Celebrating David Bowie Live Stream Wed 8 PM PST

Forums:

It seems like very little interest on this site to Live streams here. The original zone had lots of interest. I'll probably stop posting them here. This is a really good one that just got announced today. There are a lot of "A list". well know musicians playing in different cities on this tour. I think think Sting is confirmed for this webcast show. Since it's an LA show, it should be pretty well stacked.

Join us right here tomorrow night for a one-time-only live stream of Celebrating David Bowie in Los Angeles. The show is scheduled to begin at 8pm PT (4:00 GMT - please confirm the time in your time zone) and the live stream from the Wiltern Theater will begin about one hour prior. Please help spread the word by sharing this post and joining us at http://tiny.cc/CdBstream tomorrow!

Celebrating David Bowie concert proceeds benefit Children and the Arts and their partnership with the South London Gallery, supporting secondary school arts programs in the area of David Bowie’s hometown of Brixton. Please support this great cause and the Celebrating David Bowie movement by donating at http://tiny.cc/CdBdonate today

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/inside-the-ultimate-david-bow...

Each show of the tour (which continues in Los Angeles tonight and Wednesday, and visits Sydney on Sunday and Tokyo on February 2nd) features between 60 and 70 musicians who played with Bowie over the years, including guitarist Adrian Belew, bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, drummer Zack Alford and guitarist Mark Plati. It's the largest assemblage of Bowie musicians ever gathered in one place, a monumental task that took a year of round-the-clock work by Garson, actor Gary Oldman (a longtime close friend of Bowie) and Scrote (also known as Angelo Bundini), an L.A.-based musician who specializes in staging enormous shows. "I didn't see anybody else doing something on the level of the [1992] Freddie Mercury tribute show," says Scrote, "something extraordinarily large and in

Along with longtime Bowie freak Joe Elliott, the London show featured Duran Duran's Simon Le Bon and La Roux singer Elly Jackson. In New York, Kate Pierson of the B-52's and Glee's Darren Criss performed.


 

It seems like very little interest on this site to Live streams here. The original zone had lots of interest. I'll probably stop posting them here.

Please keep posting Live streams here. I think there is interest and I hope you continue to share your knowledge, even though people may not be letting you know how great your posts are. This is exactly the type of posting that creates more interest in streams and also getting people here to check things out. Remember, Viva is only 2 months old. Thank you.

Dude Thnx for the info on this key show

i missed the NYC show but I heard it rocked.

i will be tuned in. Thnx again!

I'm totally into links, just busy lately. 

Awesome, I will definitely tune in!

isn't Adrian belew a part of this?

 

and patches, u were one of the posters from PZ I was most happy to see joined viva.

imo, it would b a big loss for this site if u bailed.

i may not b interested in every single stream link u post but my day is very much brightened by the one's that I am.

thank u for your contributions and if u do leave viva please let us know what other sites you'll b sharing info like this on.

music is the best

This looks awesome. Thanks for the link.

 

Links are good.yes

 Bump,,,for the Stoner in You!

Sting covered Blackstar and Lazarus, wild!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3z6uXpk2adI

 

Fuckkkkkk nice 

Thanks Patches I never woulda seen that Space Odity solo..

Fuck I was having technical difficulties during that last Belew number, what song was it?

Hopefully this whole thing winds up on youtube

I have trouble streaming these on my computer. Yoo much buffering, But they play really good on my tablet. I doubt it will be allowed on youtube.

Def Leopard guy doing Suffergate City..

Anybody got any kind of a set list so far?

To remove the comments swipe right..

That Afraid of Americans was straight kareoke

Damn good young american though

Yo Adrian!!!!

Adrian killing it on Fashion, now Golden Years!!..

Couple botched lyrics but D'angelo is really delivering on those moonage daydream vocals

The stream went off but back, i think Sting didn't allow streaming.The Guy from Spandau Ballet doing
"Lets Dance"

Yesterdays set list and review, may be same.

Set list:
Piano medley — Mike Garson
Rebel Rebel — Bernard Fowler
Lady Grinning Soul — Holly Palmer
Sorrow — Donovan Leitch and Joe Sumner
Five Years — Gaby Moreno
The Man Who Sold the World — Jeremy Little
Changes — Mr Hudson
Life on Mars? — Sumner
Sound and Vision — Adrian Belew
Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide — Moreno
Where Are We Now? — Palmer
Starman — Mr Hudson
Space Oddity — Gail Ann Dorsey
DJ/Boys Keep Swinging — Belew
The Jean Genie — Fowler
Suffragette City — Joe Elliott
I’m Afraid of Americans — Gavin Rossdale
Wild is the Wind — Moreno
Ashes to Ashes — Angelo Moore
Young Americans — Dorsey
Win — Fowler
Diamond Dogs — Fowler
Fame — Belew
Fashion — Alex Painter
Golden Years — Perry Farrell
Aladdin Sane (1913-1938-197?) — Dorsey
Stay — Fowler
Moonage Daydream — Moore
Blackstar — Sting
China Girl
Ziggy Stardust — Brett Hool
Heroes — Fowler

Encore:
Dead Man Walking — Dorsey
Lazarus — Sting
All the Young Dudes — Elliott
Under Pressure — Palmer and Sumner

 

ngeles. 

At Tuesday night’s "Celebrating David Bowie" show at the Wiltern in Los Angeles, where the massive band was comprised largely of alumni of Bowie’s touring units, the players were the stars. Up to a point, anyway -- that point being the five-pointed Blackstar, one of two songs from Bowie’s swan song sung by Sting, who helped turn the evening from a very efficient tribute concert into something more spellbinding and incantatory.

Sting also returned during the encore portion of the 3-hour, 25-minute show to perform “Lazarus,” marking a pause in the otherwise celebratory proceedings for a spooky detour into borderline-channeling, given the “Look up here, I’m in heaven” lyrics of the final single Bowie released during his lifetime. The song’s proximity to the grave demands more than a little gravitas, with Sting clearly well suited for the solemnity of delivering a message in a bottle from the afterworld.

Perry Farrell, Bush’s Gavin Rossdale and Def Leppard’s Joe Elliott also turned up as the celebrity lead vocalists on this stop for a very limited five-city international mini-tour. But for Bowie die-hards, the main appeal was experiencing one degree of musical separation from the master, thanks to a massive, rotating group of players led by host Mike Garson, a pianist who started with Bowie on the Ziggy Stardust tour and played and recorded with him on and off through the 2000s. Other familiar figures in Bowie-dom included guitarists Adrian Belew and Earl Slick and bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, bigger draws for liner-note buffs than some of the singers who fronted them early in the evening.

 

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This was the second time in less than a year that a Bowie tribute band led by actual Bowie collaborators breezed through the Wiltern. The previous one, last spring, was Holy Holy, formed by producer/bassist Tony Visconti and Spiders From Mars drummer Woody Woodmansey, with Heaven 17’s former singer, Glenn Gregory, as frontman. Watching one of that band’s shows, it quickly became clear how difficult it is for any singer to cover Bowie in any remotely interesting or rewarding way for more than a couple of minutes. Getting any white guy to step into the shoes of the Thin White Duke is a losing gambit, so why not go for someone who embodies the things Bowie often seemed to wish he could -- i.e., a female and/or soul singer?

“Celebrating David Bowie” went a long way toward realizing the wisdom of casting women and singers of color, not just coloratura, in that role -- although the show had its own array of wan white guys. (No offense to the likes of Farrell, Elliott, Rossdale, Mr Hudson and Joe Sumner, who were fine, if hardly electrifying, as surrogates.) Among the rotating cast of singers, not altogether surprisingly, the three with arguably the greatest presence were Dorsey, Bernard Fowler and Angelo Moore. In two different sets of full makeup, Moore -- who cheekily introduced himself as “N---a Stardust” -- was a particularly wiry and riveting revelation, for those of us who haven’t thought about his band, Fishbone, for a minute.

Dorsey, who played bass as well as sang with Bowie in his later touring years, did “Young Americans” with a 16-piece choir, but had her real standout moment with a more balladic “Aladdin Sane,” leading into Garson re-creating one of rock’s most memorable free-jazz '70s piano solos with even more Gershwin-goes-discordant flair.

 

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Fowler, best known as The Rolling Stones’ longtime backup singer, finally got to be Mick Jagger for a night. This was most apparent on “Diamond Dogs,” with Earl Slick playing Keith to his Mick, as it suddenly became glaringly apparent that this was Bowie’s attempt in ’74 to do a Stones song, and winding up with something that sounded like a very good It’s Only Rock 'n' Roll outtake.

It’s hard to think of two guitarists with more distinctly different styles than Belew and Slick -- both of whom had their moments emulating the style of a third distinctive guitarist, the late Mick Ronson -- so buffs had great fun seeing their worlds collide at the Wiltern, even if they only appeared to end up playing together on the climactic “Heroes.” Belew’s standout moment came when he got to re-create his nutso playing on “DJ” and “Boys Keep Swinging,” combined into a medley (which he also sang, managing to sound a bit like Bowie, with the help of a mountain of vocal reverb). Slick’s was on one of Bowie’s most underrated singles, “Stay,” surrounding Fowler’s vocal with extended soloing just as he did on tour in the mid-'70s.

As reserved as Sting was in singing the Blackstar material, that’s how bouncy Rossdale was in putting across “I’m Afraid of Americans,” a disturbed '90s rocker that may feel more apt now than when Bowie recorded it. Elliott, who also appeared at the London opening for “Celebrating David Bowie,” prefaced “Suffragette City” with the memory that it was one of the first songs Def Leppard ever played together.

You can’t help but want at least a bit of real star power in the service of the Starman, and Sting brought it not with a re-enactment of something from the eternal songbook, but honoring Bowie’s memory eternal by invoking him at his last -- and still best. (The morning after the show, it was announced that Blackstar topped this year’s Village Voice critics’ poll, giving it an honor that the Grammys unfortunately skimped on.) Even in as un-intimate and un-occult a setting as a crowded stage with dozens of musicians and singers and an eight-piece string section, it felt like the creator of Ten Summoner’s Tales was doing actual summoning.

“Celebrating David Bowie” plays again at the Wiltern on Wednesday night, minus Sting; Garson has promised to live-stream the show on his Facebook page. From there, most of the cast moves on to shows in Sydney on Sunday and Tokyo on Feb. 2.

Thanks!

Patches.

Hello,this is my first post on Viva.The reason I am posting is to give you a big THANK YOU for all the stream info that you provide to all of us.This provides me and my friends with many hours of enjoyment.

Paul

Watching this on YouTube now. Great music performed by great artists.

Celebrating David Bowie - Los Angeles, 25th January 2017 (Webcast)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9Av8me-iA0

^Thanks!

yes Audio is low volume, so crank it up! Adrian was killing it...as were they all.

Yay, now I can catch all the Adrian I missed!

O-Tay!  Not sure how much I'll get to watch. But it should kill half a shift, audio-wise.

 

(30 seconds later) Just glanced at workflow, and there really isn't anysmiley.

 

Gracias para el linko!

Lost the stream after Dead Man Walking the other night. Nice to catch the end.

 

Overall, the webcast was decent, albeit the low volume. The performances were great, with Gaby Moreno really shining on 'Five Years', 'R&R Suicide', and 'Wild is the Wind'

Nice work in the SRV slot by Slick and Smith.

bump so I can find the setlist

 

Set list with players here::

1. Mike Garson Intro

2. Rebel Rebel – Bernard Fowler

3. Lady Grinning Soul – Holly Palmer

4. Sorrow – Joe Sumner & Donovan Leitch

5. Five Years – Gaby Moreno

6. The Man Who Sold The World – Jeremy Little

7. Changes – Mr. Hudson

8. Life On Mars – Joe Sumner

9. Sound And Vision – Adrian Belew

10. Rock and Roll Suicide – Ian Astbury

11. Where Are We Now – Holly Palmer

12. Starman – Mr. Hudson

13. Space Oddity – GAD

14. DJ/Boys – Adrian Belew

15. Jean Genie – Bernard Fowler

16. Sufragette City – Joe Elliot

17. I'm Afraid Of Americans – Gavin Rossdale

18. Wild Is The Wind – Gaby Moreno

19. Ashes To Ashes – Angelo Moore

20. Young Americans – GAD

21. Win – Bernard Fowler

22. Diamond Dogs – Bernard Fowler

23. Fame – Adrian Belew

24. Fashion – Alex Painter

25.Golden Years – Bernard Fowler

26. Aladdin Sane – GAD

27. Stay – Tony Hadley

28. Moonage Daydream – Angelo Moore

29. Blackstar – Sting [not streamed]

30. China Girl – Corey Taylor

31. Ziggy Stardust – Brett Hool

32. Heroes – Bernard Fowler

33. Dead Man Walking – GAD

34. Lazarus – Sting [not streamed]

35. All The Young Dudes – Joe Elliot

36. Under Pressure – Holly Palmer & Joe Sumner

 

Perry Farrell, Bush’s Gavin Rossdale and Def Leppard’s Joe Elliott also turned up as the celebrity lead vocalists on this stop for a very limited five-city international mini-tour. But for Bowie die-hards, the main appeal was experiencing one degree of musical separation from the master, thanks to a massive, rotating group of players led by host Mike Garson, a pianist who started with Bowie on the Ziggy Stardust tour and played and recorded with him on and off through the 2000s. Other familiar figures in Bowie-dom included guitarists Adrian Belew and Earl Slick and bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, bigger draws for liner-note buffs than some of the singers who fronted them early in the evening.

>>>Other familiar figures in Bowie-dom included guitarists Adrian Belew and Earl Slick and bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, bigger draws for liner-note buffs than some of the singers who fronted them early in the evening.

 

amen, I'd b all in favor of Garson, belew and Dorsey putting a smaller ensemble together and doing a more extensive tour. 

Hell, play even smaller venues if they need to.

Original Spiders drummer Woody Woodmansy and producer/bassist Tony Visconti have their own Bowie Tribute, Holy Holy, currently touring the UK, (and have previously played in the US).

 

https://www.facebook.com/holyholybowie/