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Live Music (Bands or Groups that you saw personally)

Seals and Crofts, Chicago, The Beach Boys, Rolling Stones, Reba McIntyre, Joe Cocker, Jerry Jeff Walker, Maynard Ferguson, Sawyer Brown.
 
Little Feat, Molly Hatchet ( at least 6 times), ZZ Top, REO, Rush, Ted Nugent, Blackberry Smoke, Jason Bolland, Cross Canadian Ragweed, Lee Greenwood, Aaron Tipin, Ray Willey Hubbard, Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown, Daisy Dillman, Mary Jane Alhm, Charlie Daniels, Concrete Blonde, Stone Coyotes, Marshal Tucker, Deputy Dog, Head East, Foreigner, 38 Special, Poison, Blues Traveler, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Faith Hill and her Husband, I know i have missed some I really enjoy live music but i need to sit and watch now.
 
Apologies for the long post. This is a list of shows I saw between 1980-1983. There have been several others since (mostly Scorpions), but these were the ones in the heyday of my concert going.

Yipes, Molly Hatchet
Def Leppard, Scorpions, Ted Nugent
Dixie Dregs
Pat Travers Band, Foghat
Molly Hatchet, Blue Oyster Cult, Black Sabbath
Outlaws, ZZ Top
Shakin' Street, Blue Oyster Cult, Black Sabbath
Michael Schenker Group, Molly Hatchet
April Wine, Nazareth
Lover Boy, Kansas
Arroyo, Outlaws
Krokus, Rainbow, Pat Travers Band
Krokus, Ted Nugent
Dregs (formerly Dixie Dregs), Marshall Tucker
Lover Boy, ZZ Top
Def Leppard, Ozzie Osborne
Def Leppard, Blackfoot
Rockets, Triumph
Wrabbit, Black Sabbath
Saxon, UFO
Iron Maiden, Scorpions
Heaven, Judas Priest
Coney Hatch, Fastway, Iron Maiden

Many stories, but here are 2. One highlight, one lowlight.
The highlight: When we went to see Ted Nugent on June 13, 1980 at the Dane County Coliseum in Madison, none of us had heard of the two warm up bands. They were Def Leppard and the Scorpions.

Lowlight: October 9th, 1980 at the Milwaukee Arena. Black Sabbath - After only 2 songs, some idiot threw a bottle at the stage and hit Geezer Butler in the head. They walked off and didn't return (rightfully so). After we realized that was the end of the show, we decided to get out of there to beat traffic and, fortunately, missed the riot that ensued. We were passed by squad car after squad car and paddy wagons going to the arena as we got our of town and headed home.

https://milwaukeerecord.com/music/37-years-black-sabbath-fans-rioted-milwaukee/

sabbathdio.jpg

Remembering the time, in 1980, when Black Sabbath fans rioted in Milwaukee​

Matt Wild

October 9, 2017
Throwing bottles at performers is a dubious concert-going tradition. Sure, it can be darkly funny in some cases (Justin Bieber), but it can be downright dangerous in others (Tila Tequila at the 2010 Gathering of the Juggalos). Add to the latter list a 1980 Black Sabbath concert in Milwaukee, where some joker in the crowd tossed a bottle at the stage, struck bassist Geezer Butler in the head, and incited a full-on riot.

The riot in question happened at the Milwaukee Arena on October 9, 1980. The night began without incident: Opener Blue Öyster Cult took the stage around 8:20 p.m., and, by all accounts, delivered a stellar set. And then…a nearly one-hour wait for Sabbath. The Sabbath camp later told the Milwaukee Journal that the long downtime was simply part of the tour—both Black Sabbath and Blue Öyster Cult had complex sets to build and strike. Oh, and the tour was named the “Black and Blue” tour, which ended up being about right.

Finally, following the interminable wait that left the crowd of roughly 9,000 on edge, the Ronnie James Dio-era Sabbath got down to business. (Original singer Ozzy Osbourne had been replaced by Dio the year before.) The band played two songs, “War Pigs” and “Neon Knights,” before the lights were dimmed and Butler was struck with the bottle. But was the “bottling” incident a malicious act, or simply an accident? In a 2007 interview with Maximum Ink, Butler wondered that himself:

“It’s all a big misunderstanding, really, The lights were down, first of all, so unless the fellow was some sort of incredible quarterback, I don’t know how he could have hit me on purpose. But I was knocked out, and the band was busy getting me off the stage and to a hospital. When the lights came back up, there was no band on stage. And of course, the crowd freaked out. Someone should have gone out and explained—the promoter or someone. I mean, the band was worrying about getting me to the hospital, you know? So the crowd freaked out because there was suddenly no band on stage, and things got worse from there.”
Purposeful or not, Butler was right about one thing: things got worse from there. Following admonishments from Dio (“We wanted to give a lot for you, but not our blood. If you don’t want to enjoy it, then tough ****!”) and the British band’s road manager (“1776 was a long while ago!”), the crowd lost its tough ****. Chairs, seat cushions, and railings were torn out and tossed at the stage. Windows and glass doors were smashed. Garbage cans were thrown. Fights broke out. Similar to Altamont 11 years prior, pleas for everyone to “cool out” went unheeded.

And then the Milwaukee police showed up in riot gear. The Arena had been cleared out by the time police arrived at 11:40 p.m., though there was still plenty of trouble on the streets. Three officers were injured in the hour-long melee. More than 160 people were arrested—roughly 80 for riot-related charges, roughly 80 for pre-show drug charges. Butler was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital (now Aurora Sinai Medical Center), treated, and released. Total damages to the Arena were estimated at $40,000.

The next day, Police Chief Harold Breier called for a straight-up ban on hard-rock concerts at the venue. A beer ban was put into place for the Arena’s next big show: Bruce Springsteen And The E Street Band on October 14. But, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel notes: “Neither ban lasted long. The beer soon returned. Among the bands that played the Arena in 1981 were AC/DC and Van Halen.”

As for Butler, he later put the whole thing in perspective, telling Maximum Ink:

“It was worse back in the ’70s, because no one was going through metal detectors and you didn’t have as much space between the band and the front of the crowd as you do nowadays. People threw a lot of beer cans in the ’70s. Once, in San Francisco, someone threw a huge iron cross on the stage. It bounced up, cut three strings on my bass, and the end of it poked me in the eye. Luckily, I didn’t lose my sight or anything. But that was quite an incident.”
 
Went to several concerts as a young guy.
Heck, REO Speedwagon was pretty much the house band at Vets auditorium in the late 70s and 80s in Des Moines.
I have to say hands down the best concert I went to was 1976 Ames Ia.
Lynyrd Skynyrd.
That was a kick azz night.
Back then I drove my only car 71 V code X
Parked in a sea of cars.
Had my soon to be wife and another couple.
Party till the sun came up. Heck we were all kids under 20 I miss those nights. Lol.
 
Frankie Vallie and the four seasons, The Beach Boys , Bob Dylan, Meatloaf come back Concert. Worked the Diana Ross Central Park Concert in the rain. and sorry to say Bruce Springsteen....
 
Shoot, where do I start? Oh yea, Kiss on their AliveII tour, all the way up to August of this year when we see Whiskey Myers at rue Toledo Zoo. I worked at the Pontiac Silverdome for a dozen years, and got to see every concert, Monster Jam, football game, anything that they had there, I got to see. I saw Barry Sanders go into 1/2 time with -4 rushing yards, and finish the game with 186 yards. Saw The Rolling Stones 6 times, and met my wife in a blind date to one of those shows. Too many shows to count.
 
AC/DC, Def Leppard, Sammy Hagar, Motley Crue, Jackyl, Uriah Heap, Johnny Van Zant, Great White, Lita Ford, Kiss, Damn Yankees, Fire House, Blue Oyster Cult. I'm sure theres a few i'm forgetting....short list but a good one!!
 
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I saw a lot of live performances in my life, but the ones that stood out were from my childhood. Mom and her friend used to get tickets to Ed Sullivan dress rehearsals all the time from the early sixties until the show ended. Unfortunately, I was too young to appreciate all the history. So here is a short list of who I saw.

Janis Joplin, Doors, Carpenters, 5th Dimension, Dave Clark 5, Jackson 5, Tom Jones, Barbara Streisand, Temptations, Blood Sweat & Tears, Tina Turner, Rolling Stones, Creedance Clearwater Revival, Diana Ross, Beach Boys, Mamas & Pappas, Lou Rawls, James Brown, Sonny & Cher, Animals and lots more!!!

Never got to see the Beatles. We had tickets, but they cancelled the dress rehearsal!
 
too many to remember or type, let's say my favorite was AC/DC at the Ohio Ritchfield Coliseum before it closed
 
ZZ Top.(10 times) Alice Cooper (Twice}
Deep Purple (First Date with my wife of 47 years) again on our 40th anniversary, Grand Funk, Black Sabbath, Young Rascals, Tommy James and the Shondels, Moody Blues, George Thorogood and the Destoyers, Ted Nugent, Rod Stewart, James Gang, (Joe Walsh era), Boston, Chicago, Aerosmith, Brooks and Dunn, 3 Dog Night, John Fogarty, Cheap Trick, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Bobby Vinton

Off topic by I was at the Immaculate Reception game, (I saved the program.)

Also off topic: When I was in the Army, basic training, April 1970, Ft.Dix, NJ., we got our first weekend pass so a bunch of us from Pittsburgh flew home on Friday evening. We had military coach tickets. We were in the gate area and the Doors were on the flight. One guy noticed them and we tried to talk to them but they had some security muscle that steered us away. They were cool about it, asking us to respect their privacy. On the flight to Pittsburgh, about a 40 minute trip, they reserved the entire 1st class section. We didn't see a flight attendant on flight. A limo picked them up on the tarmac, an airport bus took the entourage, and they were gone.
 
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I'll try and get them in order probably missed a few:

Scorpions, Rainbow and Riot (triple header)
Iron Maiden (not really a big fan)
Santana
Steve Miller
Lou Gramm (a couple times)
Foghat
Blue Oyster Cult (3x)
Judas Priest (2X)
Aerosmith
Triumph
Dio
Stevie Ray Vaughn with The Fabulous Thunderbirds - outdoor show
Rick Derringer
Pat Travers
The Firm
Rush
Deep Purple
Jefferson Starship
Get the Led Out (very good cover band)2x
Tom Petty
The Outlaws
 
First concert was Ozzy. Saw Iron Maiden and Judas Priest at one concert. My girlfriend at the time loved Journey so I bought the tickets. We broke up before the concert so I took my new girlfriend.
 
Eurythmics, AC/DC, Bryan Adam’s x2, U2 x3, Dave Dobbyn x2, The Exponants, Eric Clapton, Elton John, Guns N Roses, Hoodoo Gurus, Iron Maiden, The Rolling Stones, Sting, Debbie Harry
 
I forgot at least 1 Blue Oyster Cult, someone else's post reminded me of it
under a different name, even after they made it big
Soft White Underbelly
bar hoping with a couple friends & dates, on our bikes, mine on my new VMax
at/in a lil' dive bar it held like 200 (?) people, in Berkely (?) IIRC,
or (?) maybe Castro Valley, not sure where now
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Molly Hatchet & Rossington Collins Band too,
Candlestick Park, Cow Palace, maybe 2 different concerts I don't exactly remember (?)
how could I forget them, good southern rock
I was in my early to mid 20's (?) early to mid 1980's
I do remember one I had took a different hot lil' blonde named Debbie...
We went to Oakland after, to Denim & Diamonds C&W bar after, what a night...
 
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I forgot at least 1 Blue Oyster Cult, someone else's post reminded me of it
under a different name, even after they made it big
Soft White Underbelly
bar hoping with a couple friends & dates, on our bikes
in a lil' dive bar like 200 people, in Berkely (?) IIRC,
or (?) maybe it was Montclaire, maybe Castro Valley, not sure where now
I saw Blue Oyster Cult in a bar as well with maybe 150 people back in 1985.
I stood about 6-8 feet from them and we had buckets of 7 Oz. splits.
Probably one the greatest shows I've ever witnessed.
 
I couldn't begin to list all the concerts I've been to in my life, but I can tell you some of the ones that I list as the top ones.

Front row at an AC/DC show

B.B. King 3 times

Joe Cocker 3 times

Joe Bonamassa

Peter Frampton

Santana 2 times (The reefer smoke in St. Louis was the most intense of any concert I have ever been to.)

Tom
 
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