Brave New World Tour

Brave New World Tour
Tour by Iron Maiden
Official tour advertisement for the band's performance in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia, 6 June 2000
Associated albumBrave New World
Start date2 June 2000
End date21 March 2002
No. of shows83 (92 scheduled)
Iron Maiden concert chronology
  • The Ed Hunter Tour
    (1999)
  • Brave New World Tour
    (2000–2002)
  • Give Me Ed... 'Til I'm Dead Tour
    (2003)

The Brave New World Tour by Iron Maiden began on 2 June 2000 and ended on 19 January 2001 (Three concerts shows scheduled at Brixton Academy in 2002). It supported their 2000 album Brave New World that marked the return of vocalist Bruce Dickinson and guitarist Adrian Smith. In Europe, the tour was called Metal 2000. The initial batch of dates included just one in Iron Maiden's homeland. "Everybody in the band would like to do a thirty-date tour of 1,500-2,000-seaters," maintained Bruce Dickinson, "but we've got a tour booked in Europe this summer and we will be playing to over two million people in two months. Newbridge Memorial Hall will have to wait for a while!"[1]

On 19 January 2001, the band recorded Rock in Rio in front of an audience of 250,000,[2] their second-largest crowd in Rio de Janeiro (the largest crowd being their 1985 Rock in Rio performance during the World Slavery Tour).[3]

The Madison Square Garden concert on 5 August sold out in two hours. Three dates scheduled for Germany, Bulgaria and Greece in mid-July 2000 were cancelled so guitarist Janick Gers could recover after an accident at Mannheim, Germany, on 8 July: he slipped, fell off the stage, sustained a concussion and sprained his back.[4]

  1. ^ "Donington's a goner". Classic Rock #12. March 2000. p. 6.
  2. ^ Wall, Mick (2004). Iron Maiden: Run to the Hills, the Authorised Biography (3rd ed.). Sanctuary Publishing. p. 349. ISBN 1-86074-542-3.
  3. ^ "The History of Iron Maiden part 2". Live After Death (DVD). EMI. 4 February 2008.
  4. ^ "Janick Gers Injured in Mannheim Stage Fall". Guitar.com. 10 July 2000. Archived from the original on 21 March 2003. Retrieved 30 November 2011.