The tour, which will take Trevi to dozens of cities in Mexico, the United States, Latin America and Europe, will open at the Arena Monterrey on March 4, her manager, John Regna, said.

“She wants her fans to see her reinvented persona, her evolution,” Regna said.

Trevi was cleared on rape and kidnapping charges in September, along with two of her backup singers, after spending five years in Brazilian and Mexican prisons. Prosecutors had alleged they had lured young girls into their entourage and then sexually abused them.

The U.S. leg of Trevi’s tour will open April 1 in Reno, Nev. It will include stops in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Miami, Las Vegas and 15 other cities, Regna said.

In December, Trevi released a new album, How the Universe Was Born, to a lukewarm reception in Mexico, where none of her new songs made the Top 10 lists. However, more than 100,000 copies were sold in the United States in the first weeks after the album’s release.

Trevi’s music about sexual liberation and teenage frustration became wildly popular in the early 1990s and she was often seen as a sort of Latin American version of Madonna.