A Reality Tour

2003–2004 concert tour by David Bowie From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Reality Tour was a worldwide concert tour by the English singer-songwriter David Bowie in support of his 2003 album Reality.[1] The tour began on 7 October 2003 at the Forum Copenhagen, Denmark, continuing through Europe, North America, Asia, including a return to New Zealand and Australia for the first time since the 1987 Glass Spider Tour. At over 110 shows, the tour was the longest tour of Bowie's career.[2] A heart attack in late June 2004 forced the cancellation of some dates near the end of the tour.[3] Bowie retired from performing live in 2006, making this tour his last.[4]

Location
  • Europe
  • North America
  • Oceania
  • Asia
Associated albumReality
Start date7 October 2003
End date25 June 2004
Quick facts Location, Associated album ...
A Reality Tour
Tour by David Bowie
Promotional poster for the tour
Location
  • Europe
  • North America
  • Oceania
  • Asia
Associated albumReality
Start date7 October 2003
End date25 June 2004
Legs5
No. of shows112 in total
Box officeUS$46 million
David Bowie concert chronology
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The tour grossed US$46 million, making it the ninth-highest-grossing tour of 2004.[5]

Background

Bowie announced the tour in June 2003, intending to play to over a million people across 17 countries, and was billed as his first major tour since the Outside Tour of 1995.[6] Rehearsals for the tour begin in July, with the band from his previous Heathen Tour mostly unchanged; Mark Plati had other work booked, so guitarist Gerry Leonard was made the new bandleader.[7] The band played a warm-up gig on 19 August in New York to an audience of about 500 people at The Chance theater.[8] Starting in September, Bowie appeared on national radio and TV shows in Germany and France before doing a "live and interactive music event" staged in London on 8 September, one of the first live streams of a rock concert, and the first to be broadcast in 5.1 sound.[8] This show was beamed live to audiences around the world, although some countries (such as the Japan and Australia) didn't broadcast the show until the following day, and some countries (like the US) did not broadcast the show until a week later.[8] Some theaters report not receiving the center channel of audio of the show, meaning that some audiences didn't hear Bowie's singing as part of the broadcast (strictly an issue at the theaters' end, according to Tony Visconti, who was responsible for the mix).[9]

Bowie continued publicity for the album and tour, playing songs on shows such as Friday Night with Jonathan Ross on BBC One, The Today Show, Last Call with Carson Daly, and The Late Show with David Letterman.[10] Tracks performed during these shows included "New Killer Star", "Modern Love", "Never Get Old", and "Hang On to Yourself".[10] Finally, in late September, Bowie and the band played songs for AOL Online, performing "New Killer Star", "I'm Afraid of Americans", "Rebel Rebel", "Days" and "Fall Dog Bombs the Moon",[10] all of which were streamed to AOL customers over the next few months.[10] By the end of September, Bowie and band were in Brussels for final rehearsals.[10]

Tour design

The tour itself was described by Bowie biographer Nicholas Pegg as "in some respects [...] even more theatrical" than the "Sound+Vision Tour", one of Bowie's more theatrical undertakings.[10] The stage included a giant LED screen with a raised catwalk, multiple platforms pushing out into the audience, staircases and "huge, bleached white tree branches" that dangled "gracefully from either side of the stage".[10] Bowie himself helped design the stage alongside designer Therese Depreze, lighting designer Tom Kenny and visual director Laura Frank.[10]

Repertoire

The set list included tracks spanning Bowie's 30 plus years in the music business, from The Man Who Sold the World (1970) all the way to Reality (2003), along with collaborations such as "Sister Midnight" (originally from The Idiot (1977) by Iggy Pop) and "Under Pressure" (released as a single (1981) by Bowie and Queen later found on Hot Space released the following year), and snippets and teasers of Bowie classics such as "Space Oddity" and "Golden Years".[11] The band had rehearsed around 60 songs for the tour,[2] and the large repertoire of available songs allowed them to change the setlist from night to night, sometimes making up the setlist on the fly, a departure from some of Bowie's previous and heavily choreographed tours like the Serious Moonlight Tour of 1983, the Glass Spider Tour of 1987, and the Sound+Vision Tour of 1990.[11] Bowie and his band played over two hours every night of the tour, playing more than 30 songs at some venues.[12] One song that was rehearsed but not performed is "Win" from his 1974 album Young Americans; it never made it further than the occasional soundcheck for the tour.[13]

Reception

The 24 January 2004 show in Vancouver, Canada was reviewed positively, with the reviewer saying that "with Bowie's near-flawless vocals, brilliant band, and smartly executed show, you wind up with one of the finest old-school rock gigs the Canucks’ home rink has ever hosted."[14] The review of the next show in Seattle on 25 January 2004 was similarly positive, saying Bowie, "still every inch a superstar ... still oozes charm and sex appeal" and called the setlist a "celebration of his whole body of work."[15] In Las Vegas's The Joint at the (now former) Hard Rock Hotel, a review of the 6 February 2004 show there described Bowie as he "laughed and joked around between songs" to a crowd "dancing ... in the aisles" in an overall positive review.[16]

Tour incidents

On 6 May 2004, a performance at the James L. Knight Center, Miami, Florida was cancelled after lighting technician Walter "Wally Gator" Thomas fell to his death prior to Bowie going onstage.[17] At the show in Oslo on 18 June 2004, Bowie was struck in the left eye with a lollipop thrown by an audience member.[18]

Heart attack

On 23 June, while on stage in Prague for the tour, Bowie had a heart attack (misdiagnosed at the time as a pinched nerve), which required him to leave the stage (and finally end the show early) to receive medical attention.[3][19] The tour was officially curtailed after the Hurricane Festival performance in Scheeßel, Germany on 25 June 2004, as a result of continued discomfort.[3] On 30 June, the tour was officially cancelled after Bowie was diagnosed with an acutely blocked artery that required an angioplasty procedure (performed on 26 June).[3][20]

Live recordings

A DVD video of the Point Theatre, Dublin performances of 2003 was released as A Reality Tour in 2004. A CD of the same performances was released as A Reality Tour in 2010.

Setlist

The following setlist was obtained from the concert at the Singapore Indoor Stadium of Singapore, on 4 March 2004.[21] It does not represent all concerts through the tour.

  1. "Rebel Rebel"
  2. "New Killer Star"
  3. "Fame"
  4. "Cactus"
  5. "All the Young Dudes
  6. "China Girl"
  7. "Battle For Britain (The Letter)"
  8. "The Loneliest Guy"
  9. "The Man Who Sold the World"
  10. "Afraid"
  11. "Sunday"
  12. "Heathen (The Rays)"
  13. "Under Pressure"
  14. "Life on Mars?"
  15. "Looking for Water"
  16. "Quicksand"
  17. "Days"
  18. "Ashes to Ashes"
  19. "I'm Afraid of Americans"
  20. ""Heroes""
Encore
  1. "Changes"
  2. "Five Years"
  3. "Suffragette City"
  4. "Ziggy Stardust"

Tour dates

More information Date, City ...
List of 2003 concerts:
Date City Country Venue Tickets sold / available Revenue Opening act
7 October Copenhagen Denmark Forum Copenhagen N/a N/a The Dandy Warhols
8 October Stockholm Sweden Globen Arena N/a N/a
10 October Helsinki Finland Hartwall Areena N/a N/a
12 October Oslo Norway Oslo Spektrum N/a N/a
15 October Rotterdam Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy N/a N/a
16 October Hamburg Germany Color Line Arena N/a N/a
18 October Frankfurt Festhalle Frankfurt N/a N/a
20 October Paris France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy N/a N/a
21 October N/a N/a
23 October Milan Italy Forum di Assago N/a N/a
24 October Zürich Switzerland Hallenstadion N/a N/a
26 October Stuttgart Germany Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle N/a N/a
27 October Munich Olympiahalle N/a N/a
29 October Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle N/a N/a
31 October Cologne Germany Kölnarena N/a N/a
1 November Hanover Preussag Arena 10,587 / 10,587 $499,926
3 November Berlin Max-Schmeling-Halle 10,693 / 10,693 $512,787
5 November Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis 16,113 / 16,113 $690,217
7 November Lille France Zénith de Lille 6,986 / 6,986 $349,420
8 November Amnéville Galaxie Amnéville 10,960 / 11,200 $462,161
10 November Nice Palais Nikaïa 7,620 / 8,000 $426,823
14 November Marseille Le Dôme de Marseille 8,004 / 8,004 $440,087
15 November Lyon Halle Tony Garnier 17,000 / 17,000 $753,371
17 November Manchester England Manchester Evening News Arena 14,827 / 14,827 $1,094,747
19 November Birmingham NEC LG Arena 23,604 / 23,604 $1,759,705
20 November
22 November Dublin Republic of Ireland Point Theatre 17,000 / 17,000 $1,142,076
23 November
25 November London England Wembley Arena 23,048 / 23,048 $1,717,549
26 November
28 November Glasgow Scotland Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre 10,103 / 10,103 $768,886
13 December Montreal Canada Bell Centre 11,315 / 11,315 $613,650 Macy Gray
15 December New York City United States Madison Square Garden 13,752 / 13,752 $1,108,711
16 December Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena 6,698 / 6,698 $313,460
20 December Nassau Bahamas The Atlantis Paradise Island Hotel N/a N/a N/a
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More information Date, City ...
List of 2004 concerts:
Date City Country Venue Tickets sold / available Revenue Opening act
7 January Cleveland United States CSU Convocation Center 7,692 / 7,938 $336,940 Macy Gray
9 January Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 8,509 / 8,909 $427,522
11 January Minneapolis Target Center 5,492 / 7,505 $275,436
13 January Rosemont Rosemont Theatre 12,867 / 12,867 $959,883
14 January
16 January
19 January Denver Fillmore Auditorium 3,600 / 3,600 $237,600
21 January Calgary Canada Pengrowth Saddledome 11,474 / 11,474 $634,074
24 January Vancouver GM Place 11,617 / 11,617 $612,323
25 January Seattle United States Paramount Theatre 2,804 / 2,835 $199,722
27 January San Jose HP Pavilion 9,856 / 10,317 $578,128
30 January Las Vegas The Joint 1,522 / 1,522 $343,313
31 January Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium 12,348 / 12,348 $803,544
2 February
3 February Wiltern Theatre 2,290 / 2,290 $187,174
5 February Phoenix Dodge Theater 4,873 / 4,873 $237,842
6 February Las Vegas The Joint 1,522 / 1,522 $343,313
7 February Los Angeles Wiltern Theatre 2,290 / 2,290 $187,174
14 February Wellington New Zealand Westpac Stadium N/a N/a Brooke Fraser
17 February Brisbane Australia Brisbane Entertainment Centre N/a N/a Something for Kate
20 February Sydney Sydney Entertainment Centre N/a N/a
21 February N/a N/a
23 February Adelaide Adelaide Entertainment Centre N/a N/a
26 February Melbourne Rod Laver Arena N/a N/a
27 February N/a N/a
1 March Perth Supreme Court Gardens N/a N/a
4 March Singapore Singapore Indoor Stadium N/a N/a N/A
8 March Tokyo Japan Nippon Budokan N/a N/a
9 March N/a N/a
11 March Osaka Osaka-jo Hall N/a N/a Kiyoharu
14 March Hong Kong Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre N/a N/a N/A
29 March[a] Philadelphia United States Wachovia Center 10,761 / 18,000 $645,380 Stereophonics
30 March[b] Boston FleetCenter N/a N/a
1 April[c] Toronto Canada Air Canada Centre 13,893 / 14,114 $771,136
2 April Ottawa Corel Centre N/a N/a
4 April Quebec City Colisée Pepsi N/a N/a
7 April Winnipeg Winnipeg Arena N/a N/a
9 April Edmonton Rexall Place 8,507 / 9,404 $342,609
11 April Kelowna Skyreach Place N/a N/a
13 April Portland United States Rose Garden Arena N/a N/a
14 April Seattle KeyArena 6,065 / 6,500 $316,094
16 April Berkeley Berkeley Community Theatre N/a N/a
17 April N/a N/a
19 April Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bowl 4,546 / 4,562 $314,625
22 April Los Angeles Greek Theatre 5,764 / 5,764 $360,560
23 April Anaheim Arrowhead Pond 7,015 / 7,520 $498,218
25 April Loveland Budweiser Events Center 4,177 / 5,440 $262,503
27 April Austin The Backyard Amphitheater N/a N/a
29 April The Woodlands Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion N/a N/a
30 April New Orleans Saenger Theatre N/a N/a
5 May Tampa Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center N/a N/a The Polyphonic Spree
8 May Atlanta Chastain Park Amphitheater N/a N/a
10 May Kansas City Starlight Theatre N/a N/a
11 May St. Louis Fox Theatre N/a N/a
13 May Hershey Star Pavilion N/a N/a
14 May London Canada John Labatt Centre 8,513 / 8,513 $446,740
16 May[d] Fairfax United States Patriot Center N/a N/a
17 May Pittsburgh Benedum Center N/a N/a
19 May Milwaukee Milwaukee Theatre N/a N/a
20 May Indianapolis Murat Shrine N/a N/a
22 May Moline The MARK of the Quad Cities N/a N/a
24 May Columbus Columbus Veterans Memorial Auditorium N/a N/a
25 May Buffalo Shea's Performing Arts Center N/a N/a
27 May Scranton Ford Pavilion at Montage Mountain N/a N/a
29 May[e] Atlantic City Borgata Event Center N/a N/a
30 May N/a N/a
1 June Manchester Verizon Wireless Arena N/a N/a
2 June Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena N/a N/a
4 June Wantagh Tommy Hilfiger at Jones Beach Theatre N/a N/a
5 June Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center N/a N/a
11 June Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam Arena N/a N/a
13 June[f] Newport England Seaclose Park N/a N/a
17 June[g] Bergen Norway Koengen N/a N/a
18 June[h] Oslo Frognerbadet N/a N/a
20 June[i] Seinäjoki Finland Törnävänsaari N/a N/a
23 June Prague Czech Republic T-Mobile Arena N/a N/a
25 June[j] Scheeßel Germany Eichenring N/a N/a
Total 722,158 / 737,581 $45,395,490
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  • On 19 August 2003 Bowie performed a one-off show in Poughkeepsie, New York at The Chance, as a warm up show.
  • On 8 September 2003 Bowie performed a show at the Riverside Studios in London, and the live performance was beamed via satellite to cinemas and theatres across Europe and, due to time delay, the following day across Asia, Australia, North and South America.[22][23]
Notes
  1. The concert on 29 March 2004 in Atlantic City was originally scheduled to take place on 10 December 2003.
  2. The concert on 30 March 2004 in Boston was originally scheduled to take place on 9 December 2003.
  3. The concert on 1 April 2004 in Toronto was originally scheduled to take place on 12 December 2003.
  4. The concert on 16 May 2004 in Fairfax was originally scheduled to take place on 7 December 2003.
  5. The concert on 29 May 2004 in Atlantic City was originally scheduled to take place on 6 December 2003.
  6. The concert on 13 June 2004 in Newport was part of the Isle of Wight Festival.
  7. The concert on 17 June 2004 in Bergen was part of the Bergen Festival.
  8. The concert on 18 June 2004 in Oslo was part of the Norwegian Wood Festival.
  9. The concert on 20 June 2004 in Seinäjoki was part of Provinssirock.
  10. The concert on 25 June 2004 in Scheeßel was part of the Hurricane Festival. This was also the final David Bowie concert as part of a headlining tour.
Cancellations and rescheduled shows
More information Date, City ...
List of cancelled concerts
Date City Country Venue Reason
12 November 2003 Toulouse France Le Zénith de Toulouse Laryngitis[24]
6 May 2004 Miami United States James L. Knight Center Accident[24]
26 June 2004 Tuttlingen Germany Southside Festival Health concerns[25]
29 June 2004 Vienna Austria Schloss Schönbrunn
30 June 2004 Salzburg Residenzplatz
2 July 2004 Roskilde Denmark Roskilde Festival
4 July 2004 Werchter Belgium Rock Werchter
6 July 2004 Ile De Gaou France Festival de la Gaou
7 July 2004 Carcassonne Festival de la Cite
10 July 2004 Kinross Scotland Balado, T in the Park
11 July 2004 County Kildare Ireland Oxegen Festival
14 July 2004 Bilbao Spain Bilbao Festival
16 July 2004 Compostela Xacobeo Festival
17 July 2004 Porto Portugal The Dragon Festival
20 July 2004 Nyon Switzerland Paléo Festival Nyon
21 July 2004 Monte Carlo Monaco Club du Sporting
23 July 2004 Carhaix France Vieilles Charrues Festival
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Tour band

Songs

Notation:

  • DVD/CD Included on A Reality Tour (film) and A Reality Tour (live album)
  • CD Included on the live album
  • iTunes Available as Digital download bonus tracks (iTunes) for the live album

From The Man Who Sold the World

From Hunky Dory

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"

From Lodger

From Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)

From Let's Dance

  • "Modern Love"
  • "China Girl" CD written by Iggy Pop and Bowie)
  • "Let's Dance"

From Tonight

  • "Loving the Alien" DVD/CD
  • "Blue Jean"

From Outside

From Earthling

From Heathen

From Reality

Other songs:

Notes

References

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