Performances
Year | Title | Sponsor | Venues | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Tour: "With My Tam, Shine Your Dreams" (Cùng Mỹ Tâm tỏa sáng ước mơ) | Sunsilk | Ho Chi Minh City, Ha Noi Capital, Da Nang City | |
early 2004 | Liveshow: "Yesterday and Now" (Ngày ấy và bây giờ) | Pepsi, Sunsilk | Ho Chi Minh City (QK7 Stadium), Ha Noi Capital (National Stadium) | Production cost: 3 billion dong ($250,000 as of 2003) (most expensive in Vietnam music history), first sell-out, 15,000 attendees per night |
mid 2004 | Liveshow: "My Childhood Hometown" | VTV, Honda | Da Nang City | TV Show: Music and Friends |
late 2004 | Tour: "Live With Your Best" (Sống hết mình) | Pepsi | Ho Chi Minh City, Ha Noi Capital | |
2005-06 | Tour: "Power of Dream" (Sức mạnh của những ước mơ) | Honda | universities in Ho Chi Minh City, Ha Noi Capital, Da Nang City, Da Lat City, Cần Thơ City. | 20,000 attendees per night |
Sept-Oct 2008 | Live Concert Tour 2008: "Multi-Frequency Sound Wave" (Sóng đa tần) | MT Entertainment | Ho Chi Minh city (Tao Dan stadium), Ha Noi capital, Da Nang city, Buon Me Thuoc city, Cần Thơ city. | 15,000 attendees per night. |
2010 | Concert: "Melodies of Time" (Những giai điệu của thời gian) | MT Entertainment | Ho Chi Minh City (Municipal Theatre) | |
2011 | Special Show: "Ten Years Of Singing Anniversary" (Kỉ niệm 10 năm ca hát) | MT Entertainment | Ho Chi Minh City (Queen Plaza), Ha Noi City (Việt Xô Center) | 700 attendees (Ho Chi Minh City), 1000 attendees (Ha Noi) |
Read more about this topic: My Tam
Famous quotes containing the word performances:
“This play holds the seasons record [for early closing], thus far, with a run of four evening performances and one matinee. By an odd coincidence it ran just five performances too many.”
—Dorothy Parker (18931967)
“At one of the later performances you asked why they called it a miracle,
Since nothing ever happened. That, of course, was the miracle
But you wanted to know why so much action took on so much life
And still managed to remain itself, aloof, smiling and courteous.”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)