Candy Girl Tour

1983-1984 concert tour by New Edition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Candy Girl Tour was a concert tour by the boy band New Edition, launched to support their first album Candy Girl.

Associated albumCandy Girl (album)
Start dateFebruary 5, 1983
End dateJuly 28, 1984
Quick facts Associated album, Start date ...
Candy Girl Tour
Tour by New Edition
Associated albumCandy Girl (album)
Start dateFebruary 5, 1983
End dateJuly 28, 1984
New Edition concert chronology
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Background

New edition dropped their first single Candy Girl in February 1983. The song was played by local radio stations around Boston and later became a smash hit, this marked an opportunity for them to perform professionally.

In the beginning, they started doing track dates in nightclubs and Skating rink parties in the Northeastern region on weekends performing few minute sets on a pre-recorded tape. When summer came, they performed at some festivals, the Indiana Black Expo[1] and by august became an opening act for Rick James on his four-month Cold Blooded Tour.[2] It is on this tour in Prividence that Rick James thought it would be better for them to perform their set with a live band, providing them with his own musicians, the Stone City Band.[3][4]

August also marked their first trip oversea, as the group appeared on TV Show performing live version of their hits "Popcorn Love" and "Candy Girl" on Switch in England[5] and Vorsicht, Musik! on August 15 in Germany lip-synching "Candy Girl".[6] During the trip in London, they shot the videos for Popcorn Love and "She Gives Me a Bang" on the same day.[7] Coming back to the United States, New edition received their first royalty check for an amount of $1.87 each. Frustrated by this situation, they acquired new management in September and parted ways with Streetwise by November. Two months later, they crossed paths with Jerhyl Busby who signed them on MCA Records.[8] They spent the rest of the year opening for Rick James and other R&B acts like the Gap Band and Stacy Lattisaw.

In 1984, the group was headlining 45-minute concert backed by the Q-Band in theaters around the country. While the group was performing in the Bahamas in February, Jheryl Busby invited Ray Parker Jr. to attend one of their concert, Parker met the group members who explained to him that they were already including the cover of "Mr. Telephone Man" by Junior Tucker on their show and wanted to record a studio version of it.[9] In the spring, New Edition were part of the line-up of the "Kool Jazz Festival" with Luther Vandross, Patti LaBelle, and others artists.[10]

Setlist

Songs are not in order:

December 1983 - 1984[11]

Personnel

Musicians

The Q-Band (Questarr Band):[13]

  • Drexel "BOOTS" Anderson – guitar/MD/Bkrd vocals
  • Robert "Suave Bob" Cepeda – percussions
  • Ralph "Da Phunky Drumma" Vargas – drums,Bkrd vocals
  • Anthony "T-Bone" McEwan – bass and keyboards, Bkrd vocals
  • Carl T. "The Smooth" Smith – keyboards
  • John Steiner – keyboards
  • Rick Roberts – band manager

Tour dates

1983

More information Date, City ...
Date City Country Venue Act(s)
February 5 New York City United States Copacabana
March 11 New York City Bond International Casino
March 26 New York City Harlem World
April 2 New York City Roseland Ballroom Madonna, DJ Chuck Leonard
April 23 Brooklyn The Saturn
April 23 The Bronx Skatin' Palace Kurtis Blow, Cold Crush Brothers, Undefeated 3, Finesse 4, Sophisticated 4 with Love Bug Starski
April 29 New York City Disco Fever
April 30 New York City Studio 54
June 19 Atlantic City Club Harlem
June 24 Los Angeles Memorial Sport Arena Grandmaster Flash, Melly Mel, Junzun Crew, The System, D.Train
July 3 Miami Casanovas[14]
July 4 Miami North Shore Beach Space Park[15] Jimmy Horn
July 9 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
July 10 Indianapolis Market Square Arena The Bar-Kays, Lakeside, Mtume, Jonznn Crew
July 21 Tarpon Springs Astro Skate Roller Rink
August 3 West Warwick Warwick Memorial Auditorium Rick James, Mary Jane Girls
August 8 Garden City Long Island Children's Museum
August 9 Warwick Warwick Music Theater Rick James, Mary Jane Girls
August 24 New York City Pier 84 Grandmaster Flash, Kurtis Blow, Grandmixer DST, Rockers Revenge, Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force
August 27 Shreveport Hirsch Coliseum
August 28 Norfolk Scope Stacy Lattisaw, Trouble Funk, Slim & Arcade Funk
October 1 Landover Capital Center
October 5 Peoria Peoria Civic Center Zapp, The Gap Band
October 10 Delray Beach Carver Community Middle School
October 14 New York City The Fun House Crash Crew, Pure Energy, Love Bug Starski, The Rockatron Boogie Dancers, DJ Jellybean Benitez
October 22 Peoria Peoria Civic Center The Gap Band
November 3 Chattanooga UTC Arena The Gap Band, Midnight Star, Zapp
November 5 Champaign Assembly Hall Stacy Lattisaw, Maze
November 12 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum The Gap Band, S.O.S Band, Midnight Star
November 17 Chicago UIC Pavilion Rick James, Mary Jane Girls
November 25 New York City The Fun House Love Bug Starski, Crash Crew, Shannon, The Rockatron Boogie Dancers, DJ Jllybean Benitez
November 25 Hartford Hartford Civic Center Rick James , S.O.S Band
November 27 Buffalo Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Rick James
December 16 Tampa Curtis Hixon Hall
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1984
More information Date, City ...
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References

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