Took a Whale Watch today from Rye Harbor, very incredible and life-changing as the mammals rose right next to the boat over and over again.
Friday, August 17, 1990
Sunday, August 5, 1990
Greenfield Triathlon in Greenfield, MA.
1000 yard swim
30.50 mile bike
7.0 mile run
Completed the event in 2:32:47.
The swim was interesting, as it was in the Green River, and the water depth wasn't very deep for much of the leg (I recall my belly scraping the sand on the bottom of the river bed).
The bike was long, with a steep uphill over each of the four-laps.
Run went well.
Saturday, July 28, 1990
Tuesday, July 17, 1990
Saturday, July 7, 1990
Saratoga Performing Arts Center w/ CoolCat, TM, DL for Bowie's "Sound and Vision Tour".
Setlist:
01. Space Oddity
02. Rebel Rebel
03. Changes
04. Ashes To Ashes
05. Life On Mars
06. Pretty Pink Rose
07. Stay
08. Blue Jean
09. Let’s Dance
10. Ziggy Stardust
11. China Girl
12. Station To Station
13. Young Americans
14. Suffragette City
15. Fame
16. “Heroes”
17. White Light – White Heat
18. Baby What You Want Me To Do – The Jean Genie
19. Waiting For The Man
20. Gloria
David Bowie was in concert at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center on July 7, 1990. The following is a review published after the concert in the Times Union by Michael Eck:
It was the most breathlessly awaited show of the summer.
And like the best things in life it was worth waiting for. Make no mistake about it, David Bowie’s phenomenal retrospective concert Saturday night at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center was one of the best things in life – the kind of performance that could breathe life into a tired soul.
Bowie, his band, and his art, transcended.
The multi-media show – which Bowie claims will be the last live public performances of his past material – has been hailed and written about for months now, but no amount of pre-press could prepare fans for what they experienced on Saturday.
Bowie has always been one of rock’s true artists, merging the conceits of music, theater, literature and visuals into a pulsating, fascinating body of work.
On this “Sound and Vision” tour he has even outdone himself.
Multiple screens and video effects worked integrally with onstage action. While his band, led by guitarist extraordinaire Adrian Belew, thundered behind him Bowie, ever the cracked actor, sang duets with his own 20-foot projected image, danced with an androgynous look-alike, and cast a mighty shadow throughout the amphitheater.
MTV be damned, Bowie has brought the first completely successful merger of video and stage together.
With some artists the music is the bottom line. With Bowie the vision has always gone hand in hand with the sound.
Anyhow, the sound Saturday night was louder than the beating of a thousand hearts. It must be a strange place for Bowie to be right now – giddy with the excitement of casting off old characters, but also realizing he is singing these songs for the last time.
His projected face as he closed his set with “Heroes” said all that in the flicker of an eye.
He finished with a rocking blast of encores that segued his own “Jean Genie” with the Velvet Undergound’s “White Light, White Heat” and “Waiting for My Man” and Van Morrison’s “Gloria.”
“Station to Station,” introduced and capped off with simply wicked solos from Belew, was rock ‘n’ roll on its purest edge – so striking that it will forever remain the image I carry of Bowie in my mind.
In the past year or so the Who got back together to rehash their past, the Stones patched it up and followed suit, McCartney dragged out the Beatles catalog … Saturday night Bowie took his past in his hands and gloriously threw it all away while we watched.
Those other tours were history shaking with age, Saturday’s was history shaking with life. It was simply one of the greatest spectacles I have ever witnessed.
Thank you David.
We’ll be with you as you “turn and face the strange.”
Stay in touch.
David Bowie Tour band 1990 – Sound+Vision Tour
Bowie specifically chose a smaller band for the tour, saying in a contemporary interview that “It’s a much smaller sound. It’s not quite as orchestrated as any of the other tours. The plus of that is that there is a certain kind of drive and tightness that you get with that embryonic line-up, where everybody is totally reliant on the other two or three guys, so everybody gives a lot more”
• David Bowie – vocals, guitar, saxophone
• Adrian Belew – guitar, backing vocals, music director
• Erdal Kızılçay – bass guitar, backing vocals
• Rick Fox – keyboards, backing vocals
• Michael Hodges – drums
Tuesday, July 3, 1990
Sunday, July 1, 1990
Saturday, June 30, 1990
Saturday, June 16, 1990
Sunday, June 3, 1990
Saturday, May 19, 1990
Tuesday, May 8, 1990
Cramps at Toads Place with DL, with the Flat Duo Jets opening.
Setlist:
01. mule skinner blues
02. the creature from the black leather lagoon
03. chicken
04. bop pills
05. whats inside a girl
06. everything goes
07. mama oo pow pow
08. god damn rock n roll
09. primitive
10. goo goo muck
11. her love rubbed off
12. daisys up your butterfly
13. journey to the center of a girl
14. mystery plane
15. hot peral snatch
16. saddle up a buzz buzz
17. the most enhaulter potentate of love
18. all women are bad
19. you got good taste
20. bikini girls with machine guns
21. psychotic reaction
22. shortnin bread
23. encore break
24. drug train
25. can your pussy do the dog?
26. tear it up