Previous posts on the late 1960s in Oregon have focused narrowly on specific venues in Portland, whether high profile like the Crystal Ballroom or less well known ones. However, while Portland had a thriving local rock scene in the 1960s, the signal feature of Portland rock music was geography. Since Portland was on an Interstate Highway midway between San Francisco and Seattle, it made the city an attractive stop on many West Coast rock tours. Portland was not a large city in the 1960s, but its location meant that numerous bands played a show in Portland while heading North and South.
I should emphasize at the outset that my blogs have a very narrow focus towards Fillmore and Avalon style underground ("psychedelic") 60s rock bands. In fact, the whole Pacific Northwest had had a booming live music scene since the early 1960s, and rock bands all over Oregon played weekend shows at armories, rec halls and community centers all around the state, and continued to do so throughout the 1960s. However, my historical focus is on the sort of bands who played the Fillmore and Avalon, or at least aspired to do so.
I am attempting a list of every out-of-state touring rock band who played in Oregon in 1968 (1967 is here and 1969 will follow). I am not counting regional bands from Washington or Idaho as "out-of-state"-my focus is on bands who were on tour who played a show (or a few) in Oregon. This list is drawn from my own research and the lists of various bands' rock concert history. Within the confines of my interests (i.e. Fillmore bands), it is as complete as I can make it. I have included shows from my Crystal Ballroom list or other lists if they feature touring bands. Anyone with additions, corrections, insights or recovered memories (real or imagined) is encouraged to Comment or email me.
1968 Portland Rock Concerts
January 20, 1968 Eureka Municipal Auditorium, Eureka, CA Grateful Dead/Quicksilver Messenger Service
It may seem strange to start a history of concerts in Oregon with a show in California, but Eureka has a peculiar relationship to both California and Oregon. The Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service had planned a joint tour of the Pacific Northwest, and following the "pay-as-you-go" nature of 60s rock tours, they booked a show in the North Coast town of Eureka, CA. The Dead were on their way to Seattle (where they would play the weekend of January 26-27), but they stopped halfway for a paying gig in Eureka.
Far Northern California and Southern Oregon see themselves as a state apart from Northern California (San Francisco and the Central Valley) and Central Oregon (Portland, Eugene and Salem). The area from Ashland, OR to Eureka, CA sees itself as another entity (google "State Of Jefferson"). The Grateful Dead's first foray into this area was a show at the tiny Municipal Auditorium at 1120 F Street. The Dead were in fact well received, for the most part, but they rapidly became too big to play such tiny outposts.
The Dead were taping all of the shows on this tour in order to use the material for their forthcoming album Anthem Of The Sun (released June 1968). A portion of the show has circulated amongst Dead tape collectors over the years. Two songs from the Eureka show ("Viola Lee Blues" and "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl") were released as bonus tracks on the 2009 archival Grateful Dead cd Road Trips Vol. 2 No. 2: Carousel 2/14/68. At the beginning of "Viola Lee Blues," Jerry Garcia regretfully informs the Eureka audience that "the cops say you can't dance," a sign of the tension that often ensued when the Dead broke in new territory. Pigpen then adds "Cops ain't God, man," and Phil Lesh helpfully observes "you can't dance, but that doesn't mean you can't take off your clothes and wriggle around," which helps to explain how the Dead created a lot of tension.
January 29, 1968 PMC College Center Ballroom, Portland State College, Portland, OR Grateful Dead/Quicksilver Messenger Service/PH Phactor Jug Band
After the weekend in Seattle, the Grateful Dead/Quicksilver tour--dubbed "The Quick and The Dead"--pulled into Oregon at Portland State College. This was a Wednesday night show at a relatively small college venue.
January 30, 1968 EMU Ballroom (U of O), Eugene, OR Grateful Dead/Quicksilver Messenger Service/PH Phactor Jug Band
PH Phactor Jug Band, a local Portland group, was not on the poster, but contemporary newspaper reports confirm their presence. Once again, the bands are playing on a weeknight (Thursday) at a much smaller college facility than they would ever play again.
February 2-3, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Grateful Dead/Quicksilver Messenger Service/PH Phactor Jug Band
The Crystal Ballroom played a peculiar role in Portland rock history, as it was the highest profile venue, but it was run on a shoestring basis. When the Crystal was functioning well, however, it provided some of the great memories of 60s Portland rock. When the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver tour hit the Crystal on a Friday and Saturday night, all the stars were aligned. After a few smaller shows at Portland State and U of O, hip Portland was primed for the shows at the Crystal.
According to Toody Conner, who was one of the volunteers who helped run the Crystal (per Tim Hills book), there were lines around the block, and there was so much money in gate receipts that they had to borrow an equipment case to stuff it into, which she sat on during most of the show. The Crystal had had financial struggles throughout its entire existence as a psychedelic venue, but for this weekend, with the audience ready and the Dead firing on all cylinders--not to mention the formidable Quicksilver Messenger Service--everything happened the way it was supposed to, if only for a weekend.
We know how well the Grateful Dead played, too, because they taped it. Partial tapes of Dead sets from both nights circulate —the only live tapes I know of from The Crystal—and one track was released on a Grateful Dead vault cd in 2009 (“Dark Star” from 2/2/68, as a bonus track on Road Trips Vol. 2 No. 2: Carousel 2/14/68).
February 4, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Beach Boys/Buffalo Springfield (afternoon)
The eternally huge Beach Boys returned to the Portland Memorial Coliseum for a Sunday afternoon show, this time supported by the Buffalo Springfield. The Springfield were a popular band on AM radio, if nowhere near the status of the Beach Boys, and their management booked them for popular shows like this one. The musicians in the band, however (at this point Neil Young, Stephen Stills, Richie Furay, Dewey Martin and bassist Jim Messina) saw themselves as a primarily live band who were more comfortable in a Fillmore-type environment. The frustrated Springfield broke up for good in May 1968.
February 4, 1968 Britt Ballroom, South Oregon College, Ashland, OR Grateful Dead/Quicksilver Messenger Service
The "Quick and The Dead" Northwest tour concluded with a Sunday night show in Ashland, OR at the Gymnasium of South Oregon College, 290 miles South of Portland. South Oregon College (today Southern Oregon University) had been founded in 1926. This was the Dead's only appearance in Southern Oregon, as their increasingly popularity in Oregon insured that they played the larger population centers around Portland the two largest State Universities for the rest of their career.
February 16-17, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Blue Cheer/Nazzare Blues Band
In February 1968, the Crystal Ballroom tried to make amends for its distant location from California by aligning itself with Chet Helms and the Family Dog. At this juncture, Whitey Davis had returned to California to become some sort of manager at the Avalon Ballroom, where he had worked in 1966. The Avalon had been very successful in 1967, but now it was getting squeezed by the increasing size of the rock market on one side and the Bill Graham empire on the other. Helms had the shrewd idea that if he could offer bands a series of West Coast dates, he could compete directly with Graham. This was a very sharp idea, but it was about a year too late.
According to a long circulating story, the Crystal and the Avalon were part of a Family Dog "empire" that included Vancouver and Anchorage, Alaska. While the Dog clearly had some connections in Vancouver, the Anchorage connection seems to have simply been a tall tale (and financially absurd in any case). Helms had opened a Family Dog outpost in Denver in 1967, but it was done in by constant harassment from the Denver police. If Helms had been able to link Denver, Portland and San Francisco, he might have had some clout, but after the financial draining of the Denver debacle, the undercapitalized Portland effort seems to have been a good idea executed too late.
Nonetheless, the "Crystal Dog" began with the rising San Francisco band Blue Cheer. Blue Cheer’s legendarily heavy debut album, Vincebus Eruptum, with its proto metal single ‘Summertime Blues”, had just been released. Blue Cheer was famous for touring with an enormous sound system (with a huge bank of Marshall Stax amplifiers), and was generally the loudest band around. Tim Hills, in his excellent 1997 book The Many Lives Of The Crystal Ballroom, recounts a story of the Crystal staff's brief panic when Blue Cheer did a full volume soundcheck on Friday afternoon, while normal people were still at work.
March 1-2, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Quicksilver Messenger Service/Nazzare Blues Band
This was the third Portland Family Dog show (the second featured The Weeds). Quicksilver were Family Dog regulars. Although they had not yet released their debut album, they would have been known to locals, having just come through town with the Grateful Dead.
March 8-9, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Amazing Charlatans/Alexander’s Timeless Bluesband
This was the fourth and apparently final Portland Family Dog show (poster up top). At this point, the arrangement seemed to end, although the whole story is murky. My assumption is that the financial benefits of a partnership between Chet Helms and The Crystal were not able to be realized. Helms’s bargaining power had been greatly reduced by the Denver debacle, and he may not have had sufficient cash to make the arrangement worthwhile in Portland. Like many of Helms’s ideas, the concept was sound but the execution was spotty.
The Charlatans, of course, had played the very first Family Dog dance in San Francisco on October 16, 1965. By 1968, other groups had passed them by, but they were still an interesting band.
March 16, 1968 Cirque Club, Hillsboro, OR Family Tree/Jefferson Davis Five
The Cirque Club was just outside of Hillsboro, a suburb about 20 miles West of Portland. Directions on the surviving flyers do not give an address, but just say "1 mile East of Hillsboro on the TV [Tualatin Valley] Highway," a sign of the then-rural location. According to the excellent PNW page, it was a club for kids sixteen and over, a common sort of venue in the Northwest, and it was open for about 3 years in the late sixties. The owner was Ted Scott, a former Hollywood stuntman who had been Clark Gable's stand-in for several years, as well as helping to start the show "To Tell The Truth."
The Family Tree were advertised as a San Francisco band, not exactly true but not untrue either. The Family Tree apparently had a great live show and were very popular in Central California and Oregon. The Jefferson Davis Five were a local band.
April 13, 1968 Cirque Club, Hillsboro, OR Neighb’rhood Childr’n/Jefferson Davis V
Although the Neighb'rhood Childr'n were advertised as "Direct From Hollywood," they were actually Southern Oregon's best (and probably first) psychedelic band. Unlike all other Southern Oregon bands, they also had an album, the excellent if obscure LP Long Years In Space (released on Acta, and later released on cd by Sundazed).
I do not know much else about the Cirque Club, not even whether it was rare or common to have out-of-town bands as headliners. Owner Ted Scott went on to produce other shows, including apparently the Jimi Hendrix show at Portland Coliseum (see below).
May 3, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR The Fugs/Kaleidoscope
May 4, 1968 The Lemon Tree, Eugene, OR The Fugs/Kaleidoscope/Hammond Typewriter
A brief spurt of national touring acts in May and June suggests that there was still some informal cooperation between the Family Dog in San Francisco and the Crystal.
The poster for the May 4 show in Eugene advertised it as a Family Dog show, paired with the similar bill playing the at the Crystal. Neither show was part of the “official” Family Dog series (in February and March), so its unknown what the relationship was of this show (and the shows on 17-18 May) to the Crystal’s arrangement with the Family Dog. Nonetheless, Whitey Davis was probably still managing the Avalon, so its plausible that an informal arrangement was intact. It was also not unheard of for former associates of The Dog to use The Family Dog logo with at least tacit approval from Chet Helms, for reasons that remain obscure (as happened in February, 1968 in Denver).
The Hammond Typewriter did not perform in Eugene.
Kaleidoscope were a legendary Southern California band who invented “world music” about 20 years before the world was ready for it. The group featured David Lindley, Chester Crill, Solomon Feldthouse and Stuart Brotman (as well as drummer Paul Lagos) on numerous exotic instruments, all played with talent and flair.
I do not know anything about The Lemon Tree in Eugene. Eugene was a college town, so it seems likely that someone would try and open some kind of psychedelic venue, but this Saturday event is the only show I know of at this place. I am not sure of the address.
May 17-18, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Kaleidoscope/Family Tree
The poster for this show also indicates that it was a Family Dog show, and equally little is known about the use of the logo and any formal connection to Chet Helms or The Dog.
The Family Tree had just released their debut album Miss Butters (on RCA), and they continued to be popular on the live circuit. However, their ambitious album failed to make a dent on the charts, and the group soon broke up. Bob Segarini then formed a group in Los Angeles called Roxy, the next step in a long and fascinating career.
May 24-25, 31, June 1, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Junior Wells Blues Band
Chicago blues bands like Junior Wells were now a regular part of the psychedelic ballroom scene. So many local and national bands covered blues songs that a lot of standard Chicago material was quite well known around the country, even to kids who had never heard the original. Wells very well may have played the Crystal in the early 60s, when it featured blues and soul acts.
June 14-15, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Youngbloods/Kaleidoscope
The Youngbloods, originally from New York City and Cambridge, MA, had moved to Marin County in September, 1967. The quartet (singer/bassist Jesse Colin Young, lead guitarist/singer Jerry Corbitt, multi-instrumentalist Lowell “Banana” Levinger and drummer Joe Bauer) had played regularly throughout the Pacific Northwest as well as the rest of the country. The group’s second album (Earth Music, on RCA) had been released in November 1967.
June 21-22, 1968 Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR Buddy Guy
Buddy Guy was a prominent blues guitarist in Chicago, not well known except to other guitarists. He was starting to make a name for himself on the ballroom circuit.
The city of Portland closed the Crystal Ballroom on or about July of 1968. Tim Hills reprints a headline in The Oregonian (Portland's main daily newspaper) from July 12, 1968 that says "City Closes Dance Hall: Crystal Ballroom Fails Inspection." Unhappy with the congregation of hippies downtown, the city had found a slew of code violations in June, and the operators of the Crystal--whoever they were by Summer 1968 is a bit vague--were unable to respond effectively. According to Hills, a Newsweek article (from May 20, 1968) that said that San Francisco hippies were all going to Portland for the Summer did not help matters.
The exact date of the last show isn't certain, and the venue may have put on shows as late as Saturday, July 6, 1968, but I don't know who might have played. Its known (from Billboard magazine) that Iron Butterfly had to cancel a July date at the Crystal (either 12-13 or 26-27), and according to Hills Big Brother and the Holding Company had to cancel as well, but the end of the psychedelic area came quickly for the Crystal Ballroom.
June 30, 1968 MacArthur Court, U. of Oregon, Eugene, OR The Doors
The Doors were huge by this time. MacArthur Court was the University of Oregon basketball arena.
July 2, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Eric Burdon and The Animals/Wailers/Spiral Staircase
Eric Burdon and The Animals was the later, psychedelic lineup that had hits with "Sky Pilot" and other songs. The Wailers, from Tacoma, WA, were later known as The Fabulous Wailers (to distinguish them from Bob Marley's crew).
This show was the last one with Vic Briggs on guitar, who was replaced afterwards by no less than future policeman Andy Summers. Briggs (aka Antion Meredith, RIP) recalled that his last gig was a five-concert swing concluding in Salem, so I have assume they played the Armory.
July 10, 1968 Masonic Temple, Portland, OR Kaleidoscope/Crazy World of Arthur Brown
The Masonic Temple was a smaller venue at 1119 SW Park Avenue. The biggest events held there used the 4th floor Grand Ballroom. Although it was regularly used for smaller local events, it appears that activity picked up at the Masonic Temple whenever the Crystal Ballroom was inactive. With the Crystal closed, acts who wanted to play downtown Portland ended up at the Temple. I have always assumed that the Kaleidoscope show was originally scheduled for the Crystal, although I can't be sure.
The Crazy World of Arthur Brown had a fairly wild stage show for a 60s band. They were an interesting trio, with just a singer (Brown), an organist (Vincent Crane) and a drummer (the teenage Carl Palmer). Their big hit was the immortal "Fire."
The Portland Civic Auditorium, at 222 SW Clay Street (bounded by 2nd and 3rd Avenues and Clay and Market Streets), had been built in 1917 with a capacity of about 4,500. It was closed for substantial remodeling in 1967, and re-opened on May 3, 1968.
Steppenwolf's debut album on ABC-Dunhill had been released in January, 1968. The classic "Born To Be Wild" single was released in May '68 and would reach #2 on the Billboard charts.
September 9, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Jimi Hendrix Experience/Eire Apparent/Soft Machine
Ted Scott, proprietor of the Cirque Club, helped promote the next big show at Portland Coliseum. The opening acts, Eire Apparent and Soft Machine, were both very interesting groups managed by Hendrix manager Mike Jeffereys.
September 22, 1968 Lane County Fairgounds, Veneta, OR Country Joe and The Fish/Ian Maddron/Death Sound Blues Band
This is the first major rock show I know of at the Lane County Fairgrounds in Eugene. The Fairgrounds are located at 796 W. 13th Avenue, in the center of Eugene. I do not know whether this was an indoor or outdoor event, as there were and are a variety of facilities at the Fairgrounds.
October 3, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Donovan
It is easy to forget today that Donovan was one of the biggest performers of the late 1960s. He played the Coliseum as well, demonstrating that he was as popular as Jimi Hendrix or The Beach Boys. It is possible there was an early and late show as well. Tapes supposedly exist of this concert.
October 26, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Canned Heat/Professor Morrison's Lollipop/Grass Roots/Deep Purple/Turtles
Apparently this show was called "Survey '68" (thanks to Commenters for figuring this out)
Gil Coliseum was the basketball arena for Oregon State University. Corvallis was about 82 miles South of Portland, but still 200 miles North of Ashford and Medford. The Grateful Dead were on their way to Vancouver and Seattle. Elsewhere I have speculated on the possibility that since the Saturday, November 16 show was canceled, it is plausible that the Dead played an unscheduled show somewhere in Oregon or Washington that night (EMU Ballroom at U. of O is a plausible).
Mint Tattoo were a San Francisco band featuring Sacramento musicians Bruce Stephens and Burns Kellogg. They released a self-titled album on Dot, and Stephens and Kellogg ended up joining Blue Cheer. Kellogg went on to a successful career as a producer under the name Ethan James.
November ?, 1968 Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR Grass Roots/The Turtles/Deep Purple
A Commenter recalls this event, called "Survey 68." The Deep Purple site lists "Portland, OR unknown venue" for this date, so I have made the assumption that these are the same events. Deep Purple "Mk 1" (with Rod Evans and Nick Simper), who had just released their modest hit "Hush," were on their first American tour.
December 29, 1968 Civic Auditorium, Portland, OR Vanilla Fudge/Led Zeppelin
The Portland Civic Auditorium, at 222 SW Clay St, was built in 1917. It was rarely used for rock shows. At this time it had about 4,500 seats, although it has since been remodeled into a smaller venue. Vanilla Fudge was a very popular band, and they were connected to influential concert promoters (Concerts West) who probably had access to venues that smaller promoters did not. No one cares about Vanilla Fudge today, however; what matters was that opening act Led Zeppelin made their Oregon debut.
Led Zeppelin's first album would not even be released for a few more weeks, but the band made their North American debut filling in for some dates that had been booked for the Jeff Beck Group, with whom Zeppelin shared management, opening for Vanilla Fudge. Zeppelin had made their North American debut in Denver on December 26, followed by dates in Seattle (27) and Vancouver (28). Portland Civic Auditorium was Led Zeppelin's fourth North American date. It was also the first where there was any kind of notice at all, as they had been added to the previous shows too late to change the advertising. A Portland newspaper ad promotes "Vanilla Fudge plus special guests Led Zeppilen featuring Jimmy Page." At this time, with no album and no airplay, Zep would have been completely unknown, but Jimmy Page had a certain amount of name recognition based on his career in the Yardbirds.
Vanilla Fudge and Led Zeppelin went on to perform the next night at Gonzaga University in Spokane, WA (where Zep were billed as "Len Zifflin"). The band then had a scary ride through a Northwestern blizzard to the Seattle airport. Once Led Zeppelin landed in sunny Los Angeles to play the Whisky Au Go Go in West Hollywood, they were unknown no more.
Next: Oregon rock concerts, 1969
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ReplyDeleteRe: May 4, 1968 performance of the Fugs, Kaleidoscope and the Hammond Typewriter at the shot at this and say that the Hammond Typewriter did not play. The rationale for this is simply based on the poster - which is by no means rare - having the "Hammond Typewriter" blacked out with marker on several copies that I have seen - more often than not in fact.
ReplyDeleteMy understanding is that the Hammond Typewriter were responsible for the "Billy Shears Presents ..." shows - and I have this recollection about Billy Shears being a club rather than a specific person - one assumes tied to the Sgt Pepper's character. I may of course be wrong about this - but I thought I would mention it anyway.
The Grateful Dead played a number of free concerts at the U of O EMU ballroom in 1968 and 1969 when they were livin on Ken Kesey's farm. These shows were not publisized, but were well attended
ReplyDeletehodesy, I have heard some vague whiffs about below-the-radar EMU shows. Do you recall what seasons these shows were in (eg Fall 68 or Summer 69, or what have you)?
ReplyDeleteThere was an event in 1968 in Portland, Oregon at the Memorial Coliseum called Survey 68.
ReplyDeleteI attended and know that the Grass Roots, Turtles and Deep Purple played in that venue in one night. There may have been another band and am thinking it might have been Canned Heat but am not sure. Do you have any info on that event?
That show at the Memorial Coliseum was October 26, 1968, with Canned Heat, Professor Morrison's Lollipop, Grass Roots, Deep Purple and the Turtles.
DeleteSurvey ‘68 was my first concert. The main draw for me was Deep Purple. It was huge disappointment when it was announced the Deep Purple would not be playing “for technical reasons”. They offered refunds but I had to stay because I was 12 years old and my mother wasn’t going to pick me up until the show was over. I’m glad I stayed because the Turtles put on a hell of a show, although I was worried Mark and Howie were going to get in trouble for saying, “shit and fuck”.
DeleteI didn’t see Deep Purple live until 50 years later.
Brooks, this is very interesting information. I did not know that DP played Oregon in Fall '68. However, the very interesting
ReplyDeletehttp://www.deeppurpleliveindex.com/
lists "Portland, OR venue unknown" for October 11, 1968, so that would fit. It would also explain a little bit why DP played so many shows in Oregon in April 1969, in that there may have been a buzz about them from the previous year.
Corry,
ReplyDeleteThe above Deep Purple site lists: "Oregon, unknown city, unknown venue, November ??, 1968" not the lists you said above.
thanks Bruno, great catch. I adjusted the post accordingly.
ReplyDeleteI recently reached out to the Southern Oregon University student newspaper, the Siskiyou, to see if they had any information about the show on 2/4/68. They were very helpful, but couldn't find any specifics about the show other than the poster advertising it. It is the same as the poster above, but with the location typed over it was "Britt Ballroom" that seats maybe 350 today. A quick check of the college website indicates that this was probably not the McNeal Pavillion. I'm not sure if there was a location change or if the poster was just changed after the fact. They sent me a scan of their version of the poster, but I'm not sure how to post it here.
ReplyDelete-Shane
segan63 at gmail.com
Amazing info. I was four years old in 68 and living in Portland. I've attended well over 500 concerts, saw the Grateful Dead and Led Zeppelin (Len Zifflin? LOL) and many many others. I wish that I had documented it more. I wish I had started earlier. I was surprised that cops forbidding dancing at concerts was already occurring at this point. WoW. I thought that died out in the late 50's and was reborn in the early 90's, but no! I very much look forward to your 1969 and any ensuing concertography's. THANK YOU!
ReplyDeleteEric Burdon and the Animals performed July 2, 1968, in Portland. If I remember correctly it was at the Memorial Coliseum. The warm-up bands were Spiral Starecase and the (Fabulous) Wailers. The Animals did several of their classics as well as their just-released single, Sky Pilot.
ReplyDeleteActually it was Wednesday July 3, 1968.
DeleteI was at that show. The Animals opened with a film of band members and others as English and German soldiers unknowingly marching towards each other as the approached a curve in a road. And it was July 2, 1968. July 3 they played in Spokane. Then just over 3 weeks later on July 25, Steppenwolf played at the Civic Auditorium. It was the summer between 8th & 9th grade for me which I spent with my sister in Lake Oswego.
DeleteDidn't Steppenwolf also play a concert at the Memorial Coliseum back then?
DeleteI think I remember some local Doors cover band with a name like Tombstones or Gravediggers or something. Anybody recall something like that?
the "Quick & the Dead" concert at SOC ( Feb 4, 1968 )
ReplyDeletewas indeed in the "Britt Ballroom" ... i was there & it seemed the only ones dancing were the ones that had a fair amount of LSD in our systems ( far too many folks were sitting on the floor with their mouths agape )
those were the Daze
( reflections of a Septuagenarian :o)
I can confirm it was in Britt Ballroom. An interesting side light is that Jerry Abrams performed a light show at this venue. I was chair of the Britt Program Board was was responsible for booking these events.
DeleteFabulous! Any stories to share?
Deletere: Sept 9 Hendrix show. Also on bill were Vanilla Fudge, and they were great (I went to that show....). Hendrix was turned off in middle of purple haze, as Coliseum back there turned anyone off when 11 pm came. Same happened to airplane in 67....
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteRe: JHExp, VF, SM & EA Concert:
ReplyDeleteThen mayor Terry Schrunk didn’t like ‘hippies’ and had Coliseum management run the show by the book and to the minute, thus the control of power and lights. He also perpetrated the sham Vortex concert. Not very cool for a Democrat.
The power was also turned off while Soft Machine was jamming which resulted in their drummer being arrested for assaulting a cop after he pushed his double bass drum set off the stage onto said cop.
Jimi was visibly upset when he got cut off playing Purple Haze encore and all the house lights came up. It came pretty close to a riot except so many folks were too stoned to put out the effort.
The Grass roots were in Eugene Oregon in 66 or 68 were they not.
ReplyDeleteCutting power on Blind Faith, anyone remember that? I was with my friend Corky Hubbert.
ReplyDeleteI believe that Steppenwolf played in Portland at the Civic Auditorium on July 25th, 1968. The Echoes opened for them.
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ReplyDelete