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Glass Spider Tour

The Glass Spider Tour was a 1987 worldwide concert tour by the English musician David Bowie, launched in support of his album Never Let Me Down and named for that album's track "Glass Spider". It began in May 1987 and was preceded by a two-week press tour that saw Bowie visit nine countries throughout Europe and North America to drum up public interest in the tour. The Glass Spider Tour was the first Bowie tour to visit Austria, Italy, Spain, Ireland and Wales. Through a sponsorship from Pepsi, the tour was intended to visit Russia and South America as well, but these plans were later cancelled. The tour was, at that point, the longest and most expensive tour Bowie had embarked upon in his career. At the time, the tour's elaborate set was called "the largest touring set ever".[1]

The Glass Spider Tour
Tour by David Bowie
Promotional poster for the tour
Location
  • Europe
  • North America
  • Oceania
Associated albumNever Let Me Down
Start date30 May 1987
End date28 November 1987
Legs3
No. of shows
  • 27 in Europe
  • 44 in North America
  • 15 in Oceania
  • 86 in total
Box officeUS$86 million
David Bowie concert chronology
Tin Machine tour chronology
The Glass Spider Tour
(1987)
Tin Machine Tour
(1989)

Bowie conceived the tour as a theatrical show, and included spoken-word introductions to some songs, vignettes, and employed visuals including projected videos, theatrical lighting and stage props. On stage, Bowie was joined by guitarist Peter Frampton and a troupe of five dancers choreographed by long-time Bowie collaborator Toni Basil. With the theme "Rock stars vs Reality", the show was divided into two acts and an encore. The set list was modified over the course of the tour as Bowie dropped some of his newer material in favour of older songs from his repertoire.

The tour was generally poorly received at the time for being perceived as overblown and pretentious. Despite the criticism, Bowie in 1991 remarked that this tour laid the groundwork for later successful theatrical tours by other artists, and the set's design and the show's integration of music and theatrics has inspired later acts by a variety of artists. Starting in the late 2000s, the tour began to collect accolades for its successes, and in 2010 the tour was named one of the top concert tour designs of all time.

The tour was financially successful and well-attended, being seen by perhaps as many as six million fans worldwide, but the negative critical reception of the album and tour led Bowie to not only abandon plans for other elaborate stage shows, but to reconsider his motivations for making music.

Performances from this tour were released on the VHS video Glass Spider (1988, re-released on DVD in 2007).

Background edit

In the four years prior to the release of Never Let Me Down, Bowie had worked on a series of miscellaneous projects that included collaborations with the Pat Metheny Group for "This Is Not America" and Mick Jagger for "Dancing in the Street".[2][3] He also continued acting and composing for film soundtracks such as Absolute Beginners (1985) and Labyrinth (1986).[2][4]

In 1985, after his successful performance at Live Aid and a live performance with Tina Turner for one of her shows on her 1985 Private Dancer Tour, Bowie collaborated with his friend Iggy Pop for his solo album Blah-Blah-Blah, producing and co-writing multiple tracks.[5][6] He then worked with Turkish musician Erdal Kızılçay for the title song of the 1986 film When the Wind Blows.[5] In late 1986, Bowie began recording sessions for his album Never Let Me Down, which was released in April 1987. He had not toured for his 1984 album Tonight, making the Glass Spider Tour his first tour in four years.[7]

Development edit

Preparations for the tour began as early as 1986, when Bowie warned his band to "be ready for next year."[8] Bowie was initially mum on his plans for his tour, saying only "I'm going to do a stage thing this year, which I'm incredibly excited about, 'cause I'm gonna take a chance again." When asked if he would elaborate on his plans, he replied "No! [Laughs.] Too many other acts are goin' out. I'll just be doing what I always did, which is keeping things interesting."[9]

"I've eaten, slept, and thought about nothing but this show for six months."[10]

—David Bowie, June 1987 in London

In announcing the tour, Bowie embarked on a series of promotional press shows covering nine countries in two weeks, including Canada, the US and seven countries in Europe. The press tour shows were typically delivered in smaller venues seating around 300 people, and local fans were often allowed into the events.[8] He used the opportunity to educate the press on his album and the tour, and the multiple dates allowed him to correct misinformation. At the London Glass Spider Press Conference, he clarified that "I didn't say 'lights, costumes and sex,' what I said was 'lights, costumes and theatrical sets'" in response to a question about what the audience could expect when seeing his new live show.[11] Press tour shows included live performances of some of the songs from the album Never Let Me Down.

Bowie was joined by long-time friend Peter Frampton on the tour. Frampton said "I don't have a book to sell; I don't have an album to sell; I'm just here as a guitarist. The pressure is off. I'm enjoying myself." Frampton and Bowie had known each other since their teen years when they both attended Bromley Technical School, where Frampton's father, Owen Frampton, was Bowie's art teacher.[12]

Bowie had a clear goal for this tour: to return to the theatrics that he had performed during his short-lived 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour.[13] He wanted this tour to be "ultra-theatrical, a combination of music, theater, and rock",[14] and he felt that his previous tour, while successful, had veered away from the theatrics that he preferred:

 
Bowie being lowered from the spider set's ceiling, to the opening song "Glass Spider" at Rock am Ring – 7 June 1987

[In 1983 for the Serious Moonlight Tour] the promoters were coming around and saying, "Listen David, we moved you from this 10,000 seater up to this 30,000-seater" ... and it grew and grew and there were 60,000-seaters coming up. ... Let's trim back on the theatrics and really go for giving them songs that they've heard on the radio for the last 15 years or so – songs they probably didn't realize when added up are a great body of work coming from this guy. ... Whereas with [The Glass Spider] tour coming up, I feel I've established that. What I now want to do is have the songs work for the performance. ... Certainly there will be obscure songs on it, at least for the general public. There will be songs from albums that weren't huge albums, but now those particular songs actually fit a section of the show. So when you put three songs together, you can create a vignette that works. It has a beginning and a conclusion and deals with one subject.[13]

Bowie indicated that he was "testing the waters" with this tour, and was potentially considering other large, elaborate stage shows if the tour was successful:

The songs have to work within the show—not the show working for the songs, if you see what I mean. That's why it's so different. And that's why it's so exciting, because that's the way I really like working. I mean, I like devising a show. I've got a show book that is almost like the bible you have when you're working on a play. It's written and structured with various thematic devices. Unfortunately, it's in revue form, because none of the songs were written for the show. That's the ultimate, of course. If this works the way I hope it does, then the next step for me will be to write a piece specifically for arenas and stadiums, which is almost like taking a musical on the road that has one narrative form all the way through, with a cast of characters, and is written for epic theater.[13]

Bowie decided that the theme for the show would be "the reality and unreality of rock,"[14] or, as one critic called it, "rock stars vs. reality".[15] Bowie said, "It's not just about a rock singer, it's about rock music, so it has a lot to do with the audience and how they perceive rock, and rock figures, and all the cliches, archetypes and stereotypes, and also family relationship."[14]

During the show itself, Bowie incorporated a wide variety of props: "I'm really attempting to do a lot of stuff! It incorporates movement, dialogue, fragments of film, projected images, it's what used to be called multi-media in the '60s."[14] Bowie described how he assembled the show, saying, "The idea was to concoct surrealist or minimalist stage pieces to accompany rock-and-roll songs. I wanted to bridge together some kind of symbolist theater and modern dance. Not jazz dance, certainly not MTV dance, but something more influenced by people like Pina Bausch and a Montreal group called [La La La Human Steps]. There are some symbolist pieces, some minimalist pieces, and some vulgar pieces, too – some straightforward vaudeville bits."[16]

When Bowie was asked what he thought his audience expected of him on this tour, he said:

I guess that they come along to see whether I'll fall down or something. I really don't know. I know that they get what they consider is a really good performance. I think that over the years I've proved that I do my best to provide them with some new vision of musical information on the stage. So I think there's probably that element in it, but I couldn't go any further than that. I really don't know what they want from me. I've never really been able to write for them. I've only written and performed that which interests me. So essentially they have an agreement with me and that's great. I mean, I've lost audiences many times over the years, and they've come back again for one reason or another. I've sort of got that mutual agreement with them. If it's not going very well then they stay away. Which is fair enough, you know.[17]

Bowie reportedly coordinated aspects of the tour via email, a rarity in the late 1980s.[18]

Song selection edit

Bowie elected to play less well-known songs on the tour and avoided some of his bigger hits.[15][19] He was eager to not repeat the formula that made the Serious Moonlight Tour a success, saying, "It seemed so easy. It was cheers from the word go. You know how to get a reaction – play 'Changes,' 'Golden Years' and they'd be up on their feet. You get the reaction, take the money and run away. It seemed too easy. I didn't want to do that again."[20] In a different contemporary interview he said, "I'm not doing 'Star' again. That was quite hard. I don't think I'm doing much Ziggy material on this tour! [laughs] Probably use a lot of that mid-70s material, but not the more ponderous things like 'Warszawa.' I tried that, and that was a bit yawn-making. There was one I was humming to myself the other day: [sings] 'Baby, baby, I'll never let you down' – oh lord, what's that one? Jesus, I can't remember it. ... 'Sons of the Silent Age!' [snaps fingers] Ah! That's right! Thank god I could remember it! So that for me now is a new song. I've never done that one onstage."[21] "Sons of the Silent Age" was performed every night of the tour.

All but two songs ("Too Dizzy" and "Shining Star (Makin' My Love)") from his album Never Let Me Down were played live during the tour, although "Shining Star" was among the songs rehearsed. Other songs rehearsed but not performed were "Because You're Young" and "Scream Like a Baby", both from Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps) (1980).[8] Several songs that Bowie had anticipated playing on the tour were abandoned before rehearsals even started, including "Space Oddity" (from David Bowie (1969)), "Joe the Lion" (from "Heroes" (1977)), "Ricochet" (from Let's Dance (1983)), and "Don't Look Down" (from Tonight (1984)).[21]

Songs performed during the tour were "chosen because they fit the performance"[11] and fit Bowie's goal to make a show that was much more theatrical and had strong dramatic content. When he was asked how he was going to make his rock show "dramatic", he replied, "You'll be surprised what you can do with a 6-piece rock band and a stage and a couple of lights."[22]

Set design edit

 
Bowie on stage at Rock am Ring – 7 June 1987

The tour's set, described at the time as "the largest touring set ever,"[1] was designed to look like a giant spider. It was 60 feet (18.3m) high, 64 feet (19.5m) wide and included giant vacuum tube legs that were lit from the inside with 20,000' (6,096m) of color-changing lights.[16][23] A single set took 43 trucks to move and was estimated to weigh 360 tons.[16] 16' x 20' (4.9m x 6m) video screens displayed video and images from the show to those in the audience who were further away from the stage.[24] The system required to run the show included two separate sound systems, 260 speaker cabinets, 1,000 lights with an output total of 600,000 watts,[8] and three computers.[25] Mark Ravitz, the set designer, had previously designed Bowie's 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour set.[26]

This was Bowie's first tour where wireless microphone technology was available, allowing Bowie considerable freedom to move around the stage during a concert.[8] This allowed him to interact with the dancers and musicians much more freely, and as such the set included 3-story high mobile scaffolding, onto which Bowie and his dancers would occasionally climb during the show.[27]

Each set cost US$10 million,[10][28] about $25.8 million in today's dollars.[29] Bowie himself invested over $10 million of his own money to help fund the tour,[1] and he paid $1 million a week[12] to maintain a staff of 150 people to maintain and build the three sets as the tour moved around the world.[10][25] In Philadelphia, where the tour opened in the US, the set was described as taking "300 people 4 days" to build.[30]

About halfway through the first leg of the tour in Europe, Bowie discovered that the full Spider set was so large that it would not fit in most indoor venues. He said, "It would cost me between $500,000 and $600,000 to alter the sets enough to bring the show indoors. ... I may decide to have a smaller 'indoor' set made somewhere during the tour."[17] He did in fact commission a third slightly smaller set, called the "Junior Bug" set, to be used at indoor venues where the full spider would not fit, such as New York's Madison Square Garden.[12]

Bowie thought of the whole set as a metaphor of life, describing the stage as having "a feeling of a ship, which is the voyage, with the rigging and the climbing and the ropes. And the bottom circular area is like the Circus of Lights, so it really is from birth, and the voyaging through life."[31]

Rehearsals edit

Bowie assembled his band in early 1987 and were joined on stage by five dancers who were choreographed by Bowie's long-time friend Toni Basil. The band and the dancers spent time in 12-hour-a-day rehearsals in New York before moving on to Europe. Bowie shot the video for his single "Time Will Crawl" during these rehearsals; it previewed some of the elaborate dance routines that were used during performances of "Loving the Alien" (1985), "Fashion" (1980) and "Sons of the Silent Age" (1977).[32] Bowie described his rehearsal routine:

I prepare the day's work when I get up in the morning, and then I go in around 10 o'clock (a.m.) for rehearsals. Then it's constant rehearsals, both the visual side and the musical side, through about 8 o'clock (p.m.). At around 8 p.m. I look at the video tapes of what we've been doing during the day, and make adjustments if necessary. So there really isn't time to do anything else at all except Sundays, and then I sleep for most of the day. It's very intensive rehearsals, and physically it's quite demanding.[17]

"[The Glass Spider Tour is] the most physical tour that I've done ever. ... It's relentless, it never stops. I'm bruised as hell. I feel like a worn out rag doll."[33]

—David Bowie, 1987

Rehearsals with the full Spider set were staged in Rotterdam's Ahoy arena starting on 18 May before moving to De Kuip stadium for the dress rehearsals (27 and 28 May).[34][35] Due to relatively easy access to the venues during rehearsals, fans knew what the set list for the show would be before the tour even opened.[8]

Bowie stated that he was looking for dancers who did not look like typical MTV dancers and who knew both American street-dancing and European performance art.[31] Originally Bowie had hoped to have Édouard Lock of La La La Human Steps be involved in the show, but the group was booked with other commitments. Bowie later lamented that the Tour may have been viewed differently if La La La Human Steps had been involved: "It would have been a different ballgame."[36] La La La Human Steps would provide the choreography for Bowie's next tour, the Sound+Vision Tour of 1990.[36]

Concert synopsis edit

The show was divided into two parts and included a planned encore.

 
The Glass Spider set from above – 6 June 1987 in Berlin

Bowie entered the show to the song "Glass Spider", for which he was lowered from the set's ceiling while seated in a silver chair and singing into a telephone. The show's first vignette began with "Bang Bang", during which Bowie pulled an audience member out of the crowd, only to be rejected by the fan, who by the end of the song was revealed to be one of the troupe's dancers. Later in the show, for the song "Fashion", the dance troupe threatened Bowie with a street fight, which, by the end of the song, he accidentally wins. For the live rendition of "Never Let Me Down", the performance of which Bowie called "abrasive",[37] he was influenced by the minimalist choreography of Pina Bausch. He said:

I wanted one straight movement that starts upstage and comes all the way downstage and doesn't vary. I'm on my knees, with my arms in a kind of straitjacket, and a crawl for three-and-a-half minutes. A girl is with me, as if she's accompanying her pet in a park, but she has a cylinder on her back, and every now and then she's giving me oxygen. It felt like a very protective, a very sad little image, and it felt right for the song.[16]

For Part 2, Bowie appeared on the stage's scaffolding to "'87 & Cry", flew through the air in a Flying by Foy abseiling harness, and was subsequently tied up by riot police. On at least one occasion, the flying segment of the song was dropped due to a malfunction with the set. The movie footage shown behind Bowie during "'Heroes'" was shot by Bowie during his time in Russia in 1974. Of the footage, Bowie said:

There's a poignant image of a Mongolian with a hanky in his hand waving goodbye to his family getting on a train to Moscow and I loop that up so there's a never ending sequence of this old fellow dabbing his tears and waving bye-bye. That plays behind the action in black and white and it's alarmingly sad. It's like saying goodbye to heroism; it's like saying goodbye to a world of a 19th century ideal. It's irretrievable and now maybe we’re just looking for seeds of intelligence and not heroes. There's something about it that I really like. It's a piece of theatricality that I really adore. I’m really proud of it.[38]

The encore typically opened with the song "Time", for which Bowie emerged from the top of the spider's head with angel wings behind him, 60 feet above the crowd. The song was occasionally cut from outdoor shows when bad weather made the perch atop the spider too precarious to perform.[8][23][39]

Costume design edit

For the first act, Bowie was dressed in a single-breasted three-quarters length red suit with a red shirt and pants[8] designed by Diana Moseley.[40] The outfit included red Chelsea boots with silver details at the heel and toe.[41] One of the outfits that Bowie wore for Part 2, signed by Bowie, was put up for auction on 21 May 2016[42] and was sold for $37,500.[43] Bowie's outfit for the encore was a gold lamé leather suit complete with gold winged cowboy boots. One of these suits, also autographed by Bowie, sold at a Sotheby's auction in 1990 for $7,000 (worth about $15,700 today) several times its expected selling price.[44] That same outfit was again put up for auction in December 2016 with an expected selling price of $20,000–⁠$30,000, and was sold for $32,500.[45]

Setlists edit

On tour, the band typically performed a roughly two and a half-hour set that varied only a little from night to night.

Notes and changes edit

  • An extended drum solo separated Part 1 and Part 2 and allowed Bowie time for a costume change.
  • Bowie would lengthen or shorten his performance of "Fame" depending on the crowd's reaction by including parts of "Lavender's Blue", "London Bridge", "War" and "Who Will Buy?" into the song.
  • "White Light/White Heat" and "Fame" were performed during the encore at some venues.
  • "I Wanna Be Your Dog" was only occasionally performed at shows during the North American and Oceania tours.
  • "Time" would only be performed if it was safe for Bowie to stand on top of the spider's head for the start of the encore. If it was raining the song would be completely dropped as it was unsafe.
  • "New York's in Love" was dropped after 10 June (Milan, Italy).
  • "The Jean Genie" was added on 8 July (Barcelona, Spain).
  • "White Light/White Heat" and "Young Americans" were added and "Zeroes" was dropped on 11 July (Slane, Ireland).
  • "Rebel Rebel" was added and "Dancing with the Big Boys" was dropped on 30 July (Philadelphia, USA).[8]

Opening acts edit

The opening act for the tour varied from country to country;[46] in North America some dates of the tour were supported by Duran Duran or Siouxsie and the Banshees.[47] The opening acts in Europe varied, and included such acts as Iggy Pop, Big Country, The Cult, Erasure, The Stranglers and Nina Hagen. The tour also played festival dates, on one occasion with Eurythmics headlining one night and Bowie headlining the next.[8]

Tour incidents edit

The tour took a physical toll on Bowie. Not only did he grow noticeably thinner over the course of the tour,[8] he found that he was exhausted before the tour even started:

I think [tours like this] awre extravagantly dangerous to do because they're so fucking tiring. Just the pressures of organising the event, and it's no longer a show, it's an event. Even before you go out on tour, you're knackered. There's God knows how many people running around, and everybody's doing something and people are forgetting to delegate jobs to the right people, and it's a mass of confusion and somehow it's all supposed to come together.[48]

 
A modern aerial view of De Kuip, where Bowie opened the tour

The tour played at large-capacity venues, and in Europe the tour alternated between indoor and outdoor, open-field venues.[8] Michael Clark, a lighting engineer for the tour, died at the Stadio Comunale in Florence, Italy on 9 June after falling from the scaffolding before the show commenced.[32] The following day on 10 June, another worker fell without lethal injury while helping build the set in Milan. Mobs of fans, some who had camped out overnight to get into the venue, rioted and had to be controlled by police.[8][49] Both shows in Rome (on 15 and 16 June) saw similar rioting as fans who could not get tickets to the shows clashed with police. On the second night, Bowie had to sing through tear gas as 50 people were arrested and 15 policemen were injured in the rioting.[50] As the band's plane was leaving Rome after their show on 16 June, a bomb scare forced the plane to return to the airport, only to discover that the local chief of police had used it as a ruse to get Bowie's autograph. Said Bowie of the incident, "I was not so much annoyed as stunned – that could only happen in Italy!"[51] The 27 June concert, originally scheduled to be performed at Ullevi, Gothenburg, Sweden had to be moved to nearby Eriksberg in Hisingen because a previous concert by Bruce Springsteen held at Ullevi Stadium incurred £2.7m (or about £8m today)[52] in damages. A fan trying to enter the Slane Castle backstage area by swimming the River Boyne drowned just before the show on 11 July.[8]

At one point during the European tour, guitarist Carlos Alomar ripped a ligament in his leg, an injury that caused him to change his on-stage character. Said Alomar, "[I] had to change my character into the mad, limping Mad Max reject with spiky hair. I went to a chiropractor and asked him for a lot of metal stuff -- leg braces, back braces and everything. Now I'll be adding more metal as the show progresses."[53]

Bowie was occasionally visited or had his shows attended by European royalty, including Princess Diana at the second show in Wembley Stadium; Sarah, Duchess of York at Sunderland; and Danish Prince Joachim and Crown Prince Frederik at Stadt Park.[8]

The Glass Spider Tour was the first Bowie tour to reach Italy, Spain, and Ireland.[8] Some of the outdoor performances in Britain had to start early due to curfew laws, a problem typically avoided in other European shows, which reduced the impact of the lighting of the stage and set dressing, and bothered Bowie considerably.[8][31]

During the North American leg of the tour, a 30-year-old Dallas woman named Wanda Nichols claimed that Bowie sexually assaulted her at the Mansion Hotel after a show at Reunion Arena in Dallas.[54] Bowie denied the charges, calling them "ridiculous". He said Nichols was with him in his hotel room, but that anything that occurred between them was with her consent. A spokeswoman for assistant district attorney Hugh Lucas said on 18 November 1987 that the Dallas County grand jury no-billed Bowie after hearing two hours of testimony on November 11. "The Grand jury did not find enough evidence to warrant an indictment," the spokeswoman said.[55][56]

Ticket sales and attendance edit

"I try and do something I want to go and see really, that's the essence of whatever I do. This particular tour, for instance, I’ve really tried to put together all the elements, everything that I’ve been fascinated [with] in theater and rock, ever since the beginning of my career. It looks like the kind of show I really want to go and see myself. It's fast, colorful, vulgar, loud, subtle, quiet, dreamlike."[57]

—David Bowie, early 1987

Demand for tickets to the tour was high: the September 3 show at Sullivan Stadium in Massachusetts set a record for quickest sellout at that venue, a record matched by U2 and unsurpassed until The Who sold 100,000 tickets to two shows there in less than eight hours in 1989.[58] Star magazine reported that, for one venue,[a] Bowie sold $3 million in tickets to three shows in 90 minutes.[59] The concert drew the largest crowd ever to see a concert in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada at the time.[60] Advance sales for the Australian leg of the tour was $8.6 million, surpassing even Michael Jackson's advance sales for the Australian leg of his "Bad" concert tour (estimated at $4.5 million).[61]

Contemporary journalists estimated that by the conclusion of the tour between two[62] and six[12] million people had attended, and David Currie, the author of a book about the European leg of the tour, suggested that three million fans saw the tour worldwide.[8]

Four of the tour's shows were among the top 20 highest-grossing concert shows of 1987 in the US, and at the end of 1987 it was estimated that the entire tour grossed more than $50 million.[62] In 1991, it was estimated that each show of the tour grossed $1 million,[63] for roughly $86 million over the course of the tour, or approximately $222 million today, adjusted for inflation.[29]

Contemporary critical reviews edit

The European leg of the tour seemed to garner mostly unfavorable reviews from the media,[8][64] although there were positive reviews as well.[1][30] Chris Roberts, a writer for Melody Maker, later said that there was "overwhelming peer pressure" among his fellow musical critics to review the tour unfavourably.[65] Bowie was frustrated how the reviews in Europe changed from initially positive to negative, blaming the early start of the tour in some outdoor venues for the poor reception. He said, "the biggest mistake that was made on that tour, was opening in the daylight. The whole reason for the entire damn show was lost." He noted that reviews from indoor shows, where the set and lighting were more effective, were quite positive.[66]

"I think it's [The Glass Spider Tour] something that's very unique, and I think you either love it, or it's not your cup of tea."[1]

—Peter Frampton, August 1987

The US media seemed kinder, with papers in Orlando, Florida and Boston, Massachusetts writing positive reviews.[12][20] The Philadelphia Inquirer and Chicago Tribune were both mixed in their reviews.[39][67] The review of Bowie's first show in New York was mostly negative, calling the show "spectacular", but adding that "overkill reigns" and lamenting "a dizzying overload of visual activity."[27] A review in the Christian Science Monitor was mostly positive, highlighting the dazzling visuals and complaining that the dancing was only occasionally inspired.[10] A local paper in Portland, Oregon had a positive review that said that the dancers, music, set and band combined into an "overall effect [that] could rightly be called spectacular. It is performance art and rock opera; it is a stunning assemblage worthy of any stage or arena in the world."[24]

Despite criticism in the press, Bowie at the time said that performing on this tour was the most fun he had ever had on the road because it was the "most inventive" tour he had ever been involved with.[68]

Live recordings edit

Despite stating during the press tour that there would be no live album from the tour,[11] the performances at Sydney Entertainment Centre – Sydney on 7 and 9 November 1987 were filmed and released on video as Glass Spider in 1988. An edit of this show was subsequently aired in the US in an ABC TV concert special, ABC's first concert special since airing Elvis Presley's Aloha from Hawaii in 1973.[61] A 2007 DVD re-release of the show included an audio recording of the performance at Olympic Stadium, Montreal on 30 August 1987, which was re-mastered and released on Loving the Alien (1983-1988) (2018). The 6 June 1987 Platz der Republik (Reichstag – City Of Berlin Festival) performance was broadcast live on FM radio.

One critic found that the 1988 and 2007 DVD reissue video releases rendered the intended meaning of the show largely nonsensical, as several songs and vignettes that made the show's message explicit were excised from the release.[15] However Bowie biographer Nicholas Pegg said that the concert film was "hugely enjoyable" despite the show's flaws, and that the video "leads the field for those wishing to see David Bowie delivering a rock-theatre spectacular."[32]

Commercial sponsorship edit

Bowie agreed to what at the time was considered a controversial[69] commercial sponsorship agreement with PepsiCo,[20][70] which was later seen as helping to pave the way for other big money tours by other artists.[71] For his part, Bowie recorded a TV commercial with Tina Turner to the tune "Modern Love" in May 1987 while he was preparing for the tour.[34]

Of the sponsorship agreement, Bowie said, "We did a commercial sponsorship thing only for North America with the Pepsi-Cola company. As far as I'm concerned, what it's allowed me to do, having them underwrite the tour, is to be able to produce a far more extravagant show than if I were just doing it myself. It means that instead of just having 1 or 2 sets I can have 3 or 4 sets made, and they can travel independently and they can be far more complicated."[72]

Bowie had originally planned to take the Glass Spider Tour to Russia, albeit with the band only and no dancers or elaborate props, but with the money and extra stage provided by the sponsorship, Bowie felt he could take the full tour to Russia and South America. However, these plans failed to come to fruition, and the tour never reached those regions.[73]

Tour legacy edit

Bowie found himself under great stress during the tour, and after the tour ended in New Zealand, he reportedly had one of the Spider sets burned, saying "It was so great ... We just put the thing in a field and set light to it. That was such a relief!"[74] In 2016, road manager Peter Grumley claimed to have purchased and stored at least one of the (unburned) sets in his West Auckland warehouse.[75]

The entire tour was so physically demanding and such a large production that Bowie said at the time that "I don't think I'll ever take a tour quite this elaborate out on the road again. It's a real headache to put it together".[68]

Bowie became engaged to Melissa Hurley,[76] one of the dancers from the tour, but the two split up without being wed after four years.[77]

"[The Glass Spider Tour] was the first time I'd had the opportunity to spend that kind of money and do shows like that! The first time since Diamond Dogs, anyway ... I thought, Right! Let's really spend some money! I had all these thwarted dreams of what I'd tried to do with rock 'n roll in the early '70s, and I was trying to do all that a bit late."

—David Bowie, 1991[48]

Critics have often compared later David Bowie tours to this one,[36][64][77][78] commonly echoing this later review: "[Bowie] mounted a stadium-sized production combining the excitement of rock with the perils of Broadway. ... An incredible spectacle, but the effect was overwhelming. Each additional theatrical device served to distract, ultimately flattening the impact of the music."[79]

In 1989 while working with Tin Machine, Bowie said "I overstretched. ... There was too much responsibility on the last [Glass Spider] tour. I was under stress every single day. It was a decision a second. It was so big and so unwieldy and everybody had a problem all the time, every day, and I was under so much pressure. It was unbelievable. ... I put too many fine details into something that was going to be seen (indicates tiny figure with his finger and thumb) this big."[74]

In 1990, while giving interviews for his Sound+Vision Tour, Bowie said that he was pleased that the tour was regarded as "innovative", noting reviews that pointed out how the tour had "areas of it that surely would change the way rock was done."[66]

In 1991, while preparing for his second tour with Tin Machine, Bowie reflected on the Glass Spider Tour's theatrics and presentation, suggesting that many tours and acts that followed benefited from this tour:

The Stones' show, Prince's show, Madonna's show... all of them have benefited from [this] tour. ... I like lots of it [the Glass Spider Tour], but ... the whole thing should have been a lot smaller. Three-quarters of it was really innovative, and I've seen a lot of it in other people's shows. ... One day, if you get the chance, get a copy of that show on video and take another look at it, because in the light of what's been done since, there's some interesting shit going on.[48]

In the late 2000s, the tour began to be re-examined by critics, and the tone of the coverage began to change. In 2009, an article in the BBC News singled out the Glass Spider Tour's innovative set and marriage of music and theatre as an inspiration to later acts, including Britney Spears, Madonna, U2 and others. Stage designer Willie Williams said the Glass Spider Tour was a template for those acts: "There will be one set of costumes and they will do a few songs, then there will be another big scene change and move on to the next thing. Bowie crossing rock 'n' roll with Broadway [in the Glass Spider Tour] was where that began."[80] In 2010, the Glass Spider Tour won an award for being one of the best concert designs of all time (alongside other such notable tours as U2's 360° Tour [2009–2011] and Pink Floyd's Division Bell Tour [1994]).[23]

"When we [toured for] Young Americans, they booed the hell out of that. Why? They [the fans] wanted Diamond Dogs [Bowie's previous album]. When we did "Serious Moonlight", they booed the hell out of that because they wanted the 70s stuff. When we did "Glass Spider", they wanted "Serious Moonlight". The audience was never going to catch up to the man."

Carlos Alomar (2016), on the fans' and critics' mixed reaction to the Glass Spider Tour[81]

In 2013, new critical reviews began to take note of some of the tour's strengths and innovations and proposed that the tour was better than its reputation suggested. Although critics still found some elements of the tour questionable (including the set itself and the prevalence of Bowie's newer material), the tour was praised for Bowie's strong voice, musical arrangements and choice of relatively unheard "jewels" in the set list.[71][82] Peter Frampton credited his participation in this tour for helping to revive his own career.[83]

In 2017, a review in The Atlantic, while admitting that it had some flaws, called the show "spectacular, beautiful, charmingly pretentious, and weirdly magical."[65]

The show on 6 June 1987 was played close to the Berlin Wall. The show was heard by thousands of East German citizens across the wall[84] and was followed by violent rioting in East Berlin. According to German journalist Tobias Ruther, these protests in East Berlin were the first in the sequence of riots that led to those around the time of the fall of the wall in November 1989.[85][86] Although other factors were probably more influential in the fall of the wall,[84] on Bowie's death in 2016, the German Foreign Office tweeted "Good-bye, David Bowie. You are now among #Heroes. Thank you for helping to bring down the #wall."[87]

Ultimately, given the negative reaction to the Never Let Me Down album and this tour, Bowie found himself creatively exhausted and in low critical standing.[88] Bowie decided to return to making music for himself,[89] and, having been put in touch with Reeves Gabrels through his publicist for the Glass Spider Tour,[90] Bowie formed his band Tin Machine in 1989[71] and retired his back catalogue of songs from live performance with his Sound+Vision Tour in 1990.[91]

Tour details edit

Tour design edit

  • Allen Branton – Lighting design
  • Mark Ravitz – Set design
  • Christine Strand – Video director[23]

Band equipment edit

Peter Frampton played two natural-finish maple body Pensa-Suhr Strat types, hand-made by New York-based John Suhr. For the song "Zeroes", he used a Coral electric sitar, given to him in the late '70s and previously owned by Jimi Hendrix. Carlos Alomar played on six Kramer American series guitars and one custom Alembic. Multi-instrumentalist Erdal Kizilcay played Yamaha DX7, Emax, Korg SG-1 and Yamaha CS70 keyboards. He also played a Tokai Stratocaster, a Yamaha GS1000 bass and a Pedulla fretless bass. Additional instruments played included a set of Latin Percussion timbales and white congas, a cowbell, 6- and 8-inch Zildjian cymbals, Promark drum sticks, a Simmons SDS-9, a cornet and a 17th-century Italian viola. Richard Cottle played on two Prophet 5s, an Oberheim, a Yamaha DX7, DX7-IID and KX5 keyboards as well as a Selmer alto saxophone. Carmine Rojas used two Spector basses, and Alan Childs played on Tama Artstar II drums and used various combinations of Zildjian A, K, and Platinum series cymbals.[21]

Tour dates edit

Date (1987) City Country Venue Attendance
Promotional press shows
North America
17 March Toronto Canada Diamond Club
18 March New York City United States Cat Club
Europe
20 March London United Kingdom Player's Theatre
21 March Paris France La Locomotive
24 March Madrid Spain Halquera Plateaux
25 March Rome Italy Piper
26 March Munich West Germany Parkcafe Lowenbrau
28 March Stockholm Sweden Ritz
30 March Amsterdam Netherlands Paradiso
Oceania
27 October Sydney Australia Tivoli Club
Glass Spider Tour
Europe
30 May Rotterdam Netherlands Stadion Feijenoord 60,000[8]
31 May 60,000[8]
2 June Werchter Belgium Rock Werchter Concert Site
6 June West Berlin West Germany Platz der Republik 80,000[93]
7 June Nürburgring Rock am Ring
9 June Florence Italy Stadio Comunale 50,000[49] – 65,000[8]
10 June Milan Stadio San Siro 60,000 [94]
13 June Hamburg West Germany Festwiese Am Stadtpark
15 June Rome Italy Stadio Flaminio 40, 000[95]
16 June 40, 000[95]
19 June London United Kingdom Wembley Stadium 70,000[10]
20 June 70,000[8][10]
21 June Cardiff National Stadium 50,000[8]
23 June Sunderland Roker Park 36,000[96]
27 June Gothenburg Sweden Eriksbergsvarvet 45,000[97]
28 June Lyon France Stade de Gerland
1 July Vienna Austria Praterstadion
3 July Paris France Parc départemental de La Courneuve
4 July Toulouse Stadium Municipal
6 July Madrid Spain Vicente Calderón Stadium
7 July Barcelona Mini Estadi
8 July
11 July Slane Ireland, Republic of Slane Concert 50,000[8]
14 July Manchester United Kingdom Maine Road
15 July
17 July Nice France Stade De L'Ouest
18 July Turin Italy Stadio Comunale di Torino
North America
30 July Philadelphia United States Veterans Stadium 50,000[30]
31 July
2 August East Rutherford Giants Stadium
3 August
7 August San Jose Spartan Stadium 29,000[98]
8 August Anaheim Anaheim Stadium 50,000[99]
9 August
12 August Denver Mile High Stadium
14 August Portland Civic Stadium
15 August Vancouver Canada BC Place Stadium 35,000[100]
17 August Edmonton Commonwealth Stadium
19 August Winnipeg Winnipeg Stadium 25,000[101]
21 August Rosemont United States Rosemont Horizon
22 August
24 August Toronto Canada Canadian National Exhibition Stadium
25 August
28 August Ottawa Lansdowne Park 29,000[60]
30 August Montreal Olympic Stadium 45,000[102]
1 September New York City United States Madison Square Garden
2 September
3 September Foxborough Sullivan Stadium 61,000[103]
6 September Chapel Hill Dean Smith Center
7 September
10 September Milwaukee Marcus Amphitheater
11 September
12 September Pontiac Pontiac Silverdome
14 September Lexington Rupp Arena
18 September Miami Miami Orange Bowl
19 September Tampa Tampa Stadium
21 September Atlanta Omni Coliseum
22 September
25 September Hartford Hartford Civic Center
28 September Landover Capital Centre
29 September
1 October Saint Paul St. Paul Civic Center
2 October
4 October Kansas City Kemper Arena
6 October New Orleans Louisiana Superdome
7 October Houston The Summit
8 October
10 October Dallas Reunion Arena
11 October
13 October Los Angeles Dodger Stadium
14 October
Oceania
29 October Brisbane Australia Boondall Entertainment Centre
30 October
3 November Sydney Sydney Entertainment Centre
4 November
6 November
7 November
9 November
10 November
13 November
14 November
18 November Melbourne Kooyong Stadium
20 November
21 November
23 November
28 November Auckland New Zealand Western Springs Stadium

The songs edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The source does not identify the exact venue for which the record-making sales occurred.

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • O'Leary, Chris (2019). Ashes to Ashes: The Songs of David Bowie 1976–2016. London: Repeater Books. ISBN 978-1-91224-830-8.
  • Buckley, David (2005) [First published 1999]. Strange Fascination – David Bowie: The Definitive Story. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 978-0-7535-1002-5.

External links edit

  • Bowie TV: Episode 17: David on the Glass Spider Tour on YouTube

glass, spider, tour, 1987, worldwide, concert, tour, english, musician, david, bowie, launched, support, album, never, down, named, that, album, track, glass, spider, began, 1987, preceded, week, press, tour, that, bowie, visit, nine, countries, throughout, eu. The Glass Spider Tour was a 1987 worldwide concert tour by the English musician David Bowie launched in support of his album Never Let Me Down and named for that album s track Glass Spider It began in May 1987 and was preceded by a two week press tour that saw Bowie visit nine countries throughout Europe and North America to drum up public interest in the tour The Glass Spider Tour was the first Bowie tour to visit Austria Italy Spain Ireland and Wales Through a sponsorship from Pepsi the tour was intended to visit Russia and South America as well but these plans were later cancelled The tour was at that point the longest and most expensive tour Bowie had embarked upon in his career At the time the tour s elaborate set was called the largest touring set ever 1 The Glass Spider TourTour by David BowiePromotional poster for the tourLocationEuropeNorth AmericaOceaniaAssociated albumNever Let Me DownStart date30 May 1987End date28 November 1987Legs3No of shows27 in Europe44 in North America15 in Oceania86 in totalBox officeUS 86 millionDavid Bowie concert chronologySerious Moonlight Tour 1983 The Glass Spider Tour 1987 Sound Vision Tour 1990 Tin Machine tour chronologyThe Glass Spider Tour 1987 Tin Machine Tour 1989 Bowie conceived the tour as a theatrical show and included spoken word introductions to some songs vignettes and employed visuals including projected videos theatrical lighting and stage props On stage Bowie was joined by guitarist Peter Frampton and a troupe of five dancers choreographed by long time Bowie collaborator Toni Basil With the theme Rock stars vs Reality the show was divided into two acts and an encore The set list was modified over the course of the tour as Bowie dropped some of his newer material in favour of older songs from his repertoire The tour was generally poorly received at the time for being perceived as overblown and pretentious Despite the criticism Bowie in 1991 remarked that this tour laid the groundwork for later successful theatrical tours by other artists and the set s design and the show s integration of music and theatrics has inspired later acts by a variety of artists Starting in the late 2000s the tour began to collect accolades for its successes and in 2010 the tour was named one of the top concert tour designs of all time The tour was financially successful and well attended being seen by perhaps as many as six million fans worldwide but the negative critical reception of the album and tour led Bowie to not only abandon plans for other elaborate stage shows but to reconsider his motivations for making music Performances from this tour were released on the VHS video Glass Spider 1988 re released on DVD in 2007 Contents 1 Background 2 Development 3 Song selection 4 Set design 5 Rehearsals 6 Concert synopsis 7 Costume design 8 Setlists 8 1 Notes and changes 9 Opening acts 10 Tour incidents 11 Ticket sales and attendance 12 Contemporary critical reviews 13 Live recordings 14 Commercial sponsorship 15 Tour legacy 16 Tour details 16 1 Tour band 16 2 Guest performers 16 3 Tour dancers 16 4 Tour design 16 5 Band equipment 16 6 Tour dates 16 7 The songs 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 19 1 Works cited 20 External linksBackground editIn the four years prior to the release of Never Let Me Down Bowie had worked on a series of miscellaneous projects that included collaborations with the Pat Metheny Group for This Is Not America and Mick Jagger for Dancing in the Street 2 3 He also continued acting and composing for film soundtracks such as Absolute Beginners 1985 and Labyrinth 1986 2 4 In 1985 after his successful performance at Live Aid and a live performance with Tina Turner for one of her shows on her 1985 Private Dancer Tour Bowie collaborated with his friend Iggy Pop for his solo album Blah Blah Blah producing and co writing multiple tracks 5 6 He then worked with Turkish musician Erdal Kizilcay for the title song of the 1986 film When the Wind Blows 5 In late 1986 Bowie began recording sessions for his album Never Let Me Down which was released in April 1987 He had not toured for his 1984 album Tonight making the Glass Spider Tour his first tour in four years 7 Development editPreparations for the tour began as early as 1986 when Bowie warned his band to be ready for next year 8 Bowie was initially mum on his plans for his tour saying only I m going to do a stage thing this year which I m incredibly excited about cause I m gonna take a chance again When asked if he would elaborate on his plans he replied No Laughs Too many other acts are goin out I ll just be doing what I always did which is keeping things interesting 9 I ve eaten slept and thought about nothing but this show for six months 10 David Bowie June 1987 in London In announcing the tour Bowie embarked on a series of promotional press shows covering nine countries in two weeks including Canada the US and seven countries in Europe The press tour shows were typically delivered in smaller venues seating around 300 people and local fans were often allowed into the events 8 He used the opportunity to educate the press on his album and the tour and the multiple dates allowed him to correct misinformation At the London Glass Spider Press Conference he clarified that I didn t say lights costumes and sex what I said was lights costumes and theatrical sets in response to a question about what the audience could expect when seeing his new live show 11 Press tour shows included live performances of some of the songs from the album Never Let Me Down Bowie was joined by long time friend Peter Frampton on the tour Frampton said I don t have a book to sell I don t have an album to sell I m just here as a guitarist The pressure is off I m enjoying myself Frampton and Bowie had known each other since their teen years when they both attended Bromley Technical School where Frampton s father Owen Frampton was Bowie s art teacher 12 Bowie had a clear goal for this tour to return to the theatrics that he had performed during his short lived 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour 13 He wanted this tour to be ultra theatrical a combination of music theater and rock 14 and he felt that his previous tour while successful had veered away from the theatrics that he preferred nbsp Bowie being lowered from the spider set s ceiling to the opening song Glass Spider at Rock am Ring 7 June 1987 In 1983 for the Serious Moonlight Tour the promoters were coming around and saying Listen David we moved you from this 10 000 seater up to this 30 000 seater and it grew and grew and there were 60 000 seaters coming up Let s trim back on the theatrics and really go for giving them songs that they ve heard on the radio for the last 15 years or so songs they probably didn t realize when added up are a great body of work coming from this guy Whereas with The Glass Spider tour coming up I feel I ve established that What I now want to do is have the songs work for the performance Certainly there will be obscure songs on it at least for the general public There will be songs from albums that weren t huge albums but now those particular songs actually fit a section of the show So when you put three songs together you can create a vignette that works It has a beginning and a conclusion and deals with one subject 13 Bowie indicated that he was testing the waters with this tour and was potentially considering other large elaborate stage shows if the tour was successful The songs have to work within the show not the show working for the songs if you see what I mean That s why it s so different And that s why it s so exciting because that s the way I really like working I mean I like devising a show I ve got a show book that is almost like the bible you have when you re working on a play It s written and structured with various thematic devices Unfortunately it s in revue form because none of the songs were written for the show That s the ultimate of course If this works the way I hope it does then the next step for me will be to write a piece specifically for arenas and stadiums which is almost like taking a musical on the road that has one narrative form all the way through with a cast of characters and is written for epic theater 13 Bowie decided that the theme for the show would be the reality and unreality of rock 14 or as one critic called it rock stars vs reality 15 Bowie said It s not just about a rock singer it s about rock music so it has a lot to do with the audience and how they perceive rock and rock figures and all the cliches archetypes and stereotypes and also family relationship 14 During the show itself Bowie incorporated a wide variety of props I m really attempting to do a lot of stuff It incorporates movement dialogue fragments of film projected images it s what used to be called multi media in the 60s 14 Bowie described how he assembled the show saying The idea was to concoct surrealist or minimalist stage pieces to accompany rock and roll songs I wanted to bridge together some kind of symbolist theater and modern dance Not jazz dance certainly not MTV dance but something more influenced by people like Pina Bausch and a Montreal group called La La La Human Steps There are some symbolist pieces some minimalist pieces and some vulgar pieces too some straightforward vaudeville bits 16 When Bowie was asked what he thought his audience expected of him on this tour he said I guess that they come along to see whether I ll fall down or something I really don t know I know that they get what they consider is a really good performance I think that over the years I ve proved that I do my best to provide them with some new vision of musical information on the stage So I think there s probably that element in it but I couldn t go any further than that I really don t know what they want from me I ve never really been able to write for them I ve only written and performed that which interests me So essentially they have an agreement with me and that s great I mean I ve lost audiences many times over the years and they ve come back again for one reason or another I ve sort of got that mutual agreement with them If it s not going very well then they stay away Which is fair enough you know 17 Bowie reportedly coordinated aspects of the tour via email a rarity in the late 1980s 18 Song selection editBowie elected to play less well known songs on the tour and avoided some of his bigger hits 15 19 He was eager to not repeat the formula that made the Serious Moonlight Tour a success saying It seemed so easy It was cheers from the word go You know how to get a reaction play Changes Golden Years and they d be up on their feet You get the reaction take the money and run away It seemed too easy I didn t want to do that again 20 In a different contemporary interview he said I m not doing Star again That was quite hard I don t think I m doing much Ziggy material on this tour laughs Probably use a lot of that mid 70s material but not the more ponderous things like Warszawa I tried that and that was a bit yawn making There was one I was humming to myself the other day sings Baby baby I ll never let you down oh lord what s that one Jesus I can t remember it Sons of the Silent Age snaps fingers Ah That s right Thank god I could remember it So that for me now is a new song I ve never done that one onstage 21 Sons of the Silent Age was performed every night of the tour All but two songs Too Dizzy and Shining Star Makin My Love from his album Never Let Me Down were played live during the tour although Shining Star was among the songs rehearsed Other songs rehearsed but not performed were Because You re Young and Scream Like a Baby both from Scary Monsters And Super Creeps 1980 8 Several songs that Bowie had anticipated playing on the tour were abandoned before rehearsals even started including Space Oddity from David Bowie 1969 Joe the Lion from Heroes 1977 Ricochet from Let s Dance 1983 and Don t Look Down from Tonight 1984 21 Songs performed during the tour were chosen because they fit the performance 11 and fit Bowie s goal to make a show that was much more theatrical and had strong dramatic content When he was asked how he was going to make his rock show dramatic he replied You ll be surprised what you can do with a 6 piece rock band and a stage and a couple of lights 22 Set design edit nbsp Bowie on stage at Rock am Ring 7 June 1987The tour s set described at the time as the largest touring set ever 1 was designed to look like a giant spider It was 60 feet 18 3m high 64 feet 19 5m wide and included giant vacuum tube legs that were lit from the inside with 20 000 6 096m of color changing lights 16 23 A single set took 43 trucks to move and was estimated to weigh 360 tons 16 16 x 20 4 9m x 6m video screens displayed video and images from the show to those in the audience who were further away from the stage 24 The system required to run the show included two separate sound systems 260 speaker cabinets 1 000 lights with an output total of 600 000 watts 8 and three computers 25 Mark Ravitz the set designer had previously designed Bowie s 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour set 26 This was Bowie s first tour where wireless microphone technology was available allowing Bowie considerable freedom to move around the stage during a concert 8 This allowed him to interact with the dancers and musicians much more freely and as such the set included 3 story high mobile scaffolding onto which Bowie and his dancers would occasionally climb during the show 27 Each set cost US 10 million 10 28 about 25 8 million in today s dollars 29 Bowie himself invested over 10 million of his own money to help fund the tour 1 and he paid 1 million a week 12 to maintain a staff of 150 people to maintain and build the three sets as the tour moved around the world 10 25 In Philadelphia where the tour opened in the US the set was described as taking 300 people 4 days to build 30 About halfway through the first leg of the tour in Europe Bowie discovered that the full Spider set was so large that it would not fit in most indoor venues He said It would cost me between 500 000 and 600 000 to alter the sets enough to bring the show indoors I may decide to have a smaller indoor set made somewhere during the tour 17 He did in fact commission a third slightly smaller set called the Junior Bug set to be used at indoor venues where the full spider would not fit such as New York s Madison Square Garden 12 Bowie thought of the whole set as a metaphor of life describing the stage as having a feeling of a ship which is the voyage with the rigging and the climbing and the ropes And the bottom circular area is like the Circus of Lights so it really is from birth and the voyaging through life 31 Rehearsals editBowie assembled his band in early 1987 and were joined on stage by five dancers who were choreographed by Bowie s long time friend Toni Basil The band and the dancers spent time in 12 hour a day rehearsals in New York before moving on to Europe Bowie shot the video for his single Time Will Crawl during these rehearsals it previewed some of the elaborate dance routines that were used during performances of Loving the Alien 1985 Fashion 1980 and Sons of the Silent Age 1977 32 Bowie described his rehearsal routine I prepare the day s work when I get up in the morning and then I go in around 10 o clock a m for rehearsals Then it s constant rehearsals both the visual side and the musical side through about 8 o clock p m At around 8 p m I look at the video tapes of what we ve been doing during the day and make adjustments if necessary So there really isn t time to do anything else at all except Sundays and then I sleep for most of the day It s very intensive rehearsals and physically it s quite demanding 17 The Glass Spider Tour is the most physical tour that I ve done ever It s relentless it never stops I m bruised as hell I feel like a worn out rag doll 33 David Bowie 1987 Rehearsals with the full Spider set were staged in Rotterdam s Ahoy arena starting on 18 May before moving to De Kuip stadium for the dress rehearsals 27 and 28 May 34 35 Due to relatively easy access to the venues during rehearsals fans knew what the set list for the show would be before the tour even opened 8 Bowie stated that he was looking for dancers who did not look like typical MTV dancers and who knew both American street dancing and European performance art 31 Originally Bowie had hoped to have Edouard Lock of La La La Human Steps be involved in the show but the group was booked with other commitments Bowie later lamented that the Tour may have been viewed differently if La La La Human Steps had been involved It would have been a different ballgame 36 La La La Human Steps would provide the choreography for Bowie s next tour the Sound Vision Tour of 1990 36 Concert synopsis editThe show was divided into two parts and included a planned encore nbsp The Glass Spider set from above 6 June 1987 in BerlinBowie entered the show to the song Glass Spider for which he was lowered from the set s ceiling while seated in a silver chair and singing into a telephone The show s first vignette began with Bang Bang during which Bowie pulled an audience member out of the crowd only to be rejected by the fan who by the end of the song was revealed to be one of the troupe s dancers Later in the show for the song Fashion the dance troupe threatened Bowie with a street fight which by the end of the song he accidentally wins For the live rendition of Never Let Me Down the performance of which Bowie called abrasive 37 he was influenced by the minimalist choreography of Pina Bausch He said I wanted one straight movement that starts upstage and comes all the way downstage and doesn t vary I m on my knees with my arms in a kind of straitjacket and a crawl for three and a half minutes A girl is with me as if she s accompanying her pet in a park but she has a cylinder on her back and every now and then she s giving me oxygen It felt like a very protective a very sad little image and it felt right for the song 16 For Part 2 Bowie appeared on the stage s scaffolding to 87 amp Cry flew through the air in a Flying by Foy abseiling harness and was subsequently tied up by riot police On at least one occasion the flying segment of the song was dropped due to a malfunction with the set The movie footage shown behind Bowie during Heroes was shot by Bowie during his time in Russia in 1974 Of the footage Bowie said There s a poignant image of a Mongolian with a hanky in his hand waving goodbye to his family getting on a train to Moscow and I loop that up so there s a never ending sequence of this old fellow dabbing his tears and waving bye bye That plays behind the action in black and white and it s alarmingly sad It s like saying goodbye to heroism it s like saying goodbye to a world of a 19th century ideal It s irretrievable and now maybe we re just looking for seeds of intelligence and not heroes There s something about it that I really like It s a piece of theatricality that I really adore I m really proud of it 38 The encore typically opened with the song Time for which Bowie emerged from the top of the spider s head with angel wings behind him 60 feet above the crowd The song was occasionally cut from outdoor shows when bad weather made the perch atop the spider too precarious to perform 8 23 39 Costume design editFor the first act Bowie was dressed in a single breasted three quarters length red suit with a red shirt and pants 8 designed by Diana Moseley 40 The outfit included red Chelsea boots with silver details at the heel and toe 41 One of the outfits that Bowie wore for Part 2 signed by Bowie was put up for auction on 21 May 2016 42 and was sold for 37 500 43 Bowie s outfit for the encore was a gold lame leather suit complete with gold winged cowboy boots One of these suits also autographed by Bowie sold at a Sotheby s auction in 1990 for 7 000 worth about 15 700 today several times its expected selling price 44 That same outfit was again put up for auction in December 2016 with an expected selling price of 20 000 30 000 and was sold for 32 500 45 Setlists editOn tour the band typically performed a roughly two and a half hour set that varied only a little from night to night Early European set list Part 1 Up the Hill Backwards Glass Spider Up the Hill Backwards reprise Day In Day Out Bang Bang Absolute Beginners Loving the Alien China Girl Fashion Scary Monsters and Super Creeps All the Madmen Never Let Me Down Big Brother Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family Late European American Australasian set list Part 1 Up the Hill Backwards Glass Spider Up the Hill Backwards reprise Day In Day Out Bang Bang Absolute Beginners Loving the Alien China Girl Rebel Rebel Fashion Scary Monsters and Super Creeps All the Madmen Never Let Me Down Big Brother Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family Part 2 87 amp Cry Heroes Time Will Crawl Band introductions Beat of Your Drum Sons of the Silent Age New York s in Love Dancing with the Big Boys Zeroes Let s Dance Fame Part 2 87 amp Cry Heroes Time Will Crawl Band introductions Young Americans Beat of Your Drum Sons of the Silent Age The Jean Genie White Light White Heat Let s Dance Fame Encore Time Blue Jean Modern Love Encore Time Blue Jean I Wanna Be Your Dog Modern Love Notes and changes edit An extended drum solo separated Part 1 and Part 2 and allowed Bowie time for a costume change Bowie would lengthen or shorten his performance of Fame depending on the crowd s reaction by including parts of Lavender s Blue London Bridge War and Who Will Buy into the song White Light White Heat and Fame were performed during the encore at some venues I Wanna Be Your Dog was only occasionally performed at shows during the North American and Oceania tours Time would only be performed if it was safe for Bowie to stand on top of the spider s head for the start of the encore If it was raining the song would be completely dropped as it was unsafe New York s in Love was dropped after 10 June Milan Italy The Jean Genie was added on 8 July Barcelona Spain White Light White Heat and Young Americans were added and Zeroes was dropped on 11 July Slane Ireland Rebel Rebel was added and Dancing with the Big Boys was dropped on 30 July Philadelphia USA 8 Opening acts editThe opening act for the tour varied from country to country 46 in North America some dates of the tour were supported by Duran Duran or Siouxsie and the Banshees 47 The opening acts in Europe varied and included such acts as Iggy Pop Big Country The Cult Erasure The Stranglers and Nina Hagen The tour also played festival dates on one occasion with Eurythmics headlining one night and Bowie headlining the next 8 Tour incidents editThe tour took a physical toll on Bowie Not only did he grow noticeably thinner over the course of the tour 8 he found that he was exhausted before the tour even started I think tours like this awre extravagantly dangerous to do because they re so fucking tiring Just the pressures of organising the event and it s no longer a show it s an event Even before you go out on tour you re knackered There s God knows how many people running around and everybody s doing something and people are forgetting to delegate jobs to the right people and it s a mass of confusion and somehow it s all supposed to come together 48 nbsp A modern aerial view of De Kuip where Bowie opened the tourThe tour played at large capacity venues and in Europe the tour alternated between indoor and outdoor open field venues 8 Michael Clark a lighting engineer for the tour died at the Stadio Comunale in Florence Italy on 9 June after falling from the scaffolding before the show commenced 32 The following day on 10 June another worker fell without lethal injury while helping build the set in Milan Mobs of fans some who had camped out overnight to get into the venue rioted and had to be controlled by police 8 49 Both shows in Rome on 15 and 16 June saw similar rioting as fans who could not get tickets to the shows clashed with police On the second night Bowie had to sing through tear gas as 50 people were arrested and 15 policemen were injured in the rioting 50 As the band s plane was leaving Rome after their show on 16 June a bomb scare forced the plane to return to the airport only to discover that the local chief of police had used it as a ruse to get Bowie s autograph Said Bowie of the incident I was not so much annoyed as stunned that could only happen in Italy 51 The 27 June concert originally scheduled to be performed at Ullevi Gothenburg Sweden had to be moved to nearby Eriksberg in Hisingen because a previous concert by Bruce Springsteen held at Ullevi Stadium incurred 2 7m or about 8m today 52 in damages A fan trying to enter the Slane Castle backstage area by swimming the River Boyne drowned just before the show on 11 July 8 At one point during the European tour guitarist Carlos Alomar ripped a ligament in his leg an injury that caused him to change his on stage character Said Alomar I had to change my character into the mad limping Mad Max reject with spiky hair I went to a chiropractor and asked him for a lot of metal stuff leg braces back braces and everything Now I ll be adding more metal as the show progresses 53 Bowie was occasionally visited or had his shows attended by European royalty including Princess Diana at the second show in Wembley Stadium Sarah Duchess of York at Sunderland and Danish Prince Joachim and Crown Prince Frederik at Stadt Park 8 The Glass Spider Tour was the first Bowie tour to reach Italy Spain and Ireland 8 Some of the outdoor performances in Britain had to start early due to curfew laws a problem typically avoided in other European shows which reduced the impact of the lighting of the stage and set dressing and bothered Bowie considerably 8 31 During the North American leg of the tour a 30 year old Dallas woman named Wanda Nichols claimed that Bowie sexually assaulted her at the Mansion Hotel after a show at Reunion Arena in Dallas 54 Bowie denied the charges calling them ridiculous He said Nichols was with him in his hotel room but that anything that occurred between them was with her consent A spokeswoman for assistant district attorney Hugh Lucas said on 18 November 1987 that the Dallas County grand jury no billed Bowie after hearing two hours of testimony on November 11 The Grand jury did not find enough evidence to warrant an indictment the spokeswoman said 55 56 Ticket sales and attendance edit I try and do something I want to go and see really that s the essence of whatever I do This particular tour for instance I ve really tried to put together all the elements everything that I ve been fascinated with in theater and rock ever since the beginning of my career It looks like the kind of show I really want to go and see myself It s fast colorful vulgar loud subtle quiet dreamlike 57 David Bowie early 1987 Demand for tickets to the tour was high the September 3 show at Sullivan Stadium in Massachusetts set a record for quickest sellout at that venue a record matched by U2 and unsurpassed until The Who sold 100 000 tickets to two shows there in less than eight hours in 1989 58 Star magazine reported that for one venue a Bowie sold 3 million in tickets to three shows in 90 minutes 59 The concert drew the largest crowd ever to see a concert in Ottawa Ontario Canada at the time 60 Advance sales for the Australian leg of the tour was 8 6 million surpassing even Michael Jackson s advance sales for the Australian leg of his Bad concert tour estimated at 4 5 million 61 Contemporary journalists estimated that by the conclusion of the tour between two 62 and six 12 million people had attended and David Currie the author of a book about the European leg of the tour suggested that three million fans saw the tour worldwide 8 Four of the tour s shows were among the top 20 highest grossing concert shows of 1987 in the US and at the end of 1987 it was estimated that the entire tour grossed more than 50 million 62 In 1991 it was estimated that each show of the tour grossed 1 million 63 for roughly 86 million over the course of the tour or approximately 222 million today adjusted for inflation 29 Contemporary critical reviews editThe European leg of the tour seemed to garner mostly unfavorable reviews from the media 8 64 although there were positive reviews as well 1 30 Chris Roberts a writer for Melody Maker later said that there was overwhelming peer pressure among his fellow musical critics to review the tour unfavourably 65 Bowie was frustrated how the reviews in Europe changed from initially positive to negative blaming the early start of the tour in some outdoor venues for the poor reception He said the biggest mistake that was made on that tour was opening in the daylight The whole reason for the entire damn show was lost He noted that reviews from indoor shows where the set and lighting were more effective were quite positive 66 I think it s The Glass Spider Tour something that s very unique and I think you either love it or it s not your cup of tea 1 Peter Frampton August 1987 The US media seemed kinder with papers in Orlando Florida and Boston Massachusetts writing positive reviews 12 20 The Philadelphia Inquirer and Chicago Tribune were both mixed in their reviews 39 67 The review of Bowie s first show in New York was mostly negative calling the show spectacular but adding that overkill reigns and lamenting a dizzying overload of visual activity 27 A review in the Christian Science Monitor was mostly positive highlighting the dazzling visuals and complaining that the dancing was only occasionally inspired 10 A local paper in Portland Oregon had a positive review that said that the dancers music set and band combined into an overall effect that could rightly be called spectacular It is performance art and rock opera it is a stunning assemblage worthy of any stage or arena in the world 24 Despite criticism in the press Bowie at the time said that performing on this tour was the most fun he had ever had on the road because it was the most inventive tour he had ever been involved with 68 Live recordings editMain article Glass Spider Despite stating during the press tour that there would be no live album from the tour 11 the performances at Sydney Entertainment Centre Sydney on 7 and 9 November 1987 were filmed and released on video as Glass Spider in 1988 An edit of this show was subsequently aired in the US in an ABC TV concert special ABC s first concert special since airing Elvis Presley s Aloha from Hawaii in 1973 61 A 2007 DVD re release of the show included an audio recording of the performance at Olympic Stadium Montreal on 30 August 1987 which was re mastered and released on Loving the Alien 1983 1988 2018 The 6 June 1987 Platz der Republik Reichstag City Of Berlin Festival performance was broadcast live on FM radio One critic found that the 1988 and 2007 DVD reissue video releases rendered the intended meaning of the show largely nonsensical as several songs and vignettes that made the show s message explicit were excised from the release 15 However Bowie biographer Nicholas Pegg said that the concert film was hugely enjoyable despite the show s flaws and that the video leads the field for those wishing to see David Bowie delivering a rock theatre spectacular 32 Commercial sponsorship editBowie agreed to what at the time was considered a controversial 69 commercial sponsorship agreement with PepsiCo 20 70 which was later seen as helping to pave the way for other big money tours by other artists 71 For his part Bowie recorded a TV commercial with Tina Turner to the tune Modern Love in May 1987 while he was preparing for the tour 34 Of the sponsorship agreement Bowie said We did a commercial sponsorship thing only for North America with the Pepsi Cola company As far as I m concerned what it s allowed me to do having them underwrite the tour is to be able to produce a far more extravagant show than if I were just doing it myself It means that instead of just having 1 or 2 sets I can have 3 or 4 sets made and they can travel independently and they can be far more complicated 72 Bowie had originally planned to take the Glass Spider Tour to Russia albeit with the band only and no dancers or elaborate props but with the money and extra stage provided by the sponsorship Bowie felt he could take the full tour to Russia and South America However these plans failed to come to fruition and the tour never reached those regions 73 Tour legacy editBowie found himself under great stress during the tour and after the tour ended in New Zealand he reportedly had one of the Spider sets burned saying It was so great We just put the thing in a field and set light to it That was such a relief 74 In 2016 road manager Peter Grumley claimed to have purchased and stored at least one of the unburned sets in his West Auckland warehouse 75 The entire tour was so physically demanding and such a large production that Bowie said at the time that I don t think I ll ever take a tour quite this elaborate out on the road again It s a real headache to put it together 68 Bowie became engaged to Melissa Hurley 76 one of the dancers from the tour but the two split up without being wed after four years 77 The Glass Spider Tour was the first time I d had the opportunity to spend that kind of money and do shows like that The first time since Diamond Dogs anyway I thought Right Let s really spend some money I had all these thwarted dreams of what I d tried to do with rock n roll in the early 70s and I was trying to do all that a bit late David Bowie 1991 48 Critics have often compared later David Bowie tours to this one 36 64 77 78 commonly echoing this later review Bowie mounted a stadium sized production combining the excitement of rock with the perils of Broadway An incredible spectacle but the effect was overwhelming Each additional theatrical device served to distract ultimately flattening the impact of the music 79 In 1989 while working with Tin Machine Bowie said I overstretched There was too much responsibility on the last Glass Spider tour I was under stress every single day It was a decision a second It was so big and so unwieldy and everybody had a problem all the time every day and I was under so much pressure It was unbelievable I put too many fine details into something that was going to be seen indicates tiny figure with his finger and thumb this big 74 In 1990 while giving interviews for his Sound Vision Tour Bowie said that he was pleased that the tour was regarded as innovative noting reviews that pointed out how the tour had areas of it that surely would change the way rock was done 66 In 1991 while preparing for his second tour with Tin Machine Bowie reflected on the Glass Spider Tour s theatrics and presentation suggesting that many tours and acts that followed benefited from this tour The Stones show Prince s show Madonna s show all of them have benefited from this tour I like lots of it the Glass Spider Tour but the whole thing should have been a lot smaller Three quarters of it was really innovative and I ve seen a lot of it in other people s shows One day if you get the chance get a copy of that show on video and take another look at it because in the light of what s been done since there s some interesting shit going on 48 In the late 2000s the tour began to be re examined by critics and the tone of the coverage began to change In 2009 an article in the BBC News singled out the Glass Spider Tour s innovative set and marriage of music and theatre as an inspiration to later acts including Britney Spears Madonna U2 and others Stage designer Willie Williams said the Glass Spider Tour was a template for those acts There will be one set of costumes and they will do a few songs then there will be another big scene change and move on to the next thing Bowie crossing rock n roll with Broadway in the Glass Spider Tour was where that began 80 In 2010 the Glass Spider Tour won an award for being one of the best concert designs of all time alongside other such notable tours as U2 s 360 Tour 2009 2011 and Pink Floyd s Division Bell Tour 1994 23 When we toured for Young Americans they booed the hell out of that Why They the fans wanted Diamond Dogs Bowie s previous album When we did Serious Moonlight they booed the hell out of that because they wanted the 70s stuff When we did Glass Spider they wanted Serious Moonlight The audience was never going to catch up to the man Carlos Alomar 2016 on the fans and critics mixed reaction to the Glass Spider Tour 81 In 2013 new critical reviews began to take note of some of the tour s strengths and innovations and proposed that the tour was better than its reputation suggested Although critics still found some elements of the tour questionable including the set itself and the prevalence of Bowie s newer material the tour was praised for Bowie s strong voice musical arrangements and choice of relatively unheard jewels in the set list 71 82 Peter Frampton credited his participation in this tour for helping to revive his own career 83 In 2017 a review in The Atlantic while admitting that it had some flaws called the show spectacular beautiful charmingly pretentious and weirdly magical 65 The show on 6 June 1987 was played close to the Berlin Wall The show was heard by thousands of East German citizens across the wall 84 and was followed by violent rioting in East Berlin According to German journalist Tobias Ruther these protests in East Berlin were the first in the sequence of riots that led to those around the time of the fall of the wall in November 1989 85 86 Although other factors were probably more influential in the fall of the wall 84 on Bowie s death in 2016 the German Foreign Office tweeted Good bye David Bowie You are now among Heroes Thank you for helping to bring down the wall 87 Ultimately given the negative reaction to the Never Let Me Down album and this tour Bowie found himself creatively exhausted and in low critical standing 88 Bowie decided to return to making music for himself 89 and having been put in touch with Reeves Gabrels through his publicist for the Glass Spider Tour 90 Bowie formed his band Tin Machine in 1989 71 and retired his back catalogue of songs from live performance with his Sound Vision Tour in 1990 91 Tour details editTour band edit David Bowie vocals guitar Peter Frampton guitar vocals Carlos Alomar guitar backing vocals music director 92 Carmine Rojas bass guitar Alan Childs drums Erdal Kizilcay keyboards trumpet congas violin backing vocals Richard Cottle keyboards saxophone tambourine backing vocalsGuest performers edit Charlie Sexton guitar backing vocals during the encore at some shows of the North America and Oceania tour Earl Slick guitar during the encore at the Anaheim Stadium show Tour dancers edit Melissa Hurley Constance Marie Spazz Attack Craig Allen Rothwell Viktor Manoel Skeeter Rabbit Stephen Nichols Toni Basil choreography Tour design edit Allen Branton Lighting design Mark Ravitz Set design Christine Strand Video director 23 Band equipment edit Peter Frampton played two natural finish maple body Pensa Suhr Strat types hand made by New York based John Suhr For the song Zeroes he used a Coral electric sitar given to him in the late 70s and previously owned by Jimi Hendrix Carlos Alomar played on six Kramer American series guitars and one custom Alembic Multi instrumentalist Erdal Kizilcay played Yamaha DX7 Emax Korg SG 1 and Yamaha CS70 keyboards He also played a Tokai Stratocaster a Yamaha GS1000 bass and a Pedulla fretless bass Additional instruments played included a set of Latin Percussion timbales and white congas a cowbell 6 and 8 inch Zildjian cymbals Promark drum sticks a Simmons SDS 9 a cornet and a 17th century Italian viola Richard Cottle played on two Prophet 5s an Oberheim a Yamaha DX7 DX7 IID and KX5 keyboards as well as a Selmer alto saxophone Carmine Rojas used two Spector basses and Alan Childs played on Tama Artstar II drums and used various combinations of Zildjian A K and Platinum series cymbals 21 Tour dates edit Date 1987 City Country Venue AttendancePromotional press showsNorth America17 March Toronto Canada Diamond Club18 March New York City United States Cat ClubEurope20 March London United Kingdom Player s Theatre21 March Paris France La Locomotive24 March Madrid Spain Halquera Plateaux25 March Rome Italy Piper26 March Munich West Germany Parkcafe Lowenbrau28 March Stockholm Sweden Ritz30 March Amsterdam Netherlands ParadisoOceania27 October Sydney Australia Tivoli ClubGlass Spider TourEurope30 May Rotterdam Netherlands Stadion Feijenoord 60 000 8 31 May 60 000 8 2 June Werchter Belgium Rock Werchter Concert Site6 June West Berlin West Germany Platz der Republik 80 000 93 7 June Nurburgring Rock am Ring9 June Florence Italy Stadio Comunale 50 000 49 65 000 8 10 June Milan Stadio San Siro 60 000 94 13 June Hamburg West Germany Festwiese Am Stadtpark15 June Rome Italy Stadio Flaminio 40 000 95 16 June 40 000 95 19 June London United Kingdom Wembley Stadium 70 000 10 20 June 70 000 8 10 21 June Cardiff National Stadium 50 000 8 23 June Sunderland Roker Park 36 000 96 27 June Gothenburg Sweden Eriksbergsvarvet 45 000 97 28 June Lyon France Stade de Gerland1 July Vienna Austria Praterstadion3 July Paris France Parc departemental de La Courneuve4 July Toulouse Stadium Municipal6 July Madrid Spain Vicente Calderon Stadium7 July Barcelona Mini Estadi8 July11 July Slane Ireland Republic of Slane Concert 50 000 8 14 July Manchester United Kingdom Maine Road15 July17 July Nice France Stade De L Ouest18 July Turin Italy Stadio Comunale di TorinoNorth America30 July Philadelphia United States Veterans Stadium 50 000 30 31 July2 August East Rutherford Giants Stadium3 August7 August San Jose Spartan Stadium 29 000 98 8 August Anaheim Anaheim Stadium 50 000 99 9 August12 August Denver Mile High Stadium14 August Portland Civic Stadium15 August Vancouver Canada BC Place Stadium 35 000 100 17 August Edmonton Commonwealth Stadium19 August Winnipeg Winnipeg Stadium 25 000 101 21 August Rosemont United States Rosemont Horizon22 August24 August Toronto Canada Canadian National Exhibition Stadium25 August28 August Ottawa Lansdowne Park 29 000 60 30 August Montreal Olympic Stadium 45 000 102 1 September New York City United States Madison Square Garden2 September3 September Foxborough Sullivan Stadium 61 000 103 6 September Chapel Hill Dean Smith Center7 September10 September Milwaukee Marcus Amphitheater11 September12 September Pontiac Pontiac Silverdome14 September Lexington Rupp Arena18 September Miami Miami Orange Bowl19 September Tampa Tampa Stadium21 September Atlanta Omni Coliseum22 September25 September Hartford Hartford Civic Center28 September Landover Capital Centre29 September1 October Saint Paul St Paul Civic Center2 October4 October Kansas City Kemper Arena6 October New Orleans Louisiana Superdome7 October Houston The Summit8 October10 October Dallas Reunion Arena11 October13 October Los Angeles Dodger Stadium14 OctoberOceania29 October Brisbane Australia Boondall Entertainment Centre30 October3 November Sydney Sydney Entertainment Centre4 November6 November7 November9 November10 November13 November14 November18 November Melbourne Kooyong Stadium20 November21 November23 November28 November Auckland New Zealand Western Springs StadiumThe songs edit From The Man Who Sold the World All the Madmen From Aladdin Sane The Jean Genie Time From Ziggy Stardust The Motion Picture White Light White Heat originally from White Light White Heat 1968 by The Velvet Underground written by Lou Reed From Diamond Dogs Big Brother Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family Rebel Rebel From Young Americans Fame Bowie John Lennon Carlos Alomar Young Americans From Heroes Heroes Bowie Brian Eno Sons of the Silent Age From Scary Monsters And Super Creeps Fashion Scary Monsters And Super Creeps Up the Hill Backwards From Let s Dance China Girl originally from The Idiot by Iggy Pop written by Pop and Bowie Let s Dance Modern Love From Tonight Blue Jean Dancing With the Big Boys Bowie Pop Carlos Alomar Loving the Alien From Never Let Me Down 87 and Cry Bang Bang Pop Ivan Kral Beat of Your Drum Day In Day Out Glass Spider Never Let Me Down Bowie Alomar New York s in Love Time Will Crawl Zeroes Other songs Absolute Beginners from Absolute Beginners I Wanna Be Your Dog from The Stooges 1969 by The Stooges written by Pop Dave Alexander Ron Asheton and Scott Asheton Lavender s Blue traditional London Bridge Is Falling Down traditional War from War amp Peace 1970 by Edwin Starr written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong Who Will Buy from the musical Oliver Rehearsed but not performed 8 Because You re Young from Scary Monsters and Super Creeps Scream Like a Baby from Scary Monsters and Super Creeps Shining Star Makin My Love from Never Let Me Down See also editHighest grossing concert tours of the 1980sNotes edit The source does not identify the exact venue for which the record making sales occurred References edit a b c d e David Bowie Glass Spider Tour News report New Jersey 1987 a b O Leary 2019 chap 6 Pegg 2016 pp 69 70 Buckley 2005 pp 365 372 a b Buckley 2005 p 373 Pegg 2016 p 490 Pegg 2016 pp 582 583 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Currie David 1987 David Bowie Glass Idol 1st ed London and Margate England Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 1182 6 Loder Kurt 23 April 1987 Stardust Memories Rolling Stone 498 74 77 80 82 168 171 a b c d e f Wood Daniel 14 August 1987 Thousands flock to Bowie s web Glass Spider motif holds edge over his music Christian Science Monitor retrieved 14 January 2016 a b c The Glass Spider Tour Press Conferences London vinyl 20 March 1987 a b c d e Morse Steve 18 September 1987 Bowie Weaves Magic on Glass Spider Tour The Boston Globe retrieved 28 May 2013 a b c Morse Steve July August 1987 David Bowie Cover Story In Fashion Magazine 3 10 151 153 a b c d West Corinthia Stoute Lenny 1987 A Feast Unknown Rock Express a b c Jacobson Colin David Bowie Glass Spider 1987 retrieved 21 May 2013 a b c d Pareles Jon 2 August 1987 Bowie Creates a Spectacle The New York Times retrieved 4 April 2023 a b c Radcliffe Joe January 1988 David Bowie The Glass Spider Weaves His Musical Magic around the World Words amp Music Magazine Barnes Laura 14 January 2016 Why David Bowie s death marks a loss for the tech industry PCR PCR online biz Archived from the original on 17 January 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 O Neill Tim 26 August 2007 David Bowie Glass Spider Tour Special Edition DVD 2CD DVD retrieved 7 October 2013 a b c Graff Gary 18 September 1987 Bowie Is Back And Bolder Than Ever His Controversial Glass Spider Tour Proves The Ageless Rocker Is Still Full of Surprises The Orlando Sentinel retrieved 28 May 2013 a b c Isler Scott August 1987 David Bowie Opens Up A Little Musician 60 73 The Glass Spider Tour Press Conferences Amsterdam vinyl 30 March 1987 a b c d Sandberg Marian 1 August 2010 David Bowie Glass Spider 1987 Top Concert Tour Design of all time Live Design retrieved 20 October 2022 a b Tomlinson Stuart 15 August 1987 Bowie Outshines Dazzling Stage Props The Oregonian Portland Oregon a b Today in Music History May 30 The Canadian Press 30 May 2013 retrieved 31 May 2013 Albrecht Leslie 24 August 2016 Former David Bowie Set Designer Keeps Park Slope Building Dripping with Art DNAInfo com Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 29 August 2016 a b Pareles Jon 1 August 1987 Music Bowie s Glass Spider Tour The New York Times retrieved 28 May 2013 O Connor John 3 June 1988 TV Weekend David Bowie Glass Spider Tour The New York Times retrieved 28 May 2013 a b 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved 28 May 2023 a b c David Bowie Philadelphia 1987 Glass Spider Channel 6 Action News Report News report ABC News Philadelphia 1987 a b c David Bowie Countdown 1987 Glass Spider Special Countdown TV program Holland 1987 a b c Pegg Nicholas October 2016 The Complete David Bowie New Edition Expanded and Updated Titan Books David Bowie Glass Spider Tour Report Newsnight 1987 a b Loogman Antoine May 2007 Bowie in Holland Glass Spider The Voyeur archived from the original on 29 October 2013 retrieved 25 June 2013 David Bowie Tour Dates The Official Carlos Alomar Blog 12 July 2012 retrieved 25 June 2013 a b c Clarke Tina March 1990 Watch That Man Music Express 9 Dave In Dave Out Music amp Sound Output Magazine June 1987 Vitcavage Adam 26 March 2012 From the Vault David Bowie 1987 Paste Magazine Retrieved 14 January 2016 a b Milward John 31 July 1987 Bowie Rides Glass Spider At The Vet The Philadelphia Inquirer retrieved 5 June 2013 David Bowie Is Inside V amp A Publishing 2013 ISBN 9781851777358 Chochrek Ella 9 January 2021 David Bowie s Craziest Onstage Shoes Included Thigh High Boots amp Kitten Heels MSN Retrieved 11 January 2021 Wheeler Alex 17 May 2016 Music Icons auction Cobain Elvis Michael Jackson and Bowie memorabilia up for grabs in New York International Business Times Retrieved 19 May 2016 Lot 353 of 403 DAVID BOWIE GLASS SPIDER TOUR COSTUME Retrieved 23 May 2016 Jordan Scotia 30 November 1990 Sound amp Vision The World of David Bowie Collectibles Goldmine Iola Wisconsin p 44 A Rock amp Roll Anthology From Folk to Fury Lot 19 David Bowie state suit from the Glass Spider Tour 1987 Retrieved 11 December 2016 The Glass Spider Tour Press Conferences New York vinyl 18 March 1987 Wener Ben 15 February 2008 Siouxsie recapturing her wail on new tour The Orange County Register retrieved 23 September 2013 a b c Murray Charles Shaar October 1991 And the Singer s Called Dave Q magazine no 61 pp 56 64 a b San Siro Tonight Overflows to Bowie Italian Corriere della Sera 10 June 1987 Times Entertainment Reports From The 18 June 1987 First Off June 18 1987 Los Angeles Times retrieved 29 October 2013 Sachs John Morgan Piers 1991 Private Files of the Stars David Bowie Star Filez UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Britt Bruce 20 August 1987 Bowie Back up Alomar Sees Reason For Elation In Letdown Los Angeles Daily News retrieved 11 September 2013 Smith Courtney 13 October 2010 10 Pivotal Moments in Band Brand Relationships Number 3 FlavorWire com archived from the original on 8 November 2013 retrieved 8 November 2013 David Bowie no bill in sexual assault charge UPI Retrieved 18 April 2021 Rock Star Cleared of Assault The New York Times 19 November 1988 retrieved 28 October 2013 Kile Meredith 12 January 2016 FLASHBACK David Bowie s 1987 Glass Spider Tour Was Colorful Vulgar Dreamlike Retrieved 18 July 2021 Ressner Jeffrey 15 June 1989 The Who Sell Out Again Rolling Stone 20 Quick news Star 31 25 August 1987 a b Barr Greg 11 January 2016 1987 David Bowie breaks attendance record for Ottawa rock shows Retrieved 11 January 2016 a b O Malley Kathy Gratteau Hanke 12 November 1987 Towing the Line Chicago Tribune retrieved 28 October 2013 a b Moleski Linda 27 December 1987 On the Road Pink Floyd Proves to Be the Top Grosser of 1987 Billboard magazine 40 retrieved 25 June 2013 Bill Wyman 6 September 1991 The Man Who Fell to Earth Entertainment Weekly archived from the original on 3 July 2014 retrieved 8 January 2013 a b Du Noyer Paul April 1990 David Bowie Interview Q 60 70 a b Heller Jason 27 April 2017 David Bowie s 1987 Slump Held Its Own Weird Magic The Atlantic retrieved 23 August 2019 a b Interview with Craig Bromberg for Smart magazine 1990 Heim Chris 23 August 1987 Man of Many Tricks Bowie Uses Another On Chicago Tribune retrieved 25 June 2013 a b The Glass Spider Tour Press Conferences Sydney vinyl 27 October 1987 Rea Steven 24 August 1987 There s David Bowie looking like the Nutty Professor and Chicago Tribune retrieved 28 October 2013 Times Entertainment Reports From The 19 March 1987 First Off March 19 1987 Los Angeles Times retrieved 29 October 2013 a b c Greene Andy 27 August 2013 Flashback David Bowie Faces Heat on Glass Spider Tour Rolling Stone retrieved 27 August 2013 The Glass Spider Tour Press Conferences Stockholm vinyl 28 March 1987 Jones Tricia July 1987 David Bowie Is the Lad Too Sane for His Own Good i D a b Boys Keep Swinging Q magazine June 1989 Gates Charlie 12 January 2016 Kiwi urban myth about David Bowie s Glass Spider tour finally put to rest Stuff co nz Retrieved 12 January 2016 Gundersen Edna 27 April 1990 Bowie Rebel in Repose USA Today pp D1 D2 a b Cohen Scott September 1991 David Bowie Interview Details magazine pp 86 97 Bowie Boys Keep Swinging Melody Maker 24 26 24 March 1990 Clarke Tina July 1989 If I Only Had a Band Music Express 13 138 8 11 Youngs Ian 13 August 2009 Stadium rock from Beatles to Bono BBC News retrieved 25 June 2013 Carlos Alomar s Golden Years with David Bowie Interview Rock Cellar Magazine 11 February 2016 Archived from the original on 13 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Thompson Dave Glass Spider Live Critics Reviews AMG Review MSN archived from the original on 12 October 2013 retrieved 5 September 2013 David Bowie Helped Revive Peter Frampton antimusic com retrieved 3 January 2013 a b Fisher Max 11 January 2016 David Bowie at the Berlin Wall the incredible story of a concert and its role in history Vox Retrieved 14 January 2016 Did Bowie bring down the Berlin Wall The Week 15 December 2008 Retrieved 14 January 2016 GERMANY Thank you David Bowie for helping bring down the Berlin Wall Business Insider Australia 11 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Good bye David Bowie German Foreign Office 11 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Barton David 8 June 1989 David Bowie puts career on the line Journal American p D5 Levy Joe July 1989 I m with the Band Spin Magazine 5 4 35 36 Derringer Liz August 1989 Tin Machine Bowie s Latest Vehicle The Music Paper Manhasset New York vol 22 no 1 pp 16 17 O Brien Glenn May 1990 Bowie Interview Interview Magazine 20 5 84 91 Buckley David 2012 Strange Fascination David Bowie The Definitive Story Random House Tribute Ricky Warwick on David Bowie HotPress com 3 February 2016 retrieved 23 October 2016 Mangiarotti di Marco 11 June 1987 David Bowie taketh San Siro Italian Il Giorno a b With David in the Spider s Web Italian 16 June 1987 archived from the original on 4 March 2016 retrieved 24 June 2013 Morton David 27 June 2016 David Bowie thrills 36 000 fans at Roker Park Sunderland in Retrieved 27 June 2016 David Bowie Concert sweden YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 England s child of ch ch change widens his web The Oregonian 14 August 1987 Hilburn Robert 10 August 1987 At Anaheim Stadium David Bowie Spins A Glitzy Web Los Angeles Times retrieved 23 September 2013 Siebert Amanda 14 January 2016 Throwback Thursday 5 questions with Newt about David Bowie and a review from The Georgia Straight Straight com Retrieved 15 January 2016 Staff Winnipeg Free Press 11 January 2016 David Bowie Remembered Winnipeg Free Press Retrieved 11 January 2016 Griffin John 11 January 2016 From the Archive Bowie weds rock theatre during Glass Spider tour s Montreal stop Retrieved 11 January 2016 permanent dead link Morse Steve 3 September 1987 David Bowie tests the limits of rock theater The Boston Globe archived from the original on 5 November 2013 retrieved 11 September 2013 Works cited edit O Leary Chris 2019 Ashes to Ashes The Songs of David Bowie 1976 2016 London Repeater Books ISBN 978 1 91224 830 8 Buckley David 2005 First published 1999 Strange Fascination David Bowie The Definitive Story London Virgin Books ISBN 978 0 7535 1002 5 External links editBowie TV Episode 17 David on the Glass Spider Tour on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glass Spider Tour amp oldid 1206974376, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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