View Full Version : Your all-time best rock concerts
Milossarian
05-31-2000, 09:10 PM
I've been to a billion concerts, so I'm having to make some tough decisions to limit it to five. Here goes:
5. Pearl Jam, Masonic Temple, Detroit, 1994. I won a special drawing (out of about 100,000 to 200,000 inquiries for tickets) to be one of only about 2,000 people at this show. The band's second album had just came out, and they were at the top of their game. Played for like 3.5 hours, did three or four encores, until they were doing cover tunes. Fantastic time for the (not yet) wife and me, both huge fans of the band, particularly their first two albums.
4. REO Speedwagon, Castle Farms, Charlevoix, Michigan, 1981. This was my second concert ever. I was only 14. REO was the top band around at the time, their "Hi Infidelity" album topped the charts. Loved the band, the album, all the songs on it and on their earlier albums. Singing at the top of my lungs to "Keep on Loving You," "Take it on the Run" and "Time for Me to Fly." Just a great summer night in my youth.
3. AC/DC, Castle Farms, 1988.One of the greatest hard-rock bands of all time, a band perfectly geared for a live show, finally came to my neck of the woods. About 20 of my friends and I rented a Ryder truck, put one friend's $2,000 stereo system in the back, some couches and barbecue grills and made a day of it. We were the hit of the parking lot before and after the show. I got rip-roaring drunk, the band played all the great old songs you'd want to hear, Angus Young did his thing. What an excellent time.
My very best friend died two-and-a-half years ago in a car accident at the age of 29. When I think back on our days together, this concert stands out as one of my fondest memories.
2.Pink Floyd, Pontiac Silverdome, 1987. Another show with my late best friend, and another good buddy. Yeah, Roger Waters had left the band, but for four or five years, everybody thought the band was done. I was such a huge fan of their's back then. When I heard that they were reforming, coming out with a new album and touring, I had to be there.
For any of you who've seen a concert in a domed stadium, you know the acoustics suck. This was no exception. But the band and all of those amazing songs just transcended all of that.
"Time" off the Dark Side of the Moon album, with drummer Roger Mason's sticks changing colors as he played during the beginning. "Wish You Were Here" with 60,000 singing along. "Comfortably Numb" with the incredible sight of tens of thousands of lighters in the air -- the coolest thing I've seen in a concert to-date, with all of the expensive pyrotechnics and whatnot.
1. The Smashing Pumpkins, St. Andrew's Hall, Detroit, 1999 My favorite band goes on a tour of tiny clubs, and the Missus and I score tickets! I kicked myself in the butt when I finally entered St. Andrew's -- all of the bands I like over the years that I'd heard were playing there but passed on. This place was incredibly small. Only room for like 500-600 people! (They crammed about 1,000 in for the Pumpkins show.)
As any Pumpkins fans probably know, the band typically likes to stick to their new albums in concert, and don't dig too much into the old stuff. Well, it was like this show was totally for the fans. They opened with "I Am One" off Gish. They played "Soma," which they never play live anymore. The energy in the place was unbelievable. I discovered, however, that in my early 30s I am now officially too old for 3 hours in a mosh pit.
Hope this didn't bore everyone to tears. I get fired up when I talk about music, concerts, and how they affect people. I look forward to reading all of your posts too.
(Don't feel you have to be as long-winded as me.)
Coldfire
05-31-2000, 09:34 PM
Oh, GOOD one Milo. I know it has been done before, but it's been a while, and there's lots of newbies. Only five? Here we go!
5 a. Dire Straits - On Every Street Tour, 1992, Rotterdam 'Ahoy
I'll be brief: pure craftsmanship, and great compositions. A classic, albeit very calculated and not really spontaneous.
5 b. Fates Warning - opening for Dream Theater on the 1995 Awake Tour, Utrecht Vredenburg
One of the rare occasions that the opening act was far superior to the headliners. FW rocked the place, and showed great skill and energy. When DT played, they turned out to have become arrogant bastards since their kick-ass debut in 1993 (see #3).
4. The Tea Party - Tryptich Tour, Amsterdam Melkweg, 2000
What a fantastic band! I've seen them two times already in three months (firstly, opening for Queensryche [see #1, and they outplayed QR bigtime this year!], later headlining), and I'm gloing again in three weeks. A charismatic band with a very broad repertoire and great instrumental skills.
3. Dream Theater - Images and Words Tour, Utrecht Vredenburg, 1993
The first concert DT ever did in Europe. The energy was awesome. The band was as amazed as the crowd. This concert was one big party, and from an skills point of view possibly the best I've ever seen. Third overall.
2. Tool - Aenima Tour, 1997, Amsterdam Paradiso
I have NEVER, EVER seen a band play so HARD and ANGRY as these guys. Unbelievable energy. Plus, they came on-stage topless and painted blue all over. Smurf Metal ;)
A superb show of a very talented band - and a great album, too.
1. Queensryche - Promised Land Tour, 1996, Rotterdam 'Ahoy
They played the entire "Operation: Mindcrime" set, with background videos. The band was REALLY into it and played positively HARD. I mean, REALLY, REALLY loud! It was a superb concert from a sound point of uhm hearing. Great setup, excellent solos, and Geoff Tate hit all the high notes perfectly. Recently, I saw QR again at the same arena. It wasn't sold out like the last time. And they didn't play that hard anymore.
The edge is gone, and Tate's voice is starting to fade somewhat. The end of an era. It was great while it lasted.
OK, so that's actually six concerts. Sue me ;)
To my disappointment, I have yet to see Rush live. When I got into their music (circa 1992), they had done their last European concert up till now. Maybe, someday?
Ukulele Ike
05-31-2000, 09:40 PM
Ahhhh...no problem. The good ol' Grateful Dead at Broome County Arena, Binghamton, New York, in the spring of 1979.
Now, Binghamton isn't your swingingest community in the world, but it IS just down the highway from Ithaca, NY, the Freak Capitol of the Universe. And that's where I was that fateful night, loaded to the gunwales with homemade White Barrel LSD from the good chemistry grad students of the Cornell labs.
The acid helped mightily, but the reason I consider this my best Dead show is that, of all the dozens of Dead shows I've taken in, this is the ONLY one where they kicked off the second set with China Cat Sunflower/Know You Rider.
Okay, yeah, I know it wasn't all THAT unusual by the mid-'80s, but in 1979 it was, and China Cat was always a kinda totem tune for my Deadhead brothers and sisters and me, and when the lights went down and my consciousness was zinging from one end of the hall to the other and the first notes of the Garcia filigree came wafting out of those enormous speakers...oh, god...
Milossarian
05-31-2000, 09:45 PM
2. Tool - Aenima Tour, 1997, Amsterdam Paradiso
I have NEVER, EVER seen a band play so HARD and ANGRY as these guys. Unbelievable energy.
You may be right. I saw them on the second stage at Lollapalooza in 1993, and they blew the small crowd there away.
Come to think of it, that was a great concert too. Tool, Rage Against the Machine, Alice in Chains and others.
To my disappointment, I have yet to see Rush live.
Saw 'em. By all means, go when you can, even if they're old fogeys by that time (see my Pink Floyd listing). You haven't lived till you hear 25,000 people sing "Closer to the Heart" with Geddy, or see "Temples of Syrinx" live.
Only took two posts to get a Deadhead. :)
Ukulele Ike
05-31-2000, 10:05 PM
Shit, Milo, if I hadn't had to run upstairs with tears in my eyes to find a 1979 China Cat in my bootleg collection, I coulda beat Coldfire's post.
Great bass, Lesh filling, man.
Nacho4Sara
05-31-2000, 10:36 PM
Are you guys going to yell at me because I don't remember the exact places and times? Just warning ya...
5. Bush, HFS Festival. Pretty rocking show. Definitely hard core, Gavin and the giys laid themselves out there for the taking. Raw, passionate, orgasmic. Incredible!
4. Fuel and Orgy, concert in Towson. Going in, I was not a huge Fuel fan (just got free tix :)). But they were so into theit music and so full of rage, I respected that. I'm still not a huge fan, but I do enjoy them. I love Orgy.
3. Jah Works, last Thursday. This is a local b-more band, more reggae and soul than rock but kicking nonetheless. I've seen them at least 15 times, but this time was the best because the place was empty. Well, I was high, who knows, it felt like that to me! :) Anyway, I was right up front, making eye contact with the cracked out lead singer Scottie (he smokes a blunt before every show, just like me). I felt so peaceful and totally one with the music. I was just blown away.
2. Barenaked Ladies, Merriweather Post Pavillion, last summer. I won 3rd row seats, and BNL kicked ass. I loved it! They were so funny and groovy. I didn't want to leave.
1. THE ROLLING STONES!!, Winter 96 (Around that time.) Imagine this: at best friend's house, around 4pm. Her mom calls and says, "You didn't want tix to the Stone concert tonight, did ya? Someone offered them to me but they wereawful seats." Oh my goodness, everything you have ever thought or heard about the Stones live is true. They are tied at the runner up spot with Eric Clapton, Beatle coming in first, for my fave rock group, but they were so fucking incredible live. I felt like was having my mind blown every three seconds and I wasn't even smoking. Wow.
:)
Ukulele Ike
05-31-2000, 10:42 PM
Oh, wait...I've got to give FIVE? Sorry about the short-term memory loss, man. And I promise to leave the Dead out, now.
Frank Zappa, Cleveland Arena, Summer, 1977.
Talking Heads, Central Park, NYC, Fall, 1979.
Alex Chilton, The Knitting Factory, NYC, Fall, 1988. He did "Goldfinger." And "Volare." Nuff said.
Bob Dylan, the bullring in Gijon, Spain, Summer, 1994. With a huge buncha crime fiction writers. Michael Dibdin and I were downstairs getting beers when the music started and we stared at each other goggle-eyed and said "Holy Christ, that's STUCK INSIDE OF MOBILE WITH THE MEMPHIS BLUES AGAIN!!!" And went careening back up the stairs, frothing Spanish beer in every direction, so we could dance to it. And the crowd was tiny, so I strolled RIGHT up the the edge of the stage for the acoustic "Mister Tambourine Man" in the second set.
psycat90
05-31-2000, 10:51 PM
Woodstock 94-I saw lots of great acts, but these were my faves:
Nine Inch Nails
Green Day
Peter Gabriel
Lollapalooza 1-4
saw many many great acts.
Jane's Addiction
NIN
Pearl Jam
Soundgarden
Phish
Red Hot Chili Peppers
Mighty Mighty Bosstones
Ministry
lots of others
Rosebud
05-31-2000, 11:01 PM
By far, the best show I've been to yet was Motley Crue, touring for the Dr. Feelgood album. It was back when the speedway near where I grew up could still draw major bands (and back when Motley Crue was, in fact, a major band). I went because I wanted to make sure my Crue-lovin' little brother could see them, and I ended up having the absolute best time. Beautiful night, great seats, the loudest music I have ever heard in my life, the band was in fine form, the crowd was on in a big way-- just fantastic.
Going to see The Cure with the BF in a few weeks, maybe that'll make the list as well :)
Sassy
05-31-2000, 11:16 PM
In no particular order:
One of the early "Day on the Green" shows in Oakland. The Eagles, Fleetwood, Mac, Linda Ronstadt and others. I was young, with all my friends and it was glorious.
The Tubes at the Paramount in Oakland. It's a magnificent old theater and they made the most of it. Pearl Harbor and the Explosions opened.
Delbert McClinton at the Warfield (about 6 years ago). He rocked the house and left Robert Cray (who was the main show) looking like last weeks lunch.
John Hiatt anytime.
Tina Turner.
Czarcasm
05-31-2000, 11:44 PM
This may date me a bit, but...I was stationed in Southern California in the later half of the 70's, and had an opportunity to go to CalJam II, at the Ontario Motor Speedway.
Santana, Dave Mason, Heart, Ted Nugent, Aerosmith, Mohogany Rush, and others too numerous to mention, 50 different varieties of grass at incredibly low prices, thousands of incredibly horny people, incredibly cold beer...hell, need I go on? :)
Nacho4Sara
06-01-2000, 12:16 AM
Ike and Slythe - I am SOOO jealous of you guys! Dylan and then Santana, Heart, Aerosmith, etc. I would pee myself or pass out if I heard "Memphis" live. Actually, last year I had my dorm window open and heard soem strains of "Visions of Johanna" from Blonde on Blonde coming from someone's room. I nearly pmp right then - someone else likes Bob! :)
I judge concerts on the feel I get from them. As a consequence some of my faves aren't my fave artists and even a little off-beat. But very good live nonetheless.
5 Doug Anthony All Stars. If you know them you know how much fun they can be. If not, well... just read on then.
4 The Corrs. Nicely-paced and relaxed concert full of traditional Irish music as well as their singles. Surprisingly upbeat and refreshing. In fact the instrumentals (not found on any of their albums apparently) were the best part.
3 Savage Garden. Fun, entertaining and just watching him prance around in a strut was worth it.
2 They Might Be Giants. Smallish venue but wonderful performance and great interaction. And probably the only time I will ever see a group make a mosh pit form a conga line....
1 Garth Brooks. Yeah I know a lot of people will groan at the mention of his name but he goes off live. He IS a performer. Even the two non-fan friends who went along came away amazed at how good a concert it was. One became a fan based on the live performance.
I would have loved to have seen Queen live - apparently Freddie was fantastic (certainly appears so on videos) live. And Bare Naked Ladies next time they tour Down Under will be a must-see.
DoctorJ
06-01-2000, 01:23 AM
I can't seem to rank them, so I'll just list my five:
Bob Dylan, Bogart's, Cincinnati, July 1999. Capacity=1500. This was as close to a religious experience as I've ever come. When most artists of this stature (not that there are many) are either long gone or Vegas revues of themselves, it's really something to see Dylan come into this familiar little club and just tear the place up. I hope it occurs to me to rock that hard when I'm pushing 60.
Phish, Nutter Center, Dayton, December 1997. If I have to pick one of my nine Phish shows, this was it. Some great surprises ("Psycho Killer", "Boogie On Reggae Woman", "Tube"), plenty of energy, and "Guyute". A great example of what keeps me (and several thousand like me) coming back.
Suzanne Vega, Kentucky Theatre, Lexington, November 1997. I had front-row seats for this one. Suzanne was accompanied only by her bass player, and the effect was similar to having one of your favorite songwriters stand on your coffee table and sing to you for two hours.
Bruce Hornsby, Kentucky Theatre, Lexington, March 1999. This one caught me off guard. I was volunteering for this concert series by this time. I thought I would like this, but I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I did. This was Bruce accompanied only by his piano (can you tell I like my music underproduced?) for well over three hours. I have the tapes. :)
U2, OSU Stadium, Columbus, July 1997. In stark contrast to the preceding two. This was the PopMart tour. I think Zoo TV was probably a better show, but I didn't make it to that one. I was six rows back, which was really too close to get the full effect. As much as I think a stadium is no place for a rock concert, if it's going to be done, it should be done like this. It would be easy to let the visual flashiness of a show like this overshadow the music, but it really didn't.
I'm sure I'll think of more as soon as I hit "Submit".
Dr. J
chief
06-01-2000, 01:50 AM
[quote]2.
Come to think of it, that was a great concert too. Tool, Rage Against the Machine, Alice in Chains and others.
damn, you saw rage, tool, and AIC?
wow, im jealous.. i really want to see Alice in Chains,
maybe one day!
chief
06-01-2000, 02:00 AM
some favorites of mine:
Black Crowes with Jimmy Page
Aerosmith
Rolling Stones
Ben Harper
Black Sabbath
The Cult
there are probably a few I missed too..
RealityChuck
06-01-2000, 08:43 AM
Dates approximate:
Pink Floyd, Boston 1973(?). I was a Pink Floyd fan before it became trendy.
Rock & Roll 9, Florida 1973. Nine killer acts including Jo Jo Gunne, Edgar Winter (with a special appearance by Johnny), Elvin Bishop, the Allman Brothers, and (the only loser) the Mahvishnu Orchestra.
Otis Taylor, Albany, NY, July 1999. Amazing Blues.
J. Geils Band and Allman Brothers, Hudson Valley Community College, 1972.
Bruce Springsteen, Union College, 1974. When he was still relatively unknown.
Sha Na Na, Union College, 1971.
GLWasteful
06-01-2000, 09:09 AM
Richard Thompson, '99 in Lawrence KS, & '2K in KCMO. This man is truly amazing. I cannot recommend him enough, so if he winds up playing in your area, just go. The advantage is that he usually plays in bars or small venues, so the tickets won't break the bank. Plus, he has a band member named Pete Zorn who is a freaking music store, down right. Alto Sax, Bari Sax, Soprano Sax, guitar, mandolin, dulcimer, penny whistle, he plays it all.
A triple bill that came through last winter was Los Straitjackets, G Love & Special Sauce, and The Reverend Horton Heat. I'm still not such a fan of G Love, but I would recommend Los Straitjackets to anyone who likes a surf rock sound, Mexican wrestling masks, and a rocking version of "My Love Will Go On" or whatever in hell that Titanic song is called. The Rev was The Rev, 'nuff said.
Brave Combo, '2K in KCMO. These guys just have so damned much fun that anytime they come to town, I try to see them.
And The Dead at Starlight Theatre in. . .I dunno, '86? '87? '88? Third, and best, time that I saw them live. Plus, as some friends and I were walking toward the entrance, an enchanting little creature skipped toward me, touched me on the shoulder, and said, "Dose". So I took the tab off of my shoulder and was blown away.
Waste
Flick Lives!
Spoke
06-01-2000, 09:28 AM
OK, I have seen literally hundreds of live concerts. I'm a bit of a live music junkie. A live performance is about showmanship and about musical proficiency. It's one thing to make a good studio recording (where you can get innumerable do-overs until you get it right), another thing to perform well live, where you have one shot to get it right. I am a huge fan of R.E.M.'s albums/CDs, but for my money, they have never been great live performers. With that intro, my top 10 live performers are:
[list=1]
The Rolling Stones. Steel Wheels show at Grant Field in Atlanta. The Stones combine musical proficiency with showmanship for the best live performances around. This is the only "big production" live performance I have truly enjoyed.
Jason and the Nashville Scorchers. Dark horse here. This is one of the so-called "cow-punk" bands (infusing elements of rock, country, and punk thrash), though I believe they never liked the cow-punk appellation. I saw these fellows on numerous occasions in the late 80's to early 90's. No band out there does a better job of working the audience into an absolute frenzy night in and night out.
Stray Cats. Brian Setzer before he turned to swing. Once again, the showmanship was amazing. I had rafter seats for this show, and even the folks in the nosebleed seats were on their feet jumping around.
Bruce Springsteen. Once again, I had lousy seats, but you have to give The Boss credit. He put on a four-hour show, and had everyone in the arena delirious.
The Pretenders. Didn't miss a note the entire show, and the crowd went wild. Chrissy Hynde is a goddess.
Psychedelic Furs. I saw these guys several times, but my favorite performance was at Legion Field in Athens, GA, circa 1985. Alex Chilton, who was living in Athens at the time, opened the show, and get the crowd going (Uke is right about Chilton), then the Furs finished 'em off with a blistering set.
BR5-49. One of the "alternative country" acts out there. Got their start playing for tips at Robert's in Nashville. I caught 'em at the Star Bar in Atlanta a couple of years ago. The atmosphere was electric. They came on stage in rhinestone outfits straight out of Nashville circa 1960, and performed a tear-em-up set of old country classics, from Ernest Tubb, to Webb Pierce, to Hank Williams, plus some hilarious tongue-in-cheek original numbers.
Asylum Street Spankers. Another dark horse, and another Star Bar performance. This is a group of acoustic musicians out of Austin, TX, who play a sort of hybrid dixieland/swing/blues style, a la the Squirrel Nut Zippers. The lyrics of their songs are hilarious, and they are one of the more entertaining live acts around. Catch them if they play near you.
Radiohead. Caught these guys at the Masquerade in Atlanta, a small-to-mid-sized venue, and they killed.
Green Day. International Ballroom in Atlanta, a couple of years back. This band blew the roof off the place.
[/list=1]
Nutty Bunny
06-01-2000, 09:29 AM
I have only really enjoyed two bands live, because everyone else sucks.
The Tragically Hip--at Saratoga Winners in Latham, NY in 1994 or 95.(I've seen them about 6 times, but that was the best).
Barenaked Ladies--Walnut Creek Ampitheater in Raleigh, NC (1997)
jesuslynch
06-01-2000, 10:11 AM
Stevie Ray Vaughn. The man was a genius with his axe.
Boston and Aerosmith at Texas Jam '86. And I'm positive the two hits of TurboX had nothing to do with it.
AC/DC. Before Queensryche opened the show, there was a thick cloud hanging in the air and EMT's were carrying people out.
Loverboy. Believe it or not.
Rush. They used to stop here at least once a year.
Buffett. Though it's one of those anytime, anywhere type deals, the best one I've seen to date was at Mud Island in Memphis. It's just something about that venue. I don't know if the beer is colder or just what.
ThisYearsGirl
06-01-2000, 11:35 AM
I've also seen Bruce Hornsby in concert and was very impressed. Opening act Edwin McCain, and although I didn't like that one popular song of his, he had a lot of other great stuff, and really connected with the audience.
Can't remember dates or locations, but here are some of my favorite concerts:
REM
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Black Crowes
They Might Be Giants
2 Skinnee J's (a rap-metal group, normally I don't dig that style of music, but they put on a great show. . kinda like Rage, but less political)
Smashing Pumpkins (with Garbage as the opening act--they rocked, too)
GreenEyes
06-01-2000, 11:51 AM
Some of the best live performances I have seen.. KISS, Garth Brooks, Aerosmith, Beach Boys, Jimmy Buffet, Journey. The worst, hands down was a group I saw in the mid 80's.. they couldn't sing live to save theirs.. Huey Louis and the News.. They sucked!!
LocalLoop
06-01-2000, 12:28 PM
Hmm, let's see now. So many to choose from...
4. Alice in Chains - The show was so bad that a Rolling Stone article about the band had the quote "Things fell apart in Minneapolis". In any case, my friend and I were hanging around trying to get some tickets to the sold out show when we saw the bass player wandering around the side entrance asking for some valium. Well, I told him I could get him a tablet or two (left over prescription) if he put me and my associate on the guest list. He declared it a deal and I grabbed my car and prepared to run home (only lived a few minutes away). He saw me stopped at the intersection by the place (First Avenue nightclub, btw) and jumped in the backseat of my car!! To make a long story short, he was a total arrogant child, and the show sucked, but what a lead-in story.
3. Tool - Undertow tour - First Avenue again (smallish nightclub). Got there early, stood about 3 feet from the band. Very intense show.
2. Los Lobos - Any tour, anytime - One of my favorite bands to see live. My dream would be to have them as my wedding band.
1. Pearl Jam - First Avenue again - Tour supporting "Ten", they ahdn't hit their popularity yet. Once again, arrived early and stood a few feet from the band. Enjoyed watching Eddie swing from the balcony and crowd surf. Good stuff.
ReservoirDog
06-01-2000, 12:42 PM
In no particular order:
Counting Crows (Chicago,IL 2000) - A fantastic group of musicians who are constantly refining and redefining their songs. This show was a lot of fun, now that Adam Duritz has gotten over his "man doesn't it suck to be famous?" phase.
Nine Inch Nails (Worcester, MA 1995) - The Downward Spiral tour absolutely rocked. A true spectacle with the lights and the video screens, etc. I have never seen a larger mixing board in my life as the one they had set up for this show.
Stone Temple Pilots (Tampa, FL 1997) - Scott Weiland had just gotten out of rehab (again) and kept it together long enough to tour for a couple months. An incredible show which they split into a few distinct sections. A second, smaller stage, lit entirely with candles dropped from the roof and they all climbed aboard and did an impressive acoustic set. Every time they played a song, I thought that they had managed to play all of their hits, but then they started the next one. Awesome. Local H opened.
Beck (Chicago, IL 2000) - A very versatile, very funny, and very short man. Pulled out all the stops for this show... had two guys on the turntables, two drummers, two back up singers, a bassist, two guitarists, and a three piece horn section. I didn't know where to look.
Blind Melon / Meat Puppets (Oneonta, NY 1994) - In the SUNY school's gymnasium. A lot of fun. Meat Puppets did a cool rendition of Helter Skelter using the slide trombone as the principle instrument. Blind Melon really rocked out, much to my own surprise. Too bad Shannon Hoon had to kill himself with the ol' needle.
G. Love & Special Sauce (Ithaca, NY 1995) - In The Haunt, a tiny little club downtown. These guys are incredibly fun to watch. Guitar, giant upright bass, drums. So funky. The opening act was a band called Jaspar and the lead singer from that group came out at the end and they did a twenty-minute long improv rap/ blues thing. It was cool.
That's all for me. Honorable mentions :
Queensryche - the U.S. leg of the tour that Coldfire mentioned earlier. Operation:Mindcrime was incredible
Third Eye Blind - not so much the group themselves, but it was on Clearwater Beach, FL, last Memorial Day. Half naked people dancing all over the place.
I'm done.
Grateful Dead, Shoreline Amphitheatre...it must have been around Spring of '94. An awesome run of Stagger Lee and a montstrous marshmallow fight, to boot! ;)
Also, Primus, at The Phoenix, a tiny venue near my hometown. This was around '90, the Frizzle Fry tour. I was in the pit all night long, in a trance; Fell multiple times, but came out with not even a scratch!
SaxFace
06-01-2000, 01:06 PM
Bad Brains
Nina Hagen
Sleep
Desmond Dekker
Some random baritone sax quintet
Note: not at the same time but in no particular order.
Am I the only one who loathes concerts in huge ampitheaters? If I have to go to one of those, I usually bring a book because the crowd is so annoying and the sound quality so bad.
Give me a small, intimate place where I can actually see what the musicians are doing and I'll probably enjoy any show.
Spoke
06-01-2000, 01:20 PM
Hey LocalLoop-
I'm with you on Los Lobos. If my list had been any longer, they would have been number 11. I saw them put on a great show in Athens, GA a few years back. Tight set, and the crowd was rocking.
billehunt
06-01-2000, 01:24 PM
Smashing Pumpkins In a small place in San Diego before they were big. In fact, I played in the same bar a few weeks before. They carried their own gear in. I even helped the bass player (I don't recall her name) carry some stuff in. There were maybe 100-200 people there and they rocked. Billy Corgan had long hair at the time and he reminded me of Jim Morrison; he was very charismatic.
Pearl Jam Also in a small place in San Diego. They had just formed from Mother Love Bone.
Primus and Firehose In San Francisco. My bandmates Jason, JT and I borrowed a car and drove from San Diego to San Francisco to check them out. I had never seen anything like Les Claypool; we were blown away.
Firehose In San Diego. A few weeks after the above concert, I saw that Firehose was playing at UCSD, so we went to see them. I saw the bass player (I can't recall his name) walking around the campus before the show and talked to him a while, told him that we had driven to San Francisco to see them. They rocked. After the show, he came over to me and thanked us for coming.
Nirvana In Tiquana. "Nevermind" had just come out and they weren't super-famous yet. There were maybe 500 people at the show. A week before, as a joke, my bandmate Jason had made some backstage passes to Hell, which were very cool looking. I wore it to the show. A friend gave it to Kurt Cobain while they were playing and he talked about it on stage, "So there are Satanists in the crowd".
A couple bands I never saw in their prime that I wish I would have: AC/DC, Van Halen (v. 1), NIN
John Corrado
06-01-2000, 02:09 PM
Okay, this is really pathetic on my part, as I've only been to about five concerts in my entire life (yessir, just one giant party animal, that's me), and in one of them I was actually playing.
But the best concert I've ever been to had to have been Weird Al Yankovic at a small theatre in downtown DC this year.
Al is a frenetic and top-quality performer; there are plenty of video clips (from specials he's done, UHF, and other sources) between and during songs, often the performance approaches theatre of the absurd, and you'll hear songs that Al hasn't yet (or won't) put on an album.
(Second best was Meatloaf performing in NJ; third was Jethro Tull at the Merriweather Post Pavilion; and fourth was Rush at Merriweather Post. Last, and most sucky, was my garage band's performance at the Sligo Creek Rec Center.)
UncaStuart
06-01-2000, 02:56 PM
Hmm, mine were all around the same time, same place, when I was at UC Santa Barbara, mid to late 60s. Wasn't then and still amn't a fan of huge crowds, so I haven't gone to many since. But the venue at SB was pretty small, so I could get up close and personal with:
Cream. Yow. 20 feet away from Slowhand.
The Byrds. In a high school auditorium, because, IIRC, which is sometimes doubtful when refering to the 60s as the joke goes, Crosby was an alum and was doing the school a favor. They were just releasing "Eight Miles High," and I believe this might have been the first concert performance of it.
Also passing through town were The Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother and the Holding Company, The Doors, Ike & Tina Turner, The Loving Spoonful, and such. But I did study too, honest.
billehunt
06-01-2000, 11:25 PM
UncaStuart wrote
Yow. 20 feet away from Slowhand.
Wow; too cool. I was a zygote at the time and didn't catch him till the early 90's along with a gazillion other fans. Still a great concert, but not even in the same league.
Eo Echo
06-02-2000, 01:30 AM
There are two that really stand out:
1. HFStival 2000 (five days ago), FedEx Field, D.C.: I saw Stone Temple Pilots and Rage Against the Machine, my two favorite bands, back to back.
2. Metallica/Guns N' Roses July 1992, RFK Stadium, D.C.: again, my two favorite bands at the time. Metallica were awesome, and so were GNR, even if it took em two hours to get onstage.
London_Calling
06-02-2000, 03:52 AM
Led Zep in the open air on a warm summer's evening in 1980. A thousand fires lit across the fields, finishing with 'Stairway to Heaven' at midnight. Still waiting to come down.
DoctorJ
06-02-2000, 01:45 PM
Asylum Street Spankers. Another dark horse, and another Star Bar performance. This is a group of acoustic musicians out of Austin, TX, who play a sort of hybrid dixieland/swing/blues style, a la the Squirrel Nut Zippers. The lyrics of their songs are hilarious, and they are one of the more entertaining live acts around. Catch them if they play near you.
Fuckin' A on the Spankers. I've seen them about four times now. When the man says they are acoustic musicians, he means it--they use no amplification whatsoever. They have (had) a "barker" with a megaphone who goes into the audience and tells anyone talking too loudly to shut the hell up.
I was worried that their demise was imminent--apparently Pops and Mysterious John (the barker) both left the band. They were having some real personnel trouble right before that as well, when Stan and Col. Josh left and they had to fire their bass player for being too stoned to make a gig in Amsterdam. (As I told Christina when she was telling me about all this, you could say he was "stoned like a bass player in Amsterdam".)
They are back, with some new members and a new album all about the joys of intoxication called "Spanker Madness". They're on tour this summer--check 'em out.
Dr. J
Spoke
06-02-2000, 04:36 PM
Here's the tour schedule for the Asylum Street Spankers, for those who are interested:
http://www.asylumstreetspankers.com/shows.html
Go see 'em if you can!
Spoke
06-02-2000, 05:31 PM
Here are this summer's tour dates for BR5-49...
http://www.br5-49.com/
You want to see a great show, be sure to catch these boys if they come to a town near you.
Van Halen - great live band - I was smokin mad dope in the crowd.
Steve Vai (on Thanksgiving Night) was a blast, even let me tool his g-tar, was like 10 feet away from me the whole show.
I went back stage with Everything (you know that song, "You got the hooch...baby...) Got drunk and baked with the band and helped 'em out.
Few others, but those were the most fun.
Convict
06-02-2000, 06:45 PM
Van Halen, March 1998--This was their first Chicago show with Gary Cherone. I was a little nervous before the show since Van Halen is my favorite band, but they didn't let me down. Definitely the best concert I've seen.
Styx, October 1996--Their live album and video "Return to Paradise" was recorded at this concert. It was the third time I had seen them on this particular tour. Rumor has it that you can spot me for a nano-second at the beginning of the video.
Buddy Guy, Sept 1994 or '95--Performed at the Last Fling in Naperville, IL. This was the first time I saw him, and I almost didn't go. I'm glad I did. Can't beat seeing Buddy for free while standing 10 feet from the stage.
Smashing Pumpkins, (don't remember the date)--Got front-row seats for free for helping a friend with his ticket brokerage. I think I was the oldest person there.
Jefferson Airplane, summer of 90--performed the same night as the Stones did, so great tickets were available. Sure, age had caught up with them, but it was still a great show.
Barney111
06-02-2000, 09:56 PM
No particular order:
Woodstock '94 : Bob Dylan was the best I've seen him, before or since (I am a HUGE Dylan fan- probably seen him 75 times)
Peter Gabriel was awesome, too.
Dylan, Dead, and Tom Petty: RFK Stadium D.C.('88?)
Shawn Colvin : solo acoustic show at 9:30 Club, Washington,D.C., 1994.
Lyle Lovett and his Big Band: George Mason University, "Joshua Judges Ruth" Tour. This guy is a great performer with a very tight band. See him if you get the chance.
Little Feat(w/Lowell George), Bonnie Raitt, Catfish Hodge: The Wax Museum, Washington D.C. (early '80's)
I've been blessed to see lots of good concerts, but these shows seem to stick out for me.
Enginerd
06-02-2000, 10:36 PM
1. Bob Dylan and Ani Difranco, Wolftrap VA Summer '98
2. Dylan/Phil Lesh last November at Barton Hall, Ithaca NY (the best of the shows I got to from last fall's tour)
3. BB King, also in Ithaca
4. Fugazi (any one of them)
5. David Byrne, GW University, Summer '95
They change constantly, but these are five that really stick out.
Falcon
06-03-2000, 12:51 AM
John - You saw Rush live at Merriweather? I hate you now. *grumble* Like Coldy, I love them, but have never seen them live. The one chance I had, I was in college and decided not to make the drive. Biggest concert regret ever.
Anyway....my favorite concerts, in no particular order:
They Might Be Giants, Wolf Trap, summer 1994 - great show. Had just been introduced to the band by a friend, and went with her. Sang our LUNGS out, and had 7th row seats.
Mary Chapin Carpenter, Wolf Trap, May 1999 - Second time I went to see her. This concert was after her greatest hits CD was released. Seeing her in DC rocks...she grew up there, so it's a homecoming for her. (Her first hit song was about a bar in Bethesda, Maryland.) Played EVERY ONE of my favorite songs....and it was a beautiful night on the lawn.
Indigo Girls, Wolf Trap, June 1997 - This one goes on the list for one reason alone. Standing with my two best friends from college on the lawn at Wolf Trap a month after graduation, SCREAMING along with the line "Spent 4 years prostrate to the higher mind, got my paper and I was FREE!"
Lilith Fair, Merriweather Post Pavilion, July? 1999 - got SOAKED at this one because I was sitting on the lawn, but the show made up for it. The Pretenders were AWESOME during their set, and so were Sheryl Crow and Sarah McLachlan. Got lucky that I liked all the bands on my stop. :)
And as a final show....
Dave Matthews Band, somewhere in Roanoke, April 1998 - picking one show for DMB was hard, but I think this one was one of the better ones I've been to. Won tickets from a local radio station. It was the first show of the Before These Crowded Streets tour - it was before the album was even available. Once again, got soaked because it was general admission. Bruce Hornsby also performed, which was great....and then Dave put on a HELL of a show. Got to hear my two favorite live songs: "Halloween" and "All Along the Watchtower."
L.Ron Hoover
06-03-2000, 01:07 AM
Never seen a good outdoor stadium show.
Best arena show I ever saw was Neil Young on the Ragged Glory tour in '92, documented on Weld.
Best Summer pavillion show I ever saw was NIN and Bowie in '95, with the highlight being Bowie and Trent duetting on Scary Monsters and Hurt.
Best Package deal I ever saw was Horde '97. Neil Young, Beck, Primus, Toad The Wet Sprocked right before they imploded, and on the second stage, Morphine(RIP, Mark) and a little known band from North Carolina called Ben Folds Five who kicked the asses of all the pre-Toad main stage acts.
Best small club shows I've seen, all at a place called Toad's Place: Warren Zevon, Banned from Utopia(A Zappa tribute featuring his band members), Bruce Cockburn, and as surprised as I am to say this, I also really enjoyed Weird Al.
Rush sucks live. If I want to see Rush live, I'll just play my albums and have someone blow pot smoke in my face and spill beer on me while screaming "Play TOM SAWYER!"
Diane
06-03-2000, 01:14 AM
My taste in music usually centers around bands like Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Nirvana, Blind Melon, Smashing Pumpkins, Zebra head, KMFDM, Rancid. I also love Pink Floyd, Billy Idol, and even Prince.
I have seen most in concert as well as all the old bands while growing up, Blue Oyster Cult, Uriah Heep, Nazareth, Ted Nuggent, Sammy Hagar, Foghat, Deep Purple, Bad Company, Rolling Stone (just saw them again in 1999).
I have even been so lucky to get backstage at a few (Bob Dylan (what a burnout), Van Halen (was forcibly kissed by a member of the band and got pissed), Sammy Hagar before VH, Cheap Trick, and UFO).
However, by far my all time favorites have been:
3. KISS 1976(?) - When Destroyer came out, back when they had the fire and blood and makeup. I think a lot of it had to do with me only being 13 or 14 years old. I was in awe.
2. Chet Atkins with the Utah Symphony 1997 (or was it 98?) This guy was totally amazing and his guitar skills would blow any rock and roller off the stage.
1. Moody Blues 1998 (or maybe 97, I loose track of time). I have to say that out of every rock concert I have been to, this one, by far put them all to shame, without exception.
I attended Chet Atkins and The Moody Blues with the same friend I mentioned in the Rolling Stones thread. He was my concert buddy, he died last March. :(
chief
06-03-2000, 01:50 AM
I've also seen Bruce Hornsby in concert and was very impressed. Opening act Edwin McCain, and although I didn't like that one popular song of his, he had a lot of other great stuff, and really connected with the audience.
Can't remember dates or locations, but here are some of my favorite concerts:
REM
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Black Crowes
They Might Be Giants
2 Skinnee J's (a rap-metal group, normally I don't dig that style of music, but they put on a great show. . kinda like Rage, but less political)
Smashing Pumpkins (with Garbage as the opening act--they rocked, too)
post some more details about the Crowes show..
Flutterby
06-03-2000, 02:16 AM
I don't think I can add much to this since I've been to maybe 5 or 6 concerts in total. (all within the last 3 years btw) but the ones that I really liked were Matthew Good Band and Great Big Sea. (Two Canadian bands so if you haven't heard of them thats okay with me. But find some MP3's of MGB they are good)
So for me (going by all the concerts I've been to)
1. MGB and GBS The Palace 2000 (just April actually) and Saddle Dome '99 respectively.(Can't choose just one there)
2. Alanis Morissette Saddle Dome '99
3. Backstreet Boys Saddle Dome '98 (Say what you will I like them. I would have enjoyed the concert more if I didn't have to listen to a good couple thousand screaming girls though)
Typo Negative
06-04-2000, 04:41 AM
I know I'm a little late, but here goes.
5. Jethro Tull in Dayton,Ohio
4. Rush in Dayton,Ohio
3. The Reverend Horton Heat at the Paladium, L.A.
2 The Dickies at the Palomino Club, L.A.
1. The Epitaph Summer Nationals Shows at the Paladium featuring SNFU, NOFX, the Offspring, Down by Law, Gashuffer and Bad Religion.
JavaMaven1
06-05-2000, 02:36 AM
Spoke! I can't believe there's another BR5-49 fan out there! Saw them when they opened for Brian Setzer last year at the Greek Theatre in L.A., and finally convinced my boyfriend that this was a great band.
Other fantastic shows I've seen, in no particular order:
Royal Crown Revue at The Derby. The Derby holds in its front room, maybe about 200-250 SRO. They put on a remarkable testosterone-driven swing show.
The Pogues, John Anson Ford Theatre, 1989. I was a 17 year old pup at this time, so I survived the pit. They were a perfect combination of punk and Irish drinking music--it was music for moving, and I swear, they were the only band that ever made the accordian COOL.
Charlotte Church, Hollywood Bowl, 1999. What can I say about her--she is an earth-bound angel, whose voice can make me a pile of jello every time I hear her sing.
Buddy Guy & John Lee Hooker, Long Beach Blues Festival, 1997. I volunteered to work this festival (it's a yearly festival in which the profits go to run the L.B. University Jazz & Blues Radio station, to keep it commercial-free). Since I had the almighty all-access pass, I figured to get in to the Press Pit since it was the closest to the stage possible when Buddy Guy came on. I'm glad I did it--I was transcended to another plane of existence when I heard him. I don't think I felt my body for the 40 minutes he was on. And--about John Lee Hooker-- He's the man.
Mr. Cynical
06-05-2000, 09:18 AM
Queensryche, for sure! I saw them during the Hysteria tour, where they opened for Def Leppard. I had never heard anything by them before. By the time they got to I Don't Believe In Love, I was sold.
And, the very best one was Barry Manilow, at Fiddler's Green in Colorado. A wonderful show. It was a beautiful night, I had awesome seats, and the music was perfect. People around me were crying at some of his songs. Wonderful.
SwimmingRiddles
06-05-2000, 11:15 AM
I've been to a ton of shows, as I used to work for a radio station. But the end-all of musical experiances was standing 50 feet from the mainstage at Woodstock '99, before it burned down, listening to Elvis Costello sing "What's So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding?" Everyone started swaying and holding the peace sign, and for the first time in three days of dehydration, hunger, heat exhaustion, and pent up rage that exploded that night, I felt like I was at WOODSTOCK. It was pure beauty. Dave Matthew's set the night before was pretty great, too. The stage area was packed, I'd say way over 100,000, and during "Ants are Marching" the entire audience screamed "PEOPLE IN EVERY DIRECTION," and Dave giggled. While I will curse the promoters of Woodstock '99 until I die, the music I saw, the energy of the performers, and the synergy of audience members was nothing short of amazing.
As far as smaller shows go, I really liked the Barenaked Ladies. And while I'm not a huge fan of pop-rock, (give me a good quirky King Missle track any day,) The Barenaked Ladies were the kindest band I have ever seen. They kept coming back for encores, and Ed said "When you jump around, please make sure you're doing it vertically. Watch out for each other out there, OK?" And they did a cover of "Memories" from CATS, which amused the shit out of me. Without being sugary, they apprechiated the audience, which is a band really should be doing.
Guster, a three man outfit from Boston, is lots of fun live, too.
Spoke
06-05-2000, 01:59 PM
JavaMaven1-
Hmm, let's see...
You like BR5-49. You like [/b]The Pogues[/b]. You like Buddy Guy and John Lee Hooker.
If it weren't for the fact that you live all the way out in California, I'd tell you to dump that loser boyfriend of yours (you had to convince him to like BR5-49???) and let's go see a show!
JavaMaven1
06-05-2000, 02:31 PM
If you also liked a little Opera & Symphony music now & again, I'd have to convince you to move to L.A. (sorry, not going to GA... that means I'd have to move away from the Hollywood Bowl, and summer is nothing to me without a few Saturday nights at the Bowl)
Spoke
06-05-2000, 03:06 PM
JavaMaven1-
Let me tell you 'bout a little something called Chastain Park... (We do believe in outdoor shows here as well, you know...)
Dunno about the opera, but I'm in on the symphonies!
rackensack
06-05-2000, 05:09 PM
Hmm. Five. You'd think this'd be easier since I haven't been to a live music performance in at least five years. I haven't tried to put these in any order.
They Might Be Giants, Cotton Club, Atlanta, summer 1988. Besides being a great show, previewing material that later turned up on both Lincoln and Flood, including "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)", among the crew I went with I met a nice Jewish girl who later became my wife.
Elvis Costello, Atlanta Civic Center, spring(?) 1988. Part of the solo acoustic tour he did with Nick Lowe opening (also doing a solo set). Sponsored by the Emory University social committee, tickets for Emory students were three dollars (they were only about $10, IIRC, for non-students). Really interesting, fun set. Open seating, and we ended up about four or five rows back on the right-hand side of the auditorium.
Joe "King" Carrasco and Alex Chilton, The Dugout, Atlanta, 1987 or 1988. These actually were two different shows about a week apart, but in the interest of cramming more stuff into my quota of five shows, I'm combining them into one entry. Both were great, high-energy shows in a small storefront club directly across the street from Emory U. The stage, a platform raised about 18 inches above the floor level and maybe thirty feet wide by fifteen feet deep, was backed up against the windows at the front of the room, so that the performers had to walk through the crowd to get on or off the stage. Standing on the floor facing the stage, you could literally reach out and wrap your arms around the waist of the performers if you were inclined to do so. I spent all of both shows standing right there in front of the mike. Chilton actually did several Big Star numbers and, amazingly, "The Letter" as part of the encore.
The Cramps with Flat Duo Jets opening, The Roxy, Atlanta, 19??. One of the last shows I went to, probably in 1992 or 1993. Dexter was having a bad night, so Flat Duo Jets weren't up to their usual standard, but The Cramps were amazing. It was well worth the price of admission just to watch Nick Knox on drums. Lux climbing the stage gear was just gravy, and Poison Ivy of course was well worth watching. My watch stopped at the stroke of midnight -- all three hands lined up on the twelve -- and I always thought that should have been an omen but was never sure of what. Ended the evening (as usual) at the Majestic (an all-night diner on Ponce de Leon), where we were treated to the spectacle of Dexter slumped into a booth with the rest of the band.
k.d. lang, Center Stage, Atlanta, September 1988. First "official date" with my wife. After meeting at the TMBG show in the summer mentioned above, she'd gone back to North Carolina, moved down to Atlanta in August, then gone out on the Friday before Labor Day with the same crew that had been at the TMBG show. She flirted and didn't discourage my attention to her that night, then turned down every suggestion I made about getting together again for nearly a month. She finally agreed to go with me to this show, after which she informed me she was "sort of" engaged to a guy living in Charlotte. She continued to come up with reasons why we shouldn't date each other until early November. We both came up with lots of reasons we shouldn't get married, and continued to until 1995. Oh yeah, the k.d. lang show (just after Shadowland was released) was pretty good too.
That's five; here's the honorable mention list:
Flat Duo Jets, The Forty-Watt, Athens, GA, 1987-8. Drove over with some friends, the first time I'd been to Athens. Dexter was on that night. Boy was he on.
Translator, SOB's, Little Rock, AR, summer 1986. Probably stands out for me mostly because after being a fan for several years, I'd never expected to see them live in Arkansas. Unfortunately, it also turned out to be their farewell tour.
Tav Falco and Panther Burns, Cotton Club, Atlanta, sometime around 1990-1991, possibly earlier.
The Connells, SOB's, Little Rock, AR, summer 1986. Very good show, with my ex-roommate's band opening.
The Connells, The Rollick (nee the 688, Atlanta, GA, early 1987. I'm pretty sure this one happened after the 688 shut down and was re-opened under new management as the Rollick a few months later, though it may have still been the 688 then. Anyway, the show was added at the last minute (about 10 days in advance) as a place to stop and make a few extra bucks as the band headed out west for a tour, and Creative Loafing (the local "what's happening" weekly tabloid) screwed up the band name in the ad. I showed up on a hunch that it might be them, having really enjoyed myself at the Little Rock show mentioned above. At the posted start time, there were four people in the club besides the band. George Huntley wandered over to the bar where I was sitting and we had a very pleasant conversation for a about an hour, by which time another seven people had walked in, mostly friends or friends-of-friends of band memebers who they'd called after realizing no one else was going to show up. They went on stage and did a very respectable and professional set.
The Meat Puppets, an abandoned commercial nursery warehouse, Little Rock, AR, 1987. While visiting during a break from graduate school, happened to catch this show, which apparently had to be relocated after the original venue fell through. Even the electrical service was temporary, provided by generators outside the metal shed. Good show though.
Elvis Costello and the Attractions, with Aztec Camera opening, Mud Island Amphitheatre, Memphis, 1983 or 1984 (Punch the Clock! tour). Good show, highlighted by the cover of the OJays' "Backstabbers", and a really cool moment during "Shipbuilding" as a riverboat passed through the narrow channel between the island and downtown Memphis, behind the stage and thus in full view of the audience, as if on cue.
chief
06-06-2000, 03:36 AM
If you also liked a little Opera & Symphony music now & again, I'd have to convince you to move to L.A. (sorry, not going to GA... that means I'd have to move away from the Hollywood Bowl, and summer is nothing to me without a few Saturday nights at the Bowl)
hey, are you going to see John Lee Hooker
or Buddy Guy with BB King this summer?
im going!! :))
JavaMaven1
06-06-2000, 03:40 AM
spoke-
Let me tell you 'bout a little something called Chastain Park... (We do believe in outdoor shows here as well, you know...)
Yeah... well... has Chastain Park ever been featured in a Bugs Bunny Cartoon?
JavaMaven1
06-06-2000, 03:43 AM
hey, are you going to see John Lee Hooker
or Buddy Guy with BB King this summer?
im going!! :))
Unfortunately, no, I'm not able to go. Considering my status of "unemployed student" there's no funds to do it. <sigh> Wish I could!!!
Spoke
06-06-2000, 12:05 PM
Yeah... well... has Chastain Park ever been featured in a Bugs Bunny Cartoon?
Well, OK, you got me there. Can you have a candlelight dinner during the show at the Hollywood Bowl?
Also, how do you feel about bluegrass? ('Cause we get some kickin' bluegrass shows at a couple of venues here.) (Hey, if I have to put up with opera...)
On another subject, I feel a new kinship with my buddy Rackensack after looking over his list. (I respect anybody who mentions the 40 Watt Club and 688 in one post.) I was right there with you for some of the same shows myself. Also saw a really good Connells performance at Center Stage once. Did you catch that one?
jesuslynch
06-06-2000, 12:15 PM
I didn't see either of the two you mentioned, but I saw Timbuck3 at SOB.
Did you catch Jason D. in any of his endless number of appearences at Cajuns? He did 3 nights at Cajuns about a month ago.
Or how 'bout Joe Savage and his chain saw at the Wine Cellar?
God, now I'm starting to have flashbacks.
rackensack
06-06-2000, 01:08 PM
[quote]On another subject, I feel a new kinship with my buddy Rackensack after looking over his list. (I respect anybody who mentions the 40 Watt Club and 688 in one post.) I was right there with you for some of the same shows myself. Also saw a really good Connells performance at Center Stage once. Did you catch that one?
Didn't seem them at Center Stage. In Atlanta, I saw them once at 688 Spring (whichever name it had at the time) and once at the Cotton Club a few years later. My wife hates bars, loud music, and smoke, so my attendance at live music performances has been dramatically curtailed in the last several years -- plus I've turned into an old fart who can't be bothered. In fact, I think that Connells show at the Cotton Club was the last time I managed to talk her into going with me; she had friends who had lived in the Research Triangle area who were fans and helped talk her into it. Makes it especially ironic that it was on an expedition with common acquaintances to see TMBG at the Cotton Club that we met.
I'm really glad that I moved to Atlanta in time to catch the last few months of the 688, and to have spent time in places like the Dugout, the White Dot, the Point, etc.
gobear
06-06-2000, 01:30 PM
Gosh, I don't know about best, but the meost memorable would
be:
1) Santana, Olympic Park, Seoul, South Korea, May 1996. It was an outdoor venue, and my boss and I went. Carlos played his heart out and the Koreans just sat there, while in the crowd, here and there, you could see Westerners dancing and grooving to the music.
2)Grateful Dead, Compton Terrace, Phoenix, 1990. Sting was the opening act. I had gone to a gay bar the night before and gotten bashed by three punks as I walked out of the bar. I had to go to the hospital and get stitches, so I was dancing and wincing in pain at the show.
3)The Violent Femmes, Tipitina's, New Orleans, 1989 I went with a guy I was madly in love with to turn him on to Gordon Gano's voice. We broke up a month later. Coincidence?
4)Kiss, Freedom Hall, Louisville, Ky, 1977. My very first rock concert I saw on acid.
rackensack
06-06-2000, 02:22 PM
I didn't see either of the two you mentioned, but I saw Timbuck3 at SOB.
Did you catch Jason D. in any of his endless number of appearences at Cajuns? He did 3 nights at Cajuns about a month ago.
Or how 'bout Joe Savage and his chain saw at the Wine Cellar?
God, now I'm starting to have flashbacks.
Nope, haven't had much contact with the music scene in Little Rock since I left in 1986 (within weeks of the Connells and Translator shows mentioned in my first post). SOB was about the place in town with live music at the time -- well, I'm sure there were bars with your run-of-the-mill hard-rock cover bands, but you know what I mean.
JavaMaven1
06-06-2000, 02:35 PM
Yeah... well... has Chastain Park ever been featured in a Bugs Bunny Cartoon?
Well, OK, you got me there. Can you have a candlelight dinner during the show at the Hollywood Bowl?
Oh yeah, you betcha. If you've got the money, there's the nice box seats with tables and comfy chairs. I'm usually in the El Cheapo section with the benches, so I don't have the little table, but I still have a picnic basket packed to feed an army of food snobs, along with a couple bottles of wine. After that first bottle of wine, who gives a damn about candlelight?
About bluegrass... to be honest, there's not much bluegrass here in L.A., so my exposure to it has been... well, nonexistent. But, I'm always willing to give a listen.
Spoke
06-06-2000, 05:50 PM
Hmmm...Sounds like Chastain provides a pretty similar experience to the Hollywood Bowl (minus the Bugs Bunny connection, of course)...
KarlGauss
06-06-2000, 10:24 PM
I'm really not that old (cetainly don't feel it), but my top three would have to be:
1. The Doors - September 1969
No, he didn't whip it out, but witnessing an ad lib to 'The End', while on mescaline, at the end of a fantstic show, was nothing short of amazing.
2. Pinkfloyd - March 1973
The 'Dark Side of the Moon' tour. Floor seats, girlfriend at my side. Wow!
3. Jethro Tull - February 1972
Aqualung tour. Heard the music in my head for the next 72 hours. Now, I can't hear a thing. What? Speak up!
chief
06-07-2000, 01:58 AM
hey, are you going to see John Lee Hooker
or Buddy Guy with BB King this summer?
im going!! :))
Unfortunately, no, I'm not able to go. Considering my status of "unemployed student" there's no funds to do it. <sigh> Wish I could!!!
well im going to be looking for a job and maybe working part time. i dont see why not? it will only cost maybe 30 or so for cheap tickets for those shows.. thats not too bad!
Coldfire
06-07-2000, 04:25 AM
2. Pinkfloyd - March 1973
The 'Dark Side of the Moon' tour. Floor seats, girlfriend at my side. Wow!
Bastard! I would have been there too, you know. But my mommy wouldn't let me go. She said that one month old babies shouldn't visit rock concerts.
The lunatic is on the grass...
Spectre of Pithecanthropus
09-14-2000, 05:44 PM
I don't remember the dates, but I saw them twice there in the early 1989's.
Sam Stone
09-15-2000, 01:39 AM
Grateful Dead @ Ventura County Fairgrounds
I don't remember the dates, but I saw them twice there in the early 1989's.
Now THAT is a true dead-head.
Edward The Head
09-15-2000, 09:17 AM
Well they are in no particular order really but...
any of the 6-7 times I've seen Motorhead, Lemmy and crew have NEVER disapointed. The best would have been at the 9:30 club in DC when I was right up next to Lemmy the whole time and away from the idiots in the pit.
Rush at the US Air Arena in 96 I think.
but the absolute BEST concert would have been the first time I saw Iron Maiden with Bruce back in the band in NYC back in 99. I drove 4 hours from DC to NYC with 6 friends to see them. what a great show.
Satan
09-15-2000, 09:46 AM
My all-time favorite concert was when King's X played the Limelight in New York as a part of the CMJ Convention in 1991 I think. Opening was a young, strappling Alice In Chains (who were good, and Layne and I made fun of Extreme, who AIC opened up for before that in the tiny Cat Club in NYC), but the important thing was King's X.
These guys are always good. But this night was... Magical. They took a crowd - one with a lot of jaded music-industry-types in it (no mean feat) - on a journey that evening. I was right up front, and it was amazing. I was actually moved to tears at how wonderful the band was.
Years later when I was interviewing the band, I mentioned this show, and Doug Pinnick (bassist/vocalist) said that he had actually heard from a lot of people about that one show. Glad people noticed...
I've been to too many concerts to make a list of honorable mentions in any order, but I do want to mention in no particular order: Sepultura's first ever US performance in 1989 at the Zone DK (formerly and later an S&M bar) in New York, Queensryche opening for Metallica, my first show - The Ramones at The Bayou in DC in 1986 or so - Mojo Nixon every time I've seen him, and The Cranes at the 9:30 Club in DC, though the latter is very personal and not due to the band as much as where I was at my place in life.
Lessee... Woodstock '94 was cool (Decent bands and in the spirit of th original festival, got a blow job from some woman who invited me into her tent for the evening)... Went to the Lollapalooza where Rage Against The machine stripped naked and didn't play in Philly... Fishbone every time... Slayer at L'Amour in Brooklyn - the hottest show I was ever at, my contact lens melted out of my eye literally... The Goo Goo Dolls when they were just a Replacements wanna-be band ina tiny club cracking jokes...
There are tons more...
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vanilla
09-15-2000, 09:48 AM
The Ramones, back in 95.
Of course, thats the ONLY concert I ever went to, but it was the best.
pldennison
09-15-2000, 09:48 AM
Geez, I have seen so many concerts, it's really hard to recall which were the best, so here are five particularly memorable ones in no particular order:
Duran Duran, Blossom Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls, OH, 1988: Before you laugh, you have to know why it was my favorite. Yes, their glory days (if there ever were any) were long gone, but my then-girlfriend and I had lawn seats, and it rained like hell, so we buried ourselves under a couple of blankets, one thing led to another, and . . . yeah, I have no clue what songs, if any, the band played. Nice memory, though. Oh, and Erasure opened up, and they were pretty damned good.
Paul McCartney, Cleveland Stadium, 1989: My only chance to see one of my personal music heroes in person. The concert was one of the first to use a "lottery system," handing out numbered wristbands one day, then drawing a random number the day of sales, with that number being first in line. I was, like, tenth in line for wristbands. Unfortunately, the starting number was about 20 numbers after me, which put me near the end of the line. We did, however, get to wait in line next to a woman who had seen the Beatles at Cleveland's Public Hall in 1964, so we had a great time chatting with her. We ended up with seats in the lower deck, but way the hell back. And you know what? It was great. It was McCartney's first major tour since "Wings Over America," the show opened up with a retrospective film by Richard Lester, he had that great band with Hamish Stewart and Robbie McIntosh, and he performed not only the great Wings and Beatles hits, but one of my favorite album tracks, "Things We Said Today."
Matthew Sweet, Shooters on the Water, Cleveland, 1992[b]: Matthew Sweet was at the height of his indie-rock hero status at the time, and this was a small club in Cleveland down in the flats. Unfortunately, he didn't take guitar heros Robert Quine and Richard Lloyd, who played on his albums, on tour with him, but he did take former Voidoid Ivan Julian, who is just as good. The best part of any Matthew Sweet show is that he throws in some well-chosen covers. At this show, he made the audience guess the song from the first couple of bars before he'd play it. The covers included L7's "Pretend We're Dead," Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" and "She Said She Said" by the Beatles. (At another Sweet show, at which Go-Gos Jane Weidlin and Charlotte Caffey opened up and had a rough time with the audience, he invited them back out to do "Our Lips Are Sealed.")
[b]The Posies, Peabody's DownUnder, Cleveland, 1990: Early in the year, I had heard on the local "alternative" station this song, "Golden Blunders." The song should have been listed in the dictionary under "Beatlesque" (so much so that it was later covered by Ringo Starr). When I found out who it was by, I went and picked up their CD, "Dear 23," and went to see my friend Chris. We listened to the album in amazement--we didn't think they made bands like this anymore! A few months later, we were listening to the Sunday night DJ on WMMS 100.7 (you ex-Clevelanders remember when the Buzzard ruled, right?), and they were giving away some tickets to a show, and I called in and won. It turned out the be the Posies, at a club down in the Flats. Chris and I attended, and damned if those guys didn't rock. I mean, they flat out rocked. Less texture than on the album, but a lot more power. Since then I've become a loyal buyer of their albums, imports and B-sides, I met them at a show in Pittsburgh, and I think they're the best unsung band ever.
Smashing Pumpkins, Babylon a Go Go, 1991, and Gund Arena, 1995: The Babylon was a tiny club on West 25th Street in the Ohio City area of Cleveland. I remember the night the stage collapsed, much to the surprise of the band playing at the time. It's gone now, but I saw the Pumpkins there just before they hit big. "Gish" was just out, "Soma" was getting some limited radio and MTV play, and they were touring clubs. All I really remember about them is that they were really loud. Then, of course, "Siamese Dream" was a smash hit, as was "Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness." When that one came out, I was working at WKNR, and our GM gave me tickets to the company loge at the arena. The show was the Pumpkins with Garbage opening. I couldn't believe this was the same band I had seen in this tiny club four years ago. They were so much more refined. Plus, one of the salespeople from the station was entertaining a client and expensing all the food and drink, so my friend Jennifer and I got free pizza, beer and snacks all night.
pldennison
09-15-2000, 09:55 AM
Oh, hell, I almost forgot one!
Nirvana, JAR Arena, Akron, 1993 : This was a Halloween night show, the last the band played in Ohio before Cobain killed himself the next spring. The openers were The Boredoms, a Japanese noise band who I later saw open for Sonic Youth at the Cleveland Agora; and the Meat Puppets, who were enjoying their one-and-only radio hit, "Backwater."
Cobain was at the top of his form, at least as lucid as he was on "Unplugged." The band came out in Halloween costumes which they later shed. One of the more memorable ones was when someone in the audience threw a shoe at the stage, nearly hitting Cobain in the head. After the song, he stopped and picked it up, asking who wanted to claim it. When nobody stepped up, he set it on the stage, turned around, urinated in it, and asked, "OK, who wants to claim it now?" Needless to say, nobody did. The best part of the show was that they didn't play "Smells Like Teen Spirit," which led to the amusing sight of several thousand punk-ass slackers, at whom the song was targeted and derisively commenting on, shuffling out of the arena commenting, "I can't believe they didn't play 'Teen Spirit.'"
Shaky Jake
09-15-2000, 10:09 AM
The Dead- Radio City Music Hall (several shows); acoustic set, 2 electric sets
Dylan, Petty, The Dead - Rich Stadium, Buffalo
Bob Marley - twice, once at Harvard Stadium as part of a Reggaefest (big arena, relatively small crowd), once in Madison Square Garden (with the Commodores of all people - ugh). The man knew how to put on a show.
Shaky Jake
Gregor Samsa
09-15-2000, 10:24 AM
I'm not much a fan of theirs anymore, but I saw U2 in 1981 (I think - may have been 1980) on their Boy tour, playing Ryerson College in Toronto. I had never heard of them, nor had the guy I went with, but he, being the cooler of the two of us, knew that they were big in the UK.
I saw The Jam the same year (same town, different venue.)
During the summers of 1980 and 1981, I saw two big outdoor shows in southern Ontario: the Police Picnic, and Heatwave. Spread out over those two shows were: The Police, Elvis Costello, Iggy Pop, The Pretenders, The B-52s, 999, and a bunch of others who I just can't remember these twenty years later. In fact, I can't even remember who played in what years...
kd lang playing Le Rendezvous in Winnipeg in the mid- 1980s was truly remarkable also. I've never seen anyone have so much fun on stage.
uberDave
09-15-2000, 10:35 AM
Cool Thread.
Dire Straits (Feb 1978) Tower Theater Upper Darby Pa. Sultans of Swing was already out and it was their first tour backing it in the states. They played a simelcast (sp?) over the radio doing the whole album. Then after the radio part was shut down they did the second album. Stunning show.
The Pretenders (March 1982) Tower Theater Upper Darby Pa. Chrissie Hynde was hot. It was the orginal band before all the drugs took the bassist and lead guitarist.
Lowell George (July 197?) Alexanders Browns Mills NJ
Three nights before he died. Second to last show. A voice as cool as the other side of the pillow.
George Thorogood and the Destroyers. (April 1980) Somewhere in Chapel Hill, N.C. We right in front in the pit. Thorogood touched my head with his guitar. Sort of like an annointment. Heavy chemically enhanced evening. :)
Rick Wakeman (Autumn 1974) The Spectrum Philadelphia
He did the 'Six Wives of Henry VIII' . Wow.
I could go on and on. There were so many.
Springsteen at The Meadowlands (NJ) 7/20/99. Even better than the first time I saw him, 7/6/81. Yes, both ticket stubs are still in my wallet.
Joan Jett at Club Malibu (Long Island), 1980?
A nice small club, and she was sweating onto the crowd!
Jack Batty
09-15-2000, 10:48 AM
Three spring to mind. Actually I think they were the only three I've been to where I managed to squirm my way to the front row. And conveniently, they get better chronologically . . .
Early '80's - Aerosmith - Bangor Auditorium - Bangor ME . . . Being a huge fan all through the '70's, I was in awe. However, in retrospect, it was right before their first break-up and they kind of sucked. Steven Tyler was so shit-faced, he forgot half his lyrics, fell down a few times and generally looked like he was about to puke throughout the show.
Late '80's - AC/DC - Cumberland County Civic Center - Portland, ME ... "For those about to rock ... " BOOOOOM!!! Too cool. Front, friggin' row. Angus did a 30 minute guitar solo. Best showman I've ever seen.
Mid - '90's - Live - {some college field house, can't remember which one} - Waltham, MA. ... Drove down with a friend and hooked up with my boss's son who was attending said college. I didn't know him that well, but he hosted one hell of a dorm party. Followed by my favorite band at the time putting on a great show, really intense, and musically dead-on. Live really translates well live. Although I did get kicked in the head, being at the fringe of the mosh pit.
Lord Derfel
09-15-2000, 10:50 AM
My absolute number one concert was: Bootsy Collins and his Rubber Band at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver. The floor of the Commodore is on springs. Bootsy got everyone on the floor to jump in unison and then decided he wanted to bounce too. It was like a trampoline! Bootsy bounced through the crowd and announced that he wanted to "touch everyone", so he worked his way around the floor grabbing everyone's hand (probably around 1000 people at the show, and he made it to most!). The Rubber Band continued to lay down some wicked funk while this was happening. Awesome.
Number 2 was: NOFX at a converted bingo hall in Vancouver. They put on an incredible show, displaying more talent and musical ability than any other punk band I've seen. The tiny venue made the concert that much better.
Number 3 is a toss up between: Bad Religion at the Commodore, or Colin James doing an acoustic blues show at the Orpheum (both in Vancouver). Both shows were fabulous.
Bottle of Smoke
09-15-2000, 11:12 AM
Wow. Where to start? I haven't been to a concert in ages (got that small children thing goin' now). But my all-time favorites (places and dates are only fuzzily remembered): Bob Dylan and Tom Petty, Alpine Valley in East Troy, WI, (1986 I think) - Awesome show. I really only wanted to see Dylan (who sounded better than he had in years) but I came away as a huge Tom Petty fan, too.
REM in Minneapolis, MN (1988 I think) - On the Green tour. Seats were just 10 rows back. Wow.
Lyle Lovett, Civic Center, Madison, WI (1995 I think) - Lyle is simply amazing to hear live. I would see him again any day.
James McMurtry, Club de Wash, Madison, WI (1992 or so?) - There couldn't have been more than 50 people there, but he put on a great acoustic show.
The Replacements, Green Bay, WI (1990?) - Best concert I ever went to. The Goo Goo Dolls opened (before anyone knew who they were), the 'Mats rocked for a solid two hours, Paul Westerberg drank beer out of a dirty shoe that someone threw on stage...it was a body slammin' sweat drippin' hell of a good time.
Lynyrd Skynyrd-1998. I know they are probably not as cool now as they were in the 70's, but hey, I wasn't alive in the 70's. I couldnt believe how good they were.
I saw Phish at the Flynn Theater in Burlington VT, in Spring '97. It was the last time they played in B-town, and probably the smallest venue they have played in the states for quite a while now. They brought out some of the horn blowers from the Giant Counrty horns, and also Tammy Fletcher from a local soul/blues band called the Disiples. What an awesome show!
Zenster
09-22-2000, 12:28 AM
In some mild order:
The Doors
Country Joe and the Fish
The Charlatans
The Youngbloods
The Who
The Rolling Stones
Led Zeppelin
Johnny Winter
Edgar Winter
Rick Derringer
Lenyrd Skynnerd
Fleetwood Mack
Frank Zappa
Foghat
Blue Oyster Cult
Yes
Gentle Giant
Jeff Beck
Mahavishnu Orchestra
Joe Satriani
Eric Johnson
Steve Miller
ZZ Topp
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young
The Beach Boys
Traffic
Journey
Emerson, Lake and Palmer
Pink Floyd
U2
Bruce Springsteen
Pearl Jam
Steve Vai
Just a few others... Can't remember all of them right now.
Zenster
09-22-2000, 12:39 AM
Jethro Tull
Bob Dylan
Grateful Dead
Gentle Giant
Eric Clapton
Robert Cray
When I remember some more I'll post them.
One of the best was The Who at Winterland in San Francisco. Imagine a concert venue with a floor the size of a basketball court. This was a makeup tour for their previously failed performance at The Cow Palace. Keith Moon was in perfect form and the laser light show was fantastic!
The G3 tour gets an honorable mention too.
Mr Elbows
09-22-2000, 01:04 AM
Okay so I have been to hordes of concerts too, only it was a while ago now, back when you could get tickets to the gardens for $11.50.
BB King, had to be dragged to this show, didn't think it was my thing, hands down the best show I've ever attended.
Rolling Stones, 1975, Maple Leaf Gardens, back in the day, as they say, nothing like it and I've seen them since. It was sooo clear how someone could get killed at a Stones concert. Went all the way to Buffalo to see them 2 years later, but it couldn't touch that first show.
Bob Marley, back before anyone knew who he was on this continent, I lived with foreign students who had introduced me to the music. It was way too cool.
Bob Dylan, the one, the only, at the original Massey Hall. Magic.
John Mayal, didn't even know who he was but he rocked the joint.
Stephane Grapelli, front row, it was a long time ago but I remember it still.
Napsy
09-22-2000, 06:19 PM
Hey hey hey - my first post. Cool thread, too.
I've seen a bunch of shows and in my lumped-in #5 and #4 would be Neil Young, Primus/Sausage (multiple times), Soundgarden, Helmet, Ramones, Ministry, Rush, etc, etc...
#3) Burlap to Cashmere at the Elbo Room in Chicago, Feb of '00. I had only heard one song of theirs on the radio a few days prior, but it was a free show and I wasn't busy, so I decided to check 'em out. Despite numerous technical difficulties, they played on and I was blown away. They're incredible musicians and I was an instant convert, although I hear they may be breaking up.
#2) King Crimson in Milwaukee (summer of 95). This was during my prog-rock years, and I have NEVER seen such a display of musicianship in my life. Jaw-dropping yet never pompous. Adrian Belew did John Lennon's "Free As A Bird" as an encore just before it was released as part of that big ABC Beatles Blowout. They were so good it was scary.
and the number #1
Jeff Buckley at the Metro in Chicago, late May of 95. Got there early so I could get a good spot - I think that concert was just released as a video/DVD. Words cannot describe his voice. It was an evening of incredibly passionate music. It sucks that he's dead.
Rysdad
09-22-2000, 08:18 PM
I saw The Who the night before I went into the Army, Sep 8, 1971, at the Met Sport Center in Bloomington, MN.
:::The house lights go out. The crowd is silent. A single spotlight hits Daltry. He raises his hand... :::
"See me!"
:::The crowd goes wild:::
I caught The Stones in Frankenthal, Germany, in the summer of 1973. It was hotter than hell inside the building, and Mick threw buckets of rose petals into the crowd. I had one laminated. I kept it for quite a while until I lost that billfold. Damn it.
Kieras
09-22-2000, 09:48 PM
It was the winter of 99 Tour for
Danzig/samhain with AFI opening. I surfed the thread and did not see them mentioned but glenn danzig is a lead singer who has been with the samhain, The original misfits, and then Danzig.
The opener of the show was AFI who I did not care for at all to begin with but they grow on you. Well, they do if you are into punk music.
The show was held in a small bar with very little space but, I was impressed with the feel that the music gave off in a small area like that and the adrenaline was extremely High!! Hoping they come through the west coast again
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