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The '''Bad Tour''' was a world music tour by [[Michael Jackson]] that started on September 12th, 1987 in Tokyo, Japan and ended on January 27th, 1989 in Los Angeles, United States. The tour consisted of 123 concerts to approximately 4.4 million fans across 4 continents, beaten later by Jackson's [[HIStory World Tour|HIStory Tour]] with 4.5 million. The Bad Tour was Jackson's first as a solo performer. When the tour wrapped in January of 1989, it had grossed over $125 million at the box office, equivalent to over $210 million in 2007. |
The '''Bad Tour''' was a world music tour by [[Michael Jackson]] that started on September 12th, 1987 in Tokyo, Japan and ended on January 27th, 1989 in Los Angeles, United States. The tour consisted of 123 concerts to approximately 4.4 million fans across 4 continents, beaten later by Jackson's [[HIStory World Tour|HIStory Tour]] with 4.5 million. The Bad Tour was Jackson's first as a solo performer. When the tour wrapped in January of 1989, it had grossed over $125 million at the box office, equivalent to over $210 million in 2007. |
Revision as of 23:39, 23 May 2008
Tour by Michael Jackson | |
Start date | September 12 1987 |
---|---|
End date | January 27 1989 |
Legs | 2 |
No. of shows | 123 |
Michael Jackson concert chronology |
The Bad Tour was a world music tour by Michael Jackson that started on September 12th, 1987 in Tokyo, Japan and ended on January 27th, 1989 in Los Angeles, United States. The tour consisted of 123 concerts to approximately 4.4 million fans across 4 continents, beaten later by Jackson's HIStory Tour with 4.5 million. The Bad Tour was Jackson's first as a solo performer. When the tour wrapped in January of 1989, it had grossed over $125 million at the box office, equivalent to over $210 million in 2007.
Setlist
First Leg
The first leg set list consisted songs not only from Jackson's solo albums Bad, Thriller and Off The Wall, but songs from the albums Triumph and Destiny by The Jacksons. The last two songs were the only ones from the then recently released Bad album.
- "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
- "Things I Do For You"
- "Off The Wall"
- "Human Nature"
- "Heartbreak Hotel"
- "She's Out Of My Life"
- Jackson 5 Medley - "I Want You Back"/"The Love You Save"/"I'll Be There"
- "Rock With You"
- "Lovely One"
- "Bad Groove" Interlude (solo performance by the band)
- "Working Day And Night"
- "Beat It"
- "Billie Jean"
- "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)"
- "Thriller"
- "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" w/ Sheryl Crow
- "Bad"
Second Leg
Contrary to the first leg, the second consisted of 7 songs from the Bad album, compared to just 2 from the first.
- "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
- "Heartbreak Hotel"
- "Another Part Of Me"
- "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" w/ Sheryl Crow
- "She's Out Of My Life"
- Jackson 5 Medley - "I Want You Back"/"The Love You Save"/"I'll Be There"
- "Rock With You"
- "Human Nature"
- "Smooth Criminal"
- "Dirty Diana"
- "Thriller"
- "Bad Groove" Interlude (solo performance by the band)
- "Working Day and Night"
- "Beat It"
- "Billie Jean"
- "Bad"
- "The Way You Make Me Feel"
- "Man In The Mirror"
Tour Dates
No. | Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance per concert |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Leg | |||||
Japan | |||||
1-3 | September 12th-14th | Tokyo | Japan | Korakuen Stadium | 45,000 |
4-6 | September 19th-21st | Osaka | Japan | Hankyu Nishinomiya Stadium | 48,000 |
7-11 | September 25th-27th, October 3rd-4th | Yokohama | Japan | Yokohama Stadium | 38,000 |
12-14 | October 10th-12th | Osaka | Japan | Osaka Stadium | 32,000 |
Australia | |||||
15 | November 13th | Melbourne | Australia | Olympic Park Stadium | 45,000 |
16-17 | November 20th-21st | Sydney | Australia | Parramatta Stadium | 45,000 |
18-19 | November 25th, 28th | Brisbane | Australia | Entertainment Centre | 13,500 |
2nd Leg | |||||
North America | |||||
20-21 | February 23rd-24th, 1988 | Kansas City, Missouri | United States | Kemper Arena | 16,960 |
22-24 | March 3rd-5th | New York City, New York | United States | Madison Square Garden | 19,000 |
25-26 | March 12th-13th | St. Louis, Missouri | United States | St. Louis Arena | 18,000 |
27-28 | March 18th-19th | Indianapolis, Indiana | United States | Market Square Arena | 17,000 |
29 | March 20th | Louisville, Kentucky | United States | Freedom Hall | 19,000 |
30-31 | March 23rd-24th | Denver, Colorado | United States | McNichols Sports Arena | 20,125 |
32-34 | April 30th, March 1st | Hartford, Connecticut | United States | Hartford Civic Center | 15,060 |
35-37 | April 8th-10th | Houston, Texas | United States | The Summit | 17,000 |
38-40 | April 13th-15th | Atlanta, Georgia | United States | The Omni | 17,000 |
41-43 | April 19th-21st | Chicago, Illinois | United States | Rosemont Horizon | 20,000 |
44-46 | April 25th-27th | Dallas, Texas | United States | Reunion Arena | 19,000 |
47-49 | May 4th-6th | Minneapolis, Minnesota | United States | Met Center | 16,890 |
Europe | |||||
50-51 | May 23rd-24th, 1988 | Rome | Italy | Olympic Stadium | 70,000 |
52 | May 29th | Turin | Italy | Stadio Comunale di Torino | 53,600 |
The organised concert in Lyon, France on 30th May was cancelled after only half of the 30,000 tickets were sold. | |||||
53 | June 2nd | Vienna | Austria | Prater Stadium | 55,000 |
54-56 | June 5th-7th | Rotterdam | Holland | Feijenoord Stadium | 48,400 |
57-58 | June 11th-12th | Gothenburg | Sweden | Eriksbergs Shipyard | 53,000 |
59 | June 16th | Basel | Switzerland | St. Jakob Park Stadium | 50,000 |
60 | June 19th | West Berlin | Germany | Platz der Republik (The Reichstag/Berlin Wall) | 50,000 |
61-62 | June 27th-28th | Paris | France | Parc des Princes | 64,000 |
63 | July 1st | Hamburg | Germany | (Volkspark Stadium) | 50,000 |
64 | July 3rd | Cologne | Germany | Mungersdorfer Stadium | 70,000 |
65 | July 8th | Munich | Germany | Olympic Stadium | 72,000 |
66 | July 10th | Cologne | Germany | Mungersdorfer Stadium | 70,000 |
67-71 | July 14th-16th, 22nd-23rd, | London | England | Wembley Stadium | 72,000 |
72 | July 26th | Cardiff | Wales | Cardiff Arms Park | 55,000 |
73-74 | July 30th-31st | Cork | Ireland | Páirc Uí Chaoimh | 60,000 |
75 | August 5th | Marbella | Spain | Football Municipal Stadium | 28,000 |
76 | August 7th | Madrid | Spain | Vicente Calderón Stadium | 60,000 |
77 | August 9th | Barcelona | Spain | Nou Camp Stadium | 90,000 |
78 | August 11th | Nice | France | Charles Ehrmann Stadium | 35,000 |
79 | August 14th | Montpellier | France | Stade Richter | 35,000 |
80 | August 19th | Lausanne | Switzerland | Pontaise Stadium | 45,000 |
81 | August 21st | Wurzburg | Germany | Talavera Wiesen | 43,000 |
82 | August 23rd | Werchter | Belgium | Festival Ground | 55,000 |
83-84 | August 26th-27th | London | England | Wembley Stadium | 72,000 |
85 | August 29th | Leeds | England | Roundhay Park | 90,000 |
86 | September 2nd | Hannover | Germany | Niedersachsen Stadium | 40,000 |
87 | September 4th | Gelsenkirchen | Germany | Park Stadium | 52,000 |
88 | September 6th | Linz | Austria | Linz Stadium | 40,000 |
89 | September 10th | Milton Keynes | England | The Bowl | 60,000 |
90 | September 11th | Liverpool | England | Aintree Racecourse | 125,000 |
North America | |||||
91-93 | September 26th-28th, 1988 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | United States | Civic Arena | 16,230 |
94-96 | October 3rd-5th | New York / East Rutherford, New Jersey | United States | Meadowlands Arena | 20,350 |
97-98 | October 10th-11th | Cleveland, Ohio | United States | The Coliseum | 19,000 |
99-102 | October 13th, 17th-19th | Washington DC / Landover | United States | Capital Centre | 17,470 |
103-105 | October 24th-26th | Detroit, Michigan | United States | Palace of Auburn Hills | 16,670 |
The 3 organised concerts at The Tacoma Dome in Seattle, Washington from 30th October to 2nd November were cancelled when Michael's vocal cords became swollen. These concerts, which were sold out, were not rescheduled. | |||||
106-108 | November 7th-9th | Las Angeles / Irvine, California | United States | Irvine Meadows Amphitheater | 15,000 |
109 | November 13th | Los Angeles, California | United States | Sports Arena | 18,000 |
Following the first Los Angeles concert, the remaining concerts from 14th-15th and 20th-22nd November was cancelled due to Michael's illness. These concerts were rescheduled for January, 1989. | |||||
Japan | |||||
110-118 | December 9th-11th, 17th-19th, 24th-26th, 1988 | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | 45,000 |
North America | |||||
119-123 | January 16th-18th, 26th-27th, 1989 | Los Angeles, California | United States | Sports Arena | 18,000 |
MTV Specials
During the 1988 leg of the tour, MTV had gained access to film backstage interviews and concert performances. As part of a Michael Jackson Weekend Special on MTV in 1988, two programmes on the tour, "Another Part of Me" and "From Motown To Your Town" were broadcast. Each are a 20 minute program, capturing the huge media and public interest, and includes exclusive interviews and concert performances from the tour including the concerts held in Australia and Barcelona.
A 50-minute documentary was broadcast on NBC in the United States, as part of its Friday Night Videos show in 1988. Called "Michael Jackson: Around The World", it follows Michael's concerts from country to country, including Japan, Australia and China during the first leg, and England, Germany, and Sweden during the second. The original NBC version was presented by Ahmad and Phylicia Ayers-Allen. The documentary was then broadcast on MTV.
Official DVD Release
In August 2005, an on-line petition was created to support an official release of a Bad Tour concert in 1988. Although the target was 10,000 signatures, the petition continues to grow even to this day, with a total of more than 13,050.
Trivia
First Leg
- A granddaughter of Emperor Hirohito attended the first concert in Tokyo, 1987.
- Michael had performed a record breaking 14 sold-out concerts in three cities in Japan - Tokyo, Osaka and Yokohama. Of these 14 concerts, 3 of them were held at the Korakuen Stadium in Tokyo. It was later named the Tokyo Dome in 1988 by the time Jackson performed 9 more sold-out concerts there in December 1988 during the second leg.
- It was reported that Jackson received $4.5 million for each of the 14 concerts in Japan. It was also reported that during the United Kingdom tour in 1988, Jackson earned £16 million, an equivalent of £700,000 per hour.
- The concert in Yokohama, Japan at the Yokohama Stadium was filmed by Nippon TV and later televised in Asia.
- During the concert in Sydney, Australia on November 20th, Stevie Wonder made a surprise appearance on stage to perform "Just Good Friends" with Jackson that appeared on the Bad album. Wonder was also touring at the same time as Michael. This was the only live performance of the song to date (as of December 2007), because the duet part required Stevie Wonder for a performance to work.
Second Leg
- Two weeks before the second leg began in Kansas City, Michael and his band rehearsed in Pensacola, Florida.
- During the second leg, Jackson used his own specially constructed stage, that required several lorries and air planes to transport the equipment. Once fully set up, Jackson would be surrounded by 700 lights, 100 speakers, 3 lasers and 40 mirrors. During the first leg however, Michael used the venue's own stage, hence the much smaller stage space.
- On March 3rd, 1988 Jackson performed a private concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City. All the proceeds were donated to the United Negro College Fund. Tickets for the show could not be purchased at regular ticket box offices, as a special lottery system determined who was to receive them. It was also during the private concert whereby Siedah Garrett made a special appearance. During the performance of The Way You Make Me Feel, Tatiana Thumbtzen made a special appearance (who appeared in Jackson's music video for the same song) and also kissed him on stage.
- The concert at Gothenburg, Sweden was scheduled to be held at the Ullevi Stadium, but it was under repair. Instead, the concert was held at the Eriksbergs Shipyard.
- Michael wore two different shirts for the tour. In the first leg, he wore a silver shirt with a bolted strap from around the shirt collar to the waist. By the second leg of the tour he had altered his outfit by adding a zipper to his shirt, and omitting the bolted strap. Instead, the arms of his shirt were covered from the shoulder down with multiple black straps (normally eleven on the right arm, four on the left arm but this varied). Jackson started wearing the zipper at the concert in New York and wore the zipper in later concerts throughout the second leg (with the exception of Kansas City, the first two shows of the second leg).
- On June 16th, 1988 Jackson performed a sold out in Basel, Switzerland. Various celebrities were in attendance, including Elizabeth Taylor and Bob Dylan. While in Basel, Michael met with Mrs. Oona Chaplin, the widow of one of Michael's all time heroes, Charlie Chaplin.
- On the July 16th, 1988 concert at Wembley Stadium, Jackson performed with Princess Diana and Prince Charles in attendance. Prior to the concert Michael had met them both, and Diana told Jackson that her favorite song was in fact Dirty Diana. However in respect for the princess, Jackson took out the song from the concert's set list.
- On August 29th, 1988 Jackson performed in Leeds, England in front of 90,000 fans on his 30th birthday. The fans sang Happy Birthday to Jackson before the performance of Another Part Of Me.
- On September 8th, 1988 Jackson received a special award by London's Wembley Stadium Management for setting a new attendance record, which was entered into the Guinness Book of World Records. Jackson performed 7 sell-out concerts (5 in a row, 2 at a later date) that were attended by a total of 504,000 people at the venue. This record had beaten the previous held by Genesis, with 3. Until the demolition of the now old Wembley Stadium, this record had not been beaten since.
- The concert at Aintree Racecourse on 11th September, 1988 is the single largest attended concert that Jackson has performed in front of, with a total of 125,000 attending.
- Contrary to popular belief, Jackson did not perform 'the lean' whilst performing Smooth Criminal. In a magazine edition titled "Moonwalk with Michael: A Step By Step Dance Guide", it informs the reader how Michael 'leaned' on the Bad Tour - to "lean over as far as you can without toppling over, keeping your body straight. Come back up and walk forwards very slowly moving your arms and legs up and down like a robot".
- Michael earned $63 million for 14 concerts played in Japan in 1987, and £16 million for 12 concerts played in the UK in 1988. This is equivalent to $176 million today - from just 26 concerts, and it's uncertain how much Jackson earned from the additional 97 concerts performed for this tour.
Performers
Lead performer
- Michael Jackson: Lead Singer, Dancer, Musical Director
Bandmembers
- Keyboards, Musical Director: Greg Phillinganes
- Drums: Ricky Lawson
- Bass Guitar: Don Boylette
- Lead Guitar: Jennifer Batten
- Percussion: Ricky Lawson
- Keyboards: Chris Currell
- Rhythm Guitar: Jon Clark
- Vocals: Sheryl Crow, Kevin Dorsey, Dorian Holley, Darryl Phinnessee
Dancers
- Randy Allaire
- Eddie Garcia
- Dominic Lucero
- LaVelle Smith
Credits
- Executive director: Michael Jackson
- Assistant director: Jolie Levine
- Choreographed by: Michael Jackson
- Assistant Choreography & Staging by: Vincent Paterson
- Set Designed by: Tom McPhilips
- Lighting Designer: Allen Branton
- Director of Security: Bill Bray
- Hair & Make-up: Karen Faye
- Personal Management by: Frank Dileo