Serious Moonlight Tour
Tour by David Bowie | |
Associated album | Let's Dance |
---|---|
Start date | 18 May 1983 |
End date | 8 December 1983 |
Legs | 8 |
No. of shows | 96 |
David Bowie concert chronology |
The Serious Moonlight Tour was a worldwide concert tour by English musician David Bowie, launched in May 1983 in support of his album Let's Dance (1983). The tour opened at the Vorst Forest Nationaal, Brussels, on 18 May 1983 and ended in the Hong Kong Coliseum on 8 December 1983; 15 countries visited, 96 performances,[1] and over 2.6 million tickets sold.[2] The tour garnered mostly favourable reviews from the press.[3] It was, at the time, his longest, largest and most successful concert tour to date, although it has since been surpassed in length, attendance and gross revenue by subsequent Bowie tours.
Development
The tour, designed to support Bowie's latest album Let's Dance, was initially designed to be a smaller tour, playing to the likes of sub-10,000-seat indoor venues around the world, similar to previous Bowie tours. However, the success of Let's Dance caused unexpectedly high demand for tickets: there were 250,000 requests for 44,000 tickets at one show, for example, and as a result the tour was changed to instead play in a variety of larger outdoor and festival-style venues. The largest crowd for a single show during the tour was 80,000 in Auckland, New Zealand, while the largest crowd for a festival date was 300,000 at the US 83 Festival in California. The tour sold out at every venue it played.[1]
Bowie used boxing (of which he was a fan) to get in shape for the tour. His son Duncan Jones pointed out years later that "Each round [of boxing] is approximately the same length as a song, so if you can get your cardio up enough to do a full 12 or so rounds, you’re ready to go!"[4]
Set design
Bowie himself had a hand in the set design for the tour, which included giant columns (affectionately referred to as "condoms") as well as a large moon and a giant hand.[5] The stage was deliberately given a vertical feeling (especially due to the columns) and an overall design that Bowie called a combination of classicism and modernism. The weight of one set (of which there were two) was 32 tons.[1]
Tour musicians
Bowie used the musicians he'd newly collaborated with on Let's Dance, along with some longer standing collaborators, including Carlos Alomar who was the designated tour band leader.[1][5] Stevie Ray Vaughan, who had contributed guitar solos to six of the songs on Let's Dance and who was up and coming, was to join the tour, also to please the American audience.[6] Vaughan showed up for rehearsals in Dallas in April (soundboard tapes from the rehearsals exist),[7][8] but Vaughan showed up with a cocaine habit, a hard-partying wife and an entourage looking for easy access to drugs.[9] Given that Bowie himself had moved to Berlin in the late 1970s to try and kick his own cocaine habit,[10][11] Bowie and Vaughan's management failed to come to an agreement on how to temper the situation, and in the end Vaughan pulled out of the tour.[6] Vaughan was replaced by longtime Bowie guitarist Earl Slick.[12]
Song selection
Faced with high demand for tickets for the tour, Bowie decided to play his more recognizable songs from his repertoire, saying a few years later that his goal was to give the fans the songs that they'd heard on the radio over the past 15 years, calling the setlist a collection of songs that the fans "probably didn't realize when added up are a great body of work".[13] Bowie and Carlos Alomar selected an initial list of songs for the tour, 35 of which they rehearsed for the tour.[1] One song that was on the rehearsal's song list that never actually got to the rehearsal stage was "Across the Universe", which Bowie had covered in 1975 on his Young Americans album.[3] The setlist for the tour was the basis for the track list for the 1989 box set Sound + Vision.[14]
Tour rehearsals
Initially the band rehearsed in a studio in Manhattan[1] before moving near Dallas for dress rehearsals.[3]
Each band member wore a costume which was designed "down to the smallest detail", as if a character in a play.[15] Two sets of each person's costumes were made and worn on alternate nights, and everyone got to keep one set at the conclusion of the tour as a souvenir.[3] The bands' costumes were a nod, a "slight parody", on all the New Romantic bands that were growing in popularity at the time.[1]
Tour performances
To counteract counterfeiting, tickets and backstage passes were printed with small flaws that casual observers would not notice, but tour staff and security were trained to spot.[1]
On 30 June 1983, the performance at the Hammersmith Odeon in London was a charity show for the Brixton Neighbourhood Community Association in the presence of Princess Michael of Kent. The 13 July 1983 Montreal Forum performance was recorded and broadcast on American FM radio and other radio stations worldwide. The concert on 12 September in Vancouver was recorded for the concert video Serious Moonlight, that was released in 1984 and on DVD in 2006.
At the Canadian National Exhibition Stadium performance on 4 September 1983 in Toronto, Bowie introduced special guest Mick Ronson, who borrowed Earl Slick's guitar and performed "The Jean Genie" with Bowie and band. Mick had only been asked to play the day before, and he later recalled:
I was playing Slick's guitar ... I had heard Slick play solos all night so I decided not to play solos and I just went out and thrashed the guitar. I really thrashed the guitar, I was waving the guitar above my head and all sorts of things. It was funny afterwards because David said, 'You should have seen [Earl Slick's] face...' meaning he looked petrified. I had his prize guitar and I was swinging it around my head and Slick's going 'Waaaa... watch my guitar', you know. I was banging into it and it was going round my head. Poor Slick. I mean, I didn't know it was his special guitar, I just thought it was a guitar, a lump of wood with six strings.[3]
The last show of the tour (8 December 1983) was the third anniversary of John Lennon's death, whom Bowie and Slick had previously worked with in the studio. Slick suggested to Bowie a few days prior to the show that they play "Across the Universe" as a tribute; but Bowie said, "Well if we're going to do it, we might as well do 'Imagine'." They rehearsed the song a couple of times on 5 December (in Bangkok) and then performed the song on the final night of the tour as a tribute to their friend.[3]
Legacy
The tour was a high point of commercial success for Bowie, who found his new popularity perplexing. Bowie would later remark that with the success of Let's Dance and the Serious Moonlight Tour, he had lost track of who his fans were or what they wanted.[16] One critic would later call this tour his "most accessible" because "it had few props and one costume change, from peach suit to blue."[17]
Bowie later specifically tried to avoid repeating the formula for success from his Serious Moonlight Tour with his 1987 Glass Spider Tour.[18]
The 26 November show in Auckland became – at the time – the most attended concert in the Southern Hemisphere with over 80,000 people in attendance.[19]
Set list
This is the set list from the performance in Vancouver, Canada, on 12 September 1983. It's not intended to represent all shows throughout the tour.
- "Look Back in Anger"
- "Heroes"
- "What in the World"
- "Golden Years"
- "Fashion"
- "Let's Dance"
- "Breaking Glass"
- "Life on Mars?"
- "Sorrow"
- "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)"
- "China Girl"
- "Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)"
- "Rebel Rebel"
- "White Light/White Heat"
- "Station to Station"
- "Cracked Actor"
- "Ashes to Ashes"
- "Space Oddity"
- "Young Americans"
- "Fame"
- "TVC 15"
- Encore
- "Star"
- "Stay"
- "The Jean Genie"
- "Modern Love"
Personnel
- David Bowie – lead vocals, guitar, saxophone
- Earl Slick – guitar
- Carlos Alomar – guitar, backing vocals, music director
- Carmine Rojas – bass guitar
- Tony Thompson – drums, percussion
- Dave Lebolt – keyboards, synthesizers
- Steve Elson – saxophones
- Stan Harrison – saxophones, woodwinds
- Lenny Pickett – saxophones, woodwinds
- George Simms – backing vocals
- Frank Simms – backing vocals
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance (approx) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Europe | ||||
18 May 1983 | Brussels | Belgium | Vorst Forest Nationaal | |
19 May 1983 | ||||
20 May 1983 | Frankfurt | West Germany | Festhalle | |
21 May 1983 | Munich | Olympiahalle | ||
22 May 1983 | ||||
24 May 1983 | Lyon | France | Palais des Sports de Gerland | |
25 May 1983 | ||||
26 May 1983 | Fréjus | Les Arènes | ||
27 May 1983 | ||||
29 May 1983 | Nantes | (Cancelled) Le Beaujoire | ||
North America | ||||
30 May 1983 | San Bernardino | United States | US Festival Glen Helen Regional Park |
300,000[1] |
Europe | ||||
2 June 1983 | London | England | Wembley Arena | |
3 June 1983 | ||||
4 June 1983 | ||||
5 June 1983 | Birmingham | National Exhibition Centre | ||
6 June 1983 | ||||
8 June 1983 | Paris | France | Hippodrome D'Auteuil | 120,000[1] |
9 June 1983 | ||||
11 June 1983 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Ullevi Stadium | 58,000–60,000[1] |
12 June 1983 | ||||
15 June 1983 | Bochum | West Germany | Ruhrstadion | |
17 June 1983 | Bad Segeberg | Freilichtbühne | ||
18 June 1983 | ||||
20 June 1983 | West Berlin | Waldbühne | ||
24 June 1983 | Offenbach am Main | Bieberer Berg Stadion | ||
25 June 1983 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Stadion Feijenoord | |
26 June 1983 | ||||
28 June 1983 | Edinburgh | Scotland | Murrayfield Stadium | 47,444[1] |
30 June 1983 | London | England | Hammersmith Odeon | 2,120[1] |
1 July 1983 | Milton Keynes | National Bowl | 174,984 (over all 3 nights)[1] | |
2 July 1983 | ||||
3 July 1983 | ||||
North America | ||||
11 July 1983 | Quebec City | Canada | Colisée de Québec | 14,400[1] |
12 July 1983 | Montreal | Montreal Forum | ||
13 July 1983 | ||||
15 July 1983 | Hartford | United States | Hartford Civic Center | |
16 July 1983 | ||||
18 July 1983 | Philadelphia | The Spectrum | ||
19 July 1983 | ||||
20 July 1983 | ||||
21 July 1983 | ||||
23 July 1983 | Syracuse | (Re-scheduled) – Carrier Dome | ||
25 July 1983 | New York City | Madison Square Garden | ||
26 July 1983 | ||||
27 July 1983 | ||||
29 July 1983 | Richfield | Richfield Coliseum | ||
30 July 1983 | Detroit | Joe Louis Arena | ||
31 July 1983 | ||||
1 August 1983 | Rosemont | Rosemont Horizon | ||
2 August 1983 | ||||
3 August 1983 | ||||
7 August 1983 | Edmonton | Canada | Commonwealth Stadium | |
9 August 1983 | Vancouver | BC Place | ||
11 August 1983 | Tacoma | United States | Tacoma Dome | |
14 August 1983 | Los Angeles | The Forum | ||
15 August 1983 | ||||
17 August 1983 | Phoenix | Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum | ||
19 August 1983 | Dallas | Reunion Arena | ||
20 August 1983 | Austin | Frank Erwin Center | ||
21 August 1983 | Houston | The Summit | ||
24 August 1983 | Norfolk | Scope Cultural and Convention Center | 21,370[1] | |
25 August 1983 | ||||
27 August 1983 | Landover | Capital Centre | 29,371[1] | |
28 August 1983 | ||||
29 August 1983 | Hershey | Hersheypark Stadium | 25,230[1] | |
31 August 1983 | Foxborough | Sullivan Stadium | 60,000[1] | |
3 September 1983 | Toronto | Canada | Canadian National Exhibition Stadium | |
4 September 1983 | ||||
5 September 1983 | Buffalo | United States | Buffalo Memorial Auditorium | |
6 September 1983 | Syracuse | Carrier Dome | ||
9 September 1983 | Anaheim | Anaheim Stadium | ||
11 September 1983 | Vancouver | Canada | Pacific National Exhibition Coliseum | |
12 September 1983 | ||||
14 September 1983 | Winnipeg | Winnipeg Stadium | ||
17 September 1983 | Oakland | United States | Oakland Alameda Coliseum | 57,920[1] |
Asia | ||||
20 October 1983 | Tokyo | Japan | Nippon Budokan | 12,000[1] |
21 October 1983 | ||||
22 October 1983 | ||||
24 October 1983 | ||||
25 October 1983 | Yokohama | Yokohama Stadium | ||
26 October 1983 | Osaka | Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium | ||
27 October 1983 | ||||
29 October 1983 | Nagoya | Kokusai Tenji Kaikan | ||
30 October 1983 | Suita | Expo Commemoration Park | ||
31 October 1983 | Kyoto | Kyoto Prefectural Gymnasium | ||
Oceania | ||||
4 November 1983 | Perth | Australia | Perth Entertainment Centre | |
5 November 1983 | ||||
6 November 1983 | ||||
9 November 1983 | Adelaide | Adelaide Oval | ||
12 November 1983 | Melbourne | VFL Park | ||
16 November 1983 | Brisbane | Lang Park | ||
19 November 1983 | Sydney | RAS Showgrounds | ||
20 November 1983 | 25,000[1] | |||
24 November 1983 | Wellington | New Zealand | Athletic Park | 50,000[1] |
26 November 1983 | Auckland | Western Springs Stadium | 80,000–90,000[1] | |
Asia | ||||
3 December 1983 | Singapore | Singapore | Former National Stadium | |
5 December 1983 | Bangkok | Thailand | Thai Army Sports Stadium | 9000[20] |
7 December 1983 | Hong Kong | Hong Kong | Hong Kong Coliseum | |
8 December 1983 |
Song list
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Flippo, Chet (1984). David Bowie's Serious Moonlight : The World Tour. Doubleday & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-385-19265-1.
- ^ Pimm Jal de la Parra, David Bowie: The Concert Tapes, P.J. Publishing, 1985, ISBN 90-900100-5-X
- ^ a b c d e f David Currie, ed. (1985), David Bowie: The Starzone Interviews, England: Omnibus Press, ISBN 978-0-7119-0685-3
- ^ @ManMadeMoon (23 February 2020). "Posted this to someone else, but it applies here too... It's a great way to train for tours and dad did train this way for this tour. Each round is approximately the same length as a song, so if you can get your cardio up enough to do a full 12 or so rounds, you're ready to go!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ a b Edwards, Henry; Zanetta, Tony (1986), Stardust: The David Bowie Story, 1986, ISBN 978-0-07-072797-7
- ^ a b Gregory, Hugh (2003). Roadhouse Blues: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Texas R&B. Backbeat. pp. 75–76. ISBN 9780879307479.
- ^ Scapeletti, Christopher (11 January 2016). "Hear David Bowie and Stevie Ray Vaughan in 1983 Rehearsal". Guitar Player. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
- ^ "Soundboard Recordings of Stevie Ray Vaughan's 1983 Rehearsal with David Bowie in Dallas Texas". Forgotten Guitar. 17 May 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
- ^ Barres, Pamela Des (1996). Rock Bottom: Dark Moments in Music Babylon. St. Martin's Press. p. 259. ISBN 9780312148539.
- ^ Mastropolo, Frank (11 January 2016). "The History of David Bowie's Berlin Trilogy: 'Low,' 'Heroes' and 'Lodger'". Ultimate Classic rock.
- ^ Wilcken, Hugo (2005). Low. New York: Continuum. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-8264-1684-1.
- ^ Nicholas Pegg, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2004, ISBN 1-903111-73-0
- ^ Morse, Steve (July–August 1987), "David Bowie (Cover Story)", In Fashion Magazine, 3 (10): 151, 153
- ^ Rougvie, Jeff (15 November 2015). "It Was 26+ Years Ago Today Part 3 & Maybe 4 & 5, too". JEFF ROUGVIE HUB. Retrieved 15 March 2019 – via Squarespace.
- ^ "In Which It Is Neither The Plane Nor The Pilot". thisrecording.com.
- ^ Pond, Steve (March 1997), "Beyond Bowie", Live! Magazine: 38–41, 93
- ^ Cohen, Scott (September 1991), "From Ziggy Stardust to Tin Machine: David Bowie Comes Clean", Details magazine: 86–97
- ^ Graff, Gary (18 September 1987), "Bowie Is Back, And Bolder Than Ever His Controversial Glass Spider Tour Proves The Ageless Rocker Is Still Full of Surprises", The Orlando Sentinel, retrieved 28 May 2013
- ^ "Billboard Magazine" (PDF). 28 January 1984. p. 7. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
David Bowie's 'Serious Moonlight' Tour of Australia and New Zealand ` .. eclipsed all previous concert attendance records Down Under. More the 80,000 people attended the final Australasian concert in Auckland. That's the single biggest concert ever in the Southern Hemisphere. 1nact, the audience outnumbered the fifth largest city -in New Zealand.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "สารคดี โบวีในกรุงเทพ แขกรับเชิญคุณ อัมพร จักกะพาก BOWIE IN BANGKOK - THE PROMOTER - full interview". YouTube.
References
- David Buckley, Strange Fascination: The Definitive Biography of David Bowie, Virgin Books, 1999, ISBN 1-85227-784-X