This show lives in me for a multitude of reasons, but above all else, the music radiates in my mind with the nearly three-hour performance covering his entire songbook with one of the best and most musically muscular bands of his career. This is the show that turned me from casual observer to full-on die-hard fan. I stopped caring about singles and compilations and became obsessed with his catalog of studio albums, each essential in their own way making him an artist like no other. Here is the original review:
Rosemont Theater - January 16, 2004 - Rosemont, IL (just outside of Chicago)
I'm screaming that I'm gonna be living on till the end of time
-"Never Get Old"
Artists live in a world where their commercial worth is usually only as good as the sales of their most recent release. Most artists who are blessed to achieve a level of success in the music industry usually fall into a trap of attempting to recreate that perfect record time and time again. Even when acts branch out with determined optimism to reinvent themselves, the past is never far behind and everyone from their record company to their manager to their fans is there to remind them of this. Every once in a while an artist emerges who redefines themselves album after album and no act on planet Earth has done this better than David Bowie
David Bowie is a chameleon and an artist I have always held in the highest regard. Yet until three years ago, I considered myself a casual fan. Bowie has changed his sound and look more times than any other act in the history of rock. He's never one to rest on his laurels and since his commercial hey day of the 1980's, he's turned his back on pleasing the masses, instead seeking personal gratification from his music. For most of the 1990's and into the new millennium, David Bowie has made numerous albums die-hard fans hold in high regards while the casual fans scratch their heads wondering when he's going to write another 'Let's Dance'. In December 2003, I met my future wife and while perusing her cd collection, I noticed she had a David Bowie cd, 'The Best Of Bowie' of course�but it was the two-disc version so she immediately received bonus points. When I mentioned this, she responded enthusiastically with "I L-O-V-E David Bowie". Luck had it that the chameleon would be in Chicago in a few weeks for three sold-out shows just outside of Chicago at the Rosemont Theater (whose capacity is a mere 4,500 people). I couldn't think of a better date and I was lucky enough to score a pair of tenth row tickets for the third and final show on Friday January 16th. I surprised my now wife with the gift by merely driving to the theater without dropping any hints. She was ecstatic with joy when we drove by the theater and David Bowie's name lit up the sky. This was the night that I feel in love. My wife sung her lungs shaking her body out to almost every song and was all about giving back to the performer never resting on her laurels. What I loved about her reactions was they came from a fan who appreciated this artist and his talents. Not only did I fall for my future wife, but I also feel under David Bowie's musical spell.
Destiny granted me tickets to this show. Bowie had just begun his American leg of the 'Reality' tour one month earlier and it was receiving some of the best reviews of his career, but the final Chicago area show would prove to be anything but ordinary and prove to be a defining concert experience for me. Bowie's standard shows were approximately twenty-five songs, but this show came in at thirty-one songs which was one of the longest of the tour and of his entire career.
The intimacy of the theater setting fit this show perfectly as the building enhanced the music. I was able to delve into Bowie's latter day modern material with gusto because I could see the emotion and expressions with which he was performing these songs. From the opening chords of a reworked "Rebel, Rebel" to the finale of "Ziggy Stardust" Bowie entranced the Chicago faithful with a performance that showed he was not only commanding of the material, but that he still had something to prove. When it came time for "Life On Mars", after the piano opening, Bowie called off the band. Three years later, I'm not quite sure why, but my gut feeling is because he wasn't "feeling" it and did not want to call the performance in. The band cheered him on, specially the brilliant bass player Gail Ann Dorsey. Bowie returned to the microphone and proceeded to belt out a tour de force vocal performance I will never forget. It was as if he wrote the song earlier in the day and not thirty-years earlier. Many male singers tend to lose their range as their approach their mid-thirties, but shockingly Bowie sounds as good as he's ever sounded from a live perspective and the man was a few years shy of 60. Everything about this evening was taken to another level from a driving "Under Pressure" to a smoking "Suffragette City" to the spellbinding extended encore, the night hit on all cylinders.
More than anything else, what I loved about witnessing Bowie live in 2004 was the joy and exuberance with which he gave each performance. He appeared to be at peace with his legacy, his place in the music industry and who he is today. The most spellbinding aspect of this concert was that I didn't just go home wanting just to buy 'Ziggy Stardust', 'The Man Who Sold The World' or Aladdin Sane but Heathen, Reality, Earthling and Black Tie White Noise as well. The electrifying live performance did not rely solely on hits but what truly was the best of Bowie. While the performance of "'Heroes'" was tour de force, it was preceded by the equally prevailing "I'm Afraid of Americans" (which was recorded with Trent Reznor) which in essence is the flip side to "'Heroes'", two decades later. "Sunday" and "Cactus" seemed as essential to the set as "Sound & Vision" and "Hallo Spaceboy". What Bowie managed so beautifully on the Reality tour was partnering the new and old meticulously so to the average fans ears, they sound like forgotten favorites. Many people I speak to have no desire to see Bowie unless he plays his hits and I told them that if they saw the tour in support of Reality they would have witnessed one of the most invigorating performances of their life. The truth is that David Bowie did not get experimental in the 1990's. He merely continued to do what he has been doing for nearly forty-years; grow. The only difference is that we weren't listening as closely as we had in previous decades.
I've seen a hundreds concerts and for some reason when people ask me the best that I've seen; David Bowie is one of the first to enter my mind. Not just because of my beautiful date, but because of the extraordinary performance. I went expecting to see a good show but walked away seeing a chameleon change colors in ways I never thought imaginable. The truth is that Bowie was more adventurous on this tour than he had ever been in his entire career. Even when he pulled out "Blue Jean" in the encore for the first time this tour, it didn't seem like throwing the audience a bone, instead if felt like Bowie truly wanted to play it and share it with the 4,500 in attendance. Bowie is an artist who understands his fan base, both the fanatical and the casual. He intersected the past and present with flawless precision. He kept momentum throughout the entire concert even fooling many casual fans who believed that certain songs from Heathen and Reality were from his 70's masterpieces which helped dismiss the notion that everything post Never Let Me Down had little pop flair. The only regret I have is that I was not able to see more shows than the two I saw.
One other item no one gives Bowie enough credit for was how impeccable the routing and staging of this tour was. He very easily could have performed one night at an arena in Chicago but opted to spend an entire week, in January no less, in Chicago performing close to fifty-unique songs and showing that he embodied one of the songs on Reality, "Never Get Old". He went from theaters to arenas and late in the tour he hit a few sheds. One of the most amazing aspects of the theater tour was that with few exceptions, all tickets including services fees ranges from $40 to $90. This is a steal to see someone of Bowie's caliber in such a small setting. Compare that to the $125 Bon Jovi charged for their top tickets in stadiums in 2006 and it's even more impressive. In recent years, as bands have seen their audiences dwindle they have overpriced their tickets to maximize profit, many times taking advantage of their core audience. What most acts don't realize is that by doing this they will never expand their core base. If Bowie tickets had been $150 a piece, I wouldn't have even considered going, but they were affordable and I found myself walking out not just a fan but a believer. Before that show I owned two David Bowie compilations, three years later I own well over twenty albums by the most adventurous musician of the rock era.
A few months later I scored front row tickets to the Milwaukee show and I was astonished as the passion put forth by Bowie during "The Loneliest Guy", an ominous philosophical track from the recent release Reality. Bowie sung each note with his eyes closed as he gripped the microphone as if he was holding on for his life. When he finished the song, he wiped away what appeared to be tears from his eyes. It was a profound moment which left me speechless and it inspired me to go back to Reality to rediscover this gem. Once again, here is where a concert performance can send you back to the record demonstrating you missed something on previous listens. "The Loneliest Guy" is one of those deep album cuts that will probably get lost over time, but when he performed it with an intensity few bands can muster today. The somber piano driven song is subdued but when Bowie sang the lyric, "I'm the luckiest guy, not the loneliest guy in the world�.not me", he stepped away and cleared his eyes with what appeared to be a few tears. To this day, "The Loneliest Guy" has more pays on my Ipod than any other Bowie song. This is the power of the live performance. Here was a song I consistently passed by on Reality and the performance made me look at the song in an entirely different light.
As I watched the little blonde to my left sing along with Bowie word for word, I knew she was a keeper and I walked away with a deeper admiration for David Bowie and his eclectic catalog. It's been four-years since this show and almost every moment of it is still vital in my mind. As my future wife and I watched Bowie roar through an encore heavy on material from Ziggy Stardust, even though this was our first concert together, we knew it was more than just a mundane performance or date. It was on this night that I realized I would no longer be the lonely guy, but more so the luckiest guy.
Anthony Kuzminski is a Chicago based writer and can be found at The Screen Door
Jan-16-04 Rosemont Theatre Chicago U.S.A.
Setlist
01. Rebel Rebel
02. New Killer Star
03. Let's Dance
04. Reality
05. Hang on to Yourself
06. Fame
07. Cactus
08. Sound and Vision
09. All the Young Dudes
10. China Girl
11. Fantastic Voyage
12. 5:15 the Angels Have Gone
13. Days
14. The Man Who Sold the World
15. Hallo Spaceboy
16. Sunday
17. Under Pressure [fea. Gail Ann Dorsey]
18. Life on Mars?
19. Slip Away
20. A New Career in a New Town
21. Breaking Glass
22. Panic in Detroit
23. Ashes to Ashes
24. White Light/White Heat
25. I'm Afraid of Americans
26. "Heroes"
Encore
27. Bring Me the Disco King
28. Blue Jean *
29. Five Years
30. Suffragette City
31. Ziggy Stardust
May-19-04 Milwaukee Theatre Milwaukee U.S.A.
Setlist
01. Rebel Rebel
02. Cactus
03. Sister Midnight
04. New Killer Star
05. All the Young Dudes
06. Fashion
07. China Girl
08. The Loneliest Guy
09. The Man Who Sold the World
10. Sunday
11. Heathen (The Rays)
12. Hallo Spaceboy
13. Under Pressure [feat. Gail Ann Dorsey]
14. Station to Station
15. Ashes to Ashes
16. Quicksand
17. The Supermen
18. Modern Love
19. Pablo Picasso
20. White Light/White Heat
21. I'm Afraid of Americans
22. "Heroes"
Encore
23. Hang on to Yourself
24. Suffragette City
25. Ziggy Stardust
David Bowie Live In Chicago 2004
Rating:
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