Dance of Death World Tour

(Redirected from Dance of Death Tour)

The Dance of Death World Tour was a concert tour by heavy metal band Iron Maiden in support of their thirteenth studio album, Dance of Death. The group's eighth live record, Death on the Road, was recorded in Dortmund.[1]

Dance of Death World Tour
Tour by Iron Maiden
Official tour advertisement for the band's performance in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia, 21 October 2003
Associated albumDance of Death
Start date19 October 2003
End date8 February 2004
No. of shows53 (55 Scheduled)
Iron Maiden concert chronology

The tour was subject to a short number of cancellations, with the band's shows in Wrocław, Rotterdam and Helsinki being postponed while lead vocalist Bruce Dickinson recovered from flu and laryngitis.[2][3] On top of this, the group's second show in New York was cut short after one audience member dropped a beer on the soundboard,[4] while the final concert was cancelled due to a scheduling conflict.[5]

Set

Throughout the tour, the stage was decorated to look like a medieval castle, with two towers on either side of the runways, featuring Grim Reaper statues and a castle gate between them for the opening song. The stage floor was decorated to look like a twelve-point star, identical to the one featured in the Dance of Death artwork.

The tour was notable for its extensive use of props and other theatrics. Bruce Dickinson would begin "Dance of Death" from a throne on the left podium, wearing a cape and two Venetian masks, and would later sport a Grim Reaper cloak.[6] Paschendale would begin with battlefield sound effects reminiscent of the First World War, during which the road crew, dressed in military uniform, would place dead bodies and barbed wire around the set, and Bruce Dickinson would recite (pre-recorded) the first two stanzas of "Anthem for Doomed Youth" by Wilfred Owen.[6]

A giant Eddie would appear from the back of the set during "Iron Maiden", wearing a cloak and wielding a scythe. The walk-on Eddie would also appear as the Grim Reaper during "The Number of the Beast."[7]

Setlist

"Declamation" served as the intro for the tour.

  1. "Wildest Dreams" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  2. "Wrathchild" (from Killers, 1981)
  3. "Can I Play with Madness" (from Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, 1988)
  4. "The Trooper" (from Piece of Mind, 1983)
  5. "Dance of Death" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  6. "Rainmaker" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  7. "Brave New World" (from Brave New World, 2000)
  8. "Paschendale" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  9. "Lord of the Flies" (from The X Factor, 1995)
  10. "No More Lies" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  11. "Hallowed Be Thy Name" (from The Number of the Beast, 1982)
  12. "Fear of the Dark" (from Fear of The Dark, 1992)
  13. "Iron Maiden" (from Iron Maiden, 1980)
    Encore
  14. "Journeyman" (from Dance of Death, 2003)
  15. "The Number of the Beast" (from The Number of the Beast, 1982)
  16. "Run to the Hills" (from The Number of the Beast, 1982)

Notes

  • With the inclusion of "Lord of the Flies", the Dance of Death Tour would be the last tour to feature Blaze Bayley-era material in the band's setlist until the Legacy of the Beast World Tour in 2018.
  • "Wrathchild" was not played at the first two shows.

Tour dates

List of 2003 concerts
DateCityCountryVenue
19 October 2003DebrecenHungaryPhoenix Hall
21 October 2003Banská BystricaSlovakiaBystrica Sports Hall
22 October 2003PragueCzech RepublicT-Mobile Arena
24 October 2003MunichGermanyOlympiahalle
25 October 2003StuttgartSchleyerhalle
27 October 2003AssagoItalyFilaforum
28 October 2003FlorenceNelson Mandela Forum
30 October 2003ZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadion
31 October 2003ThonexSalles Des Fetes
1 November 2003BadalonaSpainPalau Municipal d'Esports de Badalona
2 November 2003MadridPalacio Vistalegre
4 November 2003FrankfurtGermanyJahrhunderthalle
5 November 2003RotterdamNetherlandsRotterdam Ahoy (rescheduled)
7 November 2003WrocławPolandCentennial Hall (rescheduled)
10 November 2003HelsinkiFinlandHartwall Arena (rescheduled)
12 November 2003CopenhagenDenmarkValby-Hallen
14 November 2003StockholmSwedenGloben Arena
15 November 2003GothenburgScandinavium
17 November 2003HanoverGermanyEilenriedehalle
18 November 2003BerlinTreptow Arena
20 November 2003LeuvenBelgiumBrabenthal
22 November 2003ParisFrancePalais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
24 November 2003DortmundGermanyWestfalenhalle
26 November 2003HamburgSporthalle
27 November 2003LeipzigArena
28 November 2003WrocławPolandCentennial Hall
29 November 2003ParisFranceLe Zénith (rescheduled)
1 December 2003DublinIrelandThe Point
3 December 2003Newcastle upon TyneEnglandTelewest Arena
4 December 2003NottinghamNottingham Arena
6 December 2003SheffieldHallam FM Arena
8 December 2003GlasgowScotlandSECC
9 December 2003ManchesterEnglandMEN Arena
12 December 2003LondonEarls Court
13 December 2003RotterdamNetherlandsRotterdam Ahoy
15 December 2003CardiffWalesCardiff International Arena
16 December 2003BirminghamEnglandNEC Arena
18 December 2003MetzFranceGalaxie Amnéville
21 December 2003HelsinkiFinlandHartwall Areena
List of 2004 concerts
DateCityCountryVenue
11 January 2004Buenos AiresArgentinaJosé Amalfitani Stadium
13 January 2004SantiagoChilePista Atlética
16 January 2004Rio de JaneiroBrazilClaro Hall
17 January 2004São PauloEstádio do Pacaembu
20 January 2004MontrealCanadaBell Centre
21 January 2004Quebec CityColisée Pepsi
23 January 2004New YorkUnited StatesHammerstein Ballroom
24 January 2004
26 January 2004
27 January 2004Hammerstein Ballroom (cancelled)
30 January 2004Los AngelesUniversal Amphitheatre
31 January 2004
5 February 2004SapporoJapanHokkaido Kosei Nenkin Hall
7 February 2004OsakaOsaka-jō Hall
8 February 2004SaitamaSaitama Super Arena

Reference[8][9]

References

External links