Controversy Tour
{{Short description|1981–82 concert tour by Prince}}
{{Infobox concert
| concert_tour_name = Controversy Tour
| image =
| image_size =
| alt =
| image_caption =
| type = National
| location = North America
| artist = Prince
| album = Controversy
| start_date = November 20, 1981
| end_date = March 14, 1982
| number_of_legs = 1
| number_of_shows = 61
| last_tour = Dirty Mind Tour
(1980–81)
| this_tour = Controversy Tour
(1981–82)
| next_tour = 1999 Tour
(1982–83)
}}
The Controversy Tour was a concert tour by American recording artist Prince in support of his fourth studio album Controversy. The tour included Zapp and Roger and The Time as an opening act.
Background
The Controversy Tour marked the debut of Mark Brown, a.k.a. Brown Mark, on bass guitar, replacing the departed André Cymone, and the introduction of Prince's new bodyguard, Chick Huntsberry. At first, Prince contemplated dismissing the huge Huntsberry after only being on tour with him for a few days, as Prince thought he was too big and he scared him. Guitarist Dez Dickerson talked him out of it and he eventually became a confidant to Prince and later appeared in Purple Rain as a bouncer.{{cite news|title= Possessed: The Rise And Fall Of Prince|author= Alex Hahn| publisher=Billboard Books|year=2003 }} This tour was also notable for Prince's new side group The Time joining him on tour and the resulting backstage drama and arising tension that developed between the two bands.
Ultimately Prince would kick The Time off the 1999 Tour.{{cite news|title= Prince: Life & Times|author= Jason Draper| publisher=Jawbone Press|year=2008}} The conflict came to a head on the final night of the tour in Cincinnati as during The Time's set, Prince and some of the members in his band began egging them from off stage. Near the end of the set, they grabbed Jerome Benton from the stage and proceeded to "tar and feather" him by pouring honey all over him and dumping trash on him. Things got further escalated after The Time's performance, guitarist Jesse Johnson was handcuffed to a wall-mounted coat rack and further humiliated with Prince throwing Doritos and other food at him. When The Time went to retaliate, they were stopped by the tour manager and told there would be no interruptions during Prince's performance, but as soon as he left the stage, a food fight erupted between the two bands. When the battle continued at the hotel causing damage, Prince made Morris Day pay for all damages, claiming that he had started the whole thing.
Opening acts
Set list
November 20, 1981 at the Stanley Theatre, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- "The Second Coming"
- "Sexuality"
- "Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?"
- "Jack U Off"
- "When You Were Mine"
- "I Wanna Be Your Lover"
- "Head"
- "Annie Christian"
- "Dirty Mind"
- "Do Me, Baby"
- "Let's Work"
- "Controversy "
- "Uptown"
- "Partyup"
January 30, 1982 at the Capitol Theatre, Passaic, New Jersey
- "The Second Coming"
- "Uptown"
- "Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?"
- "I Wanna Be Your Lover"
- "Head"
- "Dirty Mind"
- "Do Me, Baby"
- "Controversy"
- "Let's Work"
- "Jack U Off"
Tour dates
Prior to the tour, in October 1981 Prince played two shows at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as an opening act for The Rolling Stones. On the first date, Prince and his band did not finish their set, as the crowd turned hostile towards him. Dressed in his controversial bikini briefs and trench coat, and singing his sexually androgynous lyrics, he was run off stage after 25 minutes of the crowd booing, throwing shoes and beer bottles at him.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gh1KAAAAIBAJ&sjid=DSINAAAAIBAJ&pg=3959,2200686&dq=rolling-stones+concert&hl=en "Rolling Stones Open 2-Day Stand In LA"], Oxnard (CA) Press-Courier, October 10, 1981, p3 Off stage, security escorted Prince to his trailer, they described him as emotionally distraught and crying softly. He was later heard cussing at his band and swearing he would never open for the Rolling Stones again.
After the show, Prince immediately flew back home to Minneapolis. After speaking with Dez Dickerson, manager Steve Fargnoli, and Mick Jagger himself, they convinced him to return for the second concert. Amidst the same hostility, as The Rolling Stones' fans heard about the incident at the first concert and came prepared to dog Prince again, Prince and his band finished their set this time. Backstage, Prince referred to the crowd as, "Tasteless in music and mentally retarded".
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|+ List of 1981 concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and gross revenue |
scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Date
! scope="col" style="width:10em;"| City ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Country ! scope="col" style="width:18em;"| Venue ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Attendance ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Revenue |
---|
November 20, 1981
| rowspan="26" |United States | | |
November 21, 1981
|Washington, D.C. |2,000 / 3,400 (59%){{Cite web|url=http://www.princevault.com/index.php?title=21_November_1981-1|title=21 November 1981-1 - Prince Vault|website=www.princevault.com|access-date=2019-01-23}} | |
November 25, 1981
|Greenville Memorial Auditorium | | |
November 26, 1981
| | |
November 27, 1981
| | |
November 29, 1981
|Nashville Municipal Auditorium | | |
December 2, 1981
|New York City | | |
December 4, 1981
| | |
December 5, 1981
|Arie Crown Theater{{efn|Two shows.}} |8,638 / 8,638 (100%){{Cite web|url=https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/80s/1981/BB-1981-12-19.pdf|title=Billboard Magazine- 12-19-1981}} |
December 6, 1981
| | |
December 9, 1981
| | |
December 10, 1981
| | |
December 11, 1981
|Winston-Salem Memorial Coliseum | | |
December 12, 1981
| | |
December 13, 1981
|Cumberland County Memorial Arena | | |
December ??, 1981
| | |
December 17, 1981
|Columbus Municipal Auditorium | | |
December 18, 1981
| | |
align="center"|December 19, 1981
|align="center"|Dallas |align="center"|Dallas Convention Center | | |
December 20, 1981
|14,000 / 14,000 (100%){{Cite web|url=http://www.princevault.com/index.php?title=20_December_1981|title=20 December 1981 - Prince Vault|website=www.princevault.com|access-date=2022-07-18}} | |
December 26, 1981
| | |
December 27, 1981
| | |
December 28, 1981
|4,325 / 6,500 (67%){{Cite web|url=http://www.princevault.com/index.php?title=28_December_1981|title=28 December 1981 - Prince Vault|website=www.princevault.com|access-date=2019-02-27}} | |
December 29, 1981
|Veterans Memorial Auditorium | | |
December 30, 1981
|6,850 / 6,850 (100%){{Cite web|url=http://www.princevault.com/index.php?title=30_December_1981|title=30 December 1981 - Prince Vault|website=www.princevault.com|access-date=2019-02-27}} | |
December 31, 1981
|8,400 / 9,252 (91%){{Cite web|url=http://www.princevault.com/index.php?title=31_December_1981|title=31 December 1981 - Prince Vault|website=www.princevault.com|access-date=2019-02-27}} | |
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|+ List of 1982 concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and gross revenue |
scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Date
! scope="col" style="width:10em;"| City ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Country ! scope="col" style="width:18em;"| Venue ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Attendance ! scope="col" style="width:12em;"| Revenue |
---|
January 2, 1982
| rowspan="33" |United States | | |
January 3, 1982
|Jacksonville Memorial Coliseum | | |
January 28, 1982
| | |
January 29, 1982
| | |
January 30, 1982
|Capitol Theatre[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCb00ZcGBPo YouTube - Morris Day & The Time @ Capitol Theatre 01/30/82][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAYQUbh8HHA YouTube - Prince @ Capitol Theatre 01/30/82] | | |
February 1, 1982
| | |
February 4, 1982
| | |
February 5, 1982
| | |
February 6, 1982
|ISU-Braden Auditorium | | |
February 7, 1982
| | |
February 9, 1982
| | |
February 11, 1982
|San Diego Golden Hall | | |
February 12, 1982
|Santa Monica Civic Auditorium | | |
February 13, 1982
| | |
February 14, 1982
|rowspan="2"|San Francisco |rowspan="2"|Bill Graham Civic Auditorium | | |
February 15, 1982
| | |
February 18, 1982
| | |
February 19, 1982
|UT-Martin Fieldhouse | | |
February 20, 1982
|Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center | | |
February 21, 1982
| | |
February 24, 1982
| | |
February 25, 1982
| | |
February 26, 1982
| | |
February 27, 1982
| | |
February 28, 1982
| | |
March 3, 1982
| | |
March 5, 1982
| | |
March 6, 1982
| | |
March 7, 1982
| | |
March 11, 1982
| | |
March 12, 1982
| | |
March 13, 1982
| | |
March 14, 1982
| | |
The band
- Prince: Lead vocals, Synthesizer and guitar
- Dez Dickerson: Guitar
- Brown Mark: Bass
- Matt Fink: Keyboards
- Lisa Coleman: Keyboards
- Bobby Z.: Drums
References
{{notelist}}
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.prince-live.com/konzert/konzert.php?tour_id=5 Controversy Tour|Prince-Live]
{{Prince}}