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  • September 4, 1983 Setlist

David Bowie Setlist at CNE Stadium, Toronto, ON, Canada

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Tour: Serious Moonlight Tour statistics Add setlist

  • Look Back in Anger Play Video
  • "Heroes" Play Video
  • What in the World Play Video
  • Golden Years Play Video
  • Fashion Play Video
  • Let's Dance Play Video
  • Breaking Glass Play Video
  • Life on Mars? Play Video
  • Sorrow ( The McCoys  cover) Play Video
  • Cat People (Putting Out Fire) Play Video
  • China Girl ( Iggy Pop  cover) Play Video
  • Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) Play Video
  • Rebel Rebel Play Video
  • White Light/White Heat ( The Velvet Underground  cover) Play Video
  • Station to Station Play Video
  • Cracked Actor Play Video
  • Ashes to Ashes Play Video
  • Space Oddity Play Video
  • Young Americans Play Video
  • Fame Play Video
  • TVC15 Play Video
  • Star Play Video
  • Stay Play Video
  • The Jean Genie (with Mick Ronson ) Play Video
  • Modern Love Play Video

Edits and Comments

13 activities (last edit by pomes27 , 7 Mar 2020, 17:44 Etc/UTC )

Songs on Albums

  • Golden Years
  • Station to Station
  • Cat People (Putting Out Fire)
  • Let's Dance
  • Modern Love
  • Ashes to Ashes
  • Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)
  • China Girl by Iggy Pop
  • Sorrow by The McCoys
  • White Light/White Heat by The Velvet Underground
  • Cracked Actor
  • The Jean Genie
  • Breaking Glass
  • What in the World
  • Young Americans
  • "Heroes"
  • Space Oddity
  • Rebel Rebel
  • Life on Mars?
  • Look Back in Anger

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serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

MyLifeInConcert.com:

MyLifeInConcert.com:

A Live Memoir & Podcast by Host Various Artists

Let’s Dance: David Bowie with Rough Trade, CNE Stadium, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Saturday September 3, 1983, mylifeinconcert.com

022b. (EP 29b) Let’s Dance: David Bowie with Rough Trade, CNE Stadium, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Saturday September 3, 1983

Ten years on from my hearing “Space Oddity,” I finally get to see and hear Bowie live during the Serious Moonlight tour.

Ticket Price = $22.50 (2023 Price = $59 Canadian)

Original 2013 blog entry from opensalon.com follows below, this is the big one the ultimate the single most anticipated show i ever attended, when i—along with my co-hort miss b—and 60,000 other fans, all of whom who were going absolutely freakin’ bananas, moseyed on down to a packed cne exhibition stadium during a sweltering labour day weekend in 1983 for david bowie., he was on his global serious moonlight tour for his worldwide smash hit album, let’s dance , with the great rough trade opening the show and warming up the troops., on the exact same weekend a year earlier,  i had seen the clash at this same venue (ep 18).  now i was back and seeing an even more hotly anticipated show.  and he surpassed my expectations., in part one, episode 29a, changes: bowie, the ‘70s, and me —a prelude to this episode—i look back on first hearing david bowie on the cusp of 1973 as well as take an in-depth journey through his recording career, from 1964’s “liza jane” through 1983’s let’s dance , but also examine his impact on me and the larger culture throughout the rest of that decade. (listen to the episode below following this introduction, and click through and visit the original blog entry.), join me in returning back to this cne show on that gorgeous labour day weekend in 1983—ending one of the most memorable summers of my young life with an unforgettable climax., tune in for being caught up in the rush of crushing crowds, hamlet references, bamboo steamers among the bowie masses, and the most exciting show of my life. (i have also podcasted and blogged about seeing him in 2004 in episode 5 (concert no. 104) never get old: david bowie with the polyphonic spree, corel centre, ottawa, ontario, canada, april 2, 2004 .), here is the link for part 1, 22 a . (ep 29 a ) changes: bowie, the ‘70s, and me (a prelude to ep29b, let’s dance: bowie @ the cne in ’83 ., next on stage –> my final 1983 gig-going-entry recaps a couple of shows i took in during a crazy/nuts four-day trip to nyc. , while i will be discussing the performances by hardcore titans the circle jerks and post-throbbing gristle offshoot psychic tv, i’ll also be looking at the madcap trip to manhattan as a whole, recounting the hijinks that mz, miss b, myself, and others got up to. , if you’ve heard or read ep 25 on the flipper show at fryfogle’s , then you’ll have somewhat of an idea of what to expect., tune in for destroyed hotel rooms, terrified cousins, “peace, love and groove,” danceteria bathroom hallucinations, brooke shields’ husband: broadway bob, and pterodactyls and manifestations in episode 30, back against the wall and discopravity: the circle jerks at the reggae lounge on wednesday november 16th , and psychic tv at danceteria on thursday november 17th , both in new york city in 1983., click on the links above to read the original blog entries for the circle jerks and psychic tv shows., original 2013 blog entry from opensalon.com, 022b. let’s dance: david bowie with rough trade, cne stadium, toronto, ontario, canada, saturday september 3, 1983, $22.50.

Interest ran high for this new Bowie album in my corner of the world. What bold new step forward would this upcoming release portend? What adventurous new direction would his sound take?

In my mind, I had the idea that it would be some kind of merge between synthpop and noisy, angular post-punk experimentation, something like The Human League meets The Birthday Party. I knew that Chic’s Nile Rogers had supplanted Tony Visconti in the producer’s chair, which was potentially interesting.  Perhaps it was going to be an avant-funk kind of thing, I reckoned, like perhaps the Gang of Four ’s Solid Gold , campadrés the Talking Heads ’ Remain In Light or maybe 1982’s Thermonuclear Sweat by Defunkt, lead by that other Bowie, Joseph.

I was also stoked to learn that the album would include a cover of possibly my favourite song that he’d co-composed with Iggy Pop , “China Girl” from The Idiot . That album being on his mind was further proof to me that Our David was tapping into the right vein, and something bold and special was about to be unleashed after years of anticipation.

LABEL Cat People 45

(All label and program scans by VA)

On the morning of Let’s Dance ’s release in April, I was outside the front doors of Records On Wheels on Dundas St. in London, Ontario, ready to purchase the very first copy they had. I was probably back home by 10 am, with the warm fresh vinyl spinning on my turntable as I cued up Side One with immense anticipation. And it turns out this brand new album was ….

… uh … um … ok, I guess. Er … hmmm.

Once again, Bowie had thrown his audience a curveball, except this time it resulted in a David Bowie album that was something his output had never been before: bland. It wasn’t awful, it was just missing that element that had made his 1969-80 work something special.

David-bowie-lets-dance

 Let’s Dance (1983)

I did like the album, and it grew on me in the weeks and months ahead to the point where I liked it very much . The meshing of then-emerging Stevie Ray Vaughan’s bluesy guitar playing with the dancey grooves was interesting and worked. It sounded great in the dance clubs too, and most of the people I knew purchased and were playing it, so it was overall hard to avoid and in the air.

Indeed, well outside of my circle, Let’s Dance turned into a full-on, multi-hit, multi-million-selling blockbuster, elevating him from Biggest Cult Act to an unqualified, across-the-board Superstar.  It’s certainly one of the keynote albums that immediately comes to mind for me when I remember the summer of 1983.  But I never loved it as I had with his previous work.

6 LPs 1983

 It’s 1983! In Pt. 1 , I clustered together six albums that were glam favourites for me during 1973 through early ’74.  Ten years later, here are six albums that were favourites of mine during 1983-early ’84: Swordfishtrombones Tom Waits ;  Speaking In Tongues Talking Heads ; The Bad Seed EP The Birthday Party ; Power, Corruption & Lies New Order ; Soul Mining The The ; and The Art of Falling Apart Soft Cell .  Click on each title to hear a track from the album.

I’m not one to feel jealous or threatened by a preferred artist’s widespread success.  I’m not precious about that sort of thing as others I have known. Ergo, it wasn’t Bowie’s sudden cultural wallpapering that partially soured me. It was down to the tunes and production: the latter a tad too glossy and smooth, the former a little too slight and obvious.

As for that “China Girl” cover I’d been looking forward to, while I believe he did it for the right reasons (to generate songwriting income for his pal Iggy who was going through a career rough patch at the time ) and I do enjoy it whenever I hear it wafting out of radio speakers somewhere, it isn’t even a patch on the original.

For my 5 th episode in my initial run of kick-off EPs looking at one concert from each decade starting with the ‘70s, my choice was Concert no. 104. (EP5) Never Get Old: David Bowie with The Polyphonic Spree, Corel Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, April 2, 2004 .  Here is the promo commercial I made for the podcast with all of Bowie’s solo album covers from David Bowie (1967) through A Reality (2003) in a morphing series !

Still, Bowie had ditched the cone of silence and I was happy he was back and doing well.  His return was a multi-pronged attack, complete with three new movies.  There was the fun, campy The Hunger , alongside Catherine Deneuve, Susan Sarandon, and Bauhuas, filled with new-wavey vampirism and Playboy lesbianism; a cinema release for Ziggy Stardust: The Motion Picture , chronicling his final gig with the Spiders in 1973; and Nagisa Oshima’s sombre WWII film, Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence .

LABEL David Bowie Lets Dance Side 1

Even though I had unsteady and low-paying-when-I-got-it employment during that recession-ravaged time and was frequently cash-strapped, I had socked away $$ in anticipation of this gig.  I was suitably verklempt to get general floor tix for the event, taking place on Labour Day weekend, Saturday September 3rd.  In fact, ticket demand was so strong that a second night was later added (Toronto’s always had a big love for Bowie).

My partner in crime for this outing was Miss Beach.  I have no idea why my pals and fellow Bowie-fans Lady Bump or Special Guests didn’t attend this one.  Amazingly, Count Mara, who almost never went to ticketed events, splashed out and took in the Sunday night show. My sister and brother-in-law also went but wanted seats, whereas I had no intention of parking my ass up in the bleachers.  I wanted to force my way to as close to the front of the stage as I could get to bask in the Bowie-ness of it all.

MLIC>DAVID BOWIE: TIMESPAN C90 1964-2016 mylifeinconcert.com

MLIC>DAVID BOWIE: TIMESPAN C90 1964-2016 is my cassette-length overview of Bowie’s whole career, cherry-picking the Best of Each LP or Era from 1964 to 2016—It’s another in this series of these career-spanning Timespan playlists I have been putting up, with Timespan C90 playlists also for Marianne Faithfull and John Cale .

Fortuitously, Missy B had a brother who lived in Toronto, not far from the CNE, who would also be out of town that weekend.  This meant that we had a close-by crash pad and could walk to and from the gig. Sweet, and a real life saver for me given how tight my funds were at that time.

CNE Stadium

The late, great CNE Stadium, date unknown, from Football.Ballparks.com .

I had also been here exactly a year ago, on the Sunday night of the 1982 Labour Day weekend for one of the best gigs — and double bills — I’ve ever seen: The Clash and Black Uhuru (for that night, the stadium was partitioned into a one-third-size grandstand configuration of about 20,000).

Miss Beach and I arrived in Toronto early afternoon, and after dropping off our stuff at her brother’s, we spent the day hanging out at the Exhibition.  One key memory I always attach to this day is of Miss B buying a bamboo steamer that she had to hang on to throughout the gig.

LABEL David Bowie Lets Dance Side 2

As the evening hours arrived, B and I decided to head in and try to stake out a place on the floor: we were pleased to find ourselves about one-third of the way back from the stage. I was also pleased that one of my favourite Canadian bands, Rough Trade featuring the great Carole Pope , were opening.

The sexually provocative, funky-cum-new wave band were a perfect choice, being children of the glam revolution that Bowie had lead after picking up the Baton from instigator Marc Bolan.

Rough Trade were a hard-to-pigeonhole proposition from the start.  They arose in the last days of glam, presaged elements of punk, but weren’t really exactly part of either. They always sort of existed in a realm of their own. The group’s line-up changed frequently, with songwriters and creative cores, singer Carole Pope and guitarist Kevan Staples, as its only consistent members. Pope and Staples had met during the late 1960s in Toronto, putting Rough Trade together after several years of previous band permutations. Their sound was initially r&b-based, married to then-shocking, satirical subject matter steeped in gay and SM subcultures and iconography, right down to the group’s name.

The band itself went through several iterations during the later ‘70s, attracting media attention and a tribe of devoted fans in the staid, old-school Toronto and region of yore.  I had first heard about them through a 1975 issue of Rock Scene magazine that also introduced me to Blondie and John Waters , making this perhaps the most important magazine purchase of my life.  Meanwhile, my siblings and their gang would go see them at Fryfogle’s in London and rave about them afterwards.

They eventually began making frequent sojourns down to NYC where they cultivated a following.  Lou Reed became a fan, later poaching a few members for his own backing group from one of the earlier iterations.

Following their limited edition, live-in-the-studio, direct-to-disc debut at the end of 1976, Live! , the group were eventually signed to the CBS-distributed True North records in 1980. Their major label debut from later that year, Avoid Freud , sported a more new wave-esque sound and a cover designed by the legendary art collective General Idea.  It was a platinum-selling hit here in Canada, launching them into the national consciousness.  Its Top 20 single, “High School Confidential,” was one of the first overtly lesbian-themed hits anywhere in the world.  The song is still a radio staple in Canada, with Carole Pope trilling about “it makes me cream my jeans when she comes my way” wafting out of banks and dentists’ offices everywhere.

Above: RoughTrade “interviewed” on SCTV ‘s Pre-Teen World (1980).  Below: The “High School Confidential” video.

I’ve played Rough Trade Live! and Avoid Freud consistently for 30+ years and never tire of hearing either, although their follow-up albums are terrific too, as the band regularly hit the album and singles charts north of the border during the first half of the decade (I’ve already written about Carole Pope and will write more about Rough Trade way down the line, via a 2001 reunion tour gig, as no. 099).

At the time of this opening set for Bowie, they were promoting their soon-to-be-released fifth album, Weapons .  In Pope’s best-selling autobiography from 2000, Anti Diva , she devotes four pages to Rough Trade’s opening shows for Bowie in Toronto and other dates on the Canadian leg of the tour.  Carole is such a talented, witty writer that the whole four entertaining pages are worth a read regarding these gigs (indeed, the entire memoir is a page-turner, filled with wry observations and recollections both sad and funny, with a particularly poignant chapter on her year-long relationship with the deeply troubled Dusty Springfield).

Carole Pope Anti Diva Cover and Spine

As major Bowie fans, Pope, Staples and the band were pretty stoked about landing this prestigious gig.  In recalling the Saturday night concert in Toronto, she writes “Backstage before the show, ‘We had a vision.’ to quote Mariah Carey.  Bowie was coming down the hallway, the image of an untouchable rock god.  He was impeccably dressed in a sea-foam-coloured suit that complemented his eyes, one green, one blue.  His hair was quite possibly spun from gold …”

“Our retinas still burning from the splendor that was Bowie, we checked out our dressing rooms.  Then we went to get free food.  There were none of the usual cheese trays with food that you could mould into Play-Doh-like shapes, and luncheon meat you could hurl at the wall and it would stick.  There were sushi chefs, a fully stocked bar and all manner of perks and obsequiousness.  We were loving the alien.”

“When it was time for us to play, we gazed out on the sweating masses melting in the humid Toronto weather … Halfway through our set, I noticed Bowie standing at the side of the stage.  I could have thrown up from fear, but opted for the more positive and narcissistic, ‘Oh, my gawd, David is looking at me.  I’m being watched by David Bowie.’  We piled off the stage after our set.  We were so high we actually committed a band hug.”

Rough Trade Albums BLOG

The Rough Trade catalogue: Live! (1976), Avoid Freud (1980), For Those Who Think Young (1981), Shaking the Foundations (1982), Weapons (1983), and O Tempora! O Mores! (1984)

Rough Trade pulled out a terrific opening set that was well received by the partying masses.  Once they had left the stage, the countdown was truly on.  The anticipation was physically palpable — you could literally touch the electricity in the air.  I’d been waiting ten years for this, and when you’re twenty, that accounts for a massive chunk of your remembered life.

Plenty of terrific tunes blared through the PA system between the sets, helping quell the seemingly interminable wait time for Dukey’s live appointment.  The song I distinctly remember coming on shortly before his arrival was the Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.”  The Heads’ Speaking In Tongues was probably THE album of that summer (and New Order’s “Blue Monday” the defining single), with Let’s Dance and Tongues permanently intertwined in the grey-matter hard drive between my ears.  Not only were Bowie and the Talking Heads mutual admiration societies who had both produced each of their finest work with Brian Eno in tow, chances are if you were a fan of one you were a fan of the other as the stadium-wide sing along with the tune demonstrated.

Shortly thereafter, the houselights dimmed, the intro music pumped out through the system and the packed house exploded in demonstrative euphoria.  If one had been able to tap into the energy in the frenzied  moments framing either side of Bowie’s stepping onto stage, it would have been enough to fuel a rocket launch into space.  There was an instant c/rush to the front, with Me, Miss B and her bamboo steamer running along with the mad crowd, crammed shoulder-to-shoulder, perhaps a hundred feet from the front of the stage.

 Let’s Dance: David Bowie with Rough Trade, CNE Stadium, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Saturday September 3, 1983, Jeff Blake, mylifeinconcert.com

David Bowie hits the stage at the CNE.  (Photo by Jeff Blake)

VA presents … 14 Interesting David Bowie Vinyl Releases for His 75th Birthday To mark what would have been David Bowie’s 75 th  birthday on January 8, 2022, I select and discuss 14 interesting pieces of Bowie vinyl from my collection.

His band featured two key previous sidemen, guitarist Carlos Alomar and Earl Slick.  Additionally, Chic’s Tony Thompson was on drums and along with a killer horn section in tow.  The whole backing band of ten were outfitted in a variety of multi-national garb representing a diverse set of geographic regions, sort of a United Colors of Bowieton.  But when David himself stepped into sight, with his high-‘80s pastel suit, the massed congregation felt strung out heaven’s high.

I was particularly impressed that he opened with the propulsive “Look Back In Anger,” one of Lodger ’s finest moments (“…. Waiting so long / I’ve been waiting so long …” indeed!).  It let fans such as myself know right off the bat that there would be some surprises in store, with chunks of red meat in the form of some less obvious numbers thrown to the obsessives.

Bowie initially kept his back turned to the audience while singing the opening verses, but spun around upon hitting the chorus, gleaming in the focused spotlight as the hordes went positively batty.  He clearly knew how to make an entrance, play a crowd, create drama, and pace a show so that it was consistently ratcheting up in some form, step-by-step.

So, what were the highlights? Well, the set featured a number of tunes that I’ve since gone on to see him do often that work perfectly as live numbers every time, such as “Golden Years,” “Rebel Rebel,” “Fame,” “Jean Genie,” and “Fashion.”  Furthermore, while the material from Let’s Dance may have been a little too slight on record, all of the featured tracks from the LP came off powerfully as live gems.

Alternately, there were a few numbers I was glad to see show up but turned out to be slightly flat in concert.  In particular, “Heroes” and “Ashes to Ashes,” decidedly studio creations, didn’t have quite the same impact in an adrenalized stadium environment (although he finally found great ways of presenting them on his Reality tour).

Then there were the wonderful surprises, of which there were many: “Station to Station,” “TVC15,” and “Stay” (meaning that two-thirds of the Station to Station album was performed); Low ’s “Breaking Glass” and the Stage arrangement of “What in the World,” the one with two run-throughs where the second iteration is at double acceleration; and one of his consistent, career-long cover staples, the Velvet’s speed paean “White Light/White Heat,” certainly relevant for Miss Beach et moi.

The assorted moments of theatricality were essential to a show on this scale and overall worked well.  Most memorably, he nicked the Hamlet/skull routine for “Cracked Actor.”  As with the Let’s Dance album, the Serious Moonlight tour showcased Bowie the singer, although he did play acoustic guitar on “Young Americans” and “Space Oddity,” the performance of the latter taking me back to that ten-years-ago moment that launched my Bowie fandom.

Serious Moonlight Program Cover Back BLOG

Alas, there were several wish-list tunes that I thought I might hear but didn’t: “The Man Who Sold the World,” “Ziggy Stardust,” “Suffragette City,” “Sound and Vision,” “Changes,” “Boys Keep Swinging,” and a few others .  Still, given what he did perform including so many surprises, I wasn’t about to grouse.

He ended the main set with the only Ziggy tune of the night, “Star,” and finished the encores fittingly with “Modern Love,” with its waving of bye-byes while a big blue globe bounced among the fans in the stadium.

The show won rave reviews from the Toronto press, with the Toronto Star ’s Peter Goddard calling it “the biggest cabaret in history” and “larger than life in every way.”

TorontoStar Photos BLOG

As for Carole Pope’s take on the show, she writes in Anti Diva that “When Bowie hit the stage, I stood riveted in the wings.  He is a master of re-inventing himself.  I had seen him work before.  The performance that stands out for me was the 1977 (sic) Station to Station tour, in which he was the thin white duke crooning like Sinatra, lit by blinding white spotlights shooting up to the sky in columns, the kind Albert Speer designed for Hitler at the Nuremberg Rally.  The incarnation I was watching now was a more accessible Bowie … David stood at the lip of the stage singing ‘Modern Love’ shaking one leg like Elvis.  The show was an amalgamation of music and theatre.  While performing ‘Cracked Actor,’ Bowie was seated in a director’s chair, wearing dark glasses; like a new wave Hamlet, he sang a soliloquy to a skull.  ‘Hey David, what dyke through yonder window break? ‘Tis me.’”

She also reminisces that “During a break halfway through the show, David came up to me and we started to talk.  He was sweet and wanted to dish.  He knew I’d been with Dusty Springfield, but he had me confused with one of her other girls.  He told me he really liked Rough Trade, which meant we could do more dates with him.  He put his arms around me and we hugged.  He was so slight, I could have picked him up and carried him. Bowie grossed $2.3 million from that show.”

Program Lets Dance BLOG

It took me days to come down from this one.  I had huge expectations regarding seeing Bowie in concert but he totally surpassed them.  After being knocked out by four of the five shows I’ve seen by him through the years, I can safely say that Bowie is truly one of the great performers, with gobs of charisma to spare.

There was, however, one significant thing missing from this performance, namely what the Sunday night show had that Saturday night didn’t: a surprise appearance by Mick Ronson!  Ronno happened to be in Toronto that night and so, for the first time since dissolving the Spiders on stage at the Hammersmith Odeon ten years and two months previous, Bowie and Ronson played on a stage together again.  “The Jean Genie” to be exact.  My surprisingly-in-attendance pal Count Mara said that the place went ballistic when Ronson was unexpectedly announced and walked out to the join the band.  He rated it as one of the highlights.  Damn. Still, I got to be there on that first night which has a specialness to it all its own.

Ronson himself recalled the event , specifically his getting aggressive with Earl Slick’s guitar: “I had heard Slick play solos all night so I decided not to play solos and I just went out and thrashed the guitar. I really thrashed the guitar, I was waving the guitar above my head and all sorts of things. It was funny afterwards because David said, ‘You should have seen [Earl Slick’s] face…’ meaning he looked petrified. I had his prize guitar and I was swinging it around my head and Slick’s going ‘Waaaa… watch my guitar’, you know. I was banging into it and it was going round my head. Poor Slick. I mean, I didn’t know it was his special guitar, I just thought it was a guitar, a lump of wood with six strings.”

By the Saturday night’s end, an exhausted Miss Beach and I were spent, thanking our lucky starman that we didn’t have far to travel in order to get back to her brother’s place and promptly collapse.  Alas, I’m pleased to let you all know that, yes, the bamboo steamer arrived back safe and sound despite the crowd crush.

The summer of 1983 had been a particularly memorable one for me, having now found the like-minded tribe of pals and drinking buddies I’d been searching for , and I can’t possibly think of a better way for it to have ended.

MLIC>DAVID BOWIE: GOLDMINE—VA's Fave Deep Cuts, Outtakes, & Live Tracks 1964-83 mylifeinconcert.com

As mentioned, I’ve gone on to see him several times in the years to come, and even if I saw him play sets that even bettered this one (those would have been the two shows from the 2003-04 Reality tour, coming up way down the line as nos. 103 and 104 ), to this day I don’t think I’ve ever been more excited about seeing a performer than seeing Bowie this first time around.

In less wonderful news, Let’s Dance turned out not to be a commercial blip on the radar but in fact a transitional album, and not in the artistically significant sense that Hunky Dory , Diamond Dogs , or Station to Station were.  Instead, Let’s Dance can retrospectively been seen as bridging his truly innovate, game-changing work in the 1970s — a decade he helped shape and define — with his less consistent, uneven-to-sometimes-dreadful work that surfaced post-1980.

Bowie himself has addressed the long-term negative impact that the album had on him and his career, noting that Let’s Dance “put me in a real corner in that it fucked with my integrity … I remember looking out over these waves of people [who were coming to hear this record played live] and thinking, ‘I wonder how many Velvet Underground albums these people have in their record collections?’ I suddenly felt very apart from my audience. And it was depressing, because I didn’t know what they wanted.”

While he has released some very good albums in the intervening years — particularly Heathen (2002) but also Black Tie/White Noise (1993) — and all of his releases have contained a least a few cuts to recommend, he’s never issued something that could truly follow Scary Monsters , although he may have finally just done so last week with The Next Day .  It sure sounds like it on the first few listens, even if I would love to trim of three or four of the seventeen cuts to make it solid from start to finish.  Ask me how I feel after I’ve had a few more months to live with it and explore it. [2023 Update: I would now rank Heathen and Blackstar as among his best, and would throw in The Next Day if it had my tracklist from the sessions.]

The other big news is of his wife Iman accidently, indirectly leaking that Bowie may be gearing up to tour again after it was initially reported that there would be no shows to promote the new album.  If Bowie tours, I’ll be there to see him once again.  Let’s Dance!

  “Let’s Dance” from the Serious Moonlight tour.

Next On Stage –> It’s back to the future to look at two concerts from last fall encompassing three legends.  I’ll then zoom back and finish my look at my 1983 gig-going by recapping a couple of shows I took in during a loopy four-day trip to NYC.  While I will be discussing the performances by hardcore titans The Circle Jerks and post-Throbbing Gristle offshoot Psychic TV, these two entries will look at the madcap trip to Manhattan as a whole, recounting the hijinks that M.Zeppelin, Miss Beach, myself, and others got up to (if you’ve read my piece on the Flipper show, then you’ll have some idea of what to expect).

174. Walk Like A Giant: Neil Young and Crazy Horse with Patti Smith, Saturday November 24, 2012,  Scotiabank Place, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

175. I’m Your Man: Leonard Cohen, Friday December 7, 2012, Scotiabank Place, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

. 023. Back Against The Wall: The Circle Jerks, The Reggae Lounge, New York City, New York, USA, November 1983

024. Discopravity: Psychic TV, Danceteria, New York City, New York, USA, November 1983

© 2013 VariousArtists

Comments From The Original opensalon.com Posting

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

God God. Records on Wheels. Forgot all about that place. Is it still around? Probably not.

Anyway, if you haven’t already seen it in the entertainment news, The Next Day is the fastest selling album of 2013 so far — and Bowie’s first UK No. 1 since Black Tie White Noise.

Very interesting review, and excellent evocation of a time and place. I remember the Rough Trade “interview” on SCTV from the first time around. I do believe I had a couple of RT’s records, which I lost in the Marital War of 1980-81. Never got around to replacing the originals, although they feature on a couple of anthologies.

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

Linda: I played “Avoid Freud” on the way in to work today. It’s still amazing. HUGGGS en retour.

Boanerges: Yep, Records on Wheels are sadly long gone. One of the very few left was still here when I first moved to Ottawa at the start of 1996, but it was closed within months. And it’s still a bummer to walk past the old Sam’s flagship on Yonge St.

I’m so glad you mentioned the “time and place” part as that is one of my key goals with each entry in the series. SCTV, as with Bowie and many others, are also part of the picture of that time. I was, and remain, a major fan of SCTV and its great cast, and still enjoy watching the DVDs.

I saw the news about Bowie’s No. 1 in the UK, although I’m not surprised, and he’ll probably have the No. 1 here in Canada. It’s actually hitting No. 1 pretty much around the globe. The big question mark is whether he’ll hit the top spot in the US as he’s never had a No. 1 album there. If not, it will be Bon Jovi who are one of my all-time HATE bands …. Go Team Bowie!

catch-22: Always my pleasure.

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

VA, it’s wonderful to read your account of the 9/83 concert and other thoughts about Bowie’s work that you have included here! As with your other posts you have a great collection of related visual pieces from the period that add a special quality to the story. You’ve got a super memory for remembering so many details from the concert. I heard the NY Philharmonic play in CT in the fall of ’84 and I am now trying to see if I can remember as much about that concert and you have Bowie’s from ’83. I did shoot Kodachrome slides that day (it was an outdoor concert) and the photos are a great memory aid. My neighbor was one of the featured soloists that day which was especially memorable.

It is really interesting for me to see your thoughts on Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” and how that grew on you over time. Even before your series was posted here I did have a number of his songs on my playlist which clearly indicates how much I enjoy his music, “Let’s Dance” is one of the songs on the list.

Thanks for presenting this great 3 part series and I’ll be looking forward to your post about your four day trip to NYC, as well. It would be an interesting coincidence if I was in the city for at least one of those days and then could contemplate what you were doing in what part of the city while I was in another!

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

Great concert to cover Various. Of all the Bowie clips I’ve seen, those from the Serious Moonlight tour look and sound the best. Two of my faves were Cracked Actor and Station to Station. I’ll have to look up this version of TVC15 which I’ve been fond of ever since hearing it in the soundtrack of Christiane F. I only saw Bowie once – Stuttgart around 1990. he was doing a sort of Greatest Hits tour after which he said he’d not do any of his old songs. Instead he would devote himself to Tin Machine. I don’t think that lasted long.

Those Rough Trade songs sounded damn good too, though I didn’t like the backup singer. her voice was fine but the song would have sounded better with just Carol Pope.

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

designanator: I’m particularly glad you enjoyed the ephemera and videos I added — you of all people would appreciate that. As for my memory of the concert, I will reveal that I partially cheated as I rewatched the video filmed one week later at the PNE as a memory jog for this piece. It was virtually the same show with the last numbers shaved off of the video, but I only wrote about personal memories that the video helped bring back. It did help me remember a few things. So, in a way, I understand what you mean about those slides you took. Also, overall, I remember more about certain concerts over others and this was an important one for me.

The upcoming pieces on the NYC trip are, along with these planned Bowie pieces, some of the most anticipated entries in the series for me to get to — I’ve been chomping at the bit to get to them since I started. They’re going to be fun to write, given all the hijinks and buffoonery that our gang got up to. I did discern the exact dates when we were there owing to some online research but don’t have that info at hand at the moment, but will have some specific dates for you. Also, one of my very best friends both then and now will be chiming in with some of her own memories of the trip. And there’s photos.

Abrawang: I too saw Bowie on that same 1990 Sound + Vision tour, a sort of Greatest Hits one that supported all his Ryko reissues. It was a fantastic show/tour and it will be coming up down the line. And you’ve seen “Christiane F.”!!! That was a HUGE favourite among my gang back in the day. I think I saw that at the New Yorker rep cinema five or six times, with the Bowie sequence a highlight of course. The soundtrack of his tunes spun off from the film made for, IMO, one of the best-ever Bowie compilations, even if some of the tracks were edited versions. Did you ever read the book by Christiane F herself? It’s actually better than the film, but isn’t that usually the case anyway? (BTW, the live take on there of “Station to Station” is from Stage — a killer version)

Rough Trade do sound great there although I think the backing singer works. According to Carole Pope in her book, though, she’s on your side on that one.

Boanerges: I’m betting I loathe Bon Jovi more than you do. If I had to pick one band who represents everything I hate about rock music, it’s them.

Well I just want to add my $0.02 on Bon Jovi. Weren’t they the reason someone had to coin “corporate rock”?

And once upon a time I thought I’d heard that Rough Trades’ album after Avoid Freud was for Those Who Think Jung. Decaying memory? Urban myth?

VariousArtists

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Feb 15 2019

David Bowie – Serious Moonlight (live ’83)

  • By A Pop Life (Erwin Barendregt) in Review

David Bowie - Serious Moonlight Tour 1983 (thedailybeast.com)

David Bowie – Serious Moonlight Tour 1983

David Bowie - Serious Moonlight - Tour poster (eil.com)

David Bowie – Serious Moonlight – Tour poster

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

Introduction

By 1983 David Bowie had, finally, become a world star. His latest album  Let’s Dance was extremely successful and his tour, initially planned for mid-size indoor venues, exploded and moved to outdoor stadiums. In 1984 the tour was released on video (on dvd in 2006)). Last year, on October 12th, the boxset Loving The Alien (1983-1988) was released, of which the audio recordings of the video were a part (and were released on cd/vinyl for the very first time). On February 15th, 2019, the recordings were released as a stand-alone item.

Serious Moonlight Tour

David Bowie - Serious Moonlight (live '83) - Backcover (bol.com)

David Bowie – Serious Moonlight (live ’83) – Backcover

The  Serious Moonlight Tour , his first tour since his artistical triumph Isolar II five years earlier, was en route from May 18th until December 8th, 1983, consisted of 96 concerts and was seen by over 2.6 million people. It was the longest, largest and most successful tour of his career thus far and was largely very well received by audiences and critics alike.

Initially the concerts were staged in smaller venues with a maximum of 10,000 seats available), but the phenomenal success of Let’s Dance  made the demand for tickets explode. The tour moved outside to stadiums and sold out everywhere.

The band largely consisted of the same musicians that were part of his previous band(s). The talented and upcoming guitar player Stevie Ray Vaughan was supposed to be part of the band as well, but he and his cocaine habit and his entourage all wanted the same thing: lots and easy access to drugs. Bowie had been clean for a while and didn’t want anything to do with it: Vaughan didn’t join. A pity.

The tour started in Europe and opened in Brussels, Belgium. Next up was North America, Asia, Oceania and it ended in Asia again.

The concert on September 12th in Vancouver was filmed for the video release and has now ended up on the (double) cd release.

David Bowie - Serious Moonlight (live '83) (davidbowie.com)

At the time it struck me as odd, and it still does to this day, that only four songs of the big hit album  Let’s Dance album were part of the setlist. The album was the main reason behind the phenomenal demand for tickets.

The show’s opening is rather remarkable as well, a non commercial single, off the album  Lodger , which, after a beautiful rendition of “Heroes” , is followed by an obscure track off masterpiece Low , of which Breaking Glass is also played, but Sound And Vision isn’t. The setlist is great and is very well performed. Bowie’s voice is strong throughout the entire show and he is audibly having fun playing live and enjoying his success.

The estate of Bowie have found a way of releasing tasteful and fine sounding releases after Bowie’s passing, and this is yet another example. After truly fantastic releases like Live Nassau Coliseum ’76 (2017),  Cracked Actor (Live Los Angeles ’74) (2017),  Welcome to the Blackout (Live London ’78) (2018),  Glastonbury 2000 , this time it’s Serious Moonlight (live ’83) . Homage to Bowie and the estate!

  • Look Back in Anger
  • “Heroes”
  • What in the World
  • Golden Years
  • Let’s Dance
  • Breaking Glass
  • Life on Mars?
  • Cat People (Putting Out Fire)
  • Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)
  • Rebel Rebel
  • White Light/White Heat
  • Station to Station
  • Cracked Actor
  • Ashes to Ashes
  • Space Oddity
  • Young Americans
  • Modern Love

Oddly, the songs  TVC15 ,  Star ,  Stay and  The Jean Genie are missing. They were part of the setlist that night, fitting in between Fame and  Modern Love .

What’s your take on Serious Moonlight (live ’83) ? Let me know!

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  • Ricardo da Silva Reis on 01/04/2022 at 2:30 PM

The Serious Moonlight is the best tour ever, even than Madonna series after the Party Disco Ball Your Confessions Tour 2006 !!!

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  • DL Freudendahl on 03/07/2024 at 8:42 AM

The Album is “Let’s Dance”. The name of the tour is “Serious Moonlight”.

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  • A Pop Life (Erwin Barendregt) on 03/09/2024 at 3:29 AM Author

Correct, which is also stated in the article. However, the Serious Moonlight album was released in 2019. It contains live recordings of the tour.

Compliments/remarks? Yes, please! Cancel reply

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Remembering the time David Bowie played an insane set at Angel Stadium

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serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

RIP David Bowie. The Thin White Duke is gone, and only days removed from releasing his final album to ( naturally ) critical praise. I found out of his passing as one does in these days of instantaneous social interaction, via Twitter. Or rather, via other people's reactions on Twitter, and while i'm usually an oak when resisting the memefied tide of news bites, I was immediately saddened and joined the ranks of those remembering him through music and lyrics.

What a bummer. David Bowie was one of the most gifted and prolific songwriters of modern music; a man who would reinvent himself numerous times throughout his career, shedding the former public persona skin just as you had become accustomed to it's intricacies and odd, melodious beckoning, only to jar you with new fangled sounds and emotions and starting the cycle of falling in love with Bowie all over again. He was the musical gift that kept on giving, but was never satisfied with the gift ever being remotely the same as the previous. This is what good musicians do: challenge and reinvent while never letting go of that quintessential essence that enraptured fans to begin with.

bowie

( David Bowie at Anaheim Stadium, September 1983)

What a time it would have been to be a David Bowie fan in 1983, when he had shunned touring for some five or so years before making a huge, MTV-fueled comeback album Let's Dance. The Serious Moonlight Tour, as it was called, was the tour meant to back that comeback LP, and it ended up being his most successful run of his illustrious career.

The tour would eventually wind it's way to southern California, and while the California Angels were losing a road game to the White Sox( 0-11, to be exact ) , David Bowie was using their home, Anaheim Stadium, to grace Orange County Bowie fans with what was probably the greatest show they've ever seen. Why wasn't I around to be there? Life is completely, totally unfair.

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

It was a great time be be alive, and to be a David Bowie fan. You were experiencing a resurgence of an artistic talent the likes of which this world, in my opinion, has never seen again. On top of that, you had youthful, exuberant openers Madness and The Go-Gos( on their Serious Bar-B-Que tour...here's a live rendition of "we got the beat" taken from that very concert) doing their best to get the crowd warmed up for the set of a lifetime from Mr. Space Oddity himself. I mean, look at this set list. I feel so helpless...there's nothing I can do but drool and be sad that I was only two years old at the time and therefore too young to have experienced this awesomeness.

serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

What a night this must have been. If I could dream up a dream setlist for a Bowie gig, it'd look strikingly similar to what he and his amazing band played that night. If you were there, i'm jealous as a person could possibly be. At least there will always be the music, and we can always have a touchstone to go back to and say " THIS is what an artist is and what an artist does ". There will always be the music, the movies, the writings...there will only be one David Bowie. Oh, to be a 17-20 year old and at the Big A on that September night in 1983. Under the Serious Moonlight, a meeting of two of my favorite things in this whole world: the Big A and David Bowie. RIP.

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DavidBowieWorld.nl

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David Bowie 1983-09-04 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand – SQ 8,5

David Bowie 1983-09-04 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand - SQ 8,5

David Bowie 1983-09-04 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand (feat. Mick Ronson) Sound Quality Rating

01 – Introduction – Look Back In Anger.flac 02 – Lavender’s Blue – “Heroes”.flac 03 – What In The World.flac 04 – Golden Years.flac 05 – Fashion.flac 06 – Let’s Dance.flac 07 – Breaking Glass.flac 08 – Life On Mars.flac 09 – Sorrow.flac 10 – Cat People (Putting Out Fire).flac 11 – China Girl.flac 12 – Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps).flac 13 – Rebel Rebel.flac 14 – White Light White Heat.flac 15 – Station To Station.flac 16 – Cracked Actor.flac 17 – Ashes To Ashes.flac 18 – Space Oddity.flac 19 – Young Americans.flac 20 – Fame.flac 21 – TVC 15.flac 22 – Star.flac 23 – Star.flac 24 – The Jean Genie [feat. Mick Ronson] .flac 25 – Modern Love.flac

Label : No label Audio Source : audience Lineage : ??? Total running time : 1:57:08 Sound Quality : very good. Equals record or radio apart from a slight noise and some dullness. Attendance : 51.700 Artwork : None

A sensational announcement ,true,but a little odd all the same,for there were no more than two con­certs in Toronto,whereas the announcement made it sound as though Bowie had been there for a whole week or so. Bowie ends Breaking Glass by calling “Oh no,no!” to the rhythm of the song over and over again,ending in prolonged “Nuoooooo!”. After Space Oddit y Bowie hints that this is going to be a very special concert: “Thank you very much. Good evening! We have got a very exceptional surprise for you at the end of this evening,and I’m not going to tell anything about it”,and in a child’s voice “Don’t have to,if I don’t want to”. “Steve Elson,who’s not really a Russian” he says when introducing the band. “This is a song from the Young Americans album. We’re having a very good time tonight by the way,we’re enjoying our­ selves a lot”. Indeed he sounds quite cheerful,and he laughs orten while singing. Then During Jean Genie ,it coms,when at the beginning of the song Bowie says: “I was walking through a corridor in Toronto last night,and I ran into somebody I haven’t met for eight years,and I said ‘What are you doing tonight?’ ,and he said ‘Not much’. So I said ‘Do you wanna come in play with us’. He hasn’t worked with me for ten years,I’d like to introduce one of the original Spiders from Mars – MICK RONSON !” .

“117159662_936425816859395_5105099074463733264_n”

The audience are amased and give a loud cry. Ronson,Bowie’s trusty guitarist in the Ziggy days.appears and plays along with Jean Genie ,the song Bowie and Ronson had played together for the first time during the US Tour,October 1972,and which they had continued to bring at each concert throughout the Ziggy period. Down on his knees.overcome with emotion,Ronson plays a long solo and the audience are absolutely frantic. It is only a short visit, and without having said a single word Ronson dis­ appears from the stage. At the beginning of Modern Love Bowie says “ I’d like to thank Mick Ronson for coming and joining us tonight. I’d like to thank you particularly for being here, it’s been a pleasure!”

“117306141_936425923526051_3978171675186522729_o

14 thoughts on “David Bowie 1983-09-04 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand – SQ 8,5”

This concert in Toronto in retrospect was such a gift. It was 40 years ago now and I think of what a magic performer and musician David Bowie was. A stylish showman, a charismatic entertainer. He gave us so many different styles and portrayals of characters, always changing always giving us something new and fresh and riveting. I only wish I could go back in time to that date on a warm late summer nite and the 60,000 transfixed fans and the amazing life adventure of having David Bowie holding us spellbound for his every move and every word he sang. It was oh so very very sweet and magnificent perfect, even though it was perfect really, but no one that night really cared because David had us all under his spell.

Bowie sounds so drunk at this show

Attended the 1983 Serious Moonlight concert on the CNE grounds… I will never forget the experience and am so sad that we lost David Bowie far too soon… his music lives on….

Could you re-post this link? I was there! I was staying with my relatives and had nothing to do that day, saw the show was on and went down to the CNE, scored a ticket from a scalper, got to see Ronnie Hawkins in a little bar inside the grounds and then went to the main event. DB was a the height of his abilities back then and Mick Ronson blew everyone away! I will never forget it; i have been a concert goer for almost 50 years and only Bruce can match the magic of this night; PLEASE re-post! Thanks

https://we.tl/t-65fKNrOyeR your welcome 🙂

No problem , I hope Tomorrow

I’m so sorry to bother you again, but I didn’t see your post in time, and the link expired. Could I please ask one more time for access to this concert? Such good memories from that night…

https://we.tl/t-s1Wvebl4La Your Welcome Greeting Diedrich

I just revisited this site and saw the link you posted in August. Unfortunately it has now expired – would you be able to send a new one to me?

https://we.tl/t-j1zXWXVyHR hello, here’s a link to the concert you wanted 🙂

gr Diedrich

I was there too. I had just moved to Canada from UK, 6 weeks before. It was my first stadium concert and I was in awe. We started off in seats and were then able to go to front of stage. I told the steward that I had come from UK for the concert and he allowed us to move. Everyone was very relaxed, it didn’t feel over-crowded like the concerts I have been to in the UK since. In fact most of the concerts I went to in Canada were far more civilised, (including Prince), but nothing, (including Live8 in Hyde Park, London,) has ever compared to the Bowie concert. I have the Vancouver gig on tape but also would love the Toronto one. Thank you.

I was there, and was one of the ones carried over the crowd, under the stage, and off to the side to watch the remainder of the show. I won a pair of tickets from chum and took my best friend with me. It was our first ever concert, and I would *LOVE* to be able to have a copy that I could share with her as well.

Your welcome , see your e-mail

So like…is there a way to actually download this, or….? Because my dad was actually there, in the audience, *on the ground level* back in 1983, and his 60th birthday is literally TOMORROW and I’d actually REALLY like to burn this onto a CD for him. Sadly the official CD for this tour (as you likely know) is a recording of his concert in *VANCOUVER* whereas my dad attended the one in TORONTO.

We’re not sure if it was Saturday 03 September, 1983 or Sunday 04 September, 1983…but both are up here so if I can download both, then that neutralizes the problem. Thanks in advance…

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David Bowie 1983-08-19 Dallas ,Reunion Arena (Source 2) – SQ 8+

  • Serious Moonlight Tour

Live: Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh

David Bowie performed at Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium on 28 June 1983, as part of the Serious Moonlight Tour.

It was the 26th date of the tour, which began on 18 May in Brussels .

Bowie’s guitarists were Carlos Alomar and Earl Slick. Dave Lebolt was on keyboards and synthesizers, and Steve Elson, Stan Harrison, Lenny Pickett played saxophones. Carmine Rojas played bass guitar and Tony Thompson was on drums and percussion. George and Frank Simms were the backing singers.

The setlist

  • ‘What In The World’
  • ‘Golden Years’
  • ‘Let’s Dance’
  • ‘Breaking Glass’
  • ‘Life On Mars?’
  • ‘Cat People (Putting Out Fire)’
  • ‘China Girl’
  • ‘Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)’
  • ‘Rebel Rebel’
  • ‘White Light/White Heat’
  • ‘Station To Station’
  • ‘Cracked Actor’
  • ‘Ashes To Ashes’
  • ‘Space Oddity’
  • ‘Young Americans’
  • ‘The Jean Genie’
  • ‘Modern Love’

Also on this day...

  • 1997: Live: Kalvøyafestivalen, Oslo
  • 1996: Live: Freilichtbühne Peißnitz, Halle
  • 1987: Live: Stade de Gerland, Lyon
  • 1974: Live: Civic Center, Charleston
  • 1973: Live: Bridlington Spa, Bridlington

Want more? Visit the David Bowie history section .

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IMAGES

  1. 288: David Bowie "Serious Moonlight" Tour poster, 1983

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

  2. Serious Moonlight Tour, 1983

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

  3. David Bowie: Serious Moonlight (Live ’83). CD. Norman Records UK

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

  4. David Bowie

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

  5. David Bowie

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

  6. David Bowie Live During The Serious Moonlight Tour 1983

    serious moonlight tour toronto 1983

VIDEO

  1. sidney torch orchestra

  2. (1983) David Bowie / Look Back In Anger

  3. Mike Oldfield & Maggie Reilly

  4. Serious Moonlight Tour (1983)

  5. David Bowie

  6. Moonlight Serenade

COMMENTS

  1. Serious Moonlight Tour

    The Serious Moonlight Tour was a worldwide concert tour by the English musician David Bowie, launched in May 1983 in support of his album Let's Dance (1983). The tour opened at the Vorst Forest Nationaal , Brussels, on 18 May 1983 and ended in the Hong Kong Coliseum on 8 December 1983; 15 countries visited, 96 performances, [1] and over 2.6 ...

  2. David Bowie Setlist at CNE Stadium, Toronto

    Get the David Bowie Setlist of the concert at CNE Stadium, Toronto, ON, Canada on September 4, 1983 from the Serious Moonlight Tour and other David Bowie Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  3. Live: Canadian National Exhibition Stadium, Toronto

    David Bowie performed at CNE Stadium in Toronto, Canada, on 3 September 1983, as part of the Serious Moonlight Tour. It was the 65th date of the tour, which began on 18 May in Brussels, and the first of two consecutive nights at the CNE Stadium. Bowie's guitarists were Carlos Alomar and Earl Slick.

  4. David Bowie 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour

    The David Bowie Serious Moonlight Tour was thus far Bowie's longest, largest and most successful concert tour. The tour opened at the Vorst Forest Nationaal, Brussels, on 18 May 1983 and ended in the Hong Kong Coliseum on 8 December 1983; 16 countries visited, 96 performances, and over 2.6M tickets sold. The tour garnered mostly favorable ...

  5. David Bowie Concerts 1983

    MARCH. APRIL. MAY. *29th/30th May The gig planned for Nantes on 29th May was cancelled after David received the sum of $1.5 million dollars from Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak to perform at The US '83 Festival in Glen Helen Regional Park, Devore, San Bernadino, CA, USA on the 30th. This performance wasn't part of the Serious Moonlight Tour '83.

  6. 022b. (EP 29b) Let's Dance: David Bowie with Rough Trade, CNE Stadium

    If this 1983 gig was the most exciting, then the 2004 show may have been the best and most interesting musically. ... But the truly big news was the official announcement of the Serious Moonlight world tour, with a stop at Toronto's massive, ... As with the Let's Dance album, the Serious Moonlight tour showcased Bowie the singer, ...

  7. David Bowie

    "Introduction""Look Back in Anger" (Bowie, Brian Eno) (from Lodger)"Heroes" (Bowie, Eno) (from "Heroes")"What in the World" (from Low)"Golden Years" (from St...

  8. Serious Moonlight (Live '83)

    Recorded in Vancouver during David Bowie's 1983 world tour, Serious Moonlight (Live '83) was released as part of the Loving The Alien (1983-1988) box set in 2018. Bowie's concert at Vancouver's 11,000-seater Pacific National Exhibition Coliseum took place on 12 September 1983. The show was recorded and filmed, with David Mallet ...

  9. Serious Moonlight Tour

    The Serious Moonlight Tour was a worldwide concert tour by the English musician David Bowie, launched in May 1983 in support of his album Let's Dance (1983). The tour opened at the Vorst Forest Nationaal, Brussels, on 18 May 1983 and ended in the Hong Kong Coliseum on 8 December 1983; 15 countries visited, 96 performances, and over 2.6 million tickets sold. The tour garnered mostly favourable ...

  10. David Bowie

    Serious Moonlight Tour. The Serious Moonlight Tour, his first tour since his artistical triumph Isolar II five years earlier, was en route from May 18th until December 8th, 1983, consisted of 96 concerts and was seen by over 2.6 million people. It was the longest, largest and most successful tour of his career thus far and was largely very well ...

  11. David Bowie 1983-09-03 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand

    Sept. 3, 1983, at Exhibition Stadium (first of two shows): Opined The Globe's Liam Lacey, "Bowie may never again be the theatrical musical pioneer he once was, but he is still changing. The hysterical character parts he wrote for himself earlier in his career have been rejected, and the Bowie on this [Serious Moonlight] tour is really another persona, a Prospero figure who summons up all ...

  12. David Bowie: Serious Moonlight (1983) [1080p AI Upscale Remaster]

    My 1080p AI upscale remaster of David Bowie's Vancouver concert which made part of the Serious Moonlight tour in 1983. Original source was a poor DVD-quality video. Audio has been replaced and re-synced with the recently remastered live album tracks. The footage isn't particularly great to start with, however I've made some minor adjustments ...

  13. Remembering the time David Bowie played an insane set at Angel Stadium

    The tour would eventually wind it's way to southern California, ... Oh, to be a 17-20 year old and at the Big A on that September night in 1983. Under the Serious Moonlight, a meeting of two of my ...

  14. David Bowie SERIOUS MOONLIGHT Tour 1983

    Share your videos with friends, family, and the world

  15. David Bowie 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour

    The David Bowie Serious Moonlight Tour was thus far Bowie's longest, largest and most successful concert tour. The tour opened at the Vorst Forest Nationaal, Brussels, on 18 May 1983 and ended in the Hong Kong Coliseum on 8 December 1983; 16 countries visited, 96 performances, and over 2.6M tickets sold.

  16. Serious Moonlight (1983 film)

    Serious Moonlight. (1983 film) Serious Moonlight is a concert video by the English singer-songwriter David Bowie. Filmed in Vancouver on 12 September 1983, on the singer's "Serious Moonlight Tour", the video was released on VHS and laserdisc in 1984 and on DVD in 2006. The concert includes most of the songs from the concert although "Star ...

  17. Serious Moonlight (1983 film)

    Serious Moonlight is a David Bowie concert video. Filmed in Vancouver on 12 September 1983, on the singer's "Serious Moonlight Tour", the video was released on VHS and laserdisc in 1984 and on DVD in 2006.

  18. David Bowie 1983-09-04 Toronto ,Canadian National Exhibition Grandstand

    David Bowie - 1983 Souvenir Serious Moonlight Tour The audience are amased and give a loud cry. Ronson,Bowie's trusty guitarist in the Ziggy days.appears and plays along with Jean Genie ,the song Bowie and Ronson had played together for the first time during the US Tour,October 1972,and which they had continued to bring at each concert ...

  19. From the archive: David Bowie in Vancouver in 1983

    In 1983, David Bowie played BC Place and the Pacific Coliseum in Vancouver. This was part of his Serious Moonlight tour, considered his longest, largest and most successful tour ever. It started ...

  20. David Bowie Live

    Watch David Bowie live in Sydney, Australia, as part of his iconic Serious Moonlight Tour in 1983. This pro shot video captures the legendary singer-songwriter performing some of his greatest hits ...

  21. Live: Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh

    David Bowie performed at Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium on 28 June 1983, as part of the Serious Moonlight Tour. It was the 26th date of the tour, which began on 18 May in Brussels. Bowie's guitarists were Carlos Alomar and Earl Slick. Dave Lebolt was on keyboards and synthesizers, and Steve Elson, Stan Harrison, Lenny Pickett...

  22. Serious Moonlight Tour 1983

    Share your videos with friends, family, and the world