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APRIL
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11 Arrives in New York
on the SS France to live in America for nearly two years. Checks
into the Sherry Netherlands Hotel on 5th Avenue.
During his stay in New York Bowie spent time putting
together a new tour band and seeing live music, particularly black
artists such as The Temptations, The Spinners and Marvin Gaye at
(normally strictly black) venues in Harlem such as the Apollo Theatre.
Bowie also sees Roxy Music and Todd Rundgren at
the Carnegie Hall and attends the after show party.
> Right: Ferry, Amanda Lear (For Your Pleaure cover star and Sorrow temptress), Bowie and Shaun Cassidy (!). |
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JUNE
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8-10 Rehearsals at Port
Chester Capitol Theater for the elaborately staged Diamond Dogs
US tour, before the 600-mile journey to Montreal.
This tour was originally planned to appear in a
city for 5 or so nights and then move on to another city. The set
cost $200,000, props $75,000.
Bowie wore this Yves Saint Laurent suit as the Halloween
Jack during the June and July dates of the tour.
Diamond
David article published in Rock magazine. |
14 Montreal Forum, Canada
15 Ottawa Civic Centre
16 Toronto O'Keefe Auditorium
(2 shows).
Bowie suffers from laryngitis. Reported
by Leee Black Childers for Hit Parader magazine.
17 Rochester Memorial
Auditorium, New York
18-19 Cleveland Public
Auditorium.
By the time of these two shows, problems with props
and the set had been fixed.
20 Toledo Sports Arena
23 Detroit Cobo Hall.
Show transferred at the last minute from the Ford
Hall because the stage was too big. Reported
by Leee Black Childers for Hit Parader magazine.
24 Dayton Harra Arena
25 Akron Civic Theatre
26-27 Pittsburgh Syria
Mosque
28 Charleston, West Virginia
Civic Centre
29 Nashville, Municipal
Auditorium.
30 Memphis, Mid-South
Coliseum
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JULY
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UK promoters turn down the chance to stage the Diamond
Dogs tour at the Empire Pool, Wembley, because of the amount of
money asked for by MainMan. Tickets would have had to have been
about £7.00, unacceptable then as a reasonable price.
|

"Time is waiting in the wings…" |
1 Atlanta,
Fox Theatre
During the journey from Atlanta to Tampa, a driver
was stung by a bee and the truck containing most of the set thus
ended up in a ditch with a nest of rattlesnakes. The show at Tampa
went on, however, without props. After receiving a twenty-minute
ovation, Bowie returned for an encore.
2 Tampa, Curtis Hixon
Hall, Florida.
3 Casselberry Seminole
Jai-Alai Fronton
4 Jacksonville Exhibition
Hall
5 Charlotte Park Centre
6 Greensboro Coliseum
7 Norfolk Scope Convention
Centre
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8-12 Philadelphia
Tower Theatre
The Tower Theatre show on the 11th was nearly
cancelled at the last moment when Bowie's backing band, after hearing
that the shows were to be recorded for an LP - which became Bowie's
first live LP release, David
Live, refused to play without an increased fee in line with
the normal recording rates.
The normal show fee of $150 for a member of the
group was increased to $5,000 after Bowie relented much to DeFries'
chagrin.
|
It was recorded without Tony Visconti who was held
up when his car broke down travelling from New York. This resulted
in various instruments not being recorded exactly as Visconti had
wanted. This made the mixing much more difficult.
A few days after the Philly shows, Bowie and Tony
Visconti travelled to Manhattan's Electric Ladyland recording studios
to mix the LP together. The hectic schedule was due to a MainMan-DeFries
initiative to secure the record's release for the Christmas market.
|
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13 Cape Cod Coliseum
14 New Haven Veterans
Memorial Coliseum
15 Waterbury Palace Theater
16 Boston Music Hall
17 Hartford, Bushnell
Auditorium
19-20 New York, Madison
Square Garden
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 |
New York, Madison Square Garden shows videotaped
by MainMan.
After the last Madison show, a small party was
held at the Plaza Hotel. Amongst the regular friends and MainMan
crew were Rudolf Nureyev, Mick Jagger and Bette Midler, who disappeared
with Bowie into a closet for half an hour.
The end of tour party for the road crew was held
at the Ice Palace Discotheque.
The sets for the shows at Madison Square Garden
had to be unloaded in the street outside the venue because the trucks
were too big to clear the back entrance.
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AUGUST
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Drummer Tony Newman and bass guitarist Herbie Flowers
leave the tour group (which Bowie retained for the second leg of
the tour in September) replaced by Willie Weeks and Andy Newmark.
Bowie returns to London for a weekend and plays
uncredited (and unverified) on Rolling Stones' It's Only Rock'n'Roll and Ron Wood's I've Got My Own Album To Do. |
11-23 The first recording
sessions for the Young Americans album.
Bowie had booked studio time
at Philadelphia's Sigma Sound studios.
He liked the studios for
their Gamble and Huff recording connections, but he was particularly
excited by the sound he heard there during an Ava Cherry session. |
Tracks recorded:
Young Americans
Right
Somebody Up There Likes Me
Who Can I Be Now
It's Gonna Be Me
Can You Hear Me
After Today
John I'm Only Dancing Again was begun then completed in the November
sessions. It was dropped later but released
as a single in 1979. |
A backing track was recorded for Bruce Springsteen's
It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City but remained unfinished until
the Station To Station sessions, and unreleased until 1989 when
it was included along with After Today on the Ryko Sound + Vision anthology.
Who Can I Be Now and It's Gonna Be Me were
later dropped from the tracklisting and remained unreleased until
the Ryko reissue of Young Americans. |
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SEPTEMBER
|
Drummer Willie Weeks and bassist Andy Newmark leave to fulfil recording commitments.
The September dates of the 1974 US tour was still technically the Diamond Dogs tour, but now mixed with the new soul feel Bowie picked up in Philadelphia.
Backing singers now included - along with Warren Peace and Ava Cherry - Luther Vandross, Anthony Hinton, Dianne Sumler and Robin Clark. |

2-8 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre. One show filmed by the BBC for Cracked Actor. |
Interviewed by Robert Hilburn for Melody Maker
11 San Diego Sports Arena 13 Tucson Convention Centre
Rock 'N' Roll With Me / Panic in Detroit [live] single released in the US (RCA).
14 Phoenix Coliseum.
Melody Maker interview published.
16 Los Angeles Anaheim Convention Centre |
13 Knock On Wood / Panic in Detroit single released (highest UK chart position No. 10) |
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OCTOBER
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 |
5 After a short break,
the Diamond Dogs show becomes The Philly Dogs Tour or The Soul Tour.
Bowie replaces the massive set with a simple white screen backdrop
for his shadow to be thrown against. Along with the six backing
singers came replacement drummer Dennis Davis and bassist Emir Ksasan.
5 St Paul Civic Center
8 Indianapolis Indiana
Convention Center
11 Madison
Dane County Coliseum
13 Milwaukee Mecca
Arena
15-20 Detroit, Michigan
Palace
22-23 Chicago, Arie
Crown Theatre
30-31 New York, Radio
City Music Hall
|

29 David
Live double LP released. |
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NOVEMBER
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David Bowie and Elizabeth Taylor announce that
they are to appear together in a film, The Bluebird of Happiness,
which was eventually made without Bowie. When he viewed the script
he considered it to be, 'Too dry and boring'. |
1-3 New York, Radio City
Music Hall
6 Cleveland Public
Hall.
After the show, Bowie stayed up all night in the
hotel bar dancing and miming.
8 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
11 Washington DC, Capital
Centre
14-16 Boston Music Hall
16 BOWIE
FINDS HIS feature by Bruno Stein published in New Musical Express.
|
18 Philadelphia Spectrum Theatre
19 Pittsburgh Civic Arena |
25 Philadelphia Spectrum Theatre.
Reported in Disc Magazine |
|
Recording resumes at Sigma in Philadelphia.
Tracks recorded: Win, Fascination
While drinking at the Artemis Club, Bowie, Mike
Garson, Warren Peace, Ava Cherry and two bodyguards were held for
identity paper checks. The police asked Bowie for proof of his
age. Bowie replied, "You don't believe I'm twenty-one years of age?
Incredible! That's quite flattering actually. Why, everyone knows
that I'm at least fifty!"
25 Bruce Springsteen drops
in on Sigma sessions. Reported the next day in Bowie
meets Springsteen by Mike McGrath in The Drummer.
28 Memphis, Mid-South
Auditorium
30 Nashville Municipal
Auditorium
|

Mike Garson, Bruce Springsteen, Tony Visconti and
Bowie
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DECEMBER
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 |
Young Americans video shot in New York. The album's
working title is now Fascination and subsequently The Gouster. Mixing
begins at Record Plant in New York. Visconti then takes the masters
back to London.
1 Atlanta,
Omni.
Last show of the 1974 US tour.
On
Tour With Bowie by Leee Black Childers published in Hit Parader
magazine.
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4 Appears on the Dick Cavett 'Wide World of Entertainment' show
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