I think a pretext of seeing Iron Butterfly is having no memory of it the next day..normal wrote:possibly iron butterfly ...
First concert you ever attended?
-
- Banned
- 6127 posts since 1 Apr, 2004 from Et in Arcadia Ego
-
experimental.crow experimental.crow https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=6258
- KVRAF
- 6895 posts since 9 Mar, 2003 from the bridge of sighs
whew ...Sicklecell666 wrote:I think a pretext of seeing Iron Butterfly is having no memory of it the next day..normal wrote:possibly iron butterfly ...

-
- KVRAF
- 6496 posts since 26 Nov, 2004 from Frederick, MD
That was probably awesome! I saw them in either late '78 or early '79--after their first SNL appearance--at a theater in-the-round in Owen's Mills Maryland. It was one of my most cherished moments, and the very first time I ever saw wireless mics and guitars in use. The lead guitarist was playing leads while walking over the arms of seats in the theater . . . and the first song they played on stage (they played some films first) was Uncontrolable Urge. Mark Mothersbaugh comes running down one of the aisles singing, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah-yeah-yeah-yeah-yeah-yeah-yeah . . ." hits the stage, does a forward roll, leaps to his feet, spins to face the audience just as he finishes . . . "YEAH!"Yagushi wrote:Band: DEVO
Location: Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium (Santa Cruz, CA)
Date: December 1982
We freaked.
-
- KVRAF
- 6496 posts since 26 Nov, 2004 from Frederick, MD
Sweeeeeeeet!ew wrote:Mothers of Invention- 1969 at a place called the Labor Temple in downtown St. Paul.
ew
We are the other people
We are the other people
You're the other people, too!
Found a way to get to you!
-
- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Okay, if Hink can reveal what his first album was, I suppose I can let y'all play "laugh at Meffy." :-)
Depending on what you consider a concert, my first concert was either "Jesus Christ, Superstar" or...
*takes big breath*
... Neil Diamond. Went with my mom.
No, wait! I'm serious. Maybe a third of what he performed that night was silly dreck. But more than half of the show he rocked HARD. He still had the energy back in the early 1970s to open up his voice on the good oldies. "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show" had me ready to convert to the Born-Again Southern Diamond Synod (tent revivals, kosher fried chicken, mmm).
To hear him belt out his gutsy oldies was worth suffering through the more recent songs.
Now you may laugh. :-D
Oh, right -- about my mom. She raised me on the words of beat poets and the sounds of Janis Joplin and Stan Kenton; she was generally very sharp, and way hip. (Except that one Boxcar Willie album. =o.O=)
Depending on what you consider a concert, my first concert was either "Jesus Christ, Superstar" or...
*takes big breath*
... Neil Diamond. Went with my mom.
No, wait! I'm serious. Maybe a third of what he performed that night was silly dreck. But more than half of the show he rocked HARD. He still had the energy back in the early 1970s to open up his voice on the good oldies. "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show" had me ready to convert to the Born-Again Southern Diamond Synod (tent revivals, kosher fried chicken, mmm).
To hear him belt out his gutsy oldies was worth suffering through the more recent songs.
Now you may laugh. :-D
Oh, right -- about my mom. She raised me on the words of beat poets and the sounds of Janis Joplin and Stan Kenton; she was generally very sharp, and way hip. (Except that one Boxcar Willie album. =o.O=)
-
- KVRist
- 43 posts since 6 Aug, 2004 from portland
Definitely, they tore the place up. That show was probably in the top 5 best shows I've ever been too, strangely enough. So much energy, I can't even describe it really. Had to be there. I got to hang out backstage for a bit (my friend Dean was in Disfigured), and I remember the singer from Accidental Suicide telling me and my friend how he had to write lyrics about all this ill shit (necro/sorcery/cannabalism, you name it), otherwise he'd actually go and do it. I'm still not sure if he was just f**king with us or what, because he was a really nice guy.Sicklecell666 wrote:Obituary were f**king GREAT live..I saw them many times, but I liked em best on the first LP.highdropod wrote:Obituary, Suffocation, Accidental Suicide, Immortal Aggression, and Disfigured - all in one show, 1990.
Last edited by highdropod on Fri Apr 29, 2005 6:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- KVRist
- 43 posts since 6 Aug, 2004 from portland
bduffy wrote:That's about as sharp a contrast as is humanly possible, I think.highdropod wrote:Obituary, Suffocation, Accidental Suicide, Immortal Aggression, and Disfigured - all in one show, 1990.
There was Stevie Wonder in the 80's, but I was only like 9 or 10 and I don't remember much.
- KVRAF
- 9064 posts since 1 Aug, 2003
Simple Minds, 1985-ish, I went alone as 15-16 yr old and after a while in the front row I almost fainted due to the crowd's pressure.
-
- KVRist
- 252 posts since 28 Jan, 2005
The Catskills?Hink wrote:you must live close to my son...sangha wrote:The Who, I think it was 1972, at Madison Square Garden.
Not a concert, but I did hear Jimi Hendrix's Star Bangled Banner coming over the mountains during Woodstock.
God's country
P2 3.2GHz, XP Pro, M-Audio FW-1814, Cubase SX3
- addled muppet weed
- 111311 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
apparently glastonbury 78 
dont remember it tho so it must be true i guess
first gig i went to of my own accord was slammer i think(shite metal band)
before my metel days it was just festis with me uncles
dont remember it tho so it must be true i guess
first gig i went to of my own accord was slammer i think(shite metal band)
before my metel days it was just festis with me uncles
- KVRian
- 615 posts since 30 Apr, 2003 from London, UK
Derek up North wrote:Mott the Hoople at Leeds Town Hall (late 70s).
I thought they were great and the support band were surprisingly good too - some outfit called Queen. Wonder what became of them![]()
Regards,
Derek.
Snap! but I saw the tour at Victoria Hall, Hanley, Staffs and it must have been Autumn 1973. It was Queen's first ever national tour.
- KVRAF
- 25038 posts since 12 Jul, 2003 from West Caprazumia
queen started to become increasily huge from '75 on... ('bohemian rhapsody') - in '77 both 'we will rock you' and 'we are the champions' saw the light of day so I highly doubt that they were supporting anyone in the late 70's...
