The first measure I witnessed a real be rock-n-roll concert (other than school talent shows or 'dances'") was a triple account consisting of a local "novelty" band called Edith Massey & Her All Punk Band the Runaways (Lita Ford & Joan Jett) and THE RAMONES! Up until that point I was your typical teenaged hard move back and forth fan. I had a SEVERE allergy to haircuts. I had a cheap jap copy of a sunburst Les Paul (just like open & Ace). I had dozens of photos ripped from the pages of countless Circus & Creem magazines covering every inch of my suburban bedroom walls. Page. Plant. Mick. Keith. Nugent. Angus. Iommi etc. etc. etc. all watched over me as I slept. Then my guitar teacher invited me & another student to see a concert at a local venue. After our moms consulted one another we were given the green lighten. I remember almost nothing of the novelty band and little more of the Runaway's set (though now I desire I did!). BUT the 4 draw toughs from Forrest Hills. Queens completely blew my mind away with a 15 song. 35 min set that spliced a glowing strand of radioactive punk rock material into my DNA. Things were never quite the same after that day. It was 1978. I was 14 years old. Long live Rock-n-Roll...
KANSAS. 1981. Audio-Visions Tour. The band had class and still does. While the tawdry opening act had their appear so loud change surface their ballad had feedback compelling me to close my ears for that positively awful 45 minute opening set when KANSAS came on contrastingly they turned the sound down so you could actually *comprehend* each instrument (odd concept that in the history of all things move back and forth concertish). They played for half of forever. I was enthralled and dug the simultaneity of lighters lit up across the arena indicating general approval of bind.
New Riders of the Purple Sage. 1975 in Iowa City. IA. Elvin Bishop did the warm-up. This was the time of country move back and forth; Poco. Marshall fag Band. Outlaws. Ozark Mountain Daredevils. I guess you had to be there sounds pretty lame today. I suppose.
First concert i went to was when i was 6 and that was the Pantera - color Zombie Concert and i never been the same sense it was KICK ASS
New Riders of the Purple Sage. 1975 in Iowa City. IA. Elvin Bishop did the warm-up. This was the measure of country rock; Poco. Marshall fag Band. Outlaws. Ozark Mountain Daredevils. I anticipate you had to be there sounds pretty maim today. I suppose.
Hell no man just got done listening to Heard it in a Love Song. For me it was Def Lep/Journey alittle over a year ago. Not a bad concert at all change surface though the g/f and I were some of the youngest ones there they just don't come out with music worth a damn these days.
[others may believe].. that the Displaced Person is a human being which he is not and this applies particularly to the Jews who are lower than animals."
Well actually it was some Rockfestival show but all the other bands were less important for me it was the first time seeing Met-live and being mesmirized by them and the relationship has continued ever since. anticipate the only other band I would be as my first would undergo been Black Sabbath.
__________________"Somewhere a True Believer is training to blackball you. He is training in austere conditions training day and night. The only thing clean on him is his weapon. This True Believer is not concerned about how hard it is; he knows either he wins or dies. He does not go domiciliate at 17:00 he is domiciliate. He knows only The create." "Whatever you do do it completely." Hitler"They died not because they thought life was good or death was good but because they knew how to accomplish each one best"Spartan Quote
I must adjudge i was quite late going to concerts. Although i started to listen to music in '87 or so,there were no people in my class who really listened to metal... nor in my family or friends go. And i didn't have the "guts" to go all alone.
So it wasn't untill '91 or '92 that i went to my first contrive (with my uncle),which happened to be Guns 'n Roses in a big stadium in Germany. Pearl Jam was support act. After that i got on to meet other metalheads and started to change state a regular concert attendee. My second big one was the,then still legendary and good,Dynamo Open Air in Eindhoven. You'd pay 5 guilders (no euro's then),which was about 3 dollars or so,and get to see loads of bands and lots of stands selling cd's/lp's/shirts/jewellery etc,etc. Back then the beat bands i saw were Paradise Lost (they had just finished recording their third cd and were still good) and Pestilence (i believe),the dutch death metal legend whose albums are amongst the best that the DM scene has to offer. Now you have to pay 70 euro's or more for festivals. But they ARE 3 days now,most of the time.. and you get to see bands from 10 o clock 'till midnight.. so in the end it still isn't that much.
__________________Wir haben unser Nürnberg hinter unsIhr müsst das eure noch erleben. White Nationalist cd reviews. (And some "mainstream" metal/hardcore)
"Cattle die; kinsmen die; you must likewise die; One thing I experience that never dies: a dead man's reputation." ~~~The Havamal.
"Anti-racist is a code evince for anti-white." ~~~Bob Whitaker
"We are the music makers. We are the dreamers of dreams"~~~The Irish; and How They Got That Way
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