Uprising Tour
Tour by Bob Marley & The Wailers | |
Start date | 30 May 1980 |
---|---|
End date | 23 September 1980 |
Legs | 2 |
No. of shows |
33 in Europe 5 in the United States 38 in total |
Bob Marley & The Wailers concert chronology |
The Uprising Tour was a concert tour organised to support the album Uprising by Bob Marley & The Wailers. It was Marley's last tour and the biggest music tour of Europe in that year.
The tour started at the Hallenstadion in Zurich, Switzerland, where Marley performed for the first time, on 30 May 1980, and ended at the Stanley Theater in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on 23 September 1980, which was Marley's last concert. Two days prior to the Pittsburgh show, after playing two shows at the Madison Square Garden, Marley collapsed in Central Park while jogging, and was told to immediately cancel the U.S. leg of the tour, but he instead flew to Pittsburgh to perform one final performance. He was rumoured to go out on stage to say "Hi" to fans with Stevie Wonder during his performance of Master Blaster but this is not true. Marley went to a few treatment clinics in the United States, Boston, New York and Miami (Maybe Mexico). Each place gave him only a month to live. Marley then left for Germany to receive cancer treatment which eventually was not successful but prolonged his life 6 months more than any medical clinic in the United States predicted, as Marley died in May 1981.
The concert in Dortmund on 13 June has been broadcast in the 1990s by German TV station WDR in their Rockpalast concert series. Numerous other performances from the Uprising Tour have also been taped on video. The performance in Milan, Italy on 27 June, when Marley performed for about 120,000 people in the sold-out San Siro stadium, is still regarded in Italy as the biggest music event ever. While on tour Marley performed for the first time in Switzerland, Italy, Ireland and Scotland.
Set list
The standard set list of the tour mostly looked like the following:
- "Natural Mystic"
- "Positive Vibration"
- "Revolution"
- "I Shot The Sheriff"
- "War" / "No More Trouble"
- "Zimbabwe"
- "Zion Train"
- "No Woman, No Cry"
- "Jammin'"
- "Exodus"
- "Redemption Song"
- "Natty Dread"
- "Work"
- "Could You Be Loved"
- "Is This Love"
- "Get Up, Stand Up"
As an introductory theme, the concerts often started with a version of the Stalag riddim by Winston Riley, with keyboardist Tyrone Downie chanting "Marley!" over the riddim while Marley coming to the stage (therefore the intro is commonly called "Marley Chant" among fans). Most shows had a standard set list which closed with "Exodus", and an encore set which usually ended with "Get Up, Stand Up". There were also performances of an earlier song, "Trenchtown Rock", which is not featured on any of Marley's Island albums released at that time.
For the short U.S. leg of the tour Marley changed the set list to be similar to the one from the Kaya Tour in 1978: he dropped "Revolution" and "Natty Dread" and added songs like "Burnin' And Lootin'" or "Them Belly Full" at the beginning, or "The Heathen" and the "Running Away" / "Crazy Baldhead" medley in the middle of the set list.
From show to show sometimes an additional song was edged in the middle of the set list, like "Lively Up Yourself", "Kinky Reggae", "Roots, Rock, Reggae", "Coming In From The Cold", "Bad Card", "Kaya", "Trenchtown Rock", "We And Them", "Three Little Birds", "Talkin' Blues" or "Forever Loving Jah". Live performances of each of these songs happened very rarely during the tour.
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
30 May 1980 | Zürich | Switzerland | Hallenstadion | |
1 June 1980 | Munich | Germany | Reitstadion | with Fleetwood Mac |
3 June 1980 | Grenoble | France | Palais des Sports | |
4 June 1980 | Dijon | Parc des Sports | ||
6 June 1980 | Cologne | Germany | Sporthalle | |
7 June 1980 | London | England | Crystal Palace Concert Bowl | |
8 June 1980 | Kaiserslautern | Germany | Fritz Walter Stadion | with Fleetwood Mac |
9 June 1980 | Strasbourg | France | Hall Rhenus | |
10 June 1980 | Orléans | Parc des Expositions | ||
11 June 1980 | Bordeaux | Exposition Hall | ||
13 June 1980 | Dortmund | Germany | Westfalenhalle | |
14 June 1980 | Hamburg | Ernst-Merck-Halle | ||
16 June 1980 | Drammen | Norway | Drammenshallen | |
17 June 1980 | Stockholm | Sweden | Gröna Lund | |
18 June 1980 | Copenhagen | Denmark | The Forum | |
20 June 1980 | Berlin | Germany | Waldbühne | |
21 June 1980 | Kassel | Eissporthalle | ||
22 June 1980 | Brussels | Belgium | Forest National | |
23 June 1980 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Ahoy | |
24 June 1980 | Lille | France | Zénith de Lille | |
26 June 1980 | Toulon | Stade Mayol | ||
27 June 1980 | Milan | Italy | Stadio Giuseppe Meazza | |
28 June 1980 | Turin | Stadio Comunale | ||
29 June 1980 | Madrid | Spain | Estadio Román Valero | cancelled |
30 June 1980 | Barcelona | Plaza de Toros | ||
2 July 1980 | Nantes | France | Palais de la Beaujoire | |
3 July 1980 | Paris | Le Bourget | ||
6 July 1980 | Dublin | Ireland | Dalymount Park | |
8 July 1980 | Brighton | England | Brighton Conference Centre | |
9 July 1980 | ||||
10 July 1980 | Glasgow | Scotland | The Apollo | |
11 July 1980 | ||||
12 July 1980 | Queensferry | Wales | Deeside Leisure Centre | |
13 July 1980 | Stafford | England | New Bingley Hall | |
16 September 1980 | Boston, Massachusetts | United States | JB Hynes Auditorium | |
17 September 1980 | Providence, Rhode Island | Meehan Auditorium | ||
19 September 1980 | New York City, New York | Madison Square Garden | opener for The Commodores | |
20 September 1980 | ||||
23 September 1980 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Stanley Theater |