Misplaced Pages

Play That Song Tour

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Play That Song Tour was a concert tour by American pop rock band Train . It was in support of the group's tenth studio album, A Girl, a Bottle, a Boat (2017). The tour began on May 12, 2017, in Las Vegas and finished on October 25, 2017, in Belfast , Northern Ireland . Train announced the tour in January 2017.

#27972

7-781: In a review of the Salt Lake City show, Scott Tittrington from the Daily Herald felt that Train "still has that "it" factor that makes it must-see viewing and listening when it takes the stage." In a review of the Fresno show, Rory Appleton from the Fresno Bee said that seeing Train "on stage is to watch a master class in the rock/pop performance." This setlist is a representation of the Las Vegas show on May 12, 2017. Notes: with Priscilla Renea . Daily Herald (Utah) The Daily Herald

14-457: A final foundation for the later Daily Herald . The company was purchased in 1926 by James G. Scripps, eldest son of newspaper magnate E. W. Scripps . Scripps League Newspapers held the newspaper until 1996, when it was sold to Pulitzer , which held it for almost a decade. In 2005 Pulitzer was sold to Lee Enterprises . In February 2009, the Daily Herald announced it would discontinue five weekly papers that had covered northern Utah County:

21-660: Is a daily newspaper that covers news and community events in Utah County , central Utah . Much of the coverage focuses on the Provo-Orem metropolitan area in Utah Valley . The Daily Herald is owned by Ogden Newspapers . The paper has a daily circulation of 32,000, with a Thursday circulation of 42,000 and a Sunday circulation of 36,000. It also owns nine community publications in Utah and Sanpete counties. The earliest predecessor of

28-439: Is also published. In February 2013, the Daily Herald announced that it would no longer publish a daily opinion page. This change came shortly after 10 percent of its workforce was laid off, including the executive editor. As of May 2013, a replacement executive editor, nor an interim executive editor, had not been identified, leaving the possibility that the position may be permanently eliminated. In April 2014, Bob Williams

35-581: The American Fork Citizen , Pleasant Grove Review , Lehi Free Press , Lone Peak Press and Orem Times . Subscribers to those papers, which were published every Thursday and had a combined circulation of 5,800, instead began receiving Thursday issues of the Herald, leading to a higher subscription count that day. At that time the weekly papers in southern Utah County were not affected. However, by January 2011, it announced that it would entirely discontinue

42-738: The Daily Herald , the Provo Daily Times , was founded in 1873. It was the first newspaper to be published in Provo, when Utah was still a frontier territory. The paper eventually changed its name to the Enquirer , and then to the Provo Post . A competitor, the Utah County Democrat , was founded in 1898 and renamed the Provo Herald in 1909. In 1924 the Provo Post and the Provo Herald merged, forming

49-478: The weekly newspapers that covered southern Utah County ( Springville Herald , Spanish Fork Press , and Nebo Reporter ) and incorporate their content into daily publication of the Daily Herald . By April 2013, the online editions of all the northern Utah County publications, except the American Fork Citizen have been discontinued. However, an online edition of The Pyramid ( Mount Pleasant in Sanpete County )

#27972