The recording
Bowie performed at the Tower Theatre in Philadelphia for six consecutive nights from 8-13 July 1974, a month before the first Young American sessions. The recordings for David Live were made on all but the final night. They were recorded by Keith Harwood, who had previously worked with Bowie on Diamond Dogs.In the summer David recorded his shows at the Philadelphia Tower Theater; I was not able to attend. It was reported at the time that my car broke down travelling from New York, but I don’t recall that ever happening. David just took it upon himself to record the show for posterity, and then liked what he heard and decided to mix it into his first live album. There was one problem with this idea in that it was recorded very poorly, not that the performances were anything less than excellent on most of the songs.
Bowie, Bolan And The Brooklyn Boy
The original release claimed that “This live album was culled from performances on the 14th and 15th July 1974 at the Tower Theatre, Philadelphia.” This was incorrect – Bowie was performing in Connecticut on the 14th, and there was no show on the 15th. The claim was corrected in later reissues.
The live recordings almost never happened, however. Defries failed to tell the musicians that their performances were to be recorded. When bass guitarist Herbie Flowers saw the additional on-stage microphones he realised what was planned and told the other musicians. A threatened strike was only averted after Defries grudgingly agreed to pay an increased rate of $5,000 per musician; the cheques later bounced.
Bowie was furious during the exchange, reportedly kicking a chair and shouting at Flowers: “I’ve bloody well got to go on in ten minutes. I don’t need this shit!” Nonetheless, the show went on, with just a 30-minute delay, and may even have benefited from the backstage tension.
I can claim to be a genius for setting up the tension before we did the show, because when we went on stage, the feeling of liberation in the band was glorious.
Bowie, Jerry Hopkins
The elaborate staging of the Diamond Dogs Tour included a performance of ‘Space Oddity’ in which Bowie was suspended above the audience in a cherry picker, singing into a microphone disguised as a telephone. The song was not included on the initial release of David Live, but was included on later versions.
Recording it live, David had to have eight microphones all around the set because he’d be singing ‘Ground Control to Major Tom’ on top of this cherry picker seat. He’d be about six rows out over the audience and he’d be singing into a telephone handpiece. That was the microphone that recorded his vocal on that.
Changes: The David Bowie Story, BBC Radio 1, May 1976
Mixing and overdubbing
RCA wished to release Bowie’s live album in time for the second leg of the Diamond Dogs Tour, and Tony Visconti was flown to New York to work on the recordings. At this stage the album had the working title Wham Bam! Thank You Mam!.
Visconti soon discovered that the music lacked depth and clarity, and at times some of the musicians’ parts were inaudible. Geoff MacCormack (Warren Peace) and Gui Andrisano re-recorded their backing vocals. Some saxophone parts were also redone, as was Mike Garson’s piano solo on ‘Aladdin Sane’.
David Live was mixed by Bowie and Visconti at Electric Lady Studios. They were met by the in-house engineer, Eddie Kramer, who insisted he should man the mixing desk.
Since the console and the studio were alien to me, I felt Kramer should play an active role.First we had to fix a few backing vocals and the backing singers were brought in to re-sing their parts; poor stage monitoring was the cause of this as the singers had a great deal of difficulty hearing themselves and the other performers. This took a day. Kramer proceeded to engineer the mixes the next day. This was a tough album to mix and Kramer’s habit of throwing back his head as he ‘played’ the mixing console like a concert pianist was a little overdone. The ’70s was a crazy decade, and ‘Cocaine is a hell of a drug’, as funkmaster Rick James said.
One day during the mixing of David Live, David and I stood side by side at urinals having a pee. The men’s room was crowded with a Latin American band recording in the next studio, taking a break. They were a really friendly bunch of guys, and recognized David instantly. As we were peeing two band members held a spoon of cocaine under our noses and insisted that we each have a toot before we finished peeing. Very decadent… very ’70s.
Bowie, Bolan And The Brooklyn Boy
What is the sound Bowie is making in in intro to 1984? And what was he doing at the time?
What sound are you talking about? The first Bowie sound is him singing “heeeeyyyy”, after the bass first kicks in. If, on the other hand, you are referring to the barely audible, guttural, sort of yelping sound in the beginning when the electronic synth/flute is playing – I had always assumed that was Geoffrey MacCormack, as the tone of voice sounds like him. And I have absolutely no idea what he was doing…maybe Diamond Dog sounds?
I always thought that jelly sound was because he was singing inside a Perspex egg and after the first verse it opened to reveal him.
He’d on the reflective box for Big Brother, he’d be lowered during Chant, and it would to reveal him in a sequined-hand for Time.
I think I can provide some insight to your question. I saw the Diamond Dogs show in June 1974 (about a month before David Live was recorded) at the Syria Mosque in Pittsburgh. It was my first concert — age 14 and done up in the best glam look I could muster at the time. I’ll never forget the thrill of seeing live and in the flesh the beautifully strange creature that had graced the album covers that had so fascinated me, not to mention the sheer theatrical spectacle of the show.
The opening sounds you’re referring to are dog yelps uttered, I believe, by Warren Peace and Guy Dellasandro, Bowie’s backup singers. They were heard after the house lights had dimmed and the theater was in complete darkness. Then, during the opening to 1984, Warren and Guy wandered around the stage in the dark aiming flashlights onto the set and into the audience as a sort of excitement builder. When Bowie starts singing 1984, he was not visible on stage. He sang the first verse and first chorus in the dark with just the flashlights beaming around. If you listen to 1984 on David Live, after the first chorus, at 01:08, you’ll hear the audience cheer – that’s when the spotlight came on and revealed David center stage, dressed in a blue sweater, baggy grey high-waisted “zoot suit” slacks, pocket watch chain, red suspenders and ballet slippers. (Inspired by the Gouster look.) I was shocked that he didn’t have the signature hair style he had sported on Aladdin Sane, Pin Ups and Diamond Dogs – the now classic mullet, but his hair was still the same carrot red and blazed like a fire in the spotlight.
My favorite set piece was the bridge with lighted lamp posts that descended to the stage with Bowie, wrapped in a trench coat, on board singing Sweet Thing/Candidate. Mechanized concert stages are almost de rigueur now, but such a thing was WAY ahead of its time in 1974. I can recall thinking at the time “the music doesn’t sound the same as the album tracks.” This was partly due to the loser, live sound, to which I was not accustomed as this was my first concert, but more so to how Bowie and Michael Kamen had given the songs different arrangements.
I saw Bowie again a few months later (Nov ’74) on the Philly Dogs portion of the tour (at a larger arena in Pittsburgh but without the sets), as well as on the ISOLAR/Station to Station tour in ’76, the Serious Moonlight tour in ’83, and lastly on the same bill with Moby on the Area 2 tour in ’02. Sound wise, the band was never tighter than on the Station to Station tour (shout out to Carlos Alomar, Dennis Davis and George Murray!), but nothing will ever beat or be as memorable to me as that 1974 Diamond Dogs show! So glad I had an older brother who said, “Wanna go see David Bowie?” (The ticket cost $7.50!)
The photo on the front cover is reversed isn’t it? It sort of always bothered me but I have never checked before.
Just to clarify, I mean the negative of the shot has been turned over.
Yes and that was “corrected” on TV’s remastered release.
i suspect the first verse of 1984 might be overdubbed or at least the first part of it. it has a studio sound to it, unlike the other verses.
I always loved this album. From the day I heard it at a friend’s house about a week after it was released. I’ve attended so many concerts over the years but this is one of the ones I wish I would have been old enough to go to. In 74 I was 13 and no where near Philly. Anyhow, I miss the days when performers didn’t always replicate recorded version when doing a song live. So many interesting arrangements on this album. Version Rock n Roll Suicide is fantastic.
Sitting here, 2021, listening to this on original vinyl, I might be alone in this but I consider it a fantastic live album. The sonics are a bit odd, and off center on some tracks, but what a show…what a document, what a performance. The songs are raw, stripped of synths and too many layers of effects which killed so many later recordings. David is live here. Great album.
I agree, I think this album has gotten a bad rep. Perfect, it’s not. But if you weren’t old enough or otherwise able to see a show on that tour, it provides an extraordinary visceral experience, especially when played loud. And what a setlist!
– Scratched Vinyl, Barrington
Despite the various criticisms I’ve read over time about “David Live” it is my favorite album from Mr. Bowie. I was 17 when it was released and going through hell. Without trying to sound overly dramatic, his music quite literally kept me going during many very difficult times. “David Live” was my life-preserver. As a result, it remains closest to my heart. That’s very difficult to say – “closest” – when there’s also the “Ziggy” album in the mix, but it is closest. If I could listen to only one song for the rest of my life, it would be the full, three-part version of “Sweet Thing” from “David Live.” The lyrics, regardless of the recording, have always thrilled me. Then, the live version with the dueling saxophone of David Sanborn and guitar of Earl Slick – well, for me there’s nothing like it. Having said that, I feel I’m betraying Mick Ronson. I loved his music with Mr. Bowie and his solo work as well. Thank you.
This has to be one of the most overly criticised albums ever? When I look on Wiki, the press at the time, apparently ‘savaged’ the album? This is un-fathomable to me.
The ‘treatment’ given to these songs by the musicians… (just look at the credits)…. these musicians are absolute ‘monsters’ of their own genre’s…. To have all that, moulded into the Bowie songs?… OMG…. and this happened again and again with Frampton, SRV…. all the ‘monster’ players (of different instruments)…. that to me… is acknowledgement… that if these guys wanted to play on his songs…. then…. step back!!!
Besides the fact that it is a ‘live’ recording…. and in ‘those days’… they simply didn’t have the technology to put that on vinyl, in such a way… to hear it how we hear it today…. Earl Slick rips the guts out of his solos… the piano parts are sublime… the ending of Aladdin Sane… is absolutely insane… the percussion parts… the drum fills… the singing… the songs… apart from the recording… I’d hold this album up as one of the all-time greats of ‘versions’ of his songs… ever….. words don’t do it justice…. Back in the day…. I used to listen to this album, song by song, as a ‘live’ album…
My family had flown back to New York (I was raised there and my parents grew up there. We moved to Seattle in 1972) for Christmas 1974. We were visiting friends of my parents when I discovered one of their teenagers had this album, wh. I’d never heard of. I was FRANTIC to listen to it but the stereo was in the living room where all the adults were gathered! I can still remember the angst I was feeling – so close yet so far!
I know it’s David’s bête noire but this album is absolutely brilliant. Sorry to disagree there, Zigs.