David Bowie 1995-1996 Outside Tour

The Outside Tour, with David Bowie and Nine Inch Nails co-headlining, opened on 14 September 1995 at Meadows Music Theatre – Hartford, CT with Prick as support band. On selected dates Reeves Gabrels performed songs from his album, The Sacred Squall of Now in addition to performing with Nine Inch Nails and David Bowie. The opening of the concert tour preceded the release of the 1. Outside album which was released on 25 September 1995.

In a 2012 Rolling Stone reader’s poll, the tour (pairing Nine Inch Nails with Bowie) was named one of the top 10 opening acts in rock history.

Tour history

This tour was Bowie’s first since he retired his hits with his previous Sound+Vision Tour (1990). Bowie said, “We’re going to play some older material, sure, but not obvious things. I found, while rehearsing for the [Outside] tour, that older songs I haven’t played for years suddenly fit in with this new material quite well – things like … “Joe the Lion.” So I’m quite looking forward to it.” Other songs from Bowie’s back catalog that he performed during the tour include “Scary Monsters”, “Look Back in Anger”, “Andy Warhol” and “Breaking Glass”.

Bowie spoke on why he chose to tour with Nine Inch Nails:

I personally did like the combination of NIN and me, but my fans didn’t. Bad luck!! It also was an extremely young audience, between about 12 and 17 years old. My starting point was simply: I’ve just made an adventurous album, what can I do now to turn the concerts as adventurous. Looking at it in that way, it seemed logic to confront myself with the NIN audience. I knew it would be hard to captivate them by music they never heard, by an artist whose name was the only familiar thing.

Trent Reznor has gone on record numerous times as being heavily influenced by David Bowie,[5] and further collaborated with Bowie by remixing “The Hearts Filthy Lesson” and later on 1997’s “I’m Afraid of Americans” single. When asked in 1995 if his album Outside was influenced by Nine Inch Nails, Bowie answered, “the band that I was actually quite taken with was three guys from Switzerland call The Young Gods … I’d been aware of them previous to knowing about Nine Inch Nails.”

Set design

For the tour, Bowie went with a modest stage design (“some banners, some mannequins”) and avoided the theatrical presentation like his previous Glass Spider Tour in 1987 and Sound+Vision Tour in 1990.

Performance note

Bowie opened an interview for the tour with USA Today on the opening day of the tour, on 14 September 1995 with the question “How do you commit commercial suicide? Well, you do this: play songs from an album that hasn’t been released yet, and complement it with obscure songs from the past that you’ve never done on stage.”

During the tour, as Nine Inch Nails reached the conclusion of their performance, the two bands played together with both Nine Inch Nails and Bowie and his band performing “Subterraneans”, “Hallo Spaceboy” and “Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)”, followed by two Nine Inch Nails songs “Reptile” and “Hurt” after which Bowie continued with his own set alone.

Early in the tour, the “almost 100% Nails audience” provided a challenge to Bowie, who said “In those first weeks, we had to adjust emotionally to the fact that we were going to be challenged every night to get in sync with what people were coming to the show for. But then you start to recognize that if you’re going to continue, you’d better enjoy what you’re doing. The more we did that, the more it communicated to the audience. That’s how it went from survival to being a good tour.”

Other opening acts

For the European leg of the tour, Morrissey was enlisted to provide support until his disappearance before the Aberdeen Exhibition Centre performance on 29 November 1995. The support slot was filled on later dates by The Gyres, Echobelly, Placebo and a variety of local bands.

 Live recordings

The 13 December 1995 performance at the National Exhibition Centre (Hall 5) – Birmingham, England, billed as the Big Twix Mix Show with Alanis Morissette, Lightning Seeds and Echobelly supporting was filmed by BBC TV with excerpts broadcast at a later date.

 Tour band

David Bowie – vocals

Reeves Gabrels – guitar

Carlos Alomar – guitar

Gail Ann Dorsey – bass guitar, vocals

Zack Alford – drums

Mike Garson – piano

Peter Schwartz – synthesizer, musical director

George Simms – backing vocals, keyboards

 Tour dates

 Date – City – Country – Venue

North America

The Outside Tour, with David Bowie and Nine Inch Nails co-headlining, opened on 14 September 1995 at Meadows Music Theatre – Hartford, CT with Prick as support band. On selected dates Reeves Gabrels performed songs from his album, The Sacred Squall of Now in addition to performing with Nine Inch Nails and David Bowie. The opening of the concert tour preceded the release of the 1. Outside album which was released on 25 September 1995.

In a 2012 Rolling Stone reader’s poll, the tour (pairing Nine Inch Nails with Bowie) was named one of the top 10 opening acts in rock history.

Tour history

This tour was Bowie’s first since he retired his hits with his previous Sound+Vision Tour (1990). Bowie said, “We’re going to play some older material, sure, but not obvious things. I found, while rehearsing for the [Outside] tour, that older songs I haven’t played for years suddenly fit in with this new material quite well – things like … “Joe the Lion.” So I’m quite looking forward to it.” Other songs from Bowie’s back catalog that he performed during the tour include “Scary Monsters”, “Look Back in Anger”, “Andy Warhol” and “Breaking Glass”.

Bowie spoke on why he chose to tour with Nine Inch Nails:

I personally did like the combination of NIN and me, but my fans didn’t. Bad luck!! It also was an extremely young audience, between about 12 and 17 years old. My starting point was simply: I’ve just made an adventurous album, what can I do now to turn the concerts as adventurous. Looking at it in that way, it seemed logic to confront myself with the NIN audience. I knew it would be hard to captivate them by music they never heard, by an artist whose name was the only familiar thing.

Trent Reznor has gone on record numerous times as being heavily influenced by David Bowie, and further collaborated with Bowie by remixing “The Hearts Filthy Lesson” and later on 1997’s “I’m Afraid of Americans” single. When asked in 1995 if his album Outside was influenced by Nine Inch Nails, Bowie answered, “the band that I was actually quite taken with was three guys from Switzerland call The Young Gods … I’d been aware of them previous to knowing about Nine Inch Nails.”

Set design

For the tour, Bowie went with a modest stage design (“some banners, some mannequins”) and avoided the theatrical presentation like his previous Glass Spider Tour in 1987 and Sound+Vision Tour in 1990.

Performance notes

Bowie opened an interview for the tour with USA Today on the opening day of the tour, on 14 September 1995 with the question “How do you commit commercial suicide? Well, you do this: play songs from an album that hasn’t been released yet, and complement it with obscure songs from the past that you’ve never done on stage.”

During the tour, as Nine Inch Nails reached the conclusion of their performance, the two bands played together with both Nine Inch Nails and Bowie and his band performing “Subterraneans”, “Hallo Spaceboy” and “Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)”, followed by two Nine Inch Nails songs “Reptile” and “Hurt” after which Bowie continued with his own set alone.

Early in the tour, the “almost 100% Nails audience” provided a challenge to Bowie, who said “In those first weeks, we had to adjust emotionally to the fact that we were going to be challenged every night to get in sync with what people were coming to the show for. But then you start to recognize that if you’re going to continue, you’d better enjoy what you’re doing. The more we did that, the more it communicated to the audience. That’s how it went from survival to being a good tour.”

Other opening acts

For the European leg of the tour, Morrissey was enlisted to provide support until his disappearance before the Aberdeen Exhibition Centre performance on 29 November 1995. The support slot was filled on later dates by The Gyres, Echobelly, Placebo and a variety of local bands.

Live recordings

The 13 December 1995 performance at the National Exhibition Centre (Hall 5) – Birmingham, England, billed as the Big Twix Mix Show with Alanis Morissette, Lightning Seeds and Echobelly supporting was filmed by BBC TV with excerpts broadcast at a later date.

Tour band

David Bowie – vocals

Reeves Gabrels – guitar

Carlos Alomar – guitar

Gail Ann Dorsey – bass guitar, vocals

Zack Alford – drums

Mike Garson – piano

Peter Schwartz – synthesizer, musical director

George Simms – backing vocals, keyboards

Tour dates

Date – City – Country – Venue

North America

14 September 1995  Hartford,Connecticut,United States,Meadows Music Theatre

16 September 1995 Mansfield,Massachusetts,Great Woods Arts Center

17 September 1995 Hershey,Pennsylvania,Hersheypark Stadium

20 September 1995 Toronto,Ontario,Canada,Skydome

22 September 1995 Camden, New Jersey,United States Blockbuster Center

23 September 1995 Burgettstown,Pennsylvania,Star Lake Amphitheater

27 September 1995 East Rutherford,New Jersey,Meadowlands Arena

28 September 1995 East Rutherford,New Jersey,Meadowlands

30 September 1995 Cuyahoga Falls,Ohio,Blossom Music Center

01 October 1995 Tinley Park,Illinois,New World Music Theatre

03 October 1995 Auburn Hills,Michigan,The Palace of Auburn Hills

04 October 1995 Columbus,Ohio,Polaris Amphitheater

06 October 1995 Bristow,Virginia,Nissan Pavilion

07 October 1995 Raleigh,North Carolina,Walnut Creek Amphitheatre

09 October 1995 Atlanta,Georgia,Lakewood Amphitheatre

11 October 1995 Maryland Heights, Missouri,Riverport Amphitheatre

13 October 1995 Dallas,Texas,Starplex Amphitheatre

14 October 1995 Austin,TexasSouth Park Meadows

16 October 1995 Denver,Colorado,McNichols Sports Arena

18 October 1995 Phoenix,Arizona,Desert Sky Pavilion

19 October 1995 Las Vegas,Nevada,Thomas & Mack Center

21 October 1995 Mountain View,California,Shoreline Amphitheatre

24 October 1995 Tacoma,Washington,Tacoma Dome

25 October 1995 Portland,Oregon,The Rose Garden

28 October 1995 Inglewood,California,Great Western Forum

29 October 1995 Inglewood,California,Great Western Forum

31 October 1995 Hollywood,CA , Hollywood Palladium

Europe

14 November 1995 London,England,Wembley Arena

15 November 1995 London,England,Wembley Arena

17 November 1995 London,England,Wembley Arena

18 November 1995 London,England,Wembley Arena

20 November 1995 Birmingham,National Exhibition Centre

21 November 1995 Birmingham,National Exhibition Centre

23 November 1995 Belfast,Northern Ireland King’s Hall (The Belfast Show Was Postponed as he played the MTV EMA awards show instead – The rescheduled date was 05/12/95 and the opening / support act was local band Peacefrog)

24 November 1995 Dublin,Ireland,Point Depot

26 November 1995 Exeter, England,Westpoint Arena

27 November 1995 Cardiff, Wales, Cardiff International Arena

29 November 1995 Aberdeen, Scotland,Exhibition Centre

30 November 1995 Glasgow, Scottish Exhibition  Conference Centre

03 December 1995 Sheffield, England,Sheffield Arena

04 December 1995  Sheffield ,Arena (Cancelled)

05 December 1995 Belfast , Northern Ireland King’s Hall

06 December 1995 Manchester England (Re-scheduled) Manchester Arena

07 December 1995 Newcastle,upon Tyne Newcastle Arena

08 December 1995 Manchester,Manchester Arena

13 December 1995 Birmingham,National Exhibition Centre (Hall 5)

(Big Twix Mix Show)

17 January 1996 Helsinki Finland,Helsinki Ice Hall

19 January 1996 Stockholm,Sweden,Globe Arena

20 January 1996 Gothenburg,Scandinavium

22 January 1996 Oslo,Norway,Spektrum

24 January 1996 Copenhagen, Denmark,Valby-Hallen

25 January 1996 Hamburg,Germany Sporthalle

27 January 1996 Brussels ,Belgium, Vorst Forest Nationaal

28 January 1996 Utrecht, Netherlands, Prins Van Oranjehall

30 January 1996 Dortmund, Germany, Westfalenhalle

31 January 1996 Frankfurt, Festhalle

01 February 1996 Berlin, Deutschlandhalle

03 February 1996 Prague Czech Republic, Sportovni Hala

04 February 1996 Vienna, Austria, Stadthalle

06 February 1996 Ljubljana ,Slovenia, Hala Tivoli

08 February 1996 Milan ,Italy, Palatrussardi

09 February 1996 Bologna Palasport

11 February 1996 Lyon,France ,Halle Tony Garnier

13 February 1996 Geneva, Switzerland Arena

14 February 1996 Zurich,Hallenstadion

16 February 1996 Amnéville ,France, Le Galaxie

17 February 1996 Lille, Le Zénith

18 February 1996 Rennes,Salle Expos-Aeroport

20 February 1996 Paris,Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy

Outside Summer Festivals Tour

Tour by David Bowie

Start date       4 June 1996

End date        21 July 1996

Legs   3

Number of shows     27

 

Following on from the earlier, David Bowie Outside Tour which ended on 20 February 1996, the Outside Summer Festivals Tour opened at the Budokan Hall in Tokyo,Japan on 4 June 1996. With a slimmed-down tour band from the previous Outside Tour excursion, the concert tour embarked to Japan, Russia and Iceland, followed by a string of performances on the European Summer festivals circuit.

The Kremlin Palace Concert Hall performance on 18 June 1996 was recorded and a 50-minute broadcast was later shown on Russian Television. Other television coverage included the entire 22 June Loreley Festival performance on German TV (Rockpalast) and excerpts from the Phoenix Festival performance on 22 July broadcast on British TVwith BBC Radio broadcasting a six-song selection from the performance. The Tel Aviv and Balingen dates were both broadcast on FM Radio in their respective countries.

Wardrobe for Bowie and his band on this tour was designed by celebrated British designer Alexander McQueen.

Tour band

Asia

04-06-1996 Tokyo ,Japan ,Budokan Hall

05-06-1996 Tokyo ,Japan ,Budokan Hall

07-06-1996 Nagoya ,Japan ,Century Hall

08-06-1996 Hiroshima ,Japan ,Koseinenkin Hall

10-06-1996 Osaka ,Japan ,Castle Hall

11-06-1996 Kokura ,Japan ,Kyusyu Koseinenkin Hall

13-06-1996 Fukuoka ,Sun Palace

 

Europe

15-06-1996 St. Petersburg ,Russia (Cancelled) ,White Nights Festival

16-06-1996 St. Petersburg ,Russia , White Nights Festival

18-06-1996 Moscow ,Kremlin ,Palace Concert Hall

20-06-1996 Reykjavík ,Iceland ,Laugardalshöll

22-06-1996 St. Goarshausen ,Germany ,Loreley Festival

23-06-1996 Lisbon ,Portugal ,Super Rock Festival

25-06-1996 Toulon ,France ,Le Zénith

28-06-1996 Halle ,Germany ,Outside Festival

30-06-1996 Roskilde ,Denmark   ,Roskilde Festival

01-07-1996 Athens ,Greece ,P.A.O. Stadium

03-07-1996 Tel Aviv ,Israel ,Park HaYarkon

05-07-1996 Torhout ,Belgium ,Torhout Festival

06-07-1996 Werchter ,Werchter Festival

07-06-1996 Belfort ,France ,Eurockéennes

09-07-1996 Rome ,Italy ,Stadio Olimpico

10-07-1996 Fontvieille ,Monaco  ,Chapiteau Espace

12-07-1996 Escalarre ,Spain ,Escalarre Festival

14-07-1996 St. Polten ,Austria ,St. Polten Festival

16-07-1996 Rotterdam ,Netherlands ,Sportpaleis Ahoy

18-07-1996 Stratford upon Avon ,England ,Phoenix Festival Long Marston Airfield

20-07-1996 Balingen ,Germany   ,Ballingen Festival

21-07-1996 Bellinzona ,Switzerland ,Bellinzona Open Air Festival

 

 

 

 

 

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6 thoughts on “David Bowie 1995-1996 Outside Tour”

  1. The Belfast Show Was Postponed as he played the MTV EMA awards show instead and was 23/11/95 not 24/11/95

    The rescheduled date was 05/12/95 and the opening / support act was local band Peacefrog

  2. As I could never attend a Diamond Dogs show being 15 years old and living in the UK the Outside tour was truly the next best thing. A show encompassing all the best of Bowie: offbeat choice of more unusual tracks, powerful performance, quintessentially weird and “My Death”. “What else do you want. And I managed to get some great photos on this one off occasion in an under the radar show at Exeter. A memorable show and tour for those fans that preferred the unusual.

  3. Please add to Live Recordings:
    18 October 1995 Phoenix, Arizona,Desert Sky Pavilion
    and
    21 October 1995 Mountain View, California,Shoreline Amphitheatre
    and
    31 October 1995 Hollywood,CA, Hollywood Palladium

    Multi-camera live recording of each show by Directed by Jim Gable and Producer Ned Doyle or Graying & Balding, Inc.

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