Uprising Tour

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Uprising Tour 1980
Tour by Bob Marley & The Wailers
Start date May 30, 1980
End date September 23, 1980
Legs 2
Shows 33 in Europe
5 in the USA
38 in total
Bob Marley & The Wailers tour chronology
Survival Tour
(1979)
Uprising Tour
(1980)

The Uprising Tour was a concert tour organised to support the album Uprising by Bob Marley & The Wailers. It was Marley's last tour and the biggest music tour of Europe in that year.

The tour started at the Hallenstadion in Zurich, Switzerland, where Marley performed for the first time, on May 30, 1980, and ended at the Stanley Theater in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on September 23, 1980, which was Marley's last show ever; two days before, after two shows at the Madison Square Garden, Marley collapsed in the Central Park while jogging, and was told to immediately cancel the U.S. leg, but flew to Pittsburgh to perform one final performance. He later appeared on stage at a concert by Stevie Wonder (it's disputed whether in Pittsburgh's Civic Arena or in Washington), but didn't perform. Then he left for Germany to receive cancer treatment which eventually was not successful, as Marley died in May 1981.

The concert in Dortmund on July 13 has been broadcast in the 1990s by German TV station WDR in their Rockpalast concert series. Numerous other performances from the Uprising Tour have also been taped on video.

The performance in Milan, Italy on June 27, when Marley performed for about 120,000 people in the sold-out San Siro stadium, is historical and still regarded in Italy as the biggest music event ever. At that time no other musician had reached to have a bigger audience than Marley till then.

While on tour Marley performed for the first time in Switzerland, Italy, Ireland and Scotland.

[edit] Setlist

The standard setlist of the tour mostly looked like the following:

  • "Natural Mystic"
  • "Positive Vibration"
  • "Revolution"
  • "I Shot The Sheriff"
  • "War" / "No More Trouble"
  • "Zimbabwe"
  • "Zion Train"
  • "No Woman, No Cry"
  • "Jammin'"
  • "Exodus"
  • "Redemption Song"
  • "Natty Dread"
  • "Work"
  • "Could You Be Loved?"
  • "Is This Love?"
  • "Get Up, Stand Up"

Most shows had a standard setlist which closes with "Exodus", and an encore set which usually ended with "Get Up, Stand Up". There were performances of an earlier song, "Trenchtown Rock", which is not featured on any of Marley's Island albums released at that time.

For the short U.S. leg of the tour Marley changed the setlist similar to that one from the Kaya Tour in 1978: he dropped "Revolution" and "Natty Dread" and re-included songs like "Burnin' And Lootin'" or "Them Belly Full" at the beginning, or "The Heathen" and the "Running Away" / "Crazy Baldhead" medley in the middle of the setlist.

From show to show sometimes an additional song was edged in the middle of the setlist, like "Lively Up Yourself", "Kinky Reggae", "Roots, Rock, Reggae", "Coming In From The Cold", "Bad Card", "Kaya", "Trenchtown Rock", "We And Them", "Three Little Birds", "Talkin' Blues" or "Forever Loving Jah". Live performances of each of these songs happened very rarely during the tour.

[edit] Tour dates

Date Venue City State Notes
May 30 Hallenstadion Zürich Flag of Switzerland Switzerland
June 1 Reitstadion Munich Flag of Germany Germany with Fleetwood Mac
June 3 Palais des Sports Grenoble Flag of France France
June 4 Parc des Sports Dijon Flag of France France
June 6 Sporthalle Cologne Flag of Germany Germany
June 7 Crystal Palace Concert Bowl London Flag of England England
June 8 Fritz Walter Stadion Kaiserslautern Flag of Germany Germany with Fleetwood Mac
June 9 Hall Rhenus Strasbourg Flag of France France
June 10 Parc des Expositions Orléans Flag of France France
June 11 Exposition Hall Bordeaux Flag of France France
June 13 Westfalenhalle Dortmund Flag of Germany Germany
June 14 Ernst Merck Halle Hamburg Flag of Germany Germany
June 16 Drammenshallen Oslo Flag of Norway Norway
June 17 Gröna Lund Stockholm Flag of Sweden Sweden
June 18 The Forum Copenhagen Flag of Denmark Denmark
June 20 Waldbühne Berlin Flag of Germany Germany
June 21 Eissporthalle Kassel Flag of Germany Germany
June 22 Forest National Brussels Flag of Belgium Belgium
June 23 Ahoy Hallen Rotterdam Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands
June 24 Grand Palais Lille Flag of France France
June 26 Stade Mayol Toulon Flag of France France
June 27 Stadio Giuseppe Meazza Milan Flag of Italy Italy
June 28 Stadio Comunale Turin Flag of Italy Italy
June 29 Estadio Román Valero Madrid Flag of Spain Spain cancelled
June 30 Plaza de Toros Barcelona Flag of Spain Spain
July 2 Palais de la Beaujoire Nantes Flag of France France
July 3 Le Bourget Paris Flag of France France
July 6 Dalymount Park Dublin Flag of Ireland Ireland
July 8 Brighton Leisure Centre Brighton Flag of England England
July 9 Brighton Leisure Centre Brighton Flag of England England
July 10 The Apollo Glasgow Flag of Scotland Scotland
July 11 The Apollo Glasgow Flag of Scotland Scotland
July 12 Deeside Leisure Centre Queensferry Flag of Wales Wales
July 13 New Bingley Hall Stafford, Staffordshire Flag of England England
September 16 JB Hynes Auditorium Boston, MA Flag of the United States USA
September 17 Meehan Auditorium, Brown University Providence, RI Flag of the United States USA
September 19 Madison Square Garden New York City, NY Flag of the United States USA opener for The Commodores
September 20 Madison Square Garden New York City, NY Flag of the United States USA opener for The Commodores
September 23 Stanley Theater Pittsburgh, PA Flag of the United States USA