Actually, Mark Forster is supposed to go on tour from February – “but if I listen to myself, I need something else,” the musician has to admit. He is therefore moving the concerts to 2024, but some fans have no understanding of that.
Mark Forster has postponed his full 2023 tour by a year. The 39-year-old pop star announced the new dates on Instagram and explained the reason for the surprising shift.
The advance booking numbers or Corona are not the problem, Forster honestly said in the post. He made the decision himself. The reason: He played more concerts this year than ever before. Work on the tour, which would have started in February 2023, should start now. “Think about the show, think up the stage and of course rehearse,” says Forster.
Apparently not a nice idea for the singer at the moment: “But if I listen to myself, I just need something else.” Instead, he wants to work on new music, realize one or two projects that he’s been thinking about for a while. “Do stuff. Not really vacation, but free stuff.”
The musician tries to comfort the disappointed fans with the 2023 stadium concert in Kaiserslautern and a handful of open air events in the summer. And he makes it clear: “I know about the privilege of experiencing these concert evenings with you. That’s why it’s so difficult for me to say that, but: The tour dates are too early for me.” He very much hopes that his fans will understand that, Forster continued.
However, not everyone can do that. In addition to many fans, who understand that Forster presses the pause button, numerous users also complain in the comments. “We are still waiting for the concert in Lautern, which has been postponed four times and I can’t understand it anymore,” writes an angry user. Another had planned the card as a Christmas present for her seven-year-old daughter: “I can’t give her a present for 2024,” she complains.
From March 26, 2024, the new dates will take Forster from Halle to Vienna on May 25, 2024 via 24 concert dates, for example in Munich, Berlin, Freiburg, Leipzig or Nuremberg. Tickets that have already been purchased remain valid, but can also be returned and reimbursed .