The tour will kick off July 6th, 2023 with special guest Loverboy.
The tour is set to launch on July 6, 2023, at Atlanta’s Ameris Bank Amphitheatre, the area’s largest outdoor venue. For the first leg of the US Live Nation tour, Foreigner will be joined by Loverboy, one of the 80’s biggest hit-makers. The show plans to thrill audiences with performances of more than 20 combined chart-topping songs.
Foreigner will continue its long-term initiative with the Grammy Museum Foundation to invite choirs to open the show with a live a cappella ‘Pitch Perfect’ performance of Classic Rock songs. Foreigner will join radio partners across the country to create a contest for local choirs to win donations to their music programs. One winning choir will be selected at each show, and that choir will receive a grand prize of new musical equipment. For more details please go to foreignerchoirs.com.
Leader and founder of Foreigner, Mick Jones said, “Many years ago, I wrote a song called ‘Feels Like The First Time’ and today we are launching one last worldwide tour. We will be presenting a show that I know will have the same enthusiasm as our very first appearances. The tour will start this summer in America and we hope to get to every place that we have played over the last several years. While I’m sure our fans will have mixed feelings about the end of the road for the band, I know our shows are going to delight audiences everywhere.”
Tour Dates
Thu July 6th Alpharetta, GA – Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
Sat July 8th West Palm Beach, FL – iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
Sun July 9th Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
Tue July 11th Nashville, TN – Ascend Amphitheatre
Fri July 14th Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP
Tue July 18th Kansas City, MO – Starlight Theatre
Wed July 19th St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Fri July 21st Indianapolis, IN – Ruoff Music Center
Sat July 22nd Tinley Park, IL – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Mon July 24th Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music Center
Tue July 25th Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Fri July 28th Darien Center, NY – Darien Lake Amphitheater
Sat July 29th Burgettstown, PA – The Pavilion at Star Lake
Tue August 1st Saratoga Springs, NY – Saratoga Performing Arts Center
Wed August 2nd Wantagh, NY – Northwell Health at Jones Beach
Fri August 4th Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
Sat August 5th Mansfield, MA – Xfinity Center
Tue August 8th Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek
Wed August 9th Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion
Fri August 11th Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion
Sat August 12th Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
Mon August 14th Austin, TX – Moody Center
Wed August 16th Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Fri August 18th Salt Lake City, UT – USANA Amphitheater
Sun August 20th Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin Pavilion
Mon August 21st Irvine, CA – FivePoint Amphitheater
Wed August 23rd Wheatland, CA – Toyota Amphitheater
Thu August 24th Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
Weds August 30th Detroit, MI – Pine Knob Music Theater
Fri September 1st Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena
Sat September 2nd Syracuse, NY – St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview
Sun September 3rd Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center
For more information on Foreigner, please visit www.foreigneronline.com.
For more information on Loverboy, please visit www.loverboyband.com.
Foreigner''s "Dirty White Boy" master tracks reveal a state-of-the-art late-''70s recording process
The sound engineers at OEM Inc. have spent thousands of hours with the original masters of the most famous songs ever recorded. They use them to create products like Jammit, an iPhone app that allows you to remix and play along with those original tracks. There are many, many things to learn from those original tracks. Through a partnership with Gearhead Communications, OEM Inc. engineers are sharing their discoveries exclusively with Premier Guitar readers in what we like to call Secrets of the Masters |
I consider it a privilege just to be able to hear the raw multi tracks of some of rock ’n’ roll’s most famous recordings, so being a part of the OEM team that recreates these classic mixes for use in the Jammit iPhone app is beyond exhilarating. “Dirty White Boy” is one of three songs featured in the Jammit: Classic Rock Vol. 1 app for the iPhone (along with Deep Purple’s “Smoke on the Water” and Alice Cooper’s “I’m Eighteen”) and I thought it would be worth relaying some of the thoughts I had while working with the multi-tracks of this historic recording.
History
This SMPTE-synced, 48-track session (using both master and slave 2” analog tapes) would have been state of the art in the spring of 1979. With Roy Thomas Baker (Queen, Journey) at the helm, who was legendary even then, “Dirty White Boy” not only kicked off Foreigner’s classic 1979 record Head Games, but was the album’s biggest hit, peaking at #12 on the Billboard singles chart. Geoff Workman engineered this song at Atlantic Records Studios in New York City. He went on to record with bands like Twisted Sister and Mötley Crüe—acts known for the kind of raw, biting mid-range presence that exists in this Foreigner song. For the time, this was certainly a departure from the typically round, fat tones of the disco era that was simultaneously gasping its last breaths.
Sonic Evaluation
The box of the original "Dirty White Boy" reel. Click here to see a larger image. |
Missing in Action
It’s always interesting to hear outtakes or tracks that were muted and consequently not included into the final mix that we’re all accustomed to hearing. This Foreigner song has several lead guitar moments that, for whatever reason, did not go the distance. Mick Jones had several Jimmy Page-like moments that were momentarily muted on the console during the final mix—this is clear because they shared a track with the solo and other lead lines that did make their way into music history. There were also ten bars, a revolution of an additional end chorus, that were edited out of the final arrangement. This would have occurred via tape edit on the final 2-track master.
Re-Creation Story
What a difference a few decades makes. Like many ’70s-era mixes, “Dirty White Boy” basically sounds like the sum of its parts. The raw, unmixed tracks already resemble the sound of the final original mix. Would we love this song any more or less had Jones’ Jimmy Page-like moments made the final cut? Would this song have sounded the same if the band and the production team had different technology back then? Though interesting to think about, those questions aren’t critical to our mission.
My challenge was s to get as close to the overall tonality of the original without having the actual console and outboard gear that were used to create it in the first place. Short of having a time machine to go back and request that RTB and Workman print stems during the mix session, all of us OEM engineers go to extraordinary lengths to re-create these mixes with accuracy, reverence, and the love that these classic tracks deserve. Basically we take the digitized tracks of the original master multi-track tapes, painstakingly replicate the original mix, and then format this mix with the unique capability to rebalance the guitar track in relation to the rest of the instruments. It’s one thing to appreciate a classic track like “Dirty White Boy;” it’s another thing entirely when you can isolate the guitar track (and hear all of its nuances) or remove it entirely from the mix in order to play your own part with it.
To see/hear how you can play along to and make new mixes of “Dirty White Boy” and other songs from the original multi-track masters, check out www.jammit.com
Frank Gryner is a multi-platinum engineer whose credits include bands like A Perfect Circle, Matrix Soundtracks, Rob Zombie, and Tommy Lee. Frank’s technical expertise in audio system design has been applied to location studios for the likes of Filter, Perry Farrell and John Paul Jones.