Ziggy Stardust Tour - Biblioteka.sk

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Ziggy Stardust Tour
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Ziggy Stardust Tour
Tour by David Bowie
Bowie in character as Ziggy Stardust during the tour
Location
  • United Kingdom
  • North America
  • Asia
Associated albumHunky Dory
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
Aladdin Sane
Start date29 January 1972
End date3 July 1973
Legs6
No. of shows191 (196 scheduled)
David Bowie concert chronology

The Ziggy Stardust Tour was a 1972–73 concert tour by the English singer-songwriter David Bowie, to promote the studio albums Hunky Dory, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars and Aladdin Sane. Bowie was accompanied by his backing group, the Spiders from Mars, and integrated choreography, costumes and make-up into the live shows to make them a wider entertainment package. The tour generated significant press coverage, drawing positive reviews and launching Bowie to stardom.

The tour covered the UK, the US and Japan. It moved from small pub and club gigs at the beginning, to highly publicised sold-out shows at the end. At the tour's last gig at the Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July 1973, Bowie shocked fans by announcing that it was the last show he would do with the Spiders from Mars.

Itinerary

The tour lasted a year and a half and included three legs in the UK, two in the US and one in Japan.[1]

1972

The first show was on 29 January 1972 at the Borough Assembly Hall, Aylesbury, and featured Bowie with his backing group the Spiders from Mars: guitarist Mick Ronson, bassist Trevor Bolder and drummer Mick Woodmansey.[2] Audio engineer Robin Mayhew had started working on the PA and sound equipment since the end of the previous year, and was the principal sound engineer for the entire tour.[3]

Unlike typical rock concerts at the time, the shows featured a theatrical element with a rough storyline, and several make-up and costume changes.[4] Bowie wanted the shows to be entertainment and to be outrageous, which the Beatles and the Rolling Stones had been at one time, and collaborated with mime artist Lindsay Kemp with the on-stage choreography.[5] Looking for a change of image, Bowie asked local hairdresser Suzi Fussey to cut his long blond hair, later dyeing it red.[6][7] Some group members were unsure about the stage clothes Bowie asked them to wear, but quickly changed their minds after they realised the attention it gave them with female fans.[8]

The second show was at the Toby Jug pub in Tolworth on 10 February, where Bowie unveiled his "Ziggy Stardust" persona for the first time in front of an audience of around 60.[9][10] Early shows had a similar attendance, but this increased as the tour progressed. The 20 April show at the Manchester Free Trade Hall was only attended by a few hundred people, but at the end of the show, Bowie was carried out into the audience by fans.[11] At the 17 June show at Oxford Town Hall, Bowie simulated fellatio on Ronson's guitar. The scene was photographed by Mick Rock and was published on the front cover of Melody Maker, greatly raising Bowie's profile in the UK.[12] On the 25 June at the Greyhound, Croydon, Bowie was supported by Roxy Music and Trapeze.[13]

The 15 July show at the Friars Aylesbury included several US music journalists in the audience, including Dave Marsh and Lillian Roxon. Bowie's management spent $25,000 (about $182,000 in today's dollars)[14] to fly them, along with US representatives of their record label RCA Records, to preview his live work before starting a major US tour that autumn.[15][8]

After several months on the road, Bowie took a break to revisit and re-rehearse the live show, to include greater theatrics and costume changes.[15][16] Rehearsals took place at the Stratford Royal Theatre.[17] The first concert after this was at the Rainbow Theatre on 19 August, where Bowie was simply billed as "Ziggy Stardust".[16] A second show was added for the following day after the first one sold out.[15] Pianist Nicky Graham was added to the band line-up for these shows.[18]

The first leg in the US began in September 1972. Bowie travelled there by boat as he did not like flying.[19] Bowie and the Spiders from Mars played their first US show in the Cleveland Music Hall on 22 September. It was also pianist Mike Garson's debut. Six days later, Bowie played a sold-out show at Carnegie Hall. The concerts drew rave reviews from the press and led to the tour being extended for a further two months.[20] A concert on 20 October at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium was broadcast on radio, and heavily bootlegged before finally being released semi-officially in 1994 as Santa Monica '72 and officially in 2008 as Live Santa Monica '72.[21] The press coverage of the tour turned Bowie into a star in the US and he was featured on the front cover of Rolling Stone.[22]

The year ended with a short UK leg, which carried over into the start of 1973. Bowie played two shows at the Rainbow just before Christmas, and asked the audience to bring toys along to the concert that could be redistributed to children. The mid-show acoustic set that had been part of all the gigs until then was discarded, and Bowie with the Spiders played just an electric set.[23]

1973

At the start of 1973, Bowie called his friend Geoffrey MacCormack, saying he wanted to expand the musical line-up on stage, and asked if he would be a backing vocalist and travel with him.[24] Another friend, John Hutchinson was recruited as an additional rhythm guitarist; the pair had previously collaborated on the demo of "Space Oddity".[25]

The second US leg began in early 1973 with a sell-out show at the Radio City Music Hall, New York, on 14 February, which saw fans queuing at 2:30 pm for an evening show.[26] Bowie's costumes were designed by Kansai Yamamoto. During the end of set, he collapsed and had to be assisted.[27] The tour subsequently moved to Japan.[28] Bowie then travelled by ferry across the Sea of Japan to Vladivostok, and travelled on the Trans-Siberian Railway to Moscow in order to get back to Britain.[24][29] During this time, the Spiders from Mars complained they were still on the same wages as when they had started playing with Bowie despite multiple sold-out shows. They re-negotiated their fees with Bowie's manager Tony Defries, but this caused a rift in the band.[30]

The final leg of the tour covered the UK and began on 12 May 1973 with a concert at Earls Court Exhibition Centre in front of an audience of 18,000. Police forced the show to stop for 15 minutes while they battled with fans trying to storm the stage. Mick and Bianca Jagger attended the show.[31] The concert was fraught with technical difficulties and an inadequate PA system, leading to disgruntled fans.[32]

The last performance at the Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July was filmed by D. A. Pennebaker.[33] Woodmansey recalled the show was one of the best the band had played, because it was close to their London base and almost the end of an exhausting tour.[34] Towards the end of the show, Bowie announced "not only is it the last show of the tour, but it's the last show that we'll ever do".[1][35] Ronson had been told in advance by Bowie that the Spiders from Mars would split, but the announcement took Bolder and Woodmansey by surprise.[30]

Aftermath

By the end of the final leg, Bowie had grown weary of playing Ziggy Stardust, saying "I had an awful lot of fun doing  ... but my performance on stage reached a peak. I felt I couldn't go on stage in the same context again ... if I'm tired with what I'm doing wouldn't it be long before the audience realised."[36] Bowie went to France to record his covers album Pin Ups in the second half of 1973, and then his album Diamond Dogs in early 1974. Bowie's next tour, a solo tour without the Spiders, was his Diamond Dogs Tour of 1974.[37]

Personnel

According to biographer Nicholas Pegg:[38]

The Spiders from Mars

Other musicians

Other musicians on the 1973 legs

  • John Hutchinson – rhythm guitar, 12-string acoustic guitar
  • Warren Peace – backing vocals, percussion
  • Ken Fordham – saxophone
  • Brian Wilshaw – saxophone, flute

Timeline

Tour dates

According to Kevin Cann:[40]

1972

List of tour dates with date, city, country and venue
Date City Country Venue
Europe
29 January Aylesbury England Borough Assembly Hall
10 February London Tolworth, Toby Jug
11 February Wycombe Wycombe Town Hall
12 February London Imperial College London
14 February Brighton Brighton Dome
18 February Sheffield University Rag
23 February Chichester Chichester College
24 February London Wallington, Public Hall
25 February Eltham, Avery Hill College
26 February Sutton Coldfield Belfry Hotel
28 February
(cancelled)
Glasgow Scotland Glasgow City Halls
29 February Sunderland England Locarno Ballroom
1 March Bristol Bristol University
4 March Portsmouth South Parade Pier, Southsea
7 March Yeovil Yeovil College
11 March Southampton Southampton Guildhall
14 March Bournemouth Chelsea Village
18 March Birmingham Birmingham Town Hall
24 March Newcastle upon Tyne Mayfair Ballroom
17 April
(cancelled)
Gravesend New Lord's Club
20 April Harlow The Playhouse
21 April Manchester Free Trade Hall
29 April High Wycombe Wycombe Town Hall
30 April Plymouth Plymouth Guildhall
3 May Aberystwyth Wales Aberystwyth University
6 May London England Kingston Polytechnic
7 May Hemel Hempstead Pavilion
11 May Worthing Worthing Assembly Hall
12 May London Polytechnic of Central London
13 May Slough Slough Technical College
16 May London Unknown venue
19 May Oxford Oxford Polytechnic
20 May
25 May Bournemouth Chelsea Village
27 May Epsom Ebbisham
2 June Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle City Hall
3 June Liverpool Liverpool Stadium
4 June Preston Preston Public Hall
6 June Bradford St George's Hall
7 June Sheffield Sheffield City Hall
8 June Middlesbrough Middlesbrough Town Hall
10 June
(cancelled)
Leicester Leicester Polytechnic
13 June Bristol Colston Hall
16 June Torquay Torquay Town Hall
17 June Oxford Oxford Town Hall
19 June Southampton Southampton Guildhall
21 June Dunstable Dunstable Civic Hall
24 June Guildford Guildford Civic Hall
25 June Croydon Greyhound
30 June
(cancelled)
High Wycombe Royal Grammar School
1 July Weston-super-Mare Winter Gardens Pavilion
2 July Torquay Rainbow Pavilion
8 July London Royal Festival Hall
14 July King's Cross Cinema
15 July Aylesbury Friar's Club
19 August London Rainbow Theatre
20 August
27 August Bristol Locarno Electric Village
30 August London Rainbow Theatre
31 August Boscombe Royal Ballroom
1 September Doncaster Top Rank Suite
2 September Manchester Hard Rock
3 September
4 September Liverpool Top Rank Suite
5 September Sunderland Top Rank Suite
6 September Sheffield Top Rank Suite
7 September Hanley Top Rank Suite
North America
22 September Cleveland United States Cleveland Music Hall
24 September Memphis Ellis Auditorium
28 September New York City Carnegie Hall
1 October Boston Boston Music Hall[a]
7 October Chicago Auditorium Theatre
8 October Detroit Fisher Theater
10 October St. Louis Kiel Auditorium
11 October
15 October Kansas City Memorial Hall
20 October Santa Monica Santa Monica Civic Auditorium[b]
21 October
27 October San Francisco Winterland Ballroom
28 October
31 October Seattle Paramount Theatre
1 November
4 November Phoenix Celebrity Theatre
5 November
11 November Dallas Majestic Theater
12 November Houston Houston Music Hall
14 November New Orleans Loyola University
17 November Dania Pirates World
20 November Nashville Nashville Municipal Auditorium
22 November New Orleans The Warehouse
25 November Cleveland Public Auditorium[a]
26 November
28 November Pittsburgh Stanley Theatre
30 November Upper Darby Tower Theater
1 December
2 December
Europe
23 December London England Rainbow Theatre
24 December
28 December Manchester Hard Rock
29 December

1973

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Ziggy_Stardust_Tour
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Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.

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List of tour dates with date, city, country and venue
Date City Country Venue
5 January Glasgow Scotland Green's Playhouse
6 January Edinburgh Empire Theatre
7 January Newcastle upon Tyne England Newcastle City Hall
9 January Preston Guild Hall
North America
14 February New York City United States Radio City Music Hall
15 February
16 February Upper Darby Tower Theater
17 February
(2 shows)
18 February
(2 shows)
19 February
(2 shows)
23 February Nashville War Memorial Auditorium
26 February
(2 shows)
Memphis Ellis Auditorium
1 March Detroit Detroit Masonic Temple
2 March
10 March Long Beach Long Beach Arena
12 March West Hollywood Hollywood Palladium
Asia
8 April Tokyo Japan Shinjuku Koseinenkin Kaikan
10 April
11 April
12 April Nagoya Kokaido
14 April Hiroshima Yubin Chokin Kaikan
16 April Kobe Kobe Kokusai Kaikan
17 April Osaka Koseinenkin Kaikan
18 April Tokyo Shibuya Kokaido
20 April
Europe
12 May London England Earl's Court
16 May Aberdeen Scotland Aberdeen Music Hall
17 May Dundee Caird Hall
18 May
(2 shows)
Glasgow Green's Playhouse
19 May Edinburgh Empire Theatre
21 May
(2 shows)
Norwich England