St. Louis | Enterprise Center | — | — | ||
| August 25 | Milwaukee | Fiserv Forum | — | — | ||
| August 27 | Minneapolis | Target Center | — | — | ||
| August 29 | Omaha | CHI Health Center Omaha | — | — | ||
| August 31 | Kansas City | T-Mobile Center | — | — | ||
| September 3 | Denver | Ball Arena | — | — | ||
| September 6 | Phoenix | Footprint Center | — | — | ||
| September 13[q] | Inglewood[b] | Intuit Dome | JPEGMafia | — | — | |
| September 15 | San Jose | SAP Center | — | — | ||
| September 17 | Sacramento | Golden 1 Center | — | — | ||
| September 19 | Portland | Moda Center | — | — | ||
| September 21 | Vancouver | Canada | Rogers Arena | — | — | |
| September 24 | Seattle | United States | Climate Pledge Arena | — | — | |
| October 25 | Bogotá | Colombia | Distrito Verde | Poppy | — | — |
| October 28 | Lima | Peru | Estadio San Marcos | — | — | |
| October 31 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Parque de la Ciudad | Poppy Deny |
— | — |
| November 2 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional | Poppy Tenemos Explosivos |
— | — |
| November 5 | Curitiba | Brazil | Estádio Couto Pereira | Poppy | — | — |
| November 8 | São Paulo | Estádio do Morumbi | 65,000 / 65,000 | $6,900,000 | ||
| November 11 | Brasília | Estádio Mané Garrincha | — | — | ||
| November 16[r] | Mexico City | Mexico | Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| Date (2026) | City | Country | Venue | Supporting acts | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 18 | Sakhir | Bahrain | Al-Dana Amphitheatre | PeachPuffs | — | — |
| January 20 | Abu Dhabi | United Arab Emirates | Etihad Arena | — | — | |
| January 23 | Bengaluru | India | Brigade Innovation Gardens | Bloodywood | — | — |
| January 25[s] | Mumbai | Mahalaxmi Racecourse | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
| March 3 | Brisbane | Australia | Brisbane Entertainment Centre | Polaris | — | — |
| March 5 | ||||||
| March 8 | Melbourne | Rod Laver Arena | — | — | ||
| March 10 | ||||||
| March 12 | Adelaide | Adelaide Entertainment Centre | — | — | ||
| March 14 | Sydney | Qudos Bank Arena | — | — | ||
| March 15 | ||||||
| March 18 | Auckland | New Zealand | Spark Arena | Vana | — | — |
| May 29 | Stockholm | Sweden | 3Arena | Phantogram Clipse |
— | — |
| June 1 | Hamburg | Germany | Volksparkstadion | — | — | |
| June 3 | ||||||
| June 5[t] | Nürburg | Nürburgring | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
| June 7[u] | Nuremberg | Zeppelinfeld | ||||
| June 9 | Vienna | Austria | Ernst-Happel-Stadion | Phantogram Clipse |
— | — |
| June 10–14[v] | Castle Donington | England | Donington Park | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| June 11 | Munich | Germany | Allianz Arena | Phantogram Clipse |
— | — |
| June 12 | ||||||
| June 16 | Lyon | France | Groupama Stadium | Phantogram Last Train |
— | — |
| June 19[w] | Santiago de Compostela | Spain | Auditorio Monte do Gozo | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| June 21[x] | Lisbon | Portugal | Parque Tejo | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| June 23 | Madrid | Spain | Auditorio Miguel Ríos | Phantogram Clipse |
— | — |
| June 24 | ||||||
| June 26 | Florence | Italy | Visarno Arena | — | — | |
| June 28[y] | Dessel | Belgium | Festivalpark Stenehei | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| June 30 | Zurich | Switzerland | Letzigrund | Phantogram Clipse |
— | — |
| Total | 824,627 | $96,769,271 | ||||
Cancelled dates
[edit]| Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Reason | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 12[z] | Winchester[aa] | United States | Las Vegas Festival Grounds | Festival cancelled due to Low ticket sales | [22] |
| June 20 | Bern | Switzerland | Bernexpo | Medical issue | [23] |
| November 8 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | N/a | Logistical reasons | [24] |
| November 15 | Porto Alegre |
Personnel
[edit]Linkin Park
[edit]- Emily Armstrong – lead vocals, rhythm guitar, tambourine on "Cut the Bridge"
- Colin Brittain – drums, rhythm guitar, backing vocals
- Dave "Phoenix" Farrell – bass, backing vocals, rhythm guitar on "Castle of Glass", synthesizer on "Stained", keyboards on "Good Things Go"
- Joe Hahn – turntables, samples, backing vocals
- Mike Shinoda – co-lead vocals, rap vocals, rhythm and lead guitar, keyboards
Touring member
[edit]- Alex Feder – lead guitar, backing vocals, synthesizer on "Burn It Down"
Notes
[edit]- ^ The total gross of the tour is $179.03 million as of December 2025. The band grossed $9.43 million from 5 shows in September 2024, $150.6 million from 51 shows from October 2024 to October 2025 and $19 million from 4 shows in November 2025.[2][3][4]
- ^ a b Labeled as Los Angeles in promotional material.
- ^ Labeled as New York City in promotional material.
- ^ Labeled as Seoul in promotional material.
- ^ a b Labeled as Paris in promotional material.
- ^ Labeled as Dallas in promotional material.
- ^ The performance on December 12, 2024, was a part of Soundstorm Festival.
- ^ Labeled as Guadalajara in promotional material.
- ^ The performance on May 10, 2025 was a part of the Sonic Temple festival.
- ^ The performance on May 17, 2025 was a part of the Welcome to Rockville festival.
- ^ The performance on June 12, 2025 was part of the Nova Rock festival.
- ^ The performance on June 14, 2025 was part of the Rock for People festival.
- ^ The performance on June 22, 2025 was part of Hellfest.
- ^ The performance on June 24, 2025 was part of the I-Days Milano festival.
- ^ The performance on July 3, 2025 was part of the Rock Werchter festival.
- ^ The performance on July 5, 2025 was part of the Open'er festival.
- ^ Originally scheduled to occur at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, but was moved due to low demand.
- ^ The performance on November 16, 2025 was part of the Corona Capital festival.
- ^ The January 25, 2026, concert is set to be part of Lollapalooza India.
- ^ The June 5, 2026, concert is set to be part of Rock am Ring.
- ^ The June 7, 2026, concert is set to be part of Rock im Park.
- ^ The June 10–14, 2026, concert is set to be a part of Download Festival.[21]
- ^ The June 19, 2026, concert is set to be a part of O Son do Camiño.
- ^ The June 21, 2026, concert is set to be a part of Rock in Rio Lisboa.
- ^ The June 28, 2026, concert is set to be a part of Werchter Parklife.
- ^ The performance on April 12, 2025 was supposed to be a part of Sick New World.
- ^ Labeled as Las Vegas in promotional material.
References
[edit]- ^ "LINKIN PARK Roar Into 2025 with 50+ New Shows on From Zero World Tour" (Press release). Live Nation Entertainment. November 15, 2024. Retrieved January 7, 2025.
- ^ Allen, Bob (October 18, 2024). "Chart Scene: Global Ticket Sales Earn Linkin Park Top LIVE75 Debut". Pollstar. Retrieved December 12, 2025.
- ^ Frankenberg, Eric (December 11, 2025). "Top 10 Highest Grossing Rock Tours of the Year". Billboard. Retrieved December 12, 2025.
- ^ "Top Tours Billboard Boxscore - November 2025". Billboard. Retrieved December 23, 2025.
- ^ Garcia, Thania (September 5, 2024). "Linkin Park Selects Emily Armstrong From Rock Band Dead Sara as New Singer, Reveals Tour and Album 'From Zero'". Variety. Retrieved September 12, 2024.
- ^ "Linkin Park: From Zero World Tour". Linkin Park. November 14, 2024. Retrieved November 14, 2024.
- ^ Moloy, Laura (September 7, 2024). "Linkin Park guitarist Brad Delson confirms he will sit out of all live shows". NME. Retrieved September 12, 2024.
- ^ Willman, Chris (September 12, 2024). "Linkin Park rises from the ashes with dark songs, a joyful attitude and a new singer who does primal scream therapy proud: Concert review". Variety. Retrieved October 12, 2024.
- ^ Shutler, Ali (September 25, 2024). "Linkin Park review – monster hits perfectly reshaped for a fresh chapter". The Guardian. Retrieved September 28, 2024.
- ^ "Here's Linkin Park's set list from the first night of their 2025 world..." Kerrang!. February 3, 2025. Retrieved February 3, 2025.
- ^ Various citations concerning the attendance and revenue of the From Zero World Tour 2024:
- Allen, Bob (October 18, 2024). "Chart Scene: Global Ticket Sales Earn Linkin Park Top LIVE75 Debut". Pollstar. Retrieved October 20, 2024.
- "Billboard Boxscore – November 2024". Billboard. Retrieved December 20, 2024.
- "Billboard Top Tours – November 2024". Billboard. Retrieved December 20, 2024.
- Saeed, Saeed (December 13, 2024). "Soundstorm review: Linkin Park rock with new singer Emily Armstrong and Eminem gets his mojo back". The National. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
- ^ Various citations concerning the attendance and revenue of the From Zero World Tour 2025:
- "Billboard Boxscore – January 2025". Billboard. Retrieved February 27, 2025.
- "Billboard Boxscore – February 2025". Billboard. Retrieved March 27, 2025.
- "Billboard Top Tours – February 2025". Billboard. Retrieved March 27, 2025.
- "Billboard Boxscore – June 2025". Billboard. Retrieved December 28, 2025.
- "Billboard Boxscore – July 2025". Billboard. Retrieved December 28, 2025.
- "Billboard Boxscore – November 2025". Billboard. Retrieved December 28, 2025.
- Allen, Bob (July 25, 2025). "Drake Has Top 10 Debut On Artist Power Index With European Tour Launch". Pollstar. Retrieved December 28, 2025.
- Allen, Bob (December 3, 2025). "VenuesNow Building Profile: How Merkur Spiel-Arena Outranked Everyone In October". Pollstar. Retrieved October 20, 2024.
- ^ Miranda, Igor (September 24, 2025). "Poppy abrirá os shows do Linkin Park no Brasil". Igor Miranda (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ Martínez, Cristopher. "Linkin Park en Argentina: Poppy y Deny se suman como artistas invitados al show en Parque de la Ciudad". Data Diario (in Spanish). Retrieved September 26, 2025.
- ^ Iahn, Buddy (May 30, 2025). "Linkin Park announces From Zero World Tour 2026 European dates". The Music Universe. Retrieved May 30, 2025.
- ^ "Linkin Park to perform in Bengaluru: Check details on tickets, venue, date and more". Hindustan Times. November 13, 2025. Retrieved November 13, 2025.
- ^ Krum, Makenna (December 3, 2025). "Linkin Park Roar Back to New Zealand On Their 'From Zero' World Tour | Ticketmaster NZ Blog". Ticketmaster NZ. Retrieved December 3, 2025.
- ^ "Linkin Park Add Show to 2026 Australia Tour". Rolling Stone Australia. December 4, 2025. Retrieved December 4, 2025.
- ^ Garner, Emily (December 16, 2025). "Linkin Park announce European headline tour support". Kerrang!.
- ^ "Linkin Park Confirm Polaris As Adelaide Support". thenote.com.au. February 11, 2026.
- ^ "Download 2026 line-up: Linkin Park and Limp Bizkit to headline". BBC. November 3, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ Skinner, Tom (December 3, 2024). "Here's what Metallica and Linkin Park were reportedly set to earn from cancelled Sick New World festival". NME. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
- ^ "Linkin Park sagen Konzert in Bern wegen Krankheit ab". June 20, 2025.
- ^ Miranda, Igor (March 27, 2025). "As cidades no Brasil que podem ter sido tiradas de turnê do Linkin Park" [Cities in Brazil that may have been cut from Linkin Park's tour]. Rolling Stone Brasil (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on April 3, 2025. Retrieved June 4, 2024.