Get Adobe Flash player

Five Classic Concert Tickets

Don’t you just love that movie ‘High Fidelity’ where the hero is constantly making lists of his top 5 all time favorite records, girl friends, meals and whatever. I save all the concert tickets from the concerts that I have been to and I can’t help but make up my top five classic concerts and wish I had the concert tickets to go with the memories.

Classic concert ticket number 5: U2 plays on an L.A. liquor store rooftop, March 27, 1987. They were atop a liquor store rooftop, Los Angeles. It may not have had The Beatles’ originality, but Bono and the guys surely enjoyed their 20 minutes on top of the LA world nevertheless. The Irish super group was about four songs into the gig on an L.A. liquor store rooftop when the city police decided to end their impromptu performance and spoil the fun for the fans that had gathered below. Strictly speaking this wasn’t a concert with proper concert tickets but I love the video “Where The Streets Have No Name”, which was the point of the whole exercise.

Classic concert ticket number 4: George Harrison’s Concert for Bangladesh, August 1, 1971 at Madison Square Garden, New York City. What had initially been conceived as a small political fundraiser aimed at bringing humanitarian relief to the refugees in breakaway Bangladesh quickly turned into one of the biggest rock fundraisers of the 1970s. Although Lennon and McCartney never ended up signing on to Ravi Shankar’s cause, many other stars did, including George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Billy Preston, and Eric Clapton, who actually collapsed onstage as a result of his protracted bout of heroin addiction but still managed to proceed with the concert. The 40,000 or so fans who crowded New York’s Madison Square Garden witnessed some rare performances, including a 25-minute Indian recital by Ravi Shankar, Bob Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall” and Ringo Starr’s “It Don’t Come Easy.”

Classic concert ticket number 3: Pink Floyd break visual barriers with The Wall shows between February 1980 and June 1981. It was a World tour. Pink Floyd’s visual theatrics took a turn for the legendary with their infamous The Wall concerts, which were the last shows Roger Waters, Richard Wright, Dave Gilmour, and Nick Mason performed together before the Live 8 show in July 2005. Each show required timed performances and unprecedented cooperation between the musicians, concert crew, lighting engineers, and computer programmers. In fact, extended instrumentals and Roger Waters’ impromptu introductions often served to cover up stage fires and other technical difficulties, which seemed inevitable when putting together a show that included a 30-foot-high teacher puppet, a scorpion wife and other such animated characters.

Classic concert ticket number 2: Jimi Hendrix wows Woodstock, August 18, 1969 at Woodstock, New York. After plowing through three days worth of rain, mud, minbending drugs, and music, the 30,000 or so diehard fans who chose to brave one more night for Jimi Hendrix’s Woodstock closer were not disappointed. In fact, those who stuck around to witness Hendrix’s mind-blowing rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” cannot deny its importance on the festival’s soundtrack; it became the eternal anthem of a generation of civil rights crusaders, anti-war protestors and music lovers everywhere. Now I know this was a ‘free’ concert but it didn’t start out that way and there were actual concert tickets issued for Woddstock.

Classic concert ticket number 1: The Beatles sell out Shea Stadium August 15, 1965 in New York City. After a thundering welcome at JFK airport, the American release of Help! And an electrifying appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Beatles’ success at Shea Stadium, the first-ever stadium concert of its kind, was all but guaranteed. In fact, the sell-out crowd of 55,600 was so deafening that the The ‘Fab Four’ could barely hear themselves play throughout their 30-minute set. Instead, The Beatles’ grand armored van entrance, John Lennon’s ‘Jerry Lee Lewis’ onstage freak-out and the event’s record-setting gross revenues stole the show.

Fantastic deals to all concert, show and sport events! Get concerts tickets, wicked tickets, discount sports tickets, Las Vegas show tickets or any concerts ticket at an amazing price

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Leave a Reply

Powered by WP Hashcash

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

By submitting a comment here you grant this site a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution.

Security Code:


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 
Register and Login
Log In

Dated History
September 2010
M T W T F S S
« Jun    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
Our Sponsors
Act Now
Downloads
  • The Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis Show (860 bytes, 54 hits)
  • The Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis Show Guest Lucille Ball (6.9 MiB, 1 hits)
    You do not have permission to download this file. For Registered Users and You must be logged in
  • The Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis Show Guest William Bendix (6.6 MiB, 0 hits)
    You do not have permission to download this file. For Registered Users and You must be logged in
  • The Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis Show Guest Madeleine Carroll (6.6 MiB, 0 hits)
    You do not have permission to download this file. For Registered Users and You must be logged in
  • Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis (6.8 MiB, 0 hits)
    You do not have permission to download this file. For Registered Users and You must be logged in
  • Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis (5.3 MiB, 0 hits)
    You do not have permission to download this file. For Registered Users and You must be logged in
Google Ad
Our Sponsors
Don't Delay
Who's Online

5 visitors online now
5 guests, 0 members
Map of Visitors
Powered by Visitor Maps

Website Grader
Website Value
Blog Vitals
Blog Stats
Google Page Rank
0
Spam
  • By Elliott Back
  • 300 spam comments blocked out of 5 human comments. 98.36% of your comments are spam!