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Music World > Lists > David Bowie’s Final Live Performances: From the Heart Attack Show to Radio City
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David Bowie’s Final Live Performances: From the Heart Attack Show to Radio City

Written by: News Room Last updated: January 9, 2026
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David Bowie’s Final Live Performances: From the Heart Attack Show to Radio City

After his 2004 onstage heart attack, the enigmatic rock icon made a series of small-scale public appearances before vanishing forever from the concert stage

Ten years ago this month, David Bowie died just three days after the release of one of the most remarkable albums of his career, Blackstar. Rumors had been swirling about the precarious state of his health for a solid decade, but he’d just attended the premiere of his new off-Broadway musical Lazarus and appeared in two Blackstar music videos. Bowie’s death at 69 on January 10 was very difficult news to process, and the start of a truly horrible year in which we also lost Prince, Leonard Cohen, Glenn Frey, George Michael, Sharon Jones, and Leon Russell. 

By the time of his death, Bowie hadn’t performed a full concert or granted an interview in a dozen years. After decades of living a very public life where it didn’t seem odd to watch him guest on The Rosie O’Donnell Show or pose for photos in Hello! magazine with wife Iman and their newborn daughter Alexandria, he suddenly took on a new persona as the Man Who Fell Off Earth, seen only in glimpses on red carpets or film premieres, never speaking.

But there was a weird, brief period after the premature end of the 2003/04 Reality tour where he began popping up unexpectedly at special events and his friend’s concerts. Little did we know that they marked the denouement of his performance career. Thankfully, they were all captured on camera, even if some of the fan-shot material that pre-dates the iPhone era lacks quality. Here’s a fantastic voyage back to Bowie’s seven last live appearances.

  • Prague, T-Mobile Arena, June 23, 2004

    AUSTRALIA - FEBRUARY 20:  Photo of David BOWIE; performing live onstage at Sydney Entertainment Centre  (Photo by Bob King/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Bob King/Redferns/Getty Images


    Hard as it may be to imagine today, a David Bowie tour wasn’t an enormous event in the early 2000s. He hadn’t had a hit album in 20 years at that point, a great deal of his Seventies mystique had faded, and he came to town about as often as Rod Stewart or James Taylor. When he launched a world tour behind his woefully under-appreciated 2003 LP Reality, the U.S. leg hit a mixture of arenas, theaters, and even several casinos. He was supposed to stay on the road through late July 2004, but everything changed midway through a scorching hot show in Prague when pain overtook his body as he sang the title track to Reality. “He looked over his shoulder at me,” bassist Gail Ann Dorsey recalled to Rolling Stone in 2016, “and he was pale, translucent almost. His shirt was drenched. And he was just standing there, not singing.” The band vamped for a couple of songs without him, before Bowie somehow came back and got through four more numbers before realizing he simply couldn’t continue, calling the show off moments into “Changes.” He had no idea he had literally suffered a heart attack onstage and nearly died.

  • Scheeßel, Germany, Hurricane Festival, June 25, 2004

    NEWPORT, ENGLAND - JUNE 13:  David Bowie performs on stage on the third and final day of "The Nokia Isle of Wight Festival 2004" at Seaclose Park, on June 13, 2004 in Newport, UK. The third annual rock festival takes place during the Isle of Wight Festival which runs from June 4-19.  (Photo by Jo Hale/Getty Images)NEWPORT, ENGLAND - JUNE 13:  David Bowie performs on stage on the third and final day of "The Nokia Isle of Wight Festival 2004" at Seaclose Park, on June 13, 2004 in Newport, UK. The third annual rock festival takes place during the Isle of Wight Festival which runs from June 4-19.  (Photo by Jo Hale/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Getty Jo Hale/Getty Images


    If Bowie had been properly diagnosed as having a heart attack, there’s no way the tour would have continued. But thinking he merely had a pinched nerve, Bowie and the band headed to the Hurricane Festival in Scheeßel, Germany, two days later. Through an incredible force of will, Bowie got through the entire set, wearing a sweatshirt as opposed to his usual tour attire. “I remember walking down the stairs behind him after we finished,” Dorsey said. “When he got to the bottom, he actually collapsed. He was so tired and so sick. They rushed him to the hospital.” It was only then that he learned he needed emergency heart surgery. It marked the end of the tour, the end of his career as a touring artist, and a significant turning point in his life. 

  • New York, Radio City Music Hall, Sept. 8, 2005

    NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 08:  Singer David Bowie performs onstage at the second annual Fashion Rocks concert at Radio City Music Hall September 8, 2005 in New York City.  (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 08:  Singer David Bowie performs onstage at the second annual Fashion Rocks concert at Radio City Music Hall September 8, 2005 in New York City.  (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Frank Micelotta/Getty Images


    Bowie completely vanished from public view after the Hurricane Festival, so it was pretty surprising when Fashion Rocks announced he was going to take part in their September 2005 Radio City Music Hall event, sharing the bill with Gwen Stefani, Alicia Keys, Destiny’s Child, and Arcade Fire. He first came out with longtime pianist Mick Garson for a sparse rendition of “Life on Mars,” wearing a cast on his right arm and makeup on his eye that made it look like he’d been punched in the face. (We still don’t quite know what that was about.) Later in the night, he joined Arcade Fire for thrilling renditions of “Wake Up” and “Five Years.” For a brief moment, it felt like Bowie was truly back and the health scare was just a bump in the road.

  • New York, Central Park SummerStage, Sept. 15, 2005

    David Bowie at Conde Nast's 2005 Fashion Rocks Show (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage)David Bowie at Conde Nast's 2005 Fashion Rocks Show (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage/Getty Images


    Right around the time of Fashion Rocks, Bowie became a regular presence on the downtown New York rock scene. He was a regular sight at the Bowery Ballroom checking out shows by new acts like TV on the Radio and Arcade Fire. He was clearly enamored with the latter band and appeared at their Central Park concert, just one week after their Fashion Rocks jam, for “Queen Bitch” and another run through “Wake Up.” The footage is blurred and distorted, but you can still tell that the crowd is losing its damn mind.

  •  London, Royal Albert Hall, May 29, 2006

    David Gilmour And Friends In Concert At The Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain - 29 May 2006, David Bowie And David Gilmour Rehearsing (Photo by Brian Rasic/Getty Images)David Gilmour And Friends In Concert At The Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain - 29 May 2006, David Bowie And David Gilmour Rehearsing (Photo by Brian Rasic/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Getty Brian Rasic/Getty Images

    Thirty-three years after covering “See Emily Play” on his cover LP Pin Ups, Bowie stunned fans at a David Gilmour show at the Royal Albert Hall by showing up to sing another Sid Barrett-era classic, “Arnold Layne.” He then stuck around to deliver the Roger Waters vocal parts on “Comfortably Numb,” which had been done by Floyd keyboardist Rick Wright every other night of the tour.

    “What was incredible is when he got up to do ‘Arnold Layne,’ he knew that song inside, outside, upside down,” Gilmour bassist Guy Pratt told Rolling Stone in 2020. “It was like he had been singing it every night for his whole life. He just knew it so well. Then you kind of got the impression that he didn’t really know ‘Comfortably Numb.’ What was funny was that Rick, who had to be bullied into singing the verses at the start of the tour, was now kind of loath to give them up. [Laughs] We were like, ‘For fuck’s sake, Rick, it’s Bowie!’”

  • New York, Hammerstein Ballroom, Nov. 9, 2006

    Alicia Keys and David Bowie during Conde Nast Media Group Presents "The Black Ball" to Benefit 'Keep a Child Alive' Hosted by Alicia Keys and Iman - Show at Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City, New York, United States. ***Exclusive*** (Photo by KMazur/WireImage)Alicia Keys and David Bowie during Conde Nast Media Group Presents "The Black Ball" to Benefit 'Keep a Child Alive' Hosted by Alicia Keys and Iman - Show at Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City, New York, United States. ***Exclusive*** (Photo by KMazur/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images


    There’s a very fair argument that Bowie’s three-song set at Hammerstein Ballroom in 2006 for the Save a Child Foundation was his final live performance. He played “Wild Is the Wind,” and “Fantastic Voyage” with Mike Garson, before Alicia Keys joined him on “Changes.” (The footage is as awful as you’d expect for a 2006 concert clip that’s been on YouTube for 19 years, but we should be grateful it exists at all.) This is the last time he played his own songs in public or was even accompanied by musicians onstage. But there was one more moment that sorta, kinda counts…

  • New York, Radio City Music Hall, May 19, 2007

    (EXCLUSIVE, Premium Rates Apply) Ricky Gervais and David Bowie *EXCLUSIVE* (Photo by Gary Gershoff/WireImage)(EXCLUSIVE, Premium Rates Apply) Ricky Gervais and David Bowie *EXCLUSIVE* (Photo by Gary Gershoff/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Gary Gershoff/WireImage/Getty Images


    Bowie curated the 2007 High Line Festival in New York, and was originally supposed to close out the festivities with a giant concert in Riverside Park. Those plans were ultimately scuttled, but he did book Ricky Gervais at Radio City, and he came onstage to introduce him by recreating an Extras routine in which he mocked him with an impromptu song called “Little Fat Man.” It’s easy to argue this is a mere comedy bit, and there’s no band or instrumentation of any kind, but there is an audience and Bowie is singing rather than speaking. Setlist.FM counts it, but we’re on the fence. (Watch the video and judge for yourself.) What we can say with great certainty is that Bowie released two more albums, shot several music videos, and created the musical Lazarus after this. But he never sang another note in public, even “Little Fat Man.”

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