Isolar II – The 1978 World Tour

Isolar II - The 1978 World Tour
Tour by David Bowie

David Bowie performs in Oslo, Norway, 5 June 1978.
Associated album Low & "Heroes"
Start date 29 March 1978
End date 12 December 1978
Legs 4
Number of shows 77
David Bowie concert chronology

The Isolar II – The 1978 World Tour,[1] more commonly known as The Low / Heroes World Tour or The Stage Tour,[2] was a worldwide concert tour by David Bowie. The tour opened on 29 March 1978 at the San Diego Sports Arena continuing through North America, Europe and Australia before reaching a conclusion at the Nippon Budokan in Japan on 12 December 1978.

Tour development and song selection

Originally, Brian Eno planned to be a part of the tour band, but had to drop out due to health reasons. The band only had two weeks to rehearse for the tour. Carlos Alomar was the tour's band leader and drove the rehearsals.[3]

The set list for the performances consisted of material from the previous years' albums, Low and "Heroes", with the second half of each performance opening with a five-song sequence from the The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars album. Bowie had the band learn the entirety of the Ziggy Stardust album in rehearsals, although most of the songs were never performed live on the tour. The instrumental track "Art Decade" typically followed the Ziggy Stardust tracks, a mellow track to follow the energy of the Ziggy Stardust material.[3] Tracks from the 1976 album Station To Station were the closing numbers. In the late 1980s, Bowie regarded some of the songs he performed live on the tour as a bit "ponderous", referring specifically to some of the long instrumental performances such as "Warszawa."[4]

A short intermission split a typical night's show into two parts, and for the second Bowie wore a snakeskin drapecoat and "huge baggy white pants."[3]

Set design

The stark fluorescent tube lighting approach of the previous 1976 tour, was further developed and expanded to create a large cage of tube lighting, which enclosed the stage with the ability to pulsate moodily during the slower instrumental pieces and flash frantically during the faster songs.

Tour incidents

The show in Marseille was disrupted by a blown PA (coincidentally during the song "Blackout").[3]

The Australian leg of the tour included Bowie's first concert performances in Australia and his first large-scale outdoor concerts.[2] For the first two dates, keyboardist Dennis Garcia substituted for Roger Powell, who had a previous commitment with Utopia.

Live recordings

The performances at Civic Center in Providence, Rhode Island, Boston Garden and Philadelphia Spectrum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania were recorded for the live album Stage. Tour pianist Sean Mayes recalled that for the show that night, they slowed the tempo down (of most songs) for the recording, the only night such a change was made.[3]

The Dallas Convention Center performance on 10 April 1978 was filmed with six songs ("What in the World", "Blackout", "Sense of Doubt", "Speed of Life", "Hang On to Yourself", and "Ziggy Stardust") broadcast on USA television entitled David Bowie on Stage. The performances at Earls Court in London, England were filmed by David Hemmings, with extracts broadcast on a British TV programme, The London Weekend Show. The film has yet to be released. The performance at the NHK Hall in Tokyo, Japan on 12 December 1978 was filmed and broadcast on Japanese TV's The Young Music Show.

The final night of the Earls Court performance was recorded by the RCA mobile unit with the live performance premiere of the song, "Sound and Vision", later released on the 1995 compilation album, RarestOneBowie. The song was not performed live again until the 1990 Sound+Vision Tour.

The tour band remembered that "every show was taped" for Bowie's private use, and the tapes were carefully guarded by Carlos.[3]

Tour band

Band Road Management, Road Crew, Showco Crew, Personal Staff

Tour dates

Date City Country Venue
North America
29 March 1978 San Diego, California United States San Diego Sports Arena
30 March 1978 Phoenix, Arizona Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
2 April 1978 Fresno, California Fresno Convention Center
3 April 1978 Los Angeles, California The Forum
4 April 1978
5 April 1978 Oakland, California Oakland Coliseum
6 April 1978 Los Angeles, California The Forum
9 April 1978 Houston, Texas The Summit
10 April 1978 Dallas, Texas Dallas Convention Center
11 April 1978 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Louisiana State University Assembly Center
13 April 1978 Nashville, Tennessee Municipal Auditorium
14 April 1978 Memphis, Tennessee Mid-South Coliseum
15 April 1978 Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Auditorium
17 April 1978 Chicago, Illinois Arie Crown Theatre
18 April 1978
20 April 1978 Detroit, Michigan Cobo Arena
21 April 1978
22 April 1978 Richfield, Ohio Richfield Coliseum
24 April 1978 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Mecca Arena
26 April 1978 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Civic Arena
27 April 1978 Landover, Maryland Capital Centre
28 April 1978 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Spectrum Arena
29 April 1978
1 May 1978 Toronto, Ontario Canada Maple Leaf Gardens
2 May 1978 Ottawa, Ontario Ottawa Civic Centre
3 May 1978 Montreal, Quebec Montreal Forum
5 May 1978 Providence, Rhode Island United States Civic Center
6 May 1978 Boston, Massachusetts New Boston Garden Arena
7 May 1978 New York City Madison Square Garden
8 May 1978
9 May 1978
Europe
14 May 1978 Frankfurt Germany Festhalle
15 May 1978 Hamburg Congress-Centrum
16 May 1978 Düsseldorf (Cancelled) Philipshalle
Berlin Deutschlandhalle
18 May 1978 Essen Grugahalle
19 May 1978 Cologne Kölner Sporthalle
20 May 1978 Munich Olympiahalle
22 May 1978 Vienna Austria Stadthalle
24 May 1978 Paris France Pavillon de Paris
25 May 1978
26 May 1978 Lyon Palais des Sports de Gerland
27 May 1978 Marseille (Cancelled) Parc Chaneau
Palais des Sports
31 May 1978 Copenhagen Denmark Folketeatret
1 June 1978
2 June 1978 Stockholm Sweden (Cancelled) Skansen
Kungliga Tennishallen
4 June 1978 Gothenburg Scandinavium
5 June 1978 Oslo Norway Ekersberghallen
7 June 1978 Rotterdam Netherlands Sportpaleis Ahoy
8 June 1978
9 June 1978
11 June 1978 Brussels Belgium Vorst Nationaal
12 June 1978
14 June 1978 Newcastle upon Tyne England Newcastle City Hall
15 June 1978
16 June 1978
19 June 1978 Glasgow Scotland The Apollo
20 June 1978
21 June 1978
22 June 1978
24 June 1978 Stafford England New Bingley Hall
25 June 1978
26 June 1978
29 June 1978 London Earl's Court
30 June 1978
1 July 1978
Oceania
11 November 1978 Adelaide Australia Adelaide Oval
14 November 1978 Perth Perth Entertainment Centre
15 November 1978
18 November 1978 Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground
21 November 1978 Brisbane Lang Park
24 November 1978 Sydney RAS Showgrounds
25 November 1978
29 November 1978 Christchurch New Zealand Queen Elizabeth II Park
2 December 1978 Auckland Western Springs Stadium
Asia
6 December 1978 Osaka Japan Koseinenkin Kaikan
7 December 1978
9 December 1978 Banpaku Kaikan
11 December 1978 Tokyo Budokan Arena
12 December 1978 NHK Hall

Songs

From The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars

From Aladdin Sane

From Diamond Dogs

From Young Americans

From Station to Station

From Low

From "Heroes"

Other songs:

Notes

  1. Sean Mayes, Life on Tour with David Bowie: We Can Be Heroes, Independent Music Press, 2003, ISBN 978-1-897783-17-7
  2. 1 2 Nicholas Pegg, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2004, ISBN 1-903111-73-0
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 David Currie, ed. (1985), David Bowie: The Starzone Interviews, England: Omnibus Press, ISBN 0-7119-0685-8
  4. Isler, Scott (August 1987), "David Bowie Opens Up - A Little", Musician magazine: 60–73

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.