Tour by Black Sabbath | |
Associated album | Born Again |
---|---|
Start date | 7 August 1983 |
End date | 4 March 1984 |
Legs | 4 |
No. of shows | 96 |
Black Sabbath concert chronology |
The Born Again Tour was a concert tour by in support of Black Sabbath's Born Again album. Both the album and the tour were the only ones of Black Sabbath's to feature former Deep Purple frontman Ian Gillan on lead vocals. Ex-Electric Light Orchestra drummer Bev Bevan was hired to replace Bill Ward, who had returned to the band for the recording of the album after a two-year hiatus, for the tour. This was the final tour to feature original Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler until 1992's Dehumanizer tour.
"There had been conversations during the Born Again sessions about going on tour," Bill Ward recalled, "and I was barely making it through the sessions, let alone touring. The thought of touring put me in such a state of panic, anxiety and dread that I couldn't possibly face the idea… but I was too ashamed to tell everybody. And rather than tell everybody, I drank and I disappeared. I escaped. That's how I used to do things: when I couldn't handle a situation, I would just drink and just run away… I came back to the United States, got hospitalised a couple of times, ended up back on the streets and, in the early part of January 1984, I went into my final detox. And from that point on I haven't taken a drink. And I haven't used any narcotics." [1]
Meanwhile, between 7 and 14 August 1983, the band used the National Exhibition Centre, in Birmingham, England, to rehearse. The first leg of the tour consisted of seven European shows in August, followed by a second European leg in September and October, featuring 16 shows.
"We were on flight 666 to Helsinki," recalled Geezer Butler, "and even the baggage label said 'HEL'. We were all shitting ourselves getting on that plane. I got pissed, of course. I was severely boozing then. I was pissed for that whole tour." [2]
Two North American legs consisted of 36 shows from October through November, then 34 shows from January through March 1984. [3]
There were many cancellations during the North American tour owing to problems with an oversized Stonehenge stage set. This was the reason that initial shows in Canada were cancelled, delaying the first North American leg. The crew also got caught in a November blizzard while crossing the Continental Divide, forcing the cancellation of two shows in Salt Lake City and Reno.
There were more difficulties during the second North American leg which delayed their shows for nearly a week. One show in Salisbury, Maryland (28 February 1984) was beset by local religious protests that were noted in the local papers, but was ultimately cancelled due to poor ticket sales. Of the 96 currently confirmed shows, 30% were likely cancelled for one reason or another. The band did manage to sell out at least a dozen shows including Saginaw, Worcester, Rockford, Providence, Cleveland, Detroit, New Haven, Portland, Philadelphia, Toronto, East Rutherford and Chicago.
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
18 August 1983 | Drammen | Norway | Drammenshallen |
19 August 1983 | Stockholm | Sweden | Johanneshovs Isstadion |
21 August 1983 | Helsinki | Finland | Helsinki Ice Hall |
23 August 1983 | Lund | Sweden | Olympen |
24 August 1983 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Falkoner Teatret |
27 August 1983 | Reading | England | Reading Festival |
28 August 1983 | Dublin | Ireland | Dalymount Park |
Mulhouse | France | Hippodrome de Schlierbach | |
13 September 1983 | Barcelona | Spain | La Monumental |
14 September 1983 | Madrid | Estadio Román Valero | |
15 September 1983 | San Sebastián | Velódromo de Anoeta | |
18 September 1983 | Offenbach | West Germany | Stadthalle Offenbach |
19 September 1983 | Düsseldorf | Philips Halle | |
20 September 1983 | Mannheim | Mannheimer Rosengarten | |
22 September 1983 | Munich | Circus Krone Building | |
24 September 1983 | Frauenfeld | Switzerland | Festhalle Ruegerhols |
25 September 1983 | Geneva | Pavillon Des Sports Del Champel Geneve | |
27 September 1983 | Neunkirchen am Brand | West Germany | Hemmerleinhalle |
28 September 1983 | Böblingen | Sporthalle | |
30 September 1983 | Paris | France | Espace Balard |
1 October 1983 | Brussels | Belgium | Forest National |
2 October 1983 | Zwolle | Netherlands | IJsselhallen |
3 October 1983 | Nijmegen | Concertgebouw de Vereeniging | |
Canada | |||
17 October 1983 | Rimouski | Colisée de Rimouski | |
18 October 1983 | Chicoutimi | Centre Georges-Vézina | |
20 October 1983 | Quebec City | Colisée de Québec | |
21 October 1983 | Montreal | Montreal Forum | |
22 October 1983 | Ottawa | Ottawa Civic Centre | |
24 October 1983 | Sudbury | Sudbury Arena | |
25 October 1983 | Toronto | Maple Leaf Gardens | |
London | London Gardens | ||
27 October 1983 | Buffalo | United States | Buffalo Memorial Auditorium |
29 October 1983 | East Rutherford | Brendan Byrne Arena | |
30 October 1983 | Uniondale | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | |
1 November 1983 | Providence | Providence Civic Center | |
2 November 1983 | Landover | Capital Centre | |
4 November 1983 | Worcester | Worcester Centrum | |
5 November 1983 | Philadelphia | Spectrum | |
6 November 1983 | Portland | Cumberland County Civic Center | |
8 November 1983 | New Haven | New Haven Coliseum | |
9 November 1983 | Rochester | Rochester Community War Memorial | |
Pittsburgh | Stanley Theater | ||
11 November 1983 | Detroit | Cobo Arena | |
12 November 1983 | Cleveland | Public Auditorium | |
13 November 1983 | Cincinnati | Richfield Coliseum | |
14 November 1983 | Saginaw | Saginaw Civic Center | |
15 November 1983 | Rockford | Rockford MetroCentre | |
16 November 1983 | Ashwaubenon | Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena | |
18 November 1983 | Chicago | UIC Pavilion | |
19 November 1983 | Madison | Dane County Coliseum | |
20 November 1983 | Bloomington | Met Center | |
Salt Lake City | Salt Palace | ||
23 November 1983 | Reno | Lawlor Events Center | |
25 November 1983 | Paradise | Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts | |
26 November 1983 | Phoenix | Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum | |
27 November 1983 | Tucson | Tucson Community Center | |
29 November 1983 | Albuquerque | Tingley Coliseum | |
30 November 1983 | El Paso | El Paso County Coliseum |
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
Calgary | Canada | TBA | |
Edmonton | Northlands Coliseum | ||
Vancouver | TBA | ||
Seattle | United States | Seattle Center Coliseum | |
Spokane | Spokane Coliseum | ||
Portland | Memorial Coliseum Complex | ||
25 January 1984 | Daly City | Cow Palace | |
26 January 1984 | Long Beach | Long Beach Arena | |
28 January 1984 | El Paso | El Paso County Coliseum | |
29 January 1984 | Salt Lake City | Salt Palace | |
31 January 1984 | Denver | University of Denver Arena | |
1 February 1984 | Amarillo | Amarillo Civic Center | |
2 February 1984 | Lubbock | Lubbock Memorial Civic Center | |
3 February 1984 | Corpus Christi | Memorial Coliseum | |
4 February 1984 | San Antonio | Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center | |
7 February 1984 | Houston | Sam Houston Coliseum | |
8 February 1984 | Dallas | Reunion Arena | |
10 February 1984 | Beaumont | Beaumont Civic Center | |
11 February 1984 | Little Rock | Barton Coliseum | |
New Orleans | Lakefront Arena | ||
13 February 1984 | Birmingham | Boutwell Auditorium | |
14 February 1984 | Jacksonville | Jacksonville Memorial Coliseum | |
16 February 1984 | Lakeland | Lakeland Civic Center | |
17 February 1984 | Sunrise | Sunrise Musical Theater | |
Savannah | Savannah Civic Center | ||
20 February 1984 | Atlanta | Fox Theatre | |
22 February 1984 | St. Louis | Kiel Auditorium | |
24 February 1984 | Toledo | Toledo Sports Arena | |
25 February 1984 | Trotwood | Hara Arena | |
26 February 1984 | Kalamazoo | Wings Stadium | |
Salisbury | Wicomico Youth and Civic Center | ||
29 February 1984 | Utica | The Stanley Center for the Arts | |
1 March 1984 | Albany | Palace Theatre | |
4 March 1984 | Springfield | Springfield Civic Center |
The set list featured two Dio-era tracks, "Heaven and Hell" and "Neon Knights", as well as a good helping from the new album, and a few fan favorites reappeared in the set, such as "Supernaut" and "Rock 'n' Roll Doctor". Each show on the tour ended with a two-song encore, with the first song being a cover of the Deep Purple classic "Smoke on the Water", as Ian Gillan was formerly of Deep Purple. This is one of the few cover songs Black Sabbath have ever done at live shows. They played the song on Iommi's suggestion. He felt it was a 'bum deal' that Gillan had to perform so many old Sabbath songs and none of his own. [4]
There were many problems surrounding the tour for the album, including having little room on stage owing to it being decorated with Stonehenge replicas. [6] In 2005, Geezer Butler explained: [7]
It had nothing to do with me. In fact, I was the one who thought it was really corny. We had Sharon Osbourne’s dad, Don Arden, managing us. He came up with the idea of having the stage set be Stonehenge. He wrote the dimensions down and gave it to our tour manager. He wrote it down in meters but he meant to write it down in feet. The people who made it saw fifteen meters instead of fifteen feet. It was 45 feet high and it wouldn’t fit on any stage anywhere so we just had to leave it in the storage area. It cost a fortune to make but there was not a building on Earth that you could fit it into.
Ian Gillan maintained that Stonehenge was indeed Geezer's idea – and that, asked for details by set buildings Light and Sound Design, Geezer had simply said: "Life-size." [6] Filling three containers, it was too big for any stage, so only a small part of it was used at a time, but the band and crew still had problems edging between the monoliths.
"We couldn't believe the size of it when we saw it," recalled Iommi. "We seen it when we rehearsed at the NEC [in Birmingham] for a whole and we'd only seen it on the floor; parts of it – they hadn't finished it… It gets to [the 1983] Reading [festival] and we've got these huge ones at the back that are just, like, gigantic." [8]
Photos of the Born Again tour show that at least some of the stones were present on stage. [9]
The tour's early stages featured a dwarf, dressed to look like the demon-infant from the album cover. [6]
The dimension problems and use of dwarfs bear strong similarities to the infamous Stonehenge scene in the movie This Is Spinal Tap , released a year after Sabbath's tour. "It was great when I saw that film, though," recalled Butler, "because it was at the end of that tour with Gillan… I thought they'd had a spy with us or something – it was so like us." [8]
Bill Ward was unable to play the Born Again tour because of personal problems. He explains: [10]
We did the Born Again album but I fell apart with the idea of touring. I got so much fear behind touring, I didn't talk about the fear, I drank behind the fear instead and that was a big mistake. So, I blew the Born Again tour and Bev Bevan, who is a very, very, very nice man, a very good drummer, took over the drum chair on that one.
Pretty Maids were the support act on the initial Scandinavian dates (18–24 August 1983). The Irish date was part of a one day festival including Mama's Boys, Anvil, Twisted Sister, and Motörhead. Diamond Head provided support on the remaining European dates (13 September to 3 October) together with Lita Ford (27-28 September), but was also supplanted by Girlschool during the Spanish gigs (13–15 September 1983) and Belgian speed metallers Acid in Brussels (1 October).
Streetheart were originally scheduled to be the support act at the beginning of the 1983 Canadian leg, but those initial shows were canceled. Instead, Scottish rockers Nazareth filled in on the majority of the Canadian shows (from 20 October through 24th) until Quiet Riot were available for the show in Toronto (25 October). However, Nazareth paired with Quiet Riot in London, Ontario (26 October) and replaced Black Sabbath as the headliner when their Stonehenge set wouldn't fit into the arena!
Quiet Riot appeared with Sabbath for the remainder of the first North American leg and all U.S. dates through 30 November. Fastway also made an appearance in New Haven on 8 November.
Heaven provided support at the beginning of the 2nd North American leg from 25 January through at least the end of January. Ratt appeared only at the first show in Daly City on 25 January. Girlschool reappeared for a single show in San Antonio on 4 February. Night Ranger joined the tour from 7 February through 26. They were replaced by Canadian band Helix for two shows in New York. The final show in Springfield, MA was supported by Cryer and Lodestar that featured guitar virtuoso Tony MacAlpine.
Black Sabbath were an English rock band formed in Birmingham in 1968 by guitarist Tony Iommi, drummer Bill Ward, bassist Geezer Butler, and vocalist Ozzy Osbourne. They are often cited as pioneers of heavy metal music. The band helped define the genre with their first three albums Black Sabbath, Paranoid, and Master of Reality (1971). Following Osbourne's departure in 1979, the band underwent multiple line-up changes, with Iommi being the only constant member throughout its history.
Headless Cross is the fourteenth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released in April 1989, it was the group's second album to feature singer Tony Martin, the first to feature drummer Cozy Powell, and the only album with session bassist Laurence Cottle.
Dehumanizer is the sixteenth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. It was first released on 22 June 1992 in the UK by I.R.S. Records and on 30 June 1992 in the US by Reprise Records.
Terence Michael Joseph "Geezer" Butler is a retired English musician, best known as the bassist and primary lyricist of the heavy metal band Black Sabbath. He has also recorded and performed with Heaven & Hell, GZR, Ozzy Osbourne, and Deadland Ritual.
Sabotage is the sixth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released on 28 July 1975. The album was recorded in the midst of a legal battle with the band's former manager, Patrick Meehan. The stress that resulted from the band's ongoing legal woes infiltrated the recording process, inspiring the album's title. It was co-produced by guitarist Tony Iommi and Mike Butcher.
Vol. 4 is the fourth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released in September 1972, by Vertigo Records. It was the first album by Black Sabbath not produced by Rodger Bain; guitarist Tony Iommi assumed production duties. Patrick Meehan, the band's then-manager, was listed as co-producer, though his actual involvement in the album's production was minimal.
Born Again is the eleventh studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released on 9 September 1983, it is the only album the group recorded with lead vocalist Ian Gillan, best known for his work with Deep Purple. It was also the last Black Sabbath album for 9 years to feature original bassist Geezer Butler and the last to feature original drummer Bill Ward, though Ward did record a studio track with the band 15 years later on their 1998 live album Reunion. The album has received mixed reviews from critics, but was a commercial success upon its 1983 release, reaching No. 4 in the UK charts. The album also hit the top 40 in the United States. In July 2021, guitarist and founding member Tony Iommi confirmed that the long lost original master tapes of the album had been finally located, and that he was considering remixing the album for a future re-release.
Mob Rules is the tenth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released in November 1981. It followed 1980's Heaven and Hell, and was the second album to feature lead singer Ronnie James Dio and the first with drummer Vinny Appice. Neither musician would appear on a Black Sabbath studio album again until the 1992 album Dehumanizer.
Live Evil is the first official live album by English rock band Black Sabbath. The previously released Live at Last (1980) was not sanctioned by the band. Live Evil peaked at number 37 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart.
William Thomas Ward is an English musician. He was a co-founder and the original drummer for the heavy metal band Black Sabbath. Ward helped found Black Sabbath in 1968 alongside bandmates Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi (guitarist), and Geezer Butler (bass).
Heaven and Hell is the ninth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released on 18 April 1980. It is the first Black Sabbath album to feature vocalist Ronnie James Dio, who replaced original vocalist Ozzy Osbourne in 1979.
The Eternal Idol is the thirteenth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released in November 1987 in the UK and on 8 December 1987 in the US. It is the first Black Sabbath album to feature vocalist Tony Martin. It spent six weeks on the Billboard 200 chart, peaking at 168. It was also the last full album of new material by Black Sabbath to be released by Warner Bros. Records, and the final album through their original label Vertigo Records until the release of 13 in 2013.
The Best of Black Sabbath is a double CD compilation album by Black Sabbath released in 2000 on the Sanctuary Records label. Its 32 songs are presented chronologically from the band's first 11 albums, spanning the years 1970 to 1983. Black Sabbath's classic six-album run, from 1970s debut Black Sabbath through 1975's Sabotage is celebrated with three to six songs from each album. Original vocalist Ozzy Osbourne's subsequent final two albums with the band, 1976's Technical Ecstasy and 1978's Never Say Die!, are represented by one and two songs, respectively. Replacement Ronnie James Dio's early 80's stint fronting the band on two albums is acknowledged with the title track of 1980's Heaven and Hell and a track from 1981's The Mob Rules. The compilation closes with a song from 1983's attempted rebirth, Born Again, former Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan's sole album with the band. The Best of Black Sabbath does not include any later material with vocalists Glenn Hughes, Tony Martin (1986–96) or the returning Dio.
Beverley Bevan is an English rock musician who was the drummer and one of the original members of the Move and Electric Light Orchestra (ELO). After the end of ELO in 1986, he founded ELO Part II.
Anthony Philip Harford, better known by his stage name Tony Martin, is an English heavy metal vocalist, best known for his time fronting Black Sabbath, initially from 1987 to 1991 and again from 1993 to 1997. Martin was the band's second-longest-serving vocalist after Ozzy Osbourne. He has since been involved in many other projects.
David Thomas Donato was an American singer known for his involvement in Black Sabbath. He recorded several demos with the band and rehearsed throughout 1984 and 1985.
The Heaven & Hell Tour was the ninth world concert tour by Black Sabbath between April 1980 and February 1981 to promote their 1980 studio album, Heaven and Hell. The tour marked the band's first live shows with vocalist Ronnie James Dio, who replaced original vocalist Ozzy Osbourne the previous year; drummer Vinny Appice, who replaced original drummer Bill Ward in the middle of the tour's North American leg after Ward suddenly left the band due to personal issues; and keyboardist Geoff Nicholls, who played keyboards on the Heaven and Hell album and accompanied the band on this tour as a sideman. For a portion of the North American tour, which was popularly known as the "Black and Blue Tour", Black Sabbath co-headlined with Blue Öyster Cult, with whom they shared a manager, Sandy Pearlman. The arrangement reportedly set attendance records but caused friction between the two bands as well as between Black Sabbath and Pearlman.
The Reunion Tour was a concert tour by heavy metal band Black Sabbath, celebrating the band's 2012 reunion and in support of their album 13, which was the group's first album to feature their original singer Ozzy Osbourne since 1978's Never Say Die! and original bassist Geezer Butler since 1994's Cross Purposes.
The Never Say Die! Tour was a concert tour by the English heavy metal band Black Sabbath. The tour began on 16 May 1978 in Sheffield and ended on 11 December 1978 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was the last full tour with Ozzy Osbourne until the band reunited for Ozzfest 1997.