Heart/Aztec TwoStep Central Park 8/22/1977

The Dr. Pepper Concerts at Central Park were a magical time; Woodstock for the 1970’s NYC rock and roll generation.

The Dr. Pepper sponsored concerts at Central Park’s Wollman Rink were primarily rock and roll shows at the outdoor venue where for the bargain basement price of $4.50 you could see some of the legendary acts of our time from the orchestra section or for $2.50 you could sit in the balcony or, if the show was sold out or you just did not want to spend the money that night, you could hang out on the rocks opposite the stage beyond the fence and listen to great live music for free with your friends in midtown Manhattan surrounded by the New York City skyline.

There has never been a concert series quite like it and it provided some of the great rock and roll of our lives.

The Heart show was one that we spent on the rocks taking in the atmosphere and just having a phenomenal time.
The Wilson sisters broke big with “Magic Man” and rocked out with some of best acts of that time.
While you could not actually see the stage from that vantage point it did not really matter ; the soon to be legendary venue was spread out in front of you and the sound was loud and clear for all to hear. Heart concluded their show with Led Zeppelin’s “Rock and Roll”; a fitting finish to the first of many nights to be spent at Central Park.

I had the opportunity to attend a Sirius satellite radio event featuring Heart some time before their recent Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction; the ladies looked healthy, fit and sounded great. Shortly thereafter, I then had the good fortune to catch their show
at The Paramount in Huntington. Some thirty five years after hearing Heart play live in Central Park they were still bringing the hard rock kick ass sound that set them apart from the girl fronted rock bands to follow.

Ann Wilson still has the pipes while Nancy provides the guitar and harmonies that make the band unique in rock and roll history.

Been a Long Time

Rock On

GQ

Yes/Donovan MSG 8/5//1977

Going to see Yes for the first time was a HUGE deal as all of my friends and I were PSYCHED; we were big fans of all things YES particularly YESSONGS the tour de force triple live album.

The “Going for the One” album had just been released and it was phenomenal; Rick Wakeman was in the fold for the tour making this a rock and roll EVENT! The excitement level on this night was as high as for any show that we had seen thus far. This was the beginning of a time when the music of Yes and their pretty regularly scheduled annual tour dates were yearly highlights. Yes’ popularity was evident in that tickets for their shows usually went on sale at least 9 months prior and they gave us all something to look forward to and get pumped up for throughout the year.

A poster with a yellow Yes logo and the five members of the band individually photographed in their prime could be seen prominently hanging on my wall for the better part of a decade; musical heroes then and now. The poster disappeared in my garage under mysterious circumstances that my wife denies having any knowledge of to this day.

I have to admit, I did not realize how cool it was to have seen Donovan open for Yes 1977 until Howard Stern’s 2014 Sirius radio interview. This dude has amazing stories, hung out with the Beatles, and has a mystical quality to this day that is hard to resist; a great musician who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The “Going for the One” album is one of Yes’ best ever and the stage design resembled the album cover. Our view of the stage was midway up to the right and while the individual musical performances that night are a bit of a blur, I do know that we left the progressive rock masterpiece completely satisfied and ultimately hooked for life.

Wondrous Stories indeed

Rock On

GQ

Yes

Bad Company/Climax Blues Band MSG 7/31/1977

Bad Company and the Climax Blues Band was a real nice double bill.

The Climax Blues Band had a couple of radio hits that you knew which is always nice for an opening act.

The first Bad Co. album was still huge at the time and “Can’t Get Enough” was a big radio hit. Paul Rodgers is still a great vocalist and just recently played Town Hall supporting The Royal Sessions album.

The lasting memory from this particular Madison Square Garden concert however was not the actual musical performances but what was observed in the rafters during the show.

We were sitting opposite the stage about midway up during Bad Company’s set and up toward the left of us you could see that a fire had been started by some fans. The fire quickly grew to the point that at least one seat was fully engulfed in flames inside the Garden arena. Somehow no one seemed particularly fazed by this and the band played on.

The sky
Is burning

Rock On

GQ

No Bowie but Girls Keep Swinging

The TV Show with special guests that took place at City Winery last night was a blast. The legendary record producer Tony Visconti played bass and seemed to be having a great time chatting between playing selections from a career retrospective where he picked nineteen songs from what he said was 3000 to choose from going back to 1967 .The setlist that was heavy on Bowie and T. Rex tunes was overall great and Richard Barone handled the bulk of the lead vocals but the girls stole the show. The tall and lanky Larkin Grim handled the T. Rex lead vocals with an amazing unique vocal style that was mesmerizing and the petite dynamo Kiah Victoria with her wild hair and throwback fringed shirt and gold slacks blasted through songs like Bowie’s Boys Keep Swinging with a kick ass stage presence snd powerful vocal style that made me believe we were seeing a star in the making right before our eyes.

Tony Visconti made a point to plug all the band members’ various projects including Kiah,s upcoming Mercury Lounge gig which might be the first must see new artist “event” in 2015.

Suzanne Vega did a nice turn with The Man Who Sold the World.

Highlights of the show were Bowie’s Young Americans, Fashion, and Heroes and all the T. Rex tunes including an ensemble Bang a Gong encore.

Rock On

GQ

Tony Visconti at City Winery NYC Tonight

Legendary record producer Tony Visconti is performing a live retrospective of some of his work with T. Rex, David Bowie and others with special guests that include Suzanne Vega tonight at City Winery.

City Winery has become one of my favorite NYC venues of late with an eclectic lineup, table seating, great sight lines and excellent sound along with outstanding food and wines. City Winery is an intimate setting that reminds me of an upscale Bottom Line in NYC or My Father.s Place in Roslyn from back in the day. It’s a very civilized and relaxing place to enjoy some great music.

I’m always psyched for City Winery,
where I have already seen many great shows and acts like Ian Hunter and David Crosby, but I am particularly pumped for tonight because if David Bowie is ever going to make a cameo and come out of semi retirement from performing this could be the night.

A lad insane?

Perhaps but you never know.

Rock on!

GQ

Crosby, Stills, and Nash MSG 6/21/1977

Crosby, Stills and Nash still ranks as one of my all time favorite acts. I’ve seen the band in numerous combinations and incarnations through the years, with and without Neil Young, and they never disappoint. Not many bands can bring the acoustic and electric music with equal beauty, precision and intensity. Stephen Stills is hardly ever mentioned when the great rock guitarists are discussed but he ranks right up there with some of the best and he is under appreciated in that regard. The harmonies of David Crosby and Graham Nash, the unparalleled songwriting, the passion for music and civil activism all make the band members a fascinating ever evolving dynamic. To this day, songs like “Almost Cut My Hair” still provide chills.

While age and wear and tear have taken a bit of a toll on the elder statesman of rock, David Crosby’s voice remains as powerful as ever- a force of nature and a true gift as he proved once again that he still has chops with his latest solo album and a tour which landed at City Winery NYC.

Back in 1977, we left ourselves plenty of time to head in to Manhattan by subway to hang out before the CSN show as part of the MSG concert experience was bound to be all of the activity outside the building and we wanted to get in early. We jumped on the #7 train in Flushing, Queens to travel to Madison Square Garden for the highly anticipated concert expecting that a big night was in store.

Unfortunately our plans got somewhat derailed as the train stopped for an extended period mid trip and we found out that someone had decided to jump in front of a subway car on the train ahead of us. A crime scene was not something we could have anticipated and as the time passed we started to wonder if an apparently troubled soul was going to keep us from ever getting to the Garden that night. Troubled, maybe, but we had to admit that the thought crossed our minds that whoever it was could have been more considerate to the traveling public when choosing THIS night to take a tragic final leap. Fortunately we had enough beer to make the delay tolerable then at some point the train lurched forward and we began to move again. It was going to be close but we were going to make it! Our catastrophe was averted and our snapshot Woodstock moment with CSN would not be lost.

No one could have known then that any band could have the staying power so that I would eventually get to see the band IN Woodstock 37 years after the Madison Square Garden show. My wife and I drove to upstate NewYork this past July 5th to see the band at Bethel Woods- a beautiful outdoor venue with covered seating and a huge general admission lawn area . An added bonus to the trip was that Bethel Woods is home to the Woodstock Museum containing interesting artifacts, a movie about the event and historical perspective of the original Woodstock music festival that is different than any other- pretty cool stuff.

My wife’s Woodstock moment has always been being stuck in the legendary New York State Thruway traffic jam with her parents and sister on the way to an upstate family vacation.

Yes, she finally got to Woodstock.

Let Your Freak a Flag Fly
And Rock On

GQ

Lynyrd Skynyrd/Ted Nugent/Rough Diamond Nassau Coliseum 6/16/1977

Less than a week after the epic Led Zeppelin show at Madison Square Garden, we were off to see Lynyrd Skynyrd and Ted Nugent at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island. Now I only knew how to get to Jones Beach and the Roosevelt Field mall from Queens and the police on Long Island had a reputation for being tough on long haired rockers. The half hour trip to Uniondale may as well have been a cross country trek. This was not the New York City we were familiar with and there was an element of danger as we traveled eastbound through the toll booths on the Southern State Parkway where we crossed over the Nassau/Queens border toward a new rock and roll adventure.

I have no recollection of the band Rough Diamond as they opened for the co-headliners.

On its surface teaming Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Motor City Madman on the same bill seemed like on odd match but they were on the same record label and it just worked somehow.  I had spent much of the past year cranking my homemade “Free For All” cassette on my boombox and one of the best singles that I had bought growing up was “Journey to the Center of the Mind” by the Amboy Dukes featuring the blistering guitar of Ted Nugent.

The original Lynyrd Skynyrd lineup was legendary and Ronnie Van  Zant was its heart and soul. Our vantage point was high and to the left of the stage with the white piano as a visual centerpiece.  Live “Freebird” was, and is, an all time classic and the Mr. Young mention on “Sweet Home Alabama’ is one of the great retorts of all time.

Later on, Ronnie Van Zant would wear a Neil Young ‘Tonight’s the Night” T-shirt on the cover of the ‘Street Survivors” album that showed the band members enveloped by flames; an album cover that was suddenly pulled from record store shelves and repackaged without the fire after the tragic plane crash that changed the Lynyrd Skynyrd dynamic forever. 

A few weeks later following the Coliseum show as we ventured back to Queens from a Nassau County rock club, we got lost driving through Valley Stream in the western part of Nassau County not to far from home base. The same “Free For All” cassette was blasting and we were having a great time driving around surburbia at night. We were lost and checked the local street signs as we drove to try and figure out where we were. We had lost our bearings and really had no idea even which direction we were heading but found ourselves on, of all places, Nugent Street- no joke. We were actually traveling on NUGENT STREET ! This was obviously a cosmic coincidence and action needed to be taken. We parked the car underneath the street sign and I stood on the car hood. Unbelievably I could reach the top of the sign post and the whole thing was held together with one bolt that was easily unscrewed. As I had just about dismantled the street sign, an angry older man came out of his house and yelled that he was going to call the dreaded Nassau County Police regarding our metal mischief. As the well intentioned resident ran towards us, I grabbed the rectangular white street sign with black trim and Nugent Street was now in our possession. Our car careened down the otherwise quiet street with headlights off so as not to have the railing square see the license plate and get us caught; the four of us elated traveled home with Ted providing the soundtrack to the fun.

I’ve always wanted to show the Motor City Madman the street sign and tell him the story of our well intentioned thievery in the name of rock and roll. The sign is still in my attic, along with a Fallout Shelter sign from an old apartment building in Queens.

New Year’s always reminds me of the Allman Brothers Band/Molly Hatchet concert at the Nassau Coliseum that took place on 12/31/1981; my future bride and I headed back home on the Northern State Parkway after the show and we saw a tall young man wearing a cardboard Happy New Year hat happily walking on the white line in the middle of the roadway. He seemed to be quite content strolling down the road as cars whizzed passed him at 50 MPH (or more) oblivious to his precarious situation. Here’s hoping everyone had a good time and got home safe last night.

Happy New Year

and Rock On

GQ

Led Zeppelin MSG 6/10/1977

One of the biggest bands on the planet, Led Zeppelin, was coming to New York and there was a palpable buzz in the air. This was BIG and everyone wanted to see Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, John Bonham, and John Paul Jones live and in person. As I recall there was some sort of mail in lottery for tickets (yes there was a time when you had to buy a stamp and place your request in a mailbox). Led Zeppelin was playing a multiple night engagement and the we all wanted to go.

Scott lived on the next block over from us on Franklin Avenue. Scott was a year or two older than us,  exuded a cool confidence and ran with a different crowd. While I was donning my best Peter Framptonesque shoulder length hair, Scott kept his short  black hair impeccably coifed and was prone to wearing the sleeveless white t-shirt sometimes referred to as a “wife beater” or “guinea T”. He lived in an apartment building with his parents and brothers and  was known to be a bit of an “entrepreneur”. He was a rocker in the mold of the Stray Cats before they had strut. On the rare occasion we would run into him when we went up to see his younger brother Brett, Scott would be smoking cigarettes, lifting his dumbells, or both. Scott was a man of few words to us younger kids as he seemed to have real things of import going on and he always appeared to have a hot girlfriend in tow. Although he could play no musical instument, his confidence was such that he purchased an amplified microphone for the time he believed he would front a rock band. Scott was the tough guy but there seemed to be more to him and he helped support his middle class family with his business acumen. Scott worked “off the books” in the underground economy that permeated Queens while his older brother wound up working for the NYPD where I am told he was eventually injured in the line of duty. There are many paths in life and forks in the road, even within families, and ours were about to unfold.

I was thrilled to get a ticket to one of the Zep shows but I still remember Scott heading off to multiple shows with an expensive Canon camera in tow. It was incredibly impressive that he managed to obtain tickets to four of the shows as the tickets were impossible to obtain without paying scalper’s prices. Led Zeppelin was rock royalty and the visit was newsworthy making all the local papers and TV newscasts.

My vantage point at Madison Square Garden was midway up to the left of the stage. The band was everything they were supposed to be. There was a feeling if unabashed joy in the building and when the band hit the stage you knew they had the goods. Jimmy Page’s guitar solo with bow and triangulated laser lighting was mind blowing for its time and when Bonzo pounded the drums to start “Rock and Roll” the place went wild. A communal celebration of the power and glory of rock was happening and we were a part of the celebration day. I’ve seen various incarnations of Plant and Page through the years but this was the stuff of legend.

All of the Led Zeppelin albums are great but my favorite has always been the expansive double album classic “Physical Graffiti”. The 70’s were a time of great album packaging and the record companies seemed to spare no expense when it came to the big acts. The apartment building on the cover of Physical Graffiti could have been from my neighborhood; it was a building any one of us could have been living in at the time. There was a cosmic connection and the band was somehow still in touch with it’s fanbase while flying the world in private jets.

Every Led Zeppelin album release was an event so when “In Through the Out Door” was released, we all knew when it was going to land at Jimmy’s Music World on Roosevelt Avenue. The album was in a  non-descript brown paper bag cover yet its contents were as anticipated as any before it. Somehow the Franklin Avenue kids got to Jimmy’s Music World first and bought it before the rest of us; they headed home, threw it on a turntable and immediately proclaimed that the album “sucked”. The classic hard rock Led Zep sound had been transformed into something else and it was an affront to many. No one could know then where Plant and Page would take us going forward but the hard rock torch had seemingly been passed that day to David Lee Roth and the Van Halen brothers.

A seemingly short time later while working at Gertz Department Store, I was listening to Scott Muni of WNEW in the stockroom on my FM radio, as I did every afternoon, when I learned that John Bonham had died from an alcohol overdose. Robert Plant proclaimed the band was done as they could not continue without Bonham and the rumored upcoming New Year’s Eve Led Zeppelin show at the Nassau Coliseum was never going to take place. A tragedy to be sure and not the first, or last, in the annals of rock and roll.

Just recently we lost Rick Rosas, the great bass player for Joe Walsh and Neil Young, Ian McGlagen, Jack Bruce, and Joe Cocker. Cocker played the Jones Beach Theater just a couple of summers ago and was in phenomenal voice; it’s hard to believe he was probably ill then. Those that survived the tumultuous 60’s and 70’s are starting to pass from, unbelievably, natural causes. Unfortunately, it is true that time waits for no one.

R.I.P.

and Rock On

GQ

led-zeppelin-2

Queen/Thin Lizzy MSG 2/5/77

10/23/76 Lynyrd Skynyrd/Bebop Deluxe at the Paladium, New York City

This show would have been the beginning of our story had yours truly not cut high school just prior to the Lynyrd Skynyrd concert. “One More From the Road” is one if the greatest live double albums ever produced in an era of incredible double live releases and Skynyrd was about to break as an arena act.

Unfortunately, the one and only time I skipped out from school, for really no other reason but 16 year old angst, was not a well thought out plan as I immediately got nailed for no one calling in my absence. Having absolutely nothing planned for the day, I wandered the streets of Queens until I went to the Quartet movie theater on Northern Boulevard and sat through the awful R rated “Debbie Does Dallas 2” to kill time until I could go home. Despite the fact that I was an ordinarily pretty good kid who regularly got good grades, needless to say, my day trip got me grounded and caused me to miss the Skynyrd show.

Now the Queen show at Madison Square Garden was a completely different animal. I’m going to write this blog as I remember the events primarily  because I ‘m too lazy to Google and why let the truth get in the way of a good memory. Our seats were mid way up opposite the stage. The lights went down and on  either side of the stage were two revolving red lights and a siren wailed. Thin Lizzy opened with Jailbreak. In the summer of 1976 The Boys Are Back in Town was all over the radio and was an anthem for all the rockers in the neighborhood. This is a song that holds up to this day and brings back great memories of hanging out and having a blast- the future uncertain and wide open.

Queen was one of the great arena acts of all time. On this night Queen opened with a kick ass version of “Tie Your Mother Down” and from our vantage point the lighting effects during “Now I’m Here” were mesmerizing. Queen’s early albums were hard rock at its best and Brian May has never really gotten his due as it relates to the Queen catalog and being an arena rock guitar GOD in the big picture of rock history. Much later on Fredde Mercury’s personal troubles would become well known to the public. The name of the band was ” Queen” and Freddie would later die from AIDS, but Mercury was not a gay performer of popular songs but a hard rocking flamboyant ROCK STAR!

Freddie Mercury was no Liberace being asked on the Mike Douglas talk show why a good looking guy like him was still single. Rock and Roll was dangerous and mysterious; the album covers and a few magazines were your only window into the band’s world.  Before Alice Cooper occupied a seat on the Hollywood Squares game show and jumped the shark and then jumped back and became cool again, rock stars did not show up on television and the real private lives were not well known to the fans.

Queen had it all; their production and sound are unique to them until this day.

Forget the numerous greatest hits compilations, one of my early album purchases, Queen’s Sheer Heart Attack is still my favorite, still holds up, and is unbelievably the only Queen vinyl album in my collection.

Rock On

GQ

77-12-01_New York_01

A Christmas Gift from my Daughter

My daughter Jennifer thought it would be a great idea to set up a music blog for me as I have spent both my kids’ inheritance on rock and roll and concerts of all musical persuasions. My first musical gift, the album Meet the Beetles, was given to me as a birthday gift by my Aunt Pat. We all watched The Beatles on Ed Sullivan and wondered how the Rolling Stones would counter their every move. My next musical memory is being in a Mustang with one of my mother’s friends and hearing the Mamas and the Papas’ California Dreamin’ and a Sergeant Pepper tune on an FM radio for the first time. Now this was cool and something completely different than the top 40 radio that I was used to up to that point and the Frank Sinatra and Big Band music my parents enjoyed.

Flushing, Queens, New York in the 1960’s- The long hair teenagers that were older than I was would get drafted or enlist then return with shaved heads- a shocking transformation and visual image imbedded in our collective memories. Some came back heroes and at least one was floating around the neighborhood after going on leave and not returning. Through it all there was a musical soundtrack to our lives. I bought all the top singles and checked off the list in the Sunday papers. When I got to high school I bought my first album- Jethro Tull’s Warchild. The long haired flautist with the wild eyes became an early musical obsession. I worked at a butcher shop delivering meat on Saturdays and I would end each day going to Korvettes department store to buy an album for $2.99 and the record collection I have to this day grew.

My first rock concert was Queen at Madison Square Garden with Thin Lizzy opening. Rock and Roll theatrics at it’s finest and I was hooked. By the end of high school  Steve Howe was the greatest guitarist and the music and tours  of Yes were a focal point. Then came Neil Young and Crazy Horse with Rust Never Sleeps and things were never quite the same again.

Punk rock, New Wave, Heavy Metal, Country- I love it all. I have attended over 500 shows thus far and have most of the ticket stubs to prove it; I still attend about two shows a week which in the New York City area is not that hard to do. My family thinks I am insane but the music is my passion.

Hey Hey My My.

In this blog I hope to let you know where I’ve been and where I’m going.

Perhaps we’ve already crossed paths as it is an increasingly small world.

Rock On!

GQ

Rock and Roll Music: NYC Concerts, Music & Shows