Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Most Memorable Concerts #1-10
1. The Grateful Dead, Cal Expo June, 9 1990: 2 hits of acid and 2 unbelievable setlists played ferociously. Start at "China Cat" and don't look back. Afterwards c., boyfriend j. and i went to denny's tripping so hard we could barely walk. one of us went to the bathroom sometime before the food arrived, and came back in hysterics, "you've got to see this. the lobby is filled with excited deaf people. there's a lot of movement but no sound!" this was also the last show we saw with Brent Mydland as keyboardist. my friends and i found his songs trying, and we used to turn away when his songs came up. it was a time to smoke bowls and chitchat. when Brent committed suicide, he left a note about how he felt "extra" in the dead, like he was unwanted eveven though he'd played with the band for 20 years. He wrote about how he knew people "turned away" when he played. there are many things to say about that statement, but for now let's just say that the grateful dead were never the same amazing way again. Bruce Hornsby anyone? i also had to emancipate myself from my parents in order to go to this show. i did. i was 19. that's pretty landmark.
2. Pink Floyd, Oakland Coliseum Stadium, sometime in 1987: worked so hard all day at school trying to find a ride home from this show. i'd been looking forward to it and planned for it for months, but was now faced with transpo complications at the last minute. my typically-teenage selfish friends who don't have strict parents decided to stay overnight in Berkeley at some random person's apartment. naturally, this did not sit with my mom. i had to find a ride home or not go. not going was not an option. in the end i made it happen, but it was not easy. i talked to people i would never talk to all day long, like whoever was passing through the hall. i finally found some very kind nerdy boys from my class who agreed to meet me after the show and bring me home. NICE. after school my friends and i got in a beat-up peugeot 504 (it came equipped with a manazanita branch cleverly fashioned into a front bumper) and roared off very excited. our excitement didn't last long. about 10 miles later, the car went dead. we attempted to rent a car in Yountville but learned we were too young. then it started to rain. never could a show be so jeopardized and dearly desired as this one. i won't be telling my kids, "I hiked uphill in the snow at midnight to get to school on time." after the rental failure, we went back to the car, climbed in and tried to start it. it started right up! we silently creeped back on the freeway and never spoke once of how it was suddenly running, so as not to jinx. we arrived at the show only slightly late, running through the massive oakland coliseum parking lot in the rain, passing dudes with a nitrous tank in their van (the first time i ever heard the word "Nitrous.") as we reached the top of the nosebleed section that pops one out in sudden view, way up high, david gilmour started to sing and my heart broke into a thousand happy pieces. it was all so worth it. later, we found our seats and our neighbors passed us trash bags to wear as raingear, and a joint to serve as a lubricant. life was so sweet. after the show, the nerdy guys were totally reliably right where they said they'd be and the ride home in the cab of a truck with the two of them wasn't even that bad. This was one of the longest and most stressful days of my life with a – don't laugh – totally worthy payoff.
UPDATE: i recently re-met one of the "nerdy boys" – who made it possible for me to see pink floyd – at my 20th high school class reunion and thanked him again. he appreciated that.
3. The Breeders, GAMH, 1996: this is the story about arguing with Kim Deal (which i guess i haven't told on the Jones...) one thing i rarely mention is how amazing the show was before we met/argued with her. we were unusually thrashed from jumping around that hard because the music was THAT GOOD. sweat dripping down. tshirt sleeves rolled up. jeans rolled up. anything to get air on our guitar-heated bodies. it was incredibly satisfying. it was one of those nights i had to stay up smoking pot until 4am just to process it all.
4. Babes In Toyland, SF Parking Lot in SOMA, Summer 1994: i had just moved in to the tenderloin and my new best friend and neighbor told me about a show in a parking lot nearby (bryant and something?). of course i had to go. i barely knew who babes were, but the show was so powerful and loud and cool. no one beats kat bjelland at being the loudest, hardest rockin' female alive under 5'2". except maybe PJ Harvey. which reminds me...
5. PJ Harvey, Warfield, 1995: It was the To Bring You My Love tour and the first time i ever saw her live. i took my little sister who adored her. she was recovering from a very traumatic and painful experience at the time. and it was just as incredibly empowering for her to see PJ as I hoped it would be. little sister got the message. i saw it happen. it brought tears to my eyes to see her regain some of her self respect through polly as an example. i'll never forget Polly's big black hair and bright red lipstick.
6. Hole, Fillmore, November 1994: this is also a well-told story. truly one of the best nights of my life. who knew at the beginning of the night that d. and i would scale chainlink fences to get into a show we'd so looked forward to, but that had "surprisingly" sold out. who knew we'd also walk out with a plastic baby doll that courtney threw into the audience, and a kick-ass poster to commemorate it all. total price: FREE + one of the best stories of my life + wish fulfillment from scoring a gig as a music editor at a magazine because of that experience, and subsequent storytelling that serves as a portfolio piece to this day. it really does pay to break the law on a small scale.
7. Nirvana/Butthole Surfers, Oakland Coliseum Arena, New Year's Eve 1993: not much needs to be said here. obviously this was memorable. but i can say that i took 4 hits of LSD accidentally (thought it was 1 hit, but it was 4-way), could not see anything but simple geometric shapes the entire show, felt incredibly put-upon to witness kurt's verbal vomitting which gave way to my new theory about music and our responsibility towards how deep we go with it (kurt said stuff we had no right to hear, and by doing it anyway, he crossed an artistic line and became powerless. just an idea.) on the other hand, kurt was so amazing and stand-out because he did this. that part's no secret. PLUS, the butthole surfers were touring Independent Worm Saloon, one of their most vicious – and my favorite – albums ever. on an overhead screen surgery videos played while chainsaws screamed through speakers that were somehow behind the (incredibly loud) music. i had to become an inanimate object in my mind to deal with the overwhelming and questionable stimuli. i became a camera. i recorded the event this way, but had no need to process and understand, therefore successfully cordoning off my sanity into a place it could not be touched. WHEW! still, loved this show. LOVED IT! mind-expanding all the way.
8. PJ Harvey, Warfield, September 18, 2001: One week after 9/11. =she was touring "Stories From the City, Stories from the Sea" which is mostly about new york city and fear. there were fat tears running down my face the entire show. i have never been so touched by music in my entire life than this show. "This Mess We're In" still destroys me because of the experience. amazing, the music, the uncontrollable flow of emotion and fear, the kindness the people in the audience exhibited towards one another.
9. Butthole Surfers, GAMH, 2002: SO MUCH FUN. went with like 9 friends. we got a good spot in the balcony and ROCKED HARD the entire night. i went down on the floor during Get Down and slowly returned to the balcony afterwards. right as i climbed the south staircase they started I Saw an X-Ray of a Girl Passing Gas. with each step i took, there was a loud, hard BOOM BOOM BOOMBOOMBOOM. to this day whenever i hear the song i am instantly transported back to that moment on the stairs at that surfers show, instantly transported back to one of my favorites things in the whole world – ever.
10. Jerry Garcia Band, SDSU Open Air Theatre, 1988: this was the first time i ever laid eyes on deadheads. what are they doing with their one finger in the air? do they want LSD? where did they come from? why does everything feel so weird? what is going on here?! the whole experience was so brand new and bizarre, i loved it. i walked around in those knee-high woven hippie slippers like they were real shoes. i didn't have tickets, i was there to observe. after the show i snuck behind a fence with a friend of mine and hid behind a bush right at the very spot where jerry walked out to get on the bus. he paused for a moment right next to me unknowingly, and chatted with someone, then moved on. i did not know anything about deadheads, but i knew a lot about the merry pranksters and jerry and the high times that were had in the 60s. as he stood next to me, i soaked up his energy. it was musty just like you'd expect from someone full of history. i can still see his hair as a halo, backlit by a halogen. time stopped.
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5 comments:
So much grateful dead! I am shocked!
well, i did see them 42 times, so i'm really holding back by only listing 2 in the top 10. but there's more to come. oh my god, so much more.
42! I would never have guessed! I guess I should have but then again most people never speak of The Dead around me.
I lived less than 65 miles outside Philadelphia during high school, but there was NO WAY my parents would have EVER let me go to a concert there, or anywhere else, without them. Besides, there's no one I would have wanted to see except for Neil Diamond, who I did see, in Philadelphia, with my parents, in 1986.
A person who can hold both the Grateful Dead and Butthole Surfers in her heart with the same love and reverence is a mighty blessed space alien voodoo child indeed. Love ya, Jones.
Amazing! Cal Expo June 9, 1990! My #1 too. DAMB GOOD BREAD
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