Away from Home Tour

Away from Home Tour
Debut tour by Drake
Drake performing on the Away from Home tour in Seattle on September 6, 2010
Location
  • North America
Associated albumSo Far Gone
Thank Me Later
Start dateApril 5, 2010 (2010-04-05)
End dateNovember 6, 2010 (2010-11-06)
Legs4
No. of shows79
Box office$8 million ($9.94 million in 2021 dollars)[1]
Drake concert chronology

The Away from Home Tour was Canadian rapper Drake's first concert tour as a headlining act. It was for his 2010 debut studio album Thank Me Later and his EP So Far Gone. The tour began on April 5, 2010 in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania. It ended on November 6, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Background

Drake announced the Away From Home Tour, his first solo headlining tour since his tour alongside his fellow Young Money Entertainment artists on the America's Most Wanted Tour. Drake teamed with Reverb during the tour and it was described as a “Campus Consciousness Tour”, focusing on cutting down usage of non-biodegradable and recyclable products, as well as, using biodiesel fuel during travel between cities.[2]

The tour was very successful. It was one of the highest-grossing hip-hop tours of 2010, earning around $8 million.[3]

There were plans for Drake to perform in Europe during the tour but they were later cancelled because he wanted to focus on more North American shows.[4]

Set list

These are the songs that Drake performed during the tour.[5] He did not always perform the same songs at every show and also played some songs where he was a featured artist.

  1. "Forever"
  2. "Unstoppable"
  3. "Uptown"
  4. "Lust for Life"
  5. "Houstatlantavegas"
  6. "November 18th"
  7. "Fireworks"
  8. "Killers"
  9. "Money to Blow" / "Big Tymers" / "I'm Still Fly"
  10. "I'm Goin' In"
  11. "Every Girl / "Bedrock" / "Throw It In the Bag"
  12. "Un-Thinkable (I'm Ready)"
  13. "A Night Off"
  14. "Successful"
  15. "Fear"
  16. "Say Something"
  17. "I Invented Sex"
  18. "Best I Ever Had"
  19. "Over"

Shows

Date (2019)[6] City Country Venue
North America
April 5, 2010 Slippery Rock United States Aebersold Student Recreation Center
April 6, 2010 Charleston Lantz Arena
April 7, 2010 Columbus Value City Arena
April 9, 2010 University Park Bryce Jordan Center
April 10, 2010 Boston Matthews Arena
April 11, 2010 Lock Haven Thomas Fieldhouse
April 14, 2010 East Lansing MSU Auditorium
April 15, 2010 Rochester Hills Meadow Brook Music Festival
April 16, 2010 Morgantown WVU Coliseum
April 21, 2010 Orlando UCF Arena
April 22, 2010 Greenville Timmons Arena
April 24, 2010 New Orleans Fair Grounds Race Course
April 26, 2010 Kansas City Swinney Recreation Center
April 27, 2010 Lexington Memorial Coliseum
April 30, 2010 Syracuse Syracuse University
May 1, 2010 East Rutherford New Meadowlands Stadium Grounds
Medford President's Lawn
May 4, 2010 Worcester Hart Center
May 5, 2010 Baltimore Pier Six Concert Pavilion
May 6, 2010 Thornbury Township Cheyney University of Pennsylvania
May 7, 2010 Ithaca Ho Plaza
May 8, 2010 Plymouth PSU Campus Grounds
May 12, 2010 San Francisco Warfield Theatre
May 13, 2010 Los Angeles Nokia Theatre L.A. Live
May 14, 2010 San Diego North Campus Recreation Area
May 15, 2010 Santa Barbara Harder Stadium
May 17, 2010 Denver Ogden Theatre
May 19, 2010 Dallas Palladium Ballroom
May 20, 2010 Grand Prairie Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie
May 21, 2010 Austin Waller Creek Amphitheatre
May 23, 2010 Memphis Cannon Center for the Performing Arts
May 25, 2010 Charlotte The Fillmore Charlotte
May 27, 2010 Cleveland House of Blues
May 28, 2010 Cincinnati Bogart's
June 3, 2010 Providence Dunkin' Donuts Center
June 4, 2010 Hartford XL Center
June 5, 2010 Mansfield Comcast Center
June 6, 2010 East Rutherford New Meadowlands Stadium
June 12, 2010 Maryland Heights Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
June 13, 2010 Washington, D.C. 9:30 Club
June 15, 2010 New York City South Street Seaport
June 16, 2010 Philadelphia Theater of the Living Arts
June 19, 2010 Auburn White River Amphitheatre
July 16, 2010 Ottawa Canada Claridge Homes Stage
July 17, 2010 Saint John Harbour Station
July 18, 2010 Montreal Métropolis
July 21, 2010 Winnipeg Centennial Concert Hall
July 23, 2010 Saskatoon Credit Union Centre
July 24, 2010 Edmonton Edmonton Events Centre
July 25, 2010 Calgary Big Four Building
July 27, 2010 Vancouver Chan Centre for the Performing Arts
August 13, 2010 Indianapolis United States Hoosier Lottery Grandstand
September 6, 2010 Seattle Seattle Center
September 20, 2010 Miami James L. Knight Center
September 21, 2010
September 24, 2010 Tampa USF Sun Dome
September 28, 2010 New York City Radio City Music Hall
September 29, 2010
October 1, 2010 Vestal Binghamton University Events Center
October 2, 2010 Washington, D.C. DAR Constitution Hall
October 3, 2010
October 6, 2010 Atlanta Fox Theatre
October 9, 2010 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum
October 12, 2010 St. Louis Fox Theatre
October 13, 2010 Chicago Chicago Theatre
October 14, 2010
October 16, 2010 Bloomington U.S. Cellular Coliseum
October 17, 2010 DeKalb Convocation Center
October 19, 2010 Detroit Fox Theatre
October 21, 2010 Wallingford Oakdale Theatre
October 22, 2010 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center
October 25, 2010 Boston TD Garden
October 26, 2010 Lowell Tsongas Center
October 29, 2010 Houston Reliant Arena
October 30, 2010 New Orleans City Park
October 31, 2010 Grand Prairie Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie
November 2, 2010 Denver Wells Fargo Theatre
November 4, 2010 Los Angeles Gibson Amphitheatre
November 6, 2010 Las Vegas The Joint

References

  1. 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  2. "Drake Announces North American Solo Tour". Billboard. Retrieved May 28, 2025.
  3. "Jay-Z, Eminem And Drake Headline Hip Hop's Top-Grossing Tours". HipHopDX. Retrieved May 28, 2025.
  4. "Drake Cancels European Tour". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved May 28, 2025.
  5. "Average setlist for tour: The Away From Home Tour". www.setlist.fm. Retrieved May 28, 2025.
  6. "Drake Announces New Tour Dates, OVO Festival". HipHopWired. Retrieved May 28, 2025.