Mechanical Animals Tour Explained

Concert Tour Name:Mechanical Animals
Artist:Marilyn Manson
Album:Mechanical Animals
Start Date:October 25, 1998
End Date:January 31, 1999
Number Of Shows:52 (planned)
46 (completed)
Last Tour:Dead to the World
(1996−1997)
This Tour:Mechanical Animals
(1998−1999)
Next Tour:Beautiful Monsters
(1999)

Mechanical Animals was a worldwide tour by the band Marilyn Manson in support of their third LP record Mechanical Animals, released on September 15, 1998. The tour extended from late 1998 to early 1999 and was recorded in 1998 for the VHS-format God is in the TV which was released on November 2, 1999.[1]

The Mechanical Animals European Festival Tour was supposed to be the first leg of the tour. This particular leg of the tour consisted of six dates to be played at various European festivals planned as the debut of follow-up material to Antichrist Superstar two months before the release of Mechanical Animals. This leg of the tour spanned from June 25, 1998, until July 12, 1999.

Reportedly, drummer Ginger Fish became ill with mononucleosis. This led the band to cancel the entire summer European leg and postpone the beginning of the tour to October 25, 1998.

Beginning on October 25, 1998, and lasting until January 31, 1999, the "Mechanical Animals Tour" included two legs spanning a Fall to Winter World Tour in Europe, Japan, and North America and a 6 show headlining stint at the Big Day Out Music Festival in Australia.[1]

Background

After declining a headlining slot at the failing Lollapalooza summer music festival (along with numerous other bands) in early 1998 due to delays in Mechanical Animals' release, the band launched the first of their own headlining tours in support of the album.[2] The tour was originally intended to begin on June 25, 1998, with a series of 6 festival dates in Europe lasting until July 12, 1998.[3] However, drummer Ginger Fish became ill with mononucleosis, leading to the cancellation of the entire summer European leg and the postponement of the beginning of the tour to October 25, 1998, in Lawrence, Kansas.[4]

Performance and show themes

With this being the first leg of the tour, the stage show was minimal compared to later legs of the tour

Incidents

As with the band's preceding 1997 world tour, Dead to the World, the Mechanical Animals Tour met with heavy resistance from civic and religious leaders. The first of these protests occurred on October 19, 1998. A month before a planned performance at the Landmark Theatre in Syracuse, New York, local activists began calling for a cancellation of the engagement. According to Associated Press, then-Syracuse Mayor Roy Bernardi attempted to block the venue's permit, citing a "moral obligation to the people of Syracuse", without specifying any reason for his objections. Onondaga County officials also attempted to extort the Landmark into halting the event by threatening to withhold $30,000 in county funds earmarked for the venue, prompting the venue's bookers to consider dropping the show altogether. Despite this, representatives for the Landmark started selling tickets on the day it was planned and the performance took place on the arranged date and venue.[5]

Set list

North America

  1. The Reflecting God
  2. Great Big White World
  3. Cake and Sodomy
  4. Posthuman
  5. Mechanical Animals
  6. I Want to Disappear
  7. Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
  8. The Speed of Pain
  9. Rock Is Dead
  10. The Dope Show
  11. Lunchbox
  12. User Friendly
  13. I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)
  14. Rock N Roll Nigger
  15. The Beautiful People
  16. Irresponsible Hate Anthem

Europe/Asia

  1. Inauguration of the Mechanical Christ
  2. The Reflecting God
  3. Great Big White World
  4. Cake and Sodomy
  5. Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
  6. Astonishing Panorama of the Endtimes
  7. Rock Is Dead
  8. The Dope Show
  9. Lunchbox
  10. I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)
  11. Rock N Roll Nigger
  12. The Beautiful People

Broadcasts and recordings

Various shows were recorded on the tour but there was no specific information about which dates. A 40-minute short film was released on VHS entitled God Is in the T.V. following the tour, however it only contained short live clips from various shows. Widely heralded as the band's best tour, their 2012 comeback sparked interest in the release of an uninterrupted live DVD of this tour. It is not known if the full recordings exist of the performances shown in God Is in the T.V.. The only full live recordings available are bootleg from their January 23, 1999 concert in Sydney, Australia during their headlining stint at the Big Day Out Music Festival. The video is of mediocre quality. A rare partial recording of the band's concert on November 16, 1998, in Detroit, Michigan, and unedited aftershow promotional interview also exist.

Tour dates

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, and venue
DateCityCountryVenueOpening Act(s)AttendanceRevenue
North America
October 25, 1998LawrenceUnited StatesGranadan/a
October 26, 1998Kansas CityMemorial Hall
October 27, 1998St. LouisFox Theater
October 29, 1998MilwaukeeRiverside Theater
October 30, 1998ChicagoAragon Ballroom
October 31, 1998Saint PaulRoy Wilkins Auditorium
November 3, 1998TulsaBrady Theatre
November 4, 1998HoustonAerial Theatre
November 5, 1998DallasBronco Bowl
November 7, 1998New OrleansState Theatre
November 9, 1998AtlantaTabernacle
November 10, 1998CharlotteOvens Auditorium
November 11, 1998RichmondLandmark Theater
November 13, 1998CamdenSony Blockbuster Pavilion
November 14, 1998ClevelandCleveland Music Hall
November 16, 1998DetroitState Theatre
November 18, 1998MississaugaCanadaArrow Hall
November 19, 1998SyracuseUnited StatesLandmark Theatre
November 21, 1998PoughkeepsieMid-Hudson Civic Center
November 22, 1998LowellTsongas Arena
November 23, 1998New York CityHammerstein Ballroom
Europe
November 27, 1998BarcelonaSpainPavello de la D'Hebronn/a
November 28, 1998BilbaoPabellon de la Castilla
November 30, 1998LisbonPortugalPavilhão Atlântico
December 1, 1998MadridSpainPalacio de la Commidad
December 4, 1998MilanItalyPalavobis
December 9, 1998CopenhagenDenmarkK.B. Hallen
December 10, 1998OsloNorwayRockefeller Music Hall
December 11, 1998StockholmSwedenStockholm Arena
December 13, 1998HamburgGermanyGrosse Freiheit 36
December 14, 1998TilburgNetherlands013
December 16, 1998CologneGermanyE-Werk
December 17, 1998LondonEnglandBrixton Academy
December 18, 1998DeinzeBelgiumBreilpoort
December 19, 1998ParisFranceZénith de Paris
North America
December 31, 1998Las VegasUnited StatesThe Jointn/a
Asia
January 8, 1999TokyoJapanNK Halln/a
January 9, 1999
January 11, 1999OsakaZepp
January 12, 1999
Big Day Out
January 15, 1999AucklandNew ZealandEriccson Stadiumn/a
January 17, 1999Gold CoastAustraliaGold Coast Parklands
January 23, 1999SydneySydney Showgrounds
January 26, 1999MelbourneMelbourne Showgrounds
January 29, 1999AdelaideAdelaide Showgrounds
January 31, 1999PerthBassendean Oval

Cancelled or rescheduled shows

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and reason for cancellation
DateCityCountryVenueReason
Leg 1: European Festival Tour 1998
June 25, 1998RoskildeDenmarkRoskilde FestivalGinger Fish contracted mononucleosis.
June 27, 1998BurghNetherlandsWaldrock Festival
June 28, 1998DesselBelgiumGraspop Metal Meeting
June 30, 1998KristiansandNorwayOdderøya Amfi
July 9, 1998FrauenfeldGermanyOut in the Green Festival
July 12, 1998ZwickauFull Force Open Air

Lineup

Marilyn Manson

Vocals

Guitar

Bass

Keyboards

Drums

Reception

Critical reception

Music critic Tim Finn of The Kansas City Star commented that, overall, the show was "far less a spectacle than the Antichrist Superstar tour."[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: MTV News Staff . Marilyn Manson Kicks Off Tour . . 1998-10-28 . 2011-03-21. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151019071948/http://www.mtv.com/news/1431731/marilyn-manson-kicks-off-tour/ . 2015-10-19 .
  2. Web site: Fischer . Blair . Cruel Summer: Lollapalooza '98 Canceled . . 1998-04-03 . 2011-06-08 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20180816072504/https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/cruel-summer-lollapalooza-98-canceled-244275/ . 2018-08-16 .
  3. Web site: NME Staff . Marilyn Manson Cancel European Tour . . . 1998-05-25 . 2017-11-29. live . https://web.archive.org/web/20171201042801/https://www.nme.com/news/music/marilyn-manson-245-1389038 . 2017-12-01 .
  4. Web site: MTV News Staff . Marilyn Manson Cancels European Tour . MTV . Viacom Media Networks . 1998-06-24 . 2019-01-04. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190104103348/http://www.mtv.com/news/1431751/marilyn-manson-cancels-european-tour/ . 2019-01-04 .
  5. Web site: MTV News Staff . Marilyn Manson Tour Draws First Protests, Syracuse Show May Be Blocked . MTV . Viacom Media Networks . 1998-10-19 . 2011-03-21 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190104103849/http://www.mtv.com/news/1431733/marilyn-manson-tour-draws-first-protests-syracuse-show-may-be-blocked/ . 2019-01-04 .