OT: 30 years ago yesterday - greatest live rock performance ever?

Submitted by Zoltanrules on

What was the best live performance you saw?

Last week the Stones were awesome at Comerica (no freaking remarkable considering their age). Hopefully McCartney and Metallica will rock Lollapalooza in two weeks.

But in 1985 at Live Aid Freddie Mercury and Queen set the bar for rocking an audience imho.The Beatles on Ed Sullivan were ground breaking as were Nirvana unplugged, Led Zeppelin in MSG, and Hendrix at Monterey,et al but this one to me just was extra magical. I get goosebumps every time I see Freddie leading 70,000 sing " Radio Ga Ga".

 

 

https://youtu.be/r19FYTYRvSc

skurnie

July 15th, 2015 at 1:33 PM ^

According to a BBC documentary on Queen via Wikipedia:

"Prior to their taking the stage, Queen's sound engineer covertly switched out the limiters that had been installed on the venue's sound system so the performance would be louder than the others"

Mark McBoneski

July 15th, 2015 at 10:30 AM ^

Keep in mind that the audience at Live Aid wasn't even a Queen crowd. The fact that Freddie could get every single one of them to clap to "Radio Ga Ga" is astonishing. RIP.

bluebyyou

July 15th, 2015 at 11:03 AM ^

Yeah, I was thinking of the inflation thing too. Even with inflation, it was a hell of a deal.

How much would you pay to see Jimi Hendrix play the Star Spangled Banner at dawn?  And he was just one of 31 groups, including people like the Grateful Dead, the Who, etc.  

I was too young to appreciate what I saw then, but when I think back to that weekend, it was simply an amazing event.

My favorite performance was not at Woodstock.  It was Pink Floyd at RFK Stadium in DC about 20 years ago.

Ponypie

July 15th, 2015 at 2:43 PM ^

I was a tad too young to make Woodstock, but hitchhiked with two friends from Chicago to NY to see The Band, Grateful Dead, and Allman Brothers. The Friday night "sound check" was almost as good as the rest of the concert, as was the massive thunderstorm that chased the Allmans off the stage on Saturday.

There were only supposed to be 150,00 there - the number of available tickets - but over 500,000 showed up. Best free music around.

Second place was a 5-hour Dead concert at the UW Field House in Madison. It was intense enough that a group of us had to intervene to stop two attempted suicides (not the reason why the concert was great, just a symptom of the craziness that accompanied some of their perfomances).

Third was ushering for Dylan at Crisler center in the mid-70s: Great music and some guy offered me $500.00 if I would give him my usher shirt so that he could go down to the stage (refused, of course).

 

chatster

July 16th, 2015 at 6:54 AM ^

If you've seen the Woodstock documentary, then I'd recommend reading Pete Fornatale’s Back to the Garden: The Story of Woodstock. It includes stories about why Richie Havens became the opening act (and had to perform for about three hours because the members of the band Sweetwater, the scheduled opening act, were stuck in traffic) and why Iron Butterfly – the band that gave the world the 17-minute long song In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, missed the event, despite being booked to perform.
 
Why Iron Butterfly Missed Woodstock
 
Iron Butterfly got stuck at the airport. Their manager thought that if they had to travel by car, they couldn’t get to the concert site in time to perform on Sunday afternoon, as scheduled. So he sent a telegram to the concert production coordinator with these demands: “We will fly to LaGuardia. You will have helicopters pick us up. We will fly straight to the show. We will perform immediately, and then we will be flown out.”
 
The production coordinator sent back this telegram:
 
F or reasons I can’t go into
U ntil you are here
C larifying your situation
K nowing you are having problems
 
Y ou will have to find
O ther transportation
U nless you plan not to come.

bluebyyou

July 15th, 2015 at 10:44 AM ^

For all you Queen fans, and who isn't one, I recently saw this piece which is a discussion of the making of Bohemian Rhapsody, as narrated by Brian May whom now has a PhD in astrophysics and was heavily involved in the audio engineering utilized by Queeen.  It is fascinating and shows Freddie Mercury's genius in ways I had never previously realized.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDIfVWIJR7w

Yostbound and Down

July 15th, 2015 at 10:48 AM ^

See I would say 1985, Live Aid... for U2's performance of Bad. 

From one Oasis fan to another though...have you seen the Maine Road concert footage? That's maybe the ultimate show for me to travel back in time to... either that or Monterey Pop for Hendrix.

Yostbound and Down

July 15th, 2015 at 12:29 PM ^

Yeah, those are my two favorite bands but they had very different paths. If anything U2 blew up in the US first and has slowly become accepted by the UK. Oasis rode the popularity of the Manchester acts like the Stone Roses to the top... because even though their sound wasn't that unique they had great songs. You're right though, they never really broke through here except for a couple songs.

Interesting to me that Radiohead has had the most longevity of anyone in the "Britpop" scene... their early albums like Bends and OK Computer are still my favorites.

KO Stradivarius

July 15th, 2015 at 10:54 AM ^

During the Tattoo You Tour at the Pontiac Silverdome.  What an experience for a 17 yr old.  We skipped school to go down early, there was gen admission seating, we had main floor tickets but there were no seats on the main floor so we sat or stood on the concrete.  

Iggy Pop played first - he got booed off the stage because he wore this tight dress with nothing underneath, so you could see his Johnson after about 7-8 songs.  People threw all kinds of stuff at him.  The Santana played - they were better than the Stones, really.  After Santana played and before the RS, a mass of people rushed main floor, security could not stop them, I thought I was going to die.   

Elno Lewis

July 15th, 2015 at 11:09 AM ^

The Who...Live At Leeds

 

Best live album ever, best live show ever.

 

Yeah, subjective as Hell, just my opinion--just like everybody else up in here.  lots of great shows back in the day.  Saw Ten Years After at Cobo on a Tuesday night back when I was in high school and that was a great, great show--the best i have ever seen in person and i have seen more than a couple

skurnie

July 15th, 2015 at 11:12 AM ^

I just rewatched that Queen set...incredible.

My best live show ever was probably Sir Paul at MSG in 2002 relatively soon after George passed away. He did a great tribute to George mid-set.