1972's The Rise Fall of Ziggy Stardust catapulted the group to the top of the rock heap, as the concept album lent a major hand in popularizing glam rock (makeup, flashy outfits, androgyny, etc.). David Bowie and Spiders From Mars continued in the same musical path with their next release, 1973's Aladdin Sane, another sizeable hit (in addition, Ronson helped arrange and co-produce Lou Reed's classic 1972 comeback album, Transformer, along with Bowie). But at the last show of the album's supporting tour at London's Hammersmith Odeon on July 3, 1973, Bowie announced from the stage (unbeknownst to the other bandmembers) that it was to be the group's last show ever. Ronson and Boulder stuck around with Bowie a little while longer, playing on his all-covers album, Pin Ups, and taping a mini-concert at the Marquee Club for a TV special soon after (#The 1980 Floor Show), but Bowie stuck to his promise -- never recording or performing with Spiders ever again. Ronson would go on to launch a lukewarm-received solo career (1974's Slaughter on 10th Avenue and 1975's Play Don't Worry), as well as playing with others (Bob Dylan, Ian Hunter, John Cougar).
But while Ronson was trying to put his Spiders days behind him, both Boulder and Woodmansey resurrected the Spiders From Mars name for a lone self-titled release in 1976. The album, which saw guitarist Dave Black assume Ronson's spot (as well as Pete McDonald on vocals and Bowie-vet Mike Garson on keyboards), sunk from sight shortly after release, as Spiders split in the wake of the recording's failure. Boulder would later turn up as a member of Uriah Heep and Wishbone Ash, while Woodmansey formed his own outfit, Woody Woodmansey's U-Boat. Any possibility of Ronson reuniting with his former bandmates was extinguished on April 29, 1993, when the guitarist succumbed to cancer (although a star-studded solo album that he finished just prior to his death, Heaven and Hull, was issued in 1994). Also in 1994, a Mick Ronson Memorial Concert was held at the Hammersmith, which featured appearances by both Boulder and Woodmansey, plus Def Leppard vocalist Joe Elliot and guitarist Phil Collen. The members of Spiders/Leppard enjoyed playing with each other so much that they decided to form a side project, Cybernauts, who have played several European concerts together, and issued a pair of releases: Cybernauts Live and the internet-only release The Further Adventures of the Cybernauts. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi