Heathen Tour
Tour by David Bowie | |
At the Beacon Theatre, New York on 20 October 2002. L to R: Earl Slick (guitar), Mark Plati (guitar), Sterling Campbell (drums), David Bowie, Catherine Russell (keyboards), Gail Ann Dorsey (bass), Gerry Leonard (guitar). Mike Garson (keyboards) is out of shot to the left.
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Associated album | Heathen |
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Start date | 11 June 2002 |
End date | 23 October 2002 |
Legs | 4 |
Number of shows | 36 |
David Bowie concert chronology |
The David Bowie Heathen Tour was a 2002 concert tour in support of the album, Heathen, and was also notable for the performances of all songs from the 1977 Low album.
History
The Low album, not previously performed live in its entirety, was premiered on 11 June 2002 at the Roseland Ballroom in New York City, together with all the songs from the Heathen album. With other commitments ruling out the possibility of a major concert tour, the Heathen Tour became a mini-concert tour similar to the 1996 Outside Summer Festivals Tour.
On 11 February 2002, it was announced that Bowie had accepted the role of Artistic Director[1] at the Meltdown Festival, an annual music and arts event held at the South Bank complex in London, England. David Bowie's Meltdown 2002 run from 14 to 30 June, with a schedule of concerts and events including performances by The Legendary Stardust Cowboy, Coldplay, The Waterboys and a London Sinfonietta performance of Philip Glass's Low and Heroes symphonies. The closing night was billed as The New Heathens Night with Bowie headlining the event with support by The Dandy Warhols followed by a DJ set from Jonathan Ross.
The Heathen Tour proper began at the Meltdown Festival with Bowie embarking on a series of European performances including a link-up with Moby for the 12-date North America Area:2 Festivals with a return to Europe for a further six performances. Before returning again to North America to perform a final seven shows with the first five in each of New York City's five boroughs, dubbed The New York Marathon Tour by Bowie, who quipped; I could get home from all the gigs on roller skates.[2]
Tour band
- David Bowie - vocals, guitar, saxophone, harmonica, stylophone
- Earl Slick - guitar
- Gerry Leonard - guitar, backing vocals
- Mark Plati - rhythm guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, backing vocals
- Gail Ann Dorsey - bass guitar, backing vocals
- Sterling Campbell - drums
- Mike Garson - keyboards
- Catherine Russell - keyboards, percussion, backing vocals
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue |
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Warm-up show | |||
11 June 2002 | New York City | United States | Roseland Ballroom |
Europe | |||
29 June 2002 | London | England | Royal Festival Hall - Meltdown Festival |
1 July 2002 | Paris | France | Paris Olympia |
3 July 2002 | Kristiansand | Norway | Quart Festival |
5 July 2002 | Horsens | Denmark | Horsens Ny Teater |
7 July 2002 | Ostend | Belgium | Seat Beach Rock Festival - Hippodrome Wellington |
10 July 2002 | Manchester | England | Move Festival - Old Trafford Cricket Ground |
12 July 2002 | Cologne | Germany | E-Werk Festival |
14 July 2002 | Nîmes | France | Les Arenes de Nîmes |
15 July 2002 | Lucca | Italy | Summer Festival |
18 July 2002 | Montreux | Switzerland | Auditorium Stravinski |
North America Festivals | |||
28 July 2002 | Bristow, Virginia | United States | Nissan Pavilion |
30 July 2002 | Camden, New Jersey | Tweeter Center at the Waterfront | |
31 July 2002 | Holmdel, New Jersey | PNC Bank Arts Center | |
2 August 2002 | Wantagh, New York | Tommy Hilfiger at Jones Beach Theater | |
3 August 2002 | Mansfield, Massachusetts | Tweeter Center for the Performing Arts | |
5 August 2002 | Toronto, Ontario | Canada | Molson Amphitheater |
6 August 2002 | Detroit, Michigan | United States | DTE Energy Music Center |
8 August 2002 | Tinley Park, Illinois | Tweeter Center | |
10 August 2002 | Denver, Colorado | Pepsi Center | |
13 August 2002 | Irvine, California | Verizon Wireless Amphitheater | |
14 August 2002 | Mountain View, California | Shoreline Amphitheatre | |
16 August 2002 | George, Washington | The Gorge Amphitheatre | |
Europe | |||
22 September 2002 | Berlin | Germany | Max-Schmeling-Halle |
24 September 2002 | Paris | France | Le Zénith |
25 September 2002 | |||
27 September 2002 | Bonn | Germany | Museumsmeile |
29 September 2002 | Munich | Olympiahalle | |
2 October 2002 | London | England | Carling Apollo Hammersmith |
North America | |||
11 October 2002 | New York City | United States | The Music Hall at Snug Harbour |
12 October 2002 | New York City | St. Anne's Warehouse | |
16 October 2002 | New York City | Colden Center at Queens College | |
17 October 2002 | New York City | Jimmy's Bronx Cafe | |
20 October 2002 | New York City | Beacon Theater | |
21 October 2002 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Tower Theater | |
23 October 2002 | Boston, Massachusetts | Orpheum Theatre |
Songs
From David Bowie
From Hunky Dory
From The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
From Diamond Dogs
From Young Americans
- "Fame" (Bowie, John Lennon, Carlos Alomar)
From Station to Station
- "Stay"
From Low
- "Speed of Life"
- "Breaking Glass" (Bowie, Dennis Davis, George Murray)
- "What in the World"
- "Sound and Vision"
- "Always Crashing in the Same Car"
- "Be My Wife"
- "A New Career in a New Town"
- "Warszawa" (Bowie, Brian Eno)
- "Art Decade"
- "Weeping Wall"
- "Subterraneans"
From "Heroes"
- ""Heroes"" (Bowie, Eno)
From Lodger
- "Look Back in Anger" (Bowie, Eno)
From Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)
From Let's Dance
- "China Girl" (originally from The Idiot (1977) by Iggy Pop; written by Pop and Bowie)
- "Let's Dance"
From Outside
- "Hallo Spaceboy" (Bowie, Eno)
From Earthling
- "I'm Afraid of Americans" (Bowie, Eno)
From Hours
- "Survive" (Bowie, Gabrels)
From Heathen
- "Sunday"
- "Cactus" (originally from Surfer Rosa (1989) by the Pixies; written by Black Francis)
- "Slip Away"
- "Slow Burn"
- "Afraid"
- "I've Been Waiting for You" (originally from Neil Young (1968) by Neil Young; written by Young)
- "I Would Be Your Slave"
- "I Took a Trip on a Gemini Spaceship" (originally by Norman Carl Odam)
- "5:15 the Angels Have Gone"
- "Everyone Says 'Hi'"
- "A Better Future"
- "Heathen (The Rays)"
Other songs:
- "Absolute Beginners" (from the Absolute Beginners soundtrack; written by Bowie)
- "Alabama Song" (released as a non-album single (1980); originally from Bertolt Brecht's opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (1930); written by Brecht and Kurt Weill)
- "I Feel So Bad" (originally by Chuck Willis in 1953 and covered and released as a B-side to the "Wild in the Country" single (1961) by Elvis Presley; written by Willis)
- "One Night" (originally a single (1958) by Presley; written by Dave Bartholomew, Pearl King and Anita Steiman)
- "White Light/White Heat" (from White Light/White Heat (1968) by The Velvet Underground; written by Lou Reed)
Notes
References
- Nicholas Pegg, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2004, ISBN 1-903111-73-0