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Best Of Rock: The Top 10 Concerts I Wish I Had AttendedBy Ralph Greco, Jr.
3) Tullavision (1976 - Shea Stadium) With warm-up artists Rory Gallagher and Robin Trower respectfully, Jethro Tull headlined this Friday night in all their resplendent pastel-frocked finery. With a very early use of enormous video screens (mostly focused on a preening and mugging Ian Anderson) the band performed known ‘hits’ as well as new songs for the 55,000 gathered on that summer New York evening. 4 & 5) Pink Floyd and Emerson, Lake and Palmer (1977 - Madison Square Garden, NYC) Occurring at my most favorite arena to see shows, this summer 30 years ago saw these two powerhouses perform a multitude of dates each. Pink Floyd was supporting Animals; ELP was touring with a let's-declare-bankruptcy orchestra for Works, Volume 1. 6) Mealoaf (CBS Record Convention - New Orleans) By now the big man’s story has been told countless times, but nobody in the industry wanted to touch Meat’s first Bat Out Of Hell, let alone sell the album. Meatloaf had a lot to prove to this jaded audience of industry insiders but the legend that has grown-up around this show seems worthy of me wanting to be there. Virtually unknown and unwanted Meatloaf and his band set the room ablaze this night, earning him not only the enthusiasm of these people who would soon go out to sell his album but also an unprecedented standing ovation. 7) Genesis (1974 – Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles) During the madness of their Lamb Lies Down On Broadway shows, this last tour with Peter Gabriel featured the band with their most ambitious stage theatrics to date. I know Lamb has been lambasted by critics and fans alike, and it is not my favorite Genesis album by a long shot, but the bootlegged clips I have seen from this show solidify for me the fact that Gabriel was (and still is) one of the best front men in rock and roll history. 8) Queen (1974 - Rainbow Theater, London). This amazing band on the Sheer Heart Attack Tour. I was lucky to see Queen (the real band with Freddy Mercury) and though they were great, I think seeing them in the mid 70s, in London of all places, would have been amazing. Most people turn to the Live Aid clip of Queen, which I admit is pretty amazing stuff, but to have seen the four ‘boys’ so young, with flowing tresses and flowing blouses, would have made my decade to be sure! 9) Elton John (1970 – Troubadour, Los Angeles) Celebrated on Elton’s 17/11/70 CD (from a concert recorded at a show in New York later in the tour), this show at the famous, now extinct, LA nightclub was Elton’s first ever show in America. This legendry concert saw Elton introduced by Neil Diamond and was witnessed by almost anybody who was anybody in the music bizz at the time. If you happen to listen to 11/7/70 you can hear just what those early shows must have been like…and why I wish I had been there. The band consisting of just Elton, Dee Murray on bass and Nigel Olsen on drums, the trio slams into the beginning of the 70s marking the jumping off point for what would be Elton’s reign over hit radio for the next two decades. 10) Grateful Dead (1978 - Giza Sound and Light Theatre, Cairo Egypt) In this case, it really is about ‘location, location, location’... You can’t beat ‘the Dead’ for out-there, mind-blowing concepts, and playing amongst the great pyramids is about as out there as it gets. I’m not even a Dead fan but man how I wished I could have been out there digging the music and vibes, in such an unreal setting. As I said, this list is in no way complete. I didn’t mention the concerts that spawned hit live albums; Frampton and Lynyrd Skynyrd come to mind, so there are plenty I’d add to this list. I just had 10 I wanted to get off my chest, concerts I dream about when I bemoan (as I often do) the price of shows nowadays and how most of the bands I ever wanted to see I have already seen. If you saw any of the above, keep it to yourself, OK? I would be way too envious to hear about it! ©Copyright 1997, 2008 Vintage Rock
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