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Ok. You’ve got 2 tickets to 2 concerts

Pink Floyd at Earl's Court would have been something to see.
Billy Joel at MSG would have been something to see.
 
I doubt Legion Field was any great shakes as a concert venue. But both the Dead and the Stones played there while I was in college and I didn't go to either one.
 
Pink Floyd at Earl's Court would have been something to see.
Billy Joel at MSG would have been something to see.

Imagine seeing Billy Joel at that piano bar he was at back in the day? The Beatles banging out a living in Liverpool, Springsteen playing small gigs.
 
Beatles at the Cavern Club
Gordon Lightfoot at some bar in Ontario
I used to work with a guy who grew up in Liverpool when they were on their way up. He knew them all to some extent (he had his own band and his girlfriend, later wife, was related to one of the guys in Gerry and the Pacemakers) and he said going to see them was just something you did when they were gigging around the area. (He recalled occasionally grabbing a smoke between sets with Lennon.) He said in his mind it was preposterous to think they would become that famous because with the exception of people like the Queen and Churchill and maybe a guy like Richard Burton, British people just didn't get that kind of fame.

I have lived in the Toronto area my whole life and never saw Lightfoot once, I should probably be forced to give up my citizenship or something.
 
My accidental concert: when I was in college a group of us went up to Vancouver for the World's Fair. We were in Stanley Park when we heard a crowd in the distance. We followed the sound… and found Arlo Guthrie and Pete Seeger playing in an an amphitheater in the middle of the park.


I came close to this one — they played the Long Beach Arena a couple of days before they filmed the movie at the Pantages. I was at the Long Beach show.

So, my choices…

Still active, it could happen:
Paul Weller - somewhere in London. I may drive over to California to see him next month, which would be close enough.
Bob Mould - First Avenue in Minneapolis. Been a fan for years but never seen him live.

Alternately… not active, bloody unlikely:
The Smiths, anywhere
Split Enz, anywhere
Weller is playing a club in downtown Toronto, I thought about getting tickets but they were long gone.

I saw The Jam here in 1981 but it would have been cool to see them in the UK.

As for Split Enz, well.....
 
Maybe a weird thread to ask this on, but how do fans/music enthusiasts hear about upcoming shows before tickets go on sale these days? Back in the day in the Bay Area, Bill Graham Presents would have a full-page ad (maybe more than one) listing upcoming shows in the Chronicle's Pink Section on Sundays.
Now, about the only time I hear about shows I might want to attend are when the ticket sales are lagging and they buy TV spots or are giving away tickets on local radio.
 
I follow many of my fave artists on Instagram and Twitter and that's usually how I find out about upcoming shows. The 800-seat theatre in my part of the burbs releases their season schedule on their website, I can usually find a decent show or two to go to. In the old days here in Toronto I'd find out through ads in Rolling Stone or the local paper or announcements on the local rock stations.
 
1. In the building for the recording of "Stop Making Sense"

2. Otis Redding, anywhere

Only know the Talking Heads hit singles but I've always loved the live video for "Once In A Lifetime." You can tell everyone was just forking on fire for that. I loved at the very end, when Byrne is soaked in sweat and hunched over, you hear one shriek from the crowd. I always try to shriek that loud at concerts. :D
 
I'll go the historic route …

1. Prince, mid-1980s, when he was still touring with The Revolution.

2. Pink Floyd, circa 1971 or 1972, when they were playing early versions of Dark Side songs in their sets.

The sister of my sister's best friend (and one of my best friends as well) went to a Prince show on the Purple Rain tour. Played however long he played and the lights went up. Everyone's on the concourse, Prince returns to the stage, yells "I ain't done yet!" and everyone races back into the arena to watch him play for like another hour. And thats why the Hartford Civic Center added an ironclad rule that once the lights go up, the artist is done!
 

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