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Duran Duran

Duran Duran

Current Tour:”Paper Gods”
Discography:Duran Duran (1981)
Rio (1982)
Seven and the Ragged Tiger (1983)
Notorious (1986)
Big Thing (1988)
Liberty(1990)
Duran Duran (1993)
Thank You (1995)
Medazzaland (1997)
Pop Trash (2000)
Astronaut (2004)
Red Carpet Massacre (2007)
All you Need Is Now (2010)
Paper Gods (2015)

In September 2015, Duran Duran released their latest album Paper Gods. A couple of months later, the band announced a North American tour in the album's support, titled the "Paper Gods" tour. The 25-show trek is split into two legs, with the first launching on March 28 at Durham Preforming Arts Center in Durham, NC. Making stops at venues including Barclays Arena in Brooklyn and Phillips Arena in Atlanta, the leg finishes up at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans on April 24.

The "Paper Gods" tour's second leg kicks off at Ascend Amphitheater in Nashville on July 6 and will conclude on August 3 at Gila River Arena in Glendale. The band Chic will join Duran Duran for each show. Find your cheap Duran Duran tickets today and see the band in a city near you in 2016!

Duran Duran was founded in 1978 in Birmingham, England. Nick Rhodes and John Taylor wanted to start a British New Romantic band and started to look for other musicians. When they were joined by Roger Taylor, Andy Taylor and Simon Le Bon, the band was complete. They performed many shows around the Birmingham and London areas and eventually signed a recording deal with EMI Records. Their debut album, Duran Duran, was released in 1981 to instant success. It reached #3 on the charts in the UK and made it to #10 on US Billboard charts.

The first single from Duran Duran was "Planet Earth," which made it to the Top 20, but their third single, "Girls on Film," turned the heads of music fans around the world. "Girls on Film" was released in the summer of 1981 and was accompanied by a provocative music video. The video was very controversial, but after the scandal, fans were more interested in buying Duran Duran tickets than ever. Public interest inspired the band to launch a US tour to cities such as Los Angeles and New York.

While their first album sold more than 6 million copies worldwide, Duran Duran reached new heights with their sophomore effort. The album Rio was released in 1982 and featured three Top 20 singles in the US with "Hungry Like the Wolf," "Save a Prayer" and the title track "Rio." The album sold 10 million copies and made the group breakout stars around the world. Seven and the Ragged Tiger (1983) was Duran Duran's third project, and it became their first #1 album in the UK. Seven and the Ragged Tiger sold more than 12 million copies and featured Duran Duran's first American #1 single with "New Moon on Monday."

Since their breakout debut album in 1981, Duran Duran has seen some ups and downs but always makes it to the top. Many of the band's albums have sold over one million copies each, and the group remains a strong touring act. From their very first album, Duran Duran changed the face of the New Wave Music genre. Their art glam personas, wedge haircuts and catchy songs captured the spirit of the 1980's, and their music inspired many fans.

Brit Award for Best British Video for "Wild Boys" - 1985

Brit Award for Outstanding Contribuation to Music - 2004

Grammy Award for Best Music Video for "Girls on Film"/"Hungry Like the Wolf" - 1984

Grammy Award for Best Music Video for Duran Duran - 1984

Duran Duran Concerts

Date Location Venue Price Get tickets

29.12.2024 09:00

Las Vegas

USA

BleauLive Theater At Fontainebleau Las Vegas

29.12.2024 09:00

$189.76-$1070.00

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30.12.2024 09:00

Las Vegas

USA

BleauLive Theater At Fontainebleau Las Vegas

30.12.2024 09:00

$195.05-$1665.00

Buy tickets

02.01.2025 08:00

Highland

USA

Yaamava Resort & Casino

02.01.2025 08:00

$171.27-$1080.00

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Artist Info

Duran Duran personified new wave for much of the mainstream audience. And for good reason. Duran Duran's reputation was built through music videos, which accentuated their fashion-model looks and glamorous sense of style. Without music videos, it's likely that their pop-funk -- described by the group as the Sex Pistols-meet-Chic -- would never have made them international pop stars. While Duran Duran did have sharper pop sensibilities than their new romantic contemporaries like Spandau Ballet and Ultravox, none of their peers exploited MTV and music videos like the Birmingham-based quintet. Each video the group made was distinctive, incorporating a number of cinematic styles to showcase the band as either part of the jet-setting elite ("Rio") or as worldly adventurers ("Hungry Like the Wolf"). While early videos like "Girls on Film" and "The Chauffeur" sparked controversy in England over their sexual content, their best-known clips were often based on hit contemporary movies. "Hungry Like the Wolf" uncannily recalled Raiders of the Lost Ark, while "Union of the Snake" and "The Wild Boys" brought to mind The Road Warrior. The clever videos helped make Duran Duran's rise to popularity remarkably swift. Between 1982 and 1984, they rocketed from underground British post-punk sensations to teen idols. But their fall from grace was equally fast. By the late '80s, the group's lineup had fragmented, and the remaining members had trouble landing hit singles. Nevertheless, the group pulled off a surprising comeback in the early '90s as a sophisticated soft rock quartet.
Inspired by David Bowie and Roxy Music, as well as post-punk and disco, schoolmates Nick Rhodes (keyboards) and John Taylor (guitar) formed Duran Duran in 1978 with their friends Simon Colley (bass, clarinet) and Stephen Duffy (vocals). Taking their name from a character in Roger Vadim's psychedelic sci-fi film Barbarella, the group began playing gigs in the Birmingham club Barbarella, supported by a drum machine. Within a year, Duffy and Colley both left the group -- Duffy would later form the Lilac Time -- and were replaced by former TV Eye vocalist Andy Wickett and drummer Roger Taylor. After recording a demo, John Taylor switched to bass and guitarist Alan Curtis joined the band, only to leave within a matter of months. The group placed an ad in Melody Maker, which drew the attention of Andy Taylor, who became their guitarist. However, Duran Duran were still having trouble finding a vocalist. Following Wickett's departure in 1979, a pair of singers passed through the group before Simon LeBon, a former member of the punk band Dog Days and a drama student at Birmingham University, joined in early 1980.
By the end of 1980, Duran Duran had become popular within the burgeoning new romantic circuit in England and had secured a record contract with EMI. "Planet Earth," the band's first single, quickly rose to number 12 upon its spring 1981 release. Immediately, Duran Duran became the leaders of the new romantic movement, and media sensations in the British music and mainstream press. The group's popularity increased through its cutting-edge music videos, especially the bizarre, racy clip for "Girls on Film." Although the BBC banned the Godley & Creme-directed video, the single became the group's first Top Ten hit, setting the stage for the fall release of its eponymous debut album. Duran Duran reached number three upon its release and stayed in the charts for 118 weeks. The band quickly followed the album with Rio in the spring of 1982. Rio entered the charts at number two, and its singles -- "Hungry Like the Wolf" and "Save a Prayer" -- became Top Ten hits. By the November release of the remix EP Carnival, the bandmembers were superstars in Europe, but only just beginning to make headway in America. Their exposure in the U.S. was helped greatly by the emergence of MTV, which put the group's stylish videos into heavy rotation. MTV's constant playing of the videos paid off, and "Hungry Like the Wolf" became a Top Ten hit early in 1983. Rio followed that single into the Top Ten, eventually selling over two million copies.
Duran Duran mania was in full swing across America, with "Is There Something I Should Know" reaching the Top Ten -- it became the group's first English number one that summer -- and the group's first album climbing its way to number ten. Duran Duran capitalized on their popularity by releasing Seven and the Ragged Tiger in time for 1983's holiday season. The record hit number one in the U.K. and number eight in the U.S., spawning the hit singles "Union of the Snake" and "The Reflex," their first number one U.S. hit and their second British chart-topper. The band took an extended break after completing its year-and-a-half-long international tour in the spring of 1984. In November, the group released the non-LP single "Wild Boys," which reached number two in the U.K. and the U.S., where it was added to the live album Arena.
By 1985, Duran Duran fever was beginning to cool off, and after completing the title track for the James Bond film A View to a Kill, the group went on hiatus. Andy and John Taylor formed the supergroup the Power Station with vocalist Robert Palmer and former Chic drummer Tony Thompson in January, releasing their eponymous debut album in the spring; it spawned the Top Ten singles "Some Like It Hot" and "Get It On (Bang a Gong)." The remaining members of Duran Duran -- Nick Rhodes, Simon LeBon, and Roger Taylor -- responded with their own side project, Arcadia, releasing an album called So Red the Rose in the fall of 1985; the album launched the Top Ten hit "Election Day." Early in 1986, Roger Taylor announced he was taking a yearlong sabbatical from the group; he never returned. Several months later, Andy Taylor also left, reducing Duran Duran to a trio. Late in 1986, the band released Notorious, its first album in nearly three years. While it was relatively successful, going platinum in the U.S. and generating a Top Ten hit with the title track, it was noticeably less popular than their earlier records. For the remainder of the decade, Duran Duran's popularity continued to decline, with 1988's Big Thing producing "I Don't Want Your Love," their last Top Ten single for five years.
The greatest-hits album Decade was released late in 1989, followed several months later by Liberty, the first Duran Duran album to fail to go gold. By that point, former Missing Persons guitarist Warren Cuccurullo had become a permanent member of the group. In 1993, the band returned from a prolonged hiatus with Duran Duran [The Wedding Album], a mature, layered record of lite funk and soulful adult contemporary pop that became a surprise hit. "Ordinary World" and "Come Undone" became Top Ten hits in America and the U.K. as well; the album itself climbed into the Top Ten on both continents and went platinum in America. Not only did the record restore their commercial status, but it earned them some of their best reviews of their career. The group followed the album with one of its poorest-received efforts, 1995's all-covers Thank You, which managed to go gold in America despite negative reviews. While Duran Duran were recording the follow-up to Thank You in 1996, John Taylor left the band to pursue a solo career, leaving the group a trio of LeBon, Rhodes, and Cuccurullo. That follow-up, Medazzaland, was released in 1997 but failed to produce any major hits. Released in 2000, Pop Trash suffered a similar fate.
In March 2001, the three Taylors -- Andy, John, and Roger -- met up in Wales and worked with each other for three weeks. Around this time, rumors of a five-member reunion began to circulate. Two months after Rhodes and LeBon denied the rumors, the reunion was confirmed. Duran Duran recorded on and off for a new album over the next three years and also toured sporadically. After signing with Epic, they released Astronaut in October 2004. Red Carpet Massacre, produced by Timbaland and without Andy Taylor, followed in 2007. In 2011, Duran Duran delivered their 13th studio album, the Mark Ronson-produced All You Need Is Now; it was greeted with positive reviews and debuted at 11 on the U.K. charts and 29 in the U.S.
Duran Duran began recording for their 14th album in 2013 and worked on it over the next two years. When it finally materialized in September 2015, Paper Gods bore tracks produced by both Mark Ronson and Nile Rodgers, alongside additional contributions in this area from Mr. Hudson and the band's engineer of choice, Josh Blair. The album also included vocals from Janelle Monáe, Kiesza, and Mew's Jonas Bjerre, as well as guitar by former Red Hot Chili Pepper John Frusciante. The record was their first to be issued through Warner Bros. and its release date coincided with a headline slot at Rob da Bank's Bestival event on the Isle of Wight.

Duran Duran Video