Diary of a Madman Tour

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Diary of a Madman Tour
Promotional tour by Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy Osbourne 1982.jpg
Osbourne onstage during the Diary of a Madman Tour, 1982
Associated albumDiary of a Madman
Start dateNovember 5, 1981 (1981-11-05)
End dateAugust 8, 1982 (1982-08-08)
Legs1 in Europe
2 in North America
1 in Asia
4 total
No. of shows123
Ozzy Osbourne concert chronology

The Diary of a Madman Tour was the second concert tour by English heavy metal vocalist Ozzy Osbourne. It was undertaken in support of Osbourne's second album Diary of a Madman and covered Europe, North America, and Asia. This was Rhoads's last tour as he died in a plane crash at a small airport in Leesburg, Florida, on March 19, 1982, during the first leg of the tour. The band took a two-week break after his death. Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne restarted the tour with ex-Gillan guitarist Bernie Tormé, who only performed a couple of shows before being replaced by future Night Ranger guitarist, Brad Gillis.

Overview[]

Background[]

After the Blizzard of Ozz Tour, the band took a one-month break before going to Europe to start the tour supporting the upcoming album, Diary of a Madman, scheduled for worldwide release on November 7, 1981. Osbourne, Rhoads, Rudy Sarzo, Tommy Aldridge, and Lindsay Bridgwater reconvened at Shepperton Studios in England, where they would spend the next two weeks rehearsing.

European leg[]

On November 4, 1981, the band arrived in Hamburg, Germany to start the tour, opening up for Saxon in Europe. The band's first show was at Ernst-Merck-Halle in front of a sold-out crowd. On November 7, Diary of a Madman was released worldwide and "Flying High Again", "Over the Mountain", "You Can't Kill Rock and Roll" and "Diary of a Madman" were released as singles. On November 13, after the band's performance at Upper Swabia Hall in Ravensburg, Sharon called off the rest of the European leg because of Osbourne's mental health issues resulting from his marriage to Thelma Osbourne having fallen apart. Sharon took Osbourne back to England and checked him into a mental health clinic while the rest of the band went on excursions through Germany and France before returning to England.

On November 22, the rest of the band reconvened at Shepperton Studios to begin pre-production rehearsals for the United Kingdom dates while Osbourne was in hospital. The band rehearsed songs from Blizzard of Ozz, and the three Black Sabbath songs they had already been performing, "Over the Mountain," "Flying High Again" and "Believer" from Diary of a Madman. On November 29, with opening act Girl, the band performed at Colston Hall in Bristol. On December 2, the band performed its last show of the leg at the Royal Court Theatre in Liverpool. The rest of the European leg was canceled because of Osbourne's depression.

North American leg (December 1981–March 19, 1982)[]

After returning to Los Angeles on December 5, the band took a break for a couple of weeks and then began pre-production rehearsals. Lindsay Bridgwater departed at this time and Don Airey, former keyboardist of Rainbow was hired. In December, Entertainment Tonight taped some video footage of the band's rehearsals for a segment on the new show. On December 30, the band performed at the Cow Palace in Daly City, California. Rhoads received the Best New Talent Award from Guitar Player.[1] The band returned to Los Angeles for their last show at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. English hard rock and heavy metal band UFO and Starfighters were added to the bill as the opening bands. On January 7, the band played at Tingley Coliseum in Albuquerque. The local news filmed the first part of the show where the band performed "Over the Mountain" and "Mr. Crowley".

On January 20, at the Des Moines Veterans Memorial Auditorium a fan threw a dead bat, (stolen from the science department of Lincoln, a local high school), onto the stage. Osbourne, believing it to be a toy, took the bat, held out its wings and bit it on a wing then threw it back into the audience. This resulted in him being checked into Des Moines General Hospital to receive rabies shots after the show. On January 24 at Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Illinois, Osbourne lifted Rhoads up by his right leg during "Mr. Crowley". A professional photographer captured the moment and the image was used as the cover art for the live album, Tribute. As the band played "Over the Mountain" at the Assembly Hall on their January 26 show, Osbourne collapsed during the middle of the song, and was pulled off stage by Sharon Osbourne and the rest of stage crew, while the band finished instrumentally. He was rushed to the hospital and the remainder of the show was cancelled. Osbourne was given two days to rest and heal from his illness caused by the rabies shots. The band went on to Chicago.

Before the band's performance at Civic Arena on February 2, Rhoads did a guitar seminar at the Music City Record Store in Greensburg, Pennsylvania. On February 11, after playing at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, tensions between Osbourne and Rhoads grew as Rhoads did not want to play on a live record consisting of Black Sabbath songs as he felt it would be a major step backward in his career. The record company forced Ozzy and Sharon to release the album.[citation needed] The band performed at Fair Park Coliseum in Beaumont, Texas on February 16, where the soundcheck rehearsal that took place earlier that day was captured on video. On February 19, Sharon hid all of Ozzy's clothes so that he could not go out and drink anymore. Ozzy put on Sharon's nightgown, got drunk, urinated on The Alamo and was arrested. He was released hours before the show after Sharon warned the police that the concert promoters were worried that not releasing Osbourne from jail would result in the cancellation of that evening's performance and possibly incite a riot. After Osbourne was released, the band performed at the San Antonio Convention Center Arena. Osbourne became "Public Enemy #1" in Texas and received death threats from parents, religious groups and political activists. On February 20, before that evening's performance at Reunion Arena, Rhoads agreed to play on the live album, one more studio album, and to tour with Osbourne. He would then leave to study classical guitar at the University of California, Los Angeles. The band performed in front of a sold-out crowd at Knoxville Civic Coliseum on March 18.

The band were on the tour bus, which was supposed to be heading to Orlando, Florida, for the Rock Super Bowl at the Tangerine Bowl on March 20, but a mechanical problem forced it into a depot called Flying Baron Estates, outside Leesburg, Florida for repairs. Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne (then Sharon Arden), Rudy Sarzo, and Tommy Aldridge were all asleep on the bus while Randy Rhoads, Don Airey, tour manager Jake Duncan, the band's wardrobe/makeup artist Rachel Youngblood, bus driver Andrew Aycock and his wife Wanda, and the rest of the crew were awake. On the property, there was an airstrip and a hangar full of small airplanes. Aycock, who claimed to be an experienced pilot, took a Beechcraft Bonanza F35 plane out of the hangar and offered to take people up in the air. During one of the flights with Aycock, Rhoads, and Youngblood, the left wing struck the bus causing the plane to crash, instantly killing all three. [2][3] Once the investigation was over on March 21, the band returned to Los Angeles, where they spent the next two weeks trying to recuperate from the tragedy while attempting to find another guitarist.

North American leg (1982)[]

The band, and especially Osbourne, was in a severe state of depression. Ozzy's drug and alcohol addiction and mental state had worsened. On the day of Rhoads's death, Osbourne had said that it was over and that he never wanted to play again. Sharon got Ozzy back on his feet to finish the tour for his fans. Osbourne had said: "You Can't Kill Rock 'N' Roll," when he was interviewed on Late Night with David Letterman a week after Rhoads's death. Rudy Sarzo called his younger brother, future-Hurricane lead-guitarist, Robert and asked him to audition and play the material the same way as Randy; he was hired. Another guitarist showed up to audition, former-Gillan guitarist, Bernie Tormé. He had been hired and given an advance by Sharon's father, Don Arden, and even though his audition did not go smoothly because he was unfamiliar with the material, and his playing style and feel was different from Rhoads, Tormé ended up getting the job instead of Sarzo.

On March 28, the band flew to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania for three days of rehearsals to restart the tour. On April 1, the band restarted the tour at Stabler Arena in Bethlehem. UFO was back as an opening act in Bethlehem, and Magnum was added during the following five-show stint at Philadelphia's Spectrum. After the Philadelphia shows with Tormé, who was eager to start his solo career, Sharon found future-Night Ranger guitarist, Brad Gillis. He did not feel ready to play onstage yet as he needed some time to learn the setlist. Tormé did several more shows with the band until Gillis was ready. On April 13, he played with the band for the first time at Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena in Binghamton, New York. The band finished the tour with Gillis and Tormé left to start his solo career.

After the band's performance at Glens Falls Civic Arena in New York on May 10, Sharon put the tour on hold again as Osbourne's depression, mental illness, and drug and alcohol addiction had grown worse. The rest of the tour's shows were postponed. The band restarted the tour on May 19 at Cape Cod Coliseum in South Yarmouth, Massachusetts with Magnum as the opening band for the East Coast and Midwest shows, and the Canadian band, Santers, opening for the Canadian dates. Axe was the opening band for the West Coast shows. On June 19, the band performed its first laser show at Oakland Arena in California. The band performed at Irvine Meadows on June 25, where the live pro-video footage was used for Speak of the Devil Live, which was broadcast on MTV on Halloween.

On July 4, Ozzy and Sharon got married. From July 9 to 15, the band performed several shows in Japan. Later on August 6, the day before the band's show at the Rock N Roll Super Bowl (1982) at The Cotton Bowl in Dallas where Le Roux was opening and the supporting acts were Loverboy and Foreigner, Osbourne's depression had grown even worse, and not wanting to do more shows, he shaved his head completely. This did not stop Sharon from forcing him to get on stage wearing a wig. Osbourne ripped the wig off his head and threw it into the audience.

Personnel[]


Setlists[]

Europe setlist

"Diary of a Madman" (Intro/Outro) [Audio introduction]

  1. "Over the Mountain"
  2. "Flying High Again"
  3. "Believer"
  4. "Crazy Train"
  5. "Mr. Crowley"
  6. "I Don't Know"
  7. "Revelation Mother Earth"
  8. "Suicide Solution"
  9. Randy Rhoads guitar solo and "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" (Instrumental band jam)
  10. Tommy Aldridge drum solo and "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" (Instrumental band jam) [Reprise]
  11. "Paranoid" (Black Sabbath cover)
  12. "Steal Away the Night" [Encore]
Main setlist

"Diary of a Madman" (Intro/Outro) [Audio Introduction]

  1. "Over the Mountain"
  2. "Mr. Crowley"
  3. "Crazy Train"
  4. "Revelation Mother Earth"
  5. "Steal Away the Night"
  6. "Suicide Solution"
  7. Randy Rhoads/Bernie Tormé/Brad Gillis Guitar Solo and "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" (Instrumental band jam)
  8. Tommy Aldridge drum solo and "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" (Instrumental band jam) [Reprise]
  9. "Goodbye to Romance"
  10. "I Don't Know"
  11. "No Bone Movies"
  12. "Believer"
  13. "Flying High Again"
  14. "Iron Man" (Black Sabbath Song)
  15. "Children of the Grave" (Black Sabbath Song)
  16. "Paranoid" (Black Sabbath Song) [Encore]


Tour dates[]

Crossed out shows indicate that tour date was cancelled..

Date[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17] City Country Venue
Europe
October 30, 1981 Brussels Belgium Forest National
October 31, 1981 Amsterdam Netherlands Jaap Edenhal
November 1, 1981 Essen Germany Grugahalle
November 2, 1981 Bremen Stadthalle
November 3, 1981 Kiel Ostseehalle
November 4, 1981 Hanover Eilenriedehalle
November 5, 1981 Hamburg Ernst-Merck-Halle
November 6, 1981 Wolfsburg Wolfsburg City Hall
November 8, 1981 Cologne Sporthalle
November 9, 1981 Offenbach Stadthalle Offenbach
November 10, 1981 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
November 11, 1981 Karlsruhe Black Forest Hall
November 12, 1981 Ravensburg Upper Swabia Hall
November 13, 1981 Böblingen Sporthalle
November 14, 1981 Neunkirchen Hemmerleinhalle
November 16, 1981 Munich Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle
November 17, 1981 Eppelheim Rhein-Neckar-Halle
November 19, 1981 Dortmund Westfalenhallen
November 20, 1981 Kuernach Kuernach Hall
November 22, 1981 Strasbourg France Rhenus Hall
November 23, 1981 Reims Reims Sports Palace
November 24, 1981 Paris Hippodrome de Pantin
November 25, 1981 Lille St. Sauveur Sports Palace
November 27, 1981 Geneva Switzerland Champel Sports Pavilion
November 29, 1981 Bristol England Colston Hall
November 30, 1981 Cardiff Wales Sophia Gardens Pavilion
December 1, 1981 Leicester England De Montfort Hall
December 2, 1981 Liverpool Royal Court Theatre (Lindsay's last show)
December 4, 1981 Edinburgh Scotland Edinburgh Playhouse
December 5, 1981 Glasgow The Apollo
December 6, 1981 Newcastle England Newcastle City Hall
December 7, 1981
December 18, 1981 Manchester Apollo
December 19, 1981 Leeds Queens Hall
December 22, 1981 Stafford New Bingley Hall
December 23, 1981 Leicester De Montfort Hall
December 24, 1981 London Hammersmith Odeon
December 26, 1981
North America (1st leg)
December 30, 1981 Daly City United States Cow Palace
(Randy receives Guitar Magazine's "Best New Talent of 1981" Award backstage before the show) (Don Airey's 1st show)
December 31, 1981 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena
January 1, 1982 Phoenix Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
January 3, 1982 Fresno Selland Arena
January 4, 1982 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
January 6, 1982 Tucson Tucson Community Center
January 7, 1982 Albuquerque Tingley Coliseum
January 9, 1982 Salt Lake City Salt Palace
January 10, 1982 Boulder CU Events Center
January 12, 1982 Omaha Omaha Civic Auditorium
January 13, 1982 Kansas City Kansas City Municipal Auditorium
January 15, 1982 Bloomington Met Center
January 17, 1982 Duluth Duluth Arena
January 19, 1982 La Crosse La Crosse Center
January 20, 1982 Des Moines Des Moines Veterans Memorial Auditorium
(Osbourne's infamous bat incident)
January 22, 1982 Milwaukee MECCA Arena
January 23, 1982 Madison Dane County Veterans Memorial Coliseum
January 24, 1982 Rosemont Rosemont Horizon (Tribute cover photo shot here)
January 26, 1982 Champaign Assembly Hall
(Cancelled after Osbourne collapsed during "Over the Mountain")
January 27, 1982 St. Louis Kiel Auditorium
January 29, 1982 Terre Haute Hulman Center
January 30, 1982 Toledo Toledo Sports Arena
January 31, 1982 Cleveland Richfield Coliseum
February 2, 1982 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Civic Arena
February 3, 1982 Charleston Charleston Civic Center
February 5, 1982 Lansing Lansing Civic Center
February 6, 1982 St. Louis Kiel Auditorium
February 8, 1982 Detroit Cobo Center
February 9, 1982 Kalamazoo Wings Stadium
February 11, 1982 Indianapolis Market Square Arena
February 12, 1982 Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum
February 13, 1982 Lexington Rupp Arena
February 15, 1982 Beaumont Fair Park Coliseum
February 17, 1982 Houston Sam Houston Coliseum
February 19, 1982 San Antonio San Antonio Convention Center
(Osbourne arrested for urinating on The Alamo earlier that day!)
February 20, 1982 Dallas Reunion Arena
February 21, 1982 Corpus Christi Corpus Christi Memorial Coliseum
February 23, 1982 El Paso El Paso County Coliseum
February 24, 1982 Lubbock Lubbock Municipal Coliseum
February 25, 1982 Norman Lloyd Noble Center
February 27, 1982 Valley Center Kansas Coliseum
February 28, 1982 Amarillo Amarillo Civic Center
March 2, 1982 Shreveport Hirsch Memorial Coliseum
March 3, 1982 Baton Rouge Riverside Centroplex
March 5, 1982 Pine Bluff Pine Bluff Convention Center
March 6, 1982 Birmingham Boutwell Memorial Auditorium
March 17, 1982 Atlanta Omni Coliseum
March 18, 1982 Knoxville Knoxville Civic Coliseum (Randy Rhoads's last show)
March 20, 1982 Orlando The Tangerine Bowl (Rock Super Bowl XIV Orlando)
March 21, 1982 Miami Miami Orange Bowl (Rock Super Bowl XIV Miami)
March 24, 1982 Landover Capital Centre
March 25, 1982 Binghamton Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena
March 26, 1982 Philadelphia Spectrum
March 28, 1982 Hempstead Nassau Coliseum
March 29, 1982 East Rutherford Meadowlands Arena
March 30, 1982 Hartford Hartford Civic Arena
North America (2nd leg)
April 1, 1982 Bethlehem United States Stabler Arena (Bernie Tormé's 1st Show)
April 2, 1982 Boston Boston Garden
April 3, 1982 New Haven New Haven Coliseum
April 5, 1982 New York City Madison Square Garden
April 6, 1982 Providence Providence Civic Center
April 9, 1982 Buffalo Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
April 10, 1982 Rochester Rochester Community War Memorial Arena (Bernie's last show)
April 13, 1982 Binghamton Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena (Brad Gillis's first show)
April 15, 1982 Fort Wayne Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
April 16, 1982 Evansville Roberts Municipal Stadium
April 17, 1982 Louisville Freedom Hall
April 19, 1982 Erie Erie County Field House
April 20, 1982 Hampton Hampton Coliseum
April 21, 1982 Richmond Richmond Coliseum
April 23, 1982 Johnson City Freedom Hall Civic Center
April 24, 1982 Landover Capital Centre
April 25, 1982 Baltimore Baltimore Civic Center
April 26, 1982 Philadelphia The Spectrum
April 28, 1982 Memphis Mid-South Coliseum
April 29, 1982 Nashville Nashville Municipal Auditorium
April 30, 1982 Greensboro Greensboro Coliseum
May 1, 1982 Fayetteville Cumberland County Memorial Arena
May 3, 1982 Hempstead Nassau Coliseum
May 4, 1982 Wheeling Wheeling Civic Center
May 5, 1982 Greenville Greenville Memorial Auditorium
May 6, 1982 Charlotte Charlotte Coliseum
May 9, 1982 Syracuse Onondaga County War Memorial Arena
May 10, 1982 Glens Falls Glens Falls Civic Center
May 19, 1982 South Yarmouth Cape Cod Coliseum
May 21, 1982 Hartford Hartford Civic Center
May 22, 1982 Portland Cumberland County Civic Center
May 23, 1982 East Rutherford Brendan Byrne Arena
May 25, 1982 Columbus Columbus Fairgrounds Coliseum
May 26, 1982 Trotwood Hara Arena
May 27, 1982 Springfield Prairie Capital Convention Center
May 28, 1982 Hoffman Estates Poplar Creek Music Theater
May 29, 1982 East Troy Alpine Valley Music Theatre
May 30, 1982 Charlevoix Castle Farms
May 31, 1982 Ann Arbor Crisler Center
June 2, 1982 Ottawa Canada Ottawa Civic Center
June 3, 1982 Montreal Montreal Forum
June 4, 1982 Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens
June 6, 1982 Winnipeg Winnipeg Arena
June 7, 1982 Regina Agridome
June 8, 1982 Edmonton Northlands Coliseum
June 9, 1982 Calgary Stampede Corral
June 10, 1982 Vancouver Pacific Coliseum
June 12, 1982 Anchorage United States Anchorage High School Auditorium (Two shows)
June 15, 1982 Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum
June 16, 1982 Spokane Spokane Coliseum
June 17, 1982 Portland Veterans Memorial Coliseum
June 19, 1982 Oakland Oakland Arena (First laser show)
June 20, 1982 Bakersfield Bakersfield Convention Center
June 22, 1982 Reno Reno Centennial Coliseum
June 24, 1982 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena
June 25, 1982 Irvine Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre (Speak of the Devil)
June 28, 1982 Honolulu Honolulu International Center
Asia
July 9, 1982 Osaka Japan Festival Hall
July 11, 1982 Nagoya Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall
July 13, 1982 Kyoto Kyoto Kaikan
July 14, 1982 Tokyo Nakano Sun Plaza Hall
July 15, 1982
North America (Final leg)
August 1, 1982 Inglewood United States The Forum
August 7, 1982 Dallas Cotton Bowl (Rock 'N' Roll Super Bowl)
August 8, 1982 New Orleans Tad Gormley Stadium (Superstar Sunday) (Don's last show)

References[]

  1. ^ http://liveforlivemusic.com/features/celebrating-the-life-of-randy-rhoads-on-the-anniversary-of-his-death/
  2. ^ Presents, Wikipedia. Master of the Moon: Ronnie James Dio. ISBN 9781312293878.
  3. ^ "Black Sabbath".
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2015-07-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-19. Retrieved 2015-07-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-06-24. Retrieved 2015-07-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ http://www.ultimaterhoads.com/viewtopic.php?t=2106
  8. ^ https://www.facebook.com/notes/randy-rhoads-society/tour-dates-with-ozzy-osbourne-with-known-audio-video/403609346677
  9. ^ https://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150128672151678
  10. ^ http://www.nobitching.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=12633
  11. ^ http://norest4thecollectors.x10hosting.com/?page_id=401
  12. ^ http://norest4thecollectors.x10hosting.com/?page_id=471
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-03. Retrieved 2015-07-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ http://www.ozzyhead.com/olddates/olddates.htm
  15. ^ http://www.lookatstubs.com/bands/ozzy_osbourne.htm
  16. ^ http://www.ultimaterhoads.com/viewtopic.php?t=2146
  17. ^ http://www.ultimaterhoads.com/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=6173
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