No More Tours Tour
1992 concert tour by Ozzy Osbourne
No More Tours Tour Location North America Associated album No More Tears Start date June 9, 1992 (1992-06-09 ) End date November 15, 1992 (1992-11-15 ) Legs 1 No. of shows64
Theatre of Madness Tour (1991–1992)
No More Tours Tour (1992)
Retirement Sucks Tour (1995–1996)
The No More Tours Tour was the first farewell tour by English heavy metal singer Ozzy Osbourne .
Overview
The tour was to be Ozzy Osbourne's last tour to spend time with his family,[ 1] [ 2] because he was incorrectly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis .[ 3] [ 4] Following the tour, Osbourne changed his mind and decided to keep touring.[ 5]
The opening act a was combination of Slaughter , Ugly Kid Joe , Faster Pussycat and Motörhead before Alice in Chains took over in the fall.[ 6] After touring together, Osbourne's bassist Mike Inez joined Alice in Chains on their Dirt tour and became a permanent member of the band.[ 7]
Osbourne's October 1 show in San Antonio, Texas , marked his first appearance in the city since being banned in 1982 from performing in San Antonio after being arrested on a charge of public intoxication after urinating on the Alamo Cenotaph.[ 8]
For the last two shows in Costa Mesa, the opening acts were Sepultura , and Black Sabbath featuring Rob Halford on vocals. On November 15, Osbourne's supposed farewell set was followed by the original line-up of Black Sabbath re-uniting live for 4 songs.
Personnel
Setlist
Songs played overall
"Paranoid " (Black Sabbath cover)
"I Don't Want to Change the World"
"Desire"
"Mr Crowley "
"I Don't Know"
"Snowblind" (Black Sabbath cover)
"Road to Nowhere"
"Flying High Again "
Zakk Wylde guitar solo
"Suicide Solution"
"Goodbye to Romance"
"Bloodbath in Paradise"
"Tattooed Dancer"
"Shot in the Dark "
"Sweet Leaf " (Black Sabbath cover)
"No More Tears "
"Miracle Man" [and Randy Castillo drum solo]
"War Pigs " (Black Sabbath cover) [encore]
"Bark at the Moon "
"Iron Man " (Black Sabbath cover)
"Mama, I'm Coming Home "
"Black Sabbath " (Black Sabbath cover)
"Changes " (Black Sabbath cover)
"Crazy Train "
Typical setlist
"Paranoid" (Black Sabbath cover)
"I Don't Wanna Change the World"
"Desire"
"Mr Crowley"
"I Don't Know"
"Road to Nowhere"
"Flying High Again"
Zakk Wylde guitar solo
"Suicide Solution"
"Goodbye to Romance"
"Shot in the Dark"
"No More Tears"
"Miracle Man" [and Randy Castillo drum solo]
"War Pigs" [encore]
"Bark at the Moon"
"Mama, I'm Coming Home"
"Crazy Train"
Tour dates
Date[ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
City
Country
Venue
North America
June 9, 1992
Portland
United States
Portland Memorial Coliseum
June 11, 1992
Seattle
Seattle Center Coliseum
June 13, 1992
Daly City
Cow Palace
June 14, 1992
Sacramento
Cal Expo Amphitheatre
June 16, 1992
San Diego
San Diego Sports Arena
June 17, 1992
Las Vegas
Thomas & Mack Center
June 19, 1992
Phoenix
Desert Sky Pavilion
June 21, 1992
Salt Lake City
Delta Center
June 23, 1992
Morrison
Red Rocks Amphitheatre
June 24, 1992
June 26, 1992
Bonner Springs
Sandstone Amphitheater
June 27, 1992
Maryland Heights
Riverport Amphitheatre
June 29, 1992
Cedar Rapids
Five Seasons Center
June 30, 1992
Omaha
Omaha Civic Auditorium
July 2, 1992
Minneapolis
Target Center
July 3, 1992
East Troy
Alpine Valley Music Theatre
July 4, 1992
Charlevoix
Castle Farms
July 12, 1992
Saratoga Springs
Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 13, 1992
Mansfield
Great Woods Amphitheater
July 15, 1992
Hartford
Hartford Civic Center
July 16, 1992
East Rutherford
Brendan Byrne Arena
July 18, 1992
Clarkston
Pine Knob Music Theater
July 19, 1992
Burgettstown
Star Lake Amphitheater
July 21, 1992
Montreal
Canada
Montreal Forum
July 22, 1992
Toronto
CNE Grandstand
July 24, 1992
Richfield
United States
Richfield Coliseum
July 25, 1992
Allentown
Allentown Fairgrounds Grandstand
July 27, 1992
Columbia
Merriweather Post Pavilion
July 28, 1992
Philadelphia
The Spectrum
July 30, 1992
Wantagh
Jones Beach Theater
August 14, 1992
Miami
Miami Arena
August 16, 1992
Orlando
Orlando Arena
August 18, 1992
Atlanta
Lakewood Amphitheatre
August 20, 1992
Cincinnati
Cincinnati Gardens
August 22, 1992
Clarkston
Pine Knob Music Theatre
August 23, 1992
Tinley Park
World Music Theatre
August 26, 1992
Noblesville
Deer Creek Music Center
August 28, 1992
Richfield
Richfield Coliseum
August 30, 1992
Saratoga Springs
Saratoga Performing Arts Center
September 1, 1992
Mansfield
Great Woods Amphitheater
September 3, 1992
East Rutherford
Brendan Byrne Arena
September 4, 1992
September 5, 1992
Columbia
Merriweather Post Pavilion
September 7, 1992
Burgettstown
Star Lake Amphitheater
September 11, 1992
Philadelphia
Spectrum
September 12, 1992
New York City
The Ritz
September 13, 1992
Buffalo
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
September 15, 1992
Little Rock
Barton Coliseum
September 17, 1992
Allentown
Allentown Fairgrounds Grandstand
September 18, 1992
Charlotte
Blockbuster Pavilion Charlotte
September 19, 1992
September 21, 1992
Antioch
Starwood Amphitheatre
September 23, 1992
Houston
The Summit
September 25, 1992
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma State Fairgrounds Grandstand
September 27, 1992
Lampe
Swiss Villa Amphitheater
September 29, 1992
Tulsa
Tulsa State Fairgrounds Pavilion
October 1, 1992
San Antonio
Freeman Coliseum
October 2, 1992
October 4, 1992
Austin
Southpark Meadows
October 5, 1992
Dallas
Starplex Amphitheatre
October 8, 1992
Oakland
Oakland Arena
October 16, 1992
Denver
McNichols Sports Arena
October 18, 1992
Albuquerque
Tingley Coliseum
October 20, 1992
El Paso
Special Events Center
October 22, 1992
New Orleans
Lakefront Arena
October 23, 1992
Memphis
Memphis Pyramid
October 25, 1992
Knoxville
Thompson–Boling Arena
October 27, 1992
Louisville
Freedom Hall
October 29, 1992
Valley Center
Kansas Coliseum
October 30, 1992
Des Moines
Des Moines Civic Center
November 1, 1992
Normal
Redbird Arena
November 2, 1992
Maidson
Dane County Veterans Memorial Coliseum
November 4, 1992
Toronto
Canada
SkyDome
November 5, 1992
Buffalo
United States
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
November 7, 1992
Norfolk
Scope Arena
November 8, 1992
Clemson
Littlejohn Coliseum
November 10, 1992
Pensacola
Pensacola Civic Center
November 11, 1992
Shreveport
Hirsch Memorial Coliseum
November 14, 1992
Costa Mesa
Pacific Amphitheatre
November 15, 1992
References
^ Osbourne, O.S.; Aimee, K.J. (2012). Ordinary People: Our Story . Simon & Schuster UK. ISBN 9781471109676 . Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ Osbourne, O.; Ayres, C. (2010). I Am Ozzy . Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 9780446573139 . Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ Crawford, S. (2013). Sharon Osbourne: Unauthorized, Uncensored – Understood . Michael OMara. ISBN 9781782432029 . Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ Osbourne, S. (2006). Sharon Osbourne Extreme: My Autobiography . Little, Brown. ISBN 9780759568945 . Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ "25 Years Ago: Ozzy Osbourne Releases 'No More Tears' " . loudwire.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ Gill, Chris (September 1999). "Dirt" . Guitar World . Archived from the original on November 30, 2011. Retrieved September 22, 2019 .
^ "Jerry Cantrell & Mike Inez of Alice in Chains Join The RE Show in Studio - 8/14/17" . YouTube . August 14, 2017. Retrieved September 22, 2019 .
^ Wiederhorn, Jon (2024-02-19). "42 Years Ago - Ozzy Osbourne Arrested for Urinating on Alamo Cenotaph" . Loudwire . Retrieved 2024-06-17 .
^ "1991 - Ozzy Central" . norest4thecollectors.x10hosting.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ "1992 - Ozzy Central" . norest4thecollectors.x10hosting.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ Mitch Van Beekum. "Ozzyhead.com: Ozzy Osbourne Tour Dates" . ozzyhead.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
^ "Ozzy Osbourne Concert Ticket Stubs" . lookatstubs.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14 .
Studio albums Live albums Extended plays Compilations/box sets Singles Featured singles Other songs Concert tours Former band members
Guitarists Bassists Drummers Keyboardists
Books Related articles