Showing posts with label Various Artists - US Festival '82. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Various Artists - US Festival '82. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-5-1982 - Day 3, Part 5: Fleetwood Mac

The fifth act presented here from Day Three of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Fleetwood Mac. They were the closing act for the festival.

Not long before this festival, in July 1982, Fleetwood Mac released their studio album "Mirage." It was a big hit, going double platinum in the U.S. Festival funder Steve Wozniak must have really wanted them for his festival, because he paid them $500,000, the most of any act at the festival. That seems like a fairly trivial amount in the 2020s, but it seemed an outrageous amount for a single concert performance back then.

Unfortunately, as with most of the recordings for this festival, all I could find was an audience boot for this set. I tried hard to improve it with the UVR5 and MVSEP editing programs. Hopefully, someday the full festival recordings will be made public. Apparently, there is one record company with the rights, and they're releasing individual albums. They put out the English Beat album from the festivals, for instance. But they seem to be moving at a snail's pace.

The Rolling Stone Magazine article I found about this festival had a little bit to say about this set:

While [prior act Jackson] Browne was onstage, the members of Fleetwood Mac arrived backstage. They had played the previous day in Orlando, Florida, and didn't make it to San Bernardino until after three A.M. Sunday. But, as Christine McVie said, "We're getting such a lot of money for this that we couldn't pass it up. And it's a good opportunity to do something big on the West Coast."

A short while later, when Mick Fleetwood pounded out the beat that begins "Second Hand News," there was a typical Graham touch. All weekend long, volunteers had been inflating helium balloons, and at that moment, they were released from the scaffolding at the sides of the stage. The balloons drifted out over the dust and the lakes and the parking lots and the campgrounds, sailing away in two thick clumps. The crowd called on its final reserves of energy and whooped it up. It was just what Tom Petty had described: a party.

By the way, I've posted an album of a concert from this band's 1982 tour. In terms of sound quality, that's a better listen, no doubt. But you may still want to listen to this to get the full US Festival experience.

This album is an hour and 47 minutes long.

081 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
082 Second Hand News (Fleetwood Mac)
083 The Chain (Fleetwood Mac)
084 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
085 Don't Stop (Fleetwood Mac)
086 Dreams (Fleetwood Mac)
087 Oh Well, Part 1 (Fleetwood Mac)
088 Rhiannon (Fleetwood Mac)
089 Brown Eyes (Fleetwood Mac)
090 Eyes of the World (Fleetwood Mac)
091 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
092 Gypsy (Fleetwood Mac)
093 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
094 Love in Store (Fleetwood Mac)
095 Not That Funny (Fleetwood Mac)
096 Never Going Back Again (Fleetwood Mac)
097 Landslide (Fleetwood Mac)
098 Tusk (Fleetwood Mac)
099 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
100 Sara (Fleetwood Mac)
101 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
102 Hold Me (Fleetwood Mac)
103 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
104 You Make Loving Fun (Fleetwood Mac)
105 I'm So Afraid (Fleetwood Mac)
106 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
107 Songbird (Fleetwood Mac)
108 talk (Fleetwood Mac)

https://www.imagenetz.de/dX33a

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ooijnwtg

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/v1gDFNzxh8BigmS/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. Like many of the photos from this festival, I used the Krea AI program to add some detail.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-5-1982 - Day 3, Part 4: Jackson Browne

The fourth act presented here from Day Three of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the Grateful Dead.

We're getting to the end of the festival. It seems Day Three was a relatively short one, with only five major acts (plus the mysteriously obscure "Tommy and Brian"). There's only one act after this one.

In 1982, Browne was still a big star, although he was declining some due to changing musical trends. At the time of this concert, his last studio album was "Hold Out," released in 1980. That had been a long time for the standards of that era. However, he was enjoying a current hit with the song "Somebody's Baby." It didn't appear on any of his albums, but came out on the "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" movie soundtrack instead. It reached Number Seven on the U.S. singles chart, the highest charting song of his career. Naturally, he performed that song, but he only played two songs from his "Hold Out" album.

The sound quality of this set had the same problem as the vast majority of the festival. Namely, the source is an audience bootleg. So the quality could be better, but it's pretty decent thanks to the excellent sound system used for the festival. I tried my best to improve the quality with the UVR5 and MVSEP editing programs, as I did with most albums from this festival.

This album is an hour and 27 minutes long.

058 Lost in the Shuffle (Jackson Browne)
059 talk (Jackson Browne)
060 That Girl Could Sing (Jackson Browne)
061 talk (Jackson Browne)
062 For Everyman (Jackson Browne)
063 Knock on Any Door (Jackson Browne)
064 talk (Jackson Browne)
065 Somebody's Baby (Jackson Browne)
066 talk (Jackson Browne)
067 Tender Is the Night (Jackson Browne)
068 Cocaine (Jackson Browne)
069 The Crow on the Cradle (Jackson Browne)
070 Before the Deluge (Jackson Browne)
071 Boulevard (Jackson Browne)
072 talk (Jackson Browne)
073 Doctor My Eyes (Jackson Browne)
074 Running on Empty (Jackson Browne)
075 Sleep's Dark and Silent Gate (Jackson Browne)
076 talk (Jackson Browne)
077 The Pretender (Jackson Browne)
078 talk (Jackson Browne)
079 Hold On Hold Out (Jackson Browne)
080 Late for the Sky (Jackson Browne)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17509639/VA-1982USFstvlDay0304JcksnBrwne_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/x4Ht93AG

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/dCZVE15QYl09DxJ/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-5-1982 - Day 3, Part 3: Jimmy Buffett

The third act presented here from Day Three of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Jimmy Buffett. 

Buffett's most recent album was "Somewhere over China," released in January 1982. But that wasn't why people came to see him, and in fact he didn't play any songs from that album at all. Instead, he was best known for a bunch of crowd-pleasing songs from the 1970s, like "Margaritaville," "Why Don't We Get Drunk," and "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes."

"Brown Eyed Girl," the classic Van Morrison hit, hadn't been released by Buffett at the time of this concert. But he would put it on his next album, in 1983.

Yet again, this is another audience bootleg. As I've said, that's all there is for the vast majority of this festival. But also yet again, I did my best to improve the sound quality using the UVR5 and MVSEP editing programs.

This album is 56 minutes long.

035 Boat Drinks (Jimmy Buffett)
036 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
037 Coconut Telegraph (Jimmy Buffett)
038 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
039 I Don't Know [Spicoli's Theme] (Jimmy Buffett)
040 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
041 Come Monday (Jimmy Buffett)
042 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
043 Cheeseburger in Paradise (Jimmy Buffett)
044 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
045 Volcano (Jimmy Buffett)
046 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
047 Why Don't We Get Drunk (Jimmy Buffett)
048 Fins (Jimmy Buffett)
049 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
050 A Pirate Looks at Forty (Jimmy Buffett)
051 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
052 Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes (Jimmy Buffett)
053 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
054 Brown Eyed Girl (Jimmy Buffett)
055 Margaritaville (Jimmy Buffett)
056 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
057 Dixie Diner [Instrumental] (Jimmy Buffett)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17509636/VA-1982USFstvlDay0303JmmyBfftt_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/c9UFeXm5

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/AIrHj4P7am1IEGX/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Friday, December 13, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-5-1982 - Day 3, Part 2: Jerry Jeff Walker

The second act presented here from Day Three of the 1982 US Festival is a set by country musician Jerry Jeff Walker.

Out of all the acts performing full sets at the first, this easily has to be the least expected. Walker, who died in 2020, was a talented songwriter, best known for writing the song "Mr. Bojangles." But he wasn't very well known as a country performer. Furthermore, there were no other country acts in the festival, so he really was the odd duck. 

It turns out that 100 percent of the reason Walker played the festival was because of the festival's funder Steve Wozniak. Wozniak was a big fan, and insisted that Walker be included. Since Wozniak was writing all the checks, nobody said no. And if you watch "US Generation," a documentary about the festival, you can clearly see Wozniak smiling from ear to ear and dancing at the side of the stage during Walker's performance.

Anyway, it seems like Walker did a good job, and went over okay with the crowd, which no doubt had to have been the biggest crowd he ever played for. (Despite the fact the crowd was a lot smaller than it had been the day before, probably 100,00 compared to 200,000.) 

As with most sets from this festival, all I could find as a source was an audience bootleg. This one is pretty rough compared to some of the others. But at least it's something. I looked around, and this seems to be the only Jerry Jeff Walker concert bootleg out there. However, he did release three official live albums.

By the way, after Walker finished, he was followed by a much, much less known act, called "Tommy and Brian." They're so obscure that I couldn't find any information about them at all. I also couldn't find any recording of their performance. I'm guessing that was another mysterious Wozniak pick.

This album is 51 minutes long.

019 Gettin' By (Jerry Jeff Walker)
020 Up Against the Wall Redneck Mother (Jerry Jeff Walker)
021 talk (Jerry Jeff Walker)
022 L.A. Freeway (Jerry Jeff Walker)
023 Mr. Bojangles (Jerry Jeff Walker)
024 Pick Up the Tempo (Jerry Jeff Walker)
025 Rodeo Cowboy (Jerry Jeff Walker)
026 London Homesick Blues (Jerry Jeff Walker)
027 Dealing with the Devil (Jerry Jeff Walker)
028 talk (Jerry Jeff Walker)
029 She Knows Her Daddy Sings (Jerry Jeff Walker)
030 talk (Jerry Jeff Walker)
031 Pissin' in the Wind (Jerry Jeff Walker)
032 Takin' It as It Comes (Jerry Jeff Walker)
033 Sea Cruise - Peggy Sue - Takin' It as It Comes (Jerry Jeff Walker)
034 Public Domain (Jerry Jeff Walker)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17509638/VA-1982USFstvlDay0302JrryJeffWlker_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/rr4XfbFi

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/EnvCMeRttWuAnnV/file

The cover photo comes from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-5-1982 - Day 3, Part 1: The Grateful Dead

The first act presented here from Day Three of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the Grateful Dead. This was the start of the final day of the festival.

By the early 1980s, the Dead were a musical institution that seemed to defy cultural trends. However, they were at their best performing in their own way to their own fans, the Deadheads, and generally tried to avoid this type of festival playing to most who only knew their music a little bit or not at all. 

However, I saw an interview with band drummer Mickey Hart who said they made an exception for this festival because they were inspired by festival funder Steve Wozniak's effort to try something new and different. And even though it might seem just like another big rock festival many years later, at the time it was innovative in many ways, especially with technological innovations, such as the sound system, which used digital delay to prevent the echo-like problem of the sound being slightly off from speaker to speaker. In fact, it's not an exaggeration to say the first US festival became the template for how all big music festivals were run afterwards. 

Anyway, the last studio album the Dead released was "Go to Heaven," in 1980. But that wasn't the point with this jam band, and they didn't even bother to play any songs from it. Instead, they did a "short" version of their usual concert format, complete with the instrumental "Drums" and "Space" sections.

One unusual aspect of this concert was that it started about nine-thirty in the morning. The festival organizers nicknamed this "Breakfast with the Dead." One of the band members commented that although they'd played past sunrise at various concerts, this was the first time they'd had such an early start time in their long career. It seems the crowd reaction to their set was quite positive.

This album is an hour and 53 minutes long.

001 Playing in the Band (Grateful Dead)
002 Shakedown Street (Grateful Dead)
003 New Minglewood Blues (Grateful Dead)
004 talk (Grateful Dead)
005 Samson and Delilah (Grateful Dead)
006 China Cat Sunflower (Grateful Dead)
007 I Know You Rider (Grateful Dead)
008 Sugaree (Grateful Dead)
009 Man Smart, Woman Smarter (Grateful Dead)
010 Truckin' (Grateful Dead)
011 Drums [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)
012 Space [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)
013 Not Fade Away (Grateful Dead)
014 Black Peter (Grateful Dead)
015 Sugar Magnolia (Grateful Dead)
016 U.S. Blues (Grateful Dead)
017 [I Can't Get No] Satisfaction (Grateful Dead)
018 talk (Grateful Dead)

https://www.imagenetz.de/k9QKU

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/3gGcVH35

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/sePp0A8lulLw5iJ/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. It's shows the band's two main lead singers, Bob Weir (in shorts) and Jerry Garcia (with glasses and a beard).

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 6: Tom P*tty & the Heartbreakers

The sixth act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Tom P*tty & the Heartbreakers.

(Note that I'm not using the full name of this artist due to concerns about copyright issues.) 

I can't believe how lucky I am to be posting this, the complete set from this band, which is probably the first time it has been made publicly available anywhere. I was minutes from posting a 55-minute-long version when I got lucky. You see, when I originally searched the Internet for music from this festival, all I could find was that 55-minute-long version, which consisted of the second half of what is here (from track 104 to the end). But I figured there almost certainly had to be more, since P. was the big closing act of Day Two and it would have been odd if his set was less than an hour long, meaning it was shorter than nearly all the other sets from the festival. Also, I'd found a mention of one song performed that I didn't have ("The Waiting"). So, while writing my write-up just before posting the album, I thought I'd do one last search for a more complete set list, at least.

To my surprise, I found a Reddit post I'd previously missed that not only gave the full set list, but had links to YouTube videos of ALL the songs I'd missed! It turns out that, back in 2018, the official Tom P. & the Heartbreakers YouTube page posted videos of all the songs from the never bootlegged first half of this set, but none from the commonly bootlegged second half. It was almost like they knew which songs were available and only posted the missing ones. 

But, in a twist, none of the posted videos were labeled as from the 1982 US Festival. No source info was given at all. Apparently, years went by with hardly anyone noticing the missing portion of the set actually was available. But those videos are still on YouTube, and if you closely compare these videos with the video of the second half of the concert, one can tell they're all from the same concert, due to the clothes P. and his band members are wearing. Plus, there are occasional shots of the massive nighttime crowd of 200,000 people, apparently the largest crowd by far that the band ever played for, or would ever play for.

So I was pretty psyched to find the length of this set had doubled with those newly discovered songs. Adding to the good news, the second half I was already aware of had great sound quality, but this newly discovered first half sounded just as good. (It seems they're all different pieces of the same film footage.) Now, the entire thing can be heard with sound quality just as good as a typical official live album

That's what I'm presenting here, the full set. I would think this immediately has to become of the best and most important Tom P. concert recordings that is publicly available, because it's a great recording of a great performance of one of the band's most important shows in their long career, performed in front of their biggest ever crowd. 

Note that the YouTube videos of the first half of the concert did have some problems. Namely, they consisted of the full songs, but little else. In a few cases, there was some banter by P. that was included too, but those were just brief comments directly relating to the song just played or about to be played. I think it's pretty likely there was more general banter that got cut out. The reason I think this is because most of the applause at the ends of songs got cut out too. Even the start of the first song, "American Girl," got cut out, and I patched in a few seconds from a different 1982 live version to fix that. 

There was nothing I could do about any missing banter. But for the missing applause after each song, I found bits of cheering from the second half of the concert and patched those in so there would be a normal amount of cheering after each song. And I edited it all carefully so it sounds like one continuous recording, instead of having fade-ins and fade-outs between all the songs in the first half. (Thankfully, the second half comes from one continuous video, so there wasn't anything missing there.) 

On top of that editing, I made some other edits to improve the sound quality. P.'s voice was a bit low in the mix, so I fixed that with the UVR5 editing program. And sometimes there was too much crowd noise during the songs, so I reduced that with the MVSEP editing program. I think the final result sounds great. This is a must-have for any Tom P. fan!

Now, let me address the song selections here. At the time of this festival, the band was close to releasing their next album, "Long After Dark." But that wouldn't come out for two more months, at the very start of November 1982. Despite that fact, the band played two songs that would appear on that album, "You Got Lucky" and "A One Story Town." The also played four cover songs that hadn't appeared on any of their albums at the time: "I'm in Love," "Louie, Louie," "Shout," and "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star." Furthermore, they played every original hit the band had had by that point, plus some deeper album tracks. 

As an aside, not long before this concert, the bass player for the Heartbreakers, Ron Blair, quit due to burnout. He was replaced by Howie Epstein. Epstein's first concert with the band was on September 1, 1982, making this his second concert with the band. He would stay with the band until 2002, when he would be replaced by Blair again.

Oh, and there's one little bit at the end that amused me. In my post about the Kinks set earlier on Day Two, I told a story about a big dispute between the Kinks and promoter Bill Graham, who helped organize this festival. At the end of this set, you can hear Graham thanking all the bands who performed that day. When he gets to the Kinks, there is a veeeeeery long pause before he decides to mention their name.

This album is an hour and 37 minutes long.

I'm not including the track list due to copyright issues. But you can find it in the mp3 download file.

https://pixeldrain.com/u/jr9qdygf

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/GKV2puEKswc0ycj/file

The cover photo comes from this exact concert.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 5: Pat Benatar

The fifth act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Pat Benatar.

As I've said many times now, most of the recordings from this festival are merely good audience bootlegs. But I'm happy to say this album sounds better than that. I'm not sure why that is, since there hasn't been any official release, either video or audio. But a high quality video, apparently a bootleg, of this set can be found on YouTube. So the audio here was probably taken from that.

Benatar was at the peak of her popularity in the early 1980s. Each of her four studio albums released between 1979 and 1982 sold between a million and five million copies in the U.S. alone. So one can see why she had one of the prime final spots on Day Two of the festival.

At the time of the festival, she was on the brink of releasing her fourth album, "Get Nervous." It would be released about a month and a half later. She played two songs from it, "Little Too Late" and "The Victim." I believe all the other songs were from her first three studio albums.

This album is an hour and seven minutes long.

073 Treat Me Right (Pat Benatar)
074 You Better Run (Pat Benatar)
075 I Need a Lover (Pat Benatar)
076 talk (Pat Benatar)
077 The Victim (Pat Benatar)
078 Precious Time (Pat Benatar)
079 Anxiety [Get Nervous] (Pat Benatar)
080 In the Heat of the Night (Pat Benatar)
081 Little Too Late (Pat Benatar)
082 Fire and Ice (Pat Benatar)
083 talk (Pat Benatar)
084 Promises in the Dark (Pat Benatar)
085 Hit Me with Your Best Shot (Pat Benatar)
086 Heartbreaker (Pat Benatar)
087 Hell Is for Children (Pat Benatar)
088 No You Don't (Pat Benatar)
089 talk (Pat Benatar)
090 Just like Me (Pat Benatar) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/17500953/VA-1982USFstvlDay0205PtBntar_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/UipcFB9Q

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/o48pZoAEusjc8F5/file

The cover photo comes from this exact concert.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 4: The Kinks

The fourth act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the Kinks.

Oh boy, there's quite a tangled story with this set. First off, note that this is all unreleased, like nearly all the music from this festival. And it's from an audience bootleg, again, just like nearly all of the festival. However, we're lucky this is one of the better sounding audience boots from it.

Okay, let's get to the story. Keep in mind that while the festival was funded by computer multimillionaire Steve Wozniak, the main organizer was Bill Graham, who was easily the best known and most important concert promoter in the U.S. at the time. Also keep in mind that the festival was really damn hot. On this, the second day, the high temperature was "only" 106 degrees Fahrenheit, a few degrees less than on the first day. The heat and sun had made the crowd lethargic during the first day, but they had gotten more lively after the sun went down. So it was understandable why the Kinks would have wanted to go on later. And one more thing to keep in mind: I just looked it up, and the sun set in this region on that date at about 7:15 P.M.

Okay, now that you know all that, here's an except from a Rolling Stone Magazine article about the concert that came out shortly after it happened:

[T]he Kinks most assuredly did care when they appeared, and by their reckoning, they shouldn't have gone on until after dark. But they were scheduled for 6:20 P.M., before [Tom] Petty, before [Pat] Benatar and before dark - and a couple of weeks' worth of protests [by the band] didn't change that. So they resorted to the next best thing: as the clock reached 6:20, the Kinks were nowhere in sight.

For Bill Graham, that was the cardinal sin: screwing with his smoothly run show. Graham was fuming when the band's manager - sans Kinks - parked his Mercedes backstage. Graham bodily ejected him, ordering a forklift operator to upend the car unless he left. He left.

Finally, twenty minutes after they were supposed to have taken the stage, the Kinks pulled up and strolled to their dressing room. Graham was still seething. "Five minutes!" he screamed at a band assistant as he towered outside. Five minutes later, he pounded on the door, yelling, "NOW!"

The band finally emerged. [Lead singer] Ray Davies walked slowly, loitering by Benatar's door, a big, bemused smile on his face. Graham simply watched; if looks could kill, they'd have had to take Davies home in a paper bag. When the band got to the base of the stage stairs and then stood around with no apparent intention of taking the stage, something snapped in Graham.

In two strides, the promoter was halfway up the stairs, shouting at Davies and a Kinks aide. "All right, that's it!" Graham finally bellowed. He galloped up the rest of the stairs, and it was clear that as soon as he made it to the microphone, the Kinks would be off the bill. Before he got there, Davies and crew were on their way onstage. By then, it was nearly dark. The band played a sloppy, flashy set. The two video screens were not used.

So that's a pretty wild story right there. But the power struggle is even more interesting if you listen to the banter between songs made in this recording. For instance, the Kinks seemed to end their set a few songs early (despite giving the longest performance of the day already), telling the audience that they wanted to keep going but weren't allowed to play any longer. That obliged Graham to go out on stage and ask the audience to cheer louder so the Kinks would agree to keep playing. Then, Davies said snarkily, "I consider this truly a great honor to be asked by the one and only Bill Graham to do an encore for his, the pitiful, the pinnacle... of something."

I'm guessing at that moment Graham was contemplating just how many years he'd have to serve in prison if he murdered Davies on stage!

In retrospect, I think both Davies and Graham were at fault. Davies showed a complete inability to be diplomatic, in fact showing almost a childlike glee at snubbing authority. Based on this incident, I can easily see why the Kinks were banned by a musician's union from touring in the U.S. from 1965 to 1969. They were the only famous band to get banned like that, at least in that era.

But on the other hand, Graham was known to have an explosive temper, and he didn't cover himself in glory either. For instance, it was a petty move for him to turn off the huge video screens only for the Kinks set.

It's strange he was so insistent on sticking to the time, given that there were only two more acts to follow the Kinks, and each of the big acts in the festival played sets that lasted about an hour each. So if the Kinks went on when they were supposed to, and the following acts played the expected amount of time (which in fact is what they did), Day Two would have ended before 10 P.M. That would have been shockingly early for a massive festival like this, where delays of many hours were the norm. In fact, for many big festivals like Woodstock and the Isle of Wight, the last acts of each evening often didn't finish their sets until after sunrise! And given the extreme heat of this particular festival, I'm sure the crowd would have much preferred to have less of the acts during the day and more of them at night.

In any case, I think it's a safe bet that the Kinks never took part in any concert or festival organized by Bill Graham after this. That alone would have impacted their popularity in the U.S. for the rest of their career, because Graham organized so many concerts, especially big festivals like this. For instance, this probably explains why the Kinks and/or Ray Davies never played at any of the yearly Bridge School Benefits despite being a great fit for the acoustic format of those concerts, since that was still operated by Graham's organization long after Graham died in the 1990s.

One final note. In his 2013 book "Americana," Davies wrote: "...The Kinks kept their side of the bargain at the US Festival; we honored our word and, more than anything else, delivered a knockout show, which was all that mattered at the end of the day." That's not just self-promotion either. I've read praise for the performance elsewhere. Probably, the conflict with Graham got the band all fired up.

Moving on to the music presented here, the Kinks released their studio album "Give the People What They Want" in 1981, and many of the songs played came from that. They would release the album "State of Confusion" in 1983. One song they played here, "Bernadette," would appear on that album. Another one, "Entertainment," was supposed to go on that album, and was even announced as "Here's a song from our next album." But it ultimately wouldn't make the cut. It would finally appear on the 1989 album "UK Jive."

This album is an hour and 25 minutes long.

045 Introduction [Instrumental] (Kinks)
046 Around the Dial (Kinks)
047 The Hard Way (Kinks)
048 Where Have All the Good Times Gone (Kinks)
049 Catch Me Now, I'm Falling (Kinks)
050 talk (Kinks)
051 Destroyer (Kinks)
052 Yo-Yo (Kinks)
053 talk (Kinks)
054 Lola (Kinks)
055 Entertainment (Kinks)
056 talk (Kinks)
057 Low Budget (Kinks)
058 Back to Front (Kinks)
059 talk (Kinks)
060 Art Lover (Kinks)
061 Celluloid Heroes (Kinks)
062 talk (Kinks)
063 Come On Now (Kinks)
064 A Gallon of Gas (Kinks)
065 Till the End of the Day (Kinks)
066 Bernadette (Kinks)
067 talk (Kinks)
068 All Day and All of the Night (Kinks)
069 talk (Kinks)
070 Pressure (Kinks)
071 You Really Got Me (Kinks)
072 talk (Kinks)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17500956/VA-1982USFstvlDay0204TKnks_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/yBEFyCuT

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/K455aNnPjdKajmM/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. I used the Krea AI program to improve the detail.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 3: The Cars

The third act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the Cars.

Unfortunately, after the great sound quality of the previous set, by Santana, we're back to just okay sound quality. This comes from another audience bootleg. Basically, pretty much the entire festival is only available via audience boots, but were lucky the festival had a stellar sound system for such a massive audience, so all of those are much better than the typical poor audience boots.

In an interview before the Cars' performance, the band's lead singer Ric Ocasek said, "The first time they pushed me to do this, I said no. But they, uh... they talked me into it. We haven't played in months, so this show could be anything."

I looked it up, and the band's last concert prior to this one was in March 1982, when they were still promoting their 1981 album "Shake It Up." So it had been about six months. They wouldn't play another concert until mid-1984. It seems the money offered was just too good to pass up. There didn't seem to be any problem with their performance, despite the time off.

As I've done with all the other audience boot-sourced albums from this festival, I used the UVR5 and MVSEP audio editing programs to improve the sound quality as much as I could. But I could only do so much.

This album is one hour long.

030 Good Times Roll (Cars)
031 Bye Bye Love (Cars)
032 Touch and Go (Cars)
033 Misfit Kid (Cars)
034 Cruiser (Cars)
035 Since You're Gone (Cars)
036 Candy-O (Cars)
037 Moving in Stereo (Cars)
038 Nightspots (Cars)
039 Let's Go (Cars)
040 My Best Friend's Girl (Cars)
041 Dangerous Type (Cars)
042 Just What I Needed (Cars)
043 Shake It Up (Cars)
044 You're All I've Got Tonight (Cars)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17497721/VA-1982USFstvlDay0203TCrs_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/zCKnmj2H

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/sMLVpx6ZUExIrVH/file

The cover photo of lead vocalist Ric Ocasek is from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 2: Santana

The second act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Santana.

The act I posted right before this one, Dave Edmunds, has one of the worst sounding audience bootleg recordings from this festival. But luckily, the Santana set is one of the best sounding. That's because of a very rare official release from the festival: "Santana: Live at US Festival." Note this was just a video release, not an audio one, so I had to concert the video file into mp3s.

Also, although the audio quality from that source was great, there were problems. The main one was that the concert performance was occasionally interrupted with other things not from the concert, such as interview segments between some songs. I got rid of all of that extraneous stuff. But I had to put "[Edit]" in the titles of three songs. Those are cases were bits of songs were missing due to those other bits included in the video instead, so I had to patch those up.

In the early 1980s, Santana was in more of a hit making mode, with hits like "Open Invitation," "Hold On," and "She's Not There." So some of the set is like that. But at the same time, the band continued to be jammy and jazzy. That also shows up here, especially with the version of "Incident at Neshabur" that prominently featured legendary jazz keyboardist Herbie Hancock as a guest star.

By the way, note that while I said above that the album from the festival I posted before this one was Dave Edmunds, there actually was another act between that one and this one: Eddie Money. Unfortunately, I couldn't find ANY recording of Money's set, not even a crappy audience bootleg. If anyone can find a recording of it, please let me know. The only sets I regret not having from this festival are the Gang of Four and Eddie Money. I believe I got all the other major acts.

This album is an hour and five minutes long.

016 talk (Santana)
017 Primera Invasion [Instrumental] [Edit] (Santana)
018 Searchin' (Santana)
019 Black Magic Woman - Gypsy Queen (Santana)
020 Oye Como Va [Edit] (Santana)
021 Dealer - Spanish Rose (Santana)
022 Nowhere to Run (Santana)
023 talk (Santana)
024 Incident at Neshabur [Instrumental] (Santana with Herbie Hancock)
025 Jingo [Instrumental] [Edit] (Santana)
026 Hold On (Santana)
027 She's Not There (Santana)
028 Open Invitation (Santana)
029 Shango (Santana)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17497720/VA-1982USFstvlDay0202Sntna_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Rk1dHbHs

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/jTBjMsFjX4mGLtE/file 

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-4-1982 - Day 2, Part 1: Dave Edmunds

The first act presented here from Day Two of the 1982 US Festival is a set by Dave Edmunds.

Before I say anything else, I want to make clear the sound quality of this set is not great. The vast majority of the sets from this festival are audio bootlegs, but some are better than others. This is one of the poorer ones. I still think it's worthy, but be ware.

Note that this was not actually the first act on this day of the festival. A Rolling Stone Magazine article explained it well:

"One of the advantages of footing the bill for a big rock show is that you can insist that your friends get on the bill. [Festival funder] Steve Wozniak clearly learned that early on, and day two opened with a couple of his own choices. First, there was Ms. Milk, who sang 'America, the Beautiful' to the accompaniment of a lone synthesizer, adding a few new lyrics along the way: 'America, America/It is our human right/To do our thing/To laugh and sing/Free from atomic fight.' Ms. Milk was followed by Joe Sharino, a Santa Cruz-based singer/songwriter who played at Wozniak’s wedding."

The attendance of Day Two was about 200,000 people, significantly greater than Day One. It must have been extremely strange to be either Ms. Milk or Joe Sharino on that day, because as far as I can tell, they had next to no musical careers aside from this one festival. (I found out there's one very obscure studio album by Joe Sharino that was released in 1984.) I couldn't find any recordings of either of their sets.

Dave Edmunds, by contrast, was a pretty big rock star in 1982. He had just gone back to fully focusing on being a solo artist after being one of the two lead singers in the band Rockpile for a few years. 

As usual for this festival, I did what I could to improve the sound, using both the UVR5 and MVSEP audio editing programs. But one can only do so much with the source material.

This album is 35 minutes long.

001 Crawling from the Wreckage (Dave Edmunds)
002 Dear Dad (Dave Edmunds)
003 talk (Dave Edmunds)
004 From Small Things [Big Things One Day Come] (Dave Edmunds)
005 Girls Talk (Dave Edmunds)
006 talk (Dave Edmunds)
007 You Ain't Nothin' but Fine (Dave Edmunds)
008 talk (Dave Edmunds)
009 Me and the Boys (Dave Edmunds)
010 Queen of Hearts (Dave Edmunds)
011 I Knew the Bride [When She Used to Rock and Roll] (Dave Edmunds)
012 It's My Own Business (Dave Edmunds)
013 Ju Ju Man (Dave Edmunds)
014 Let's Talk about Us (Dave Edmunds)
015 talk (Dave Edmunds)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17497709/VA-1982USFstvlDay0201DveEdmnds_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/dRtW5mUd

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/B9H6TRcUuhB9CRN/file

Strangely, Dave Edmunds was the only major act of the festival where I couldn't find even a single photo of him performing at the festival. I wanted to have one album cover that showed just how huge the crowd was, so I chose a photo of the crowd. Now, imagine being someone like Joe Sharino who probably had never performed before more than a couple hundred people, playing to THAT crowd!

Sunday, December 8, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 6: The Police

The sixth and final album from Day One of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the band the Police. But there are two days of the festival after this.

This concert was one of the last of a year-long tour the Police did to support their album "Ghost in the Machine," released in late 1981. They only performed two concerts in the tour after this one.

I read somewhere, although I couldn't find the exact quote, that drummer Stewart Copeland thought the band's performance was very good, but also that it was the beginning of the end for the band. The band members wouldn't get along well during their recording of their next and last studio album, "Synchronicity," with a fist fight even breaking out at one point.

The festival was so well organized that halfway through this final set of the evening, staffers went out into the audience and began picking up trash. That kind of approach set a new standard, since festivals had generally been ramshackle affairs prior to that.

This recording is just an audience bootleg, like the vast majority of the recordings of the sets from this festival. However, it's a particularly good one, enough so that it has often been mislabeled as a soundboard recording. I did my best to improve the sound quality in the same way I did for all the other audience sourced sets in this festival.

By the way, it seems Sting really liked the English Beat. He wore an English Beat T-shirt the day of this concert. And during the song "One World (Not Three)," Ranking Roger, one of the two lead singers for the English Beat, joined in on backing vocals.

This album is an hour and 31 minutes long.

106 Voices Inside My Head (Police)
107 Message in a Bottle (Police)
108 Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic (Police)
109 Walking on the Moon (Police)
110 talk (Police)
111 Spirits in a Material World (Police)
112 talk (Police)
113 Hungry for You [J'aurais Toujours Faim de Toi] (Police)
114 When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around (Police)
115 The Bed's Too Big without You (Police)
116 De Do Do Do De Da Da Da (Police)
117 talk (Police)
118 Demolition Man (Police)
119 Shadows in the Rain (Police)
120 Bring on the Night (Police)
121 Driven to Tears (Police)
122 One World [Not Three] (Police)
123 Invisible Sun (Police)
124 Roxanne (Police)
125 talk (Police)
126 Don't Stand So Close to Me (Police)
127 Can't Stand Losing You (Police)
128 talk (Police)
129 So Lonely (Police)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/gZyxoi8p

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/pvkytDAoiMcz1QK/file

The cover photo of Sting comes from this exact concert.

Friday, December 6, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 5: The Talking Heads

The fifth album from Day One of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the new wave band the Talking Heads.

Be warned, again, that most of the albums I'm posting from this festival are audience bootlegs with lower sound quality than the soundboard or FM radio bootlegs I usually post. This is another case of that. 

It seems the sun set during the B-52's set that just prior to this one. So it was dark during this whole set, which helped a ton considered it had reached 110 degrees Fahrenheit during the day, and was quite dusty as well.

Here's what Rolling Stone Magazine wrote about this set in an article that came out shortly after the festival: "Talking Heads didn't have to inhale quite as much dirt during their set... but they did turn in the day's best show – a tough, gritty set of percussive funk that found [lead singer] David Byrne hopping around the stage like a bunny rabbit, running in circles around its perimeter and introducing one unrecorded, as-yet-untitled new song whose chorus consisted of 'Hi hi hi hi hi hi.'" The song mentioned at the end is called "Swamp" and would appear on the band's 1983 album "Speaking in Tongues."

Note that when I first posted this album, the sound quality was slightly worse. But musical associate MZ sent me a better source. It's still an audience boot, but it sounds significantly better. Thanks, MZ!

At the time of this concert, the band hadn't released a new album since 1980's "Remain in Light." At that time, for a young band, that was a long time between albums. But lead singer David Byrne released a solo album in late 1981 called "The Catherine Wheel," and that effectively served as a new Talking Heads album for the purposes of their 1982 concerts. They played four songs from that album in this concert (tracks 93, 96, 98, and 103). Additionally, band member Jerry Harrison released a solo album in 1981 called "The Red and the Black." One song from that, "Slink," was a minor hit, and was also performed in this concert.

This album is an hour and 18 minutes long. 

090 Psycho Killer (Talking Heads)
091 Love Goes to a Building on Fire (Talking Heads)
092 Cities (Talking Heads)
093 Big Blue Plymouth [Eyes Wide Open] (Talking Heads)
094 Once in a Lifetime (Talking Heads)
095 Mind (Talking Heads)
096 My Big Hands [Fall Through the Cracks] (Talking Heads)
097 Slink (Talking Heads)
098 Big Business (Talking Heads)
099 I Zimbra (Talking Heads)
100 talk (Talking Heads)
101 Swamp (Talking Heads)
102 Houses in Motion (Talking Heads)
103 What a Day That Was (Talking Heads)
104 Life During Wartime (Talking Heads)
105 Take Me to the River (Talking Heads)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17485749/VA-1982USFstvlDay0105TlkngHeds_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/PfEkEMbx

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/WIV7X1T10YZU74W/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 4: The B-52's

The fourth album from Day One of the 1982 US Festival is a set by the new wave band the B-52's.

A Rolling Stone Magazine article about the festival shortly after it happened had one paragraph about the B-52's set: "Onstage, the B-52's were learning the price of being popular. Their nonstop dance numbers turned the area in front of the stage into a man-made dust storm. By the time the band finished 'Hot Lava,' the white spotlight aimed at Fred Schneider looked for all the world like a car headlight cutting through heavy fog."

At the time of this festival, the band's most recent release was the E.P. "Mesopotamia." The band wanted to make that a full album, but the record company forced them to put it out as an E.P. before the album version could be finished. It was produced by none other than David Byrne, lead singer for the next act to perform on Day One of the festival, the Talking Heads. One song that was an outtake from the E.P., "Big Bird," was performed during the set. It would be included on the band's next album, "Whammy!" in 1983.

As I've mentioned elsewhere, unfortunately, many of the sets from the 1982 come from audience bootlegs. But I'm happy to say the B-52's set is an exception. That's because although no audio album of the set has ever been release, a DVD video release of the full set was in 2020, called "The B52's: Live at US Festival." So the audio here comes from that.

This album is 56 minutes long.

068 Planet Claire Intro [Instrumental] (B-52's)
069 Party Out of Bounds (B-52's)
070 Give Me Back My Man (B-52's)
071 Planet Claire (B-52's)
072 talk (B-52's)
073 Throw That Beat in the Garbage Can (B-52's)
074 talk (B-52's)
075 Lava (B-52's)
076 talk (B-52's)
077 Mesopotamia (B-52's)
078 6060-842 (B-52's)
079 talk (B-52's)
080 Big Bird (B-52's)
081 talk (B-52's)
082 52 Girls (B-52's)
083 talk (B-52's)
084 Dance This Mess Around (B-52's)
085 talk (B-52's)
086 Private Idaho (B-52's)
087 Rock Lobster (B-52's)
088 talk (B-52's)
089 Strobe Light (B-52's)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17467870/VA-1982USFstvlDay0104TB52s_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/SxqZzCpR

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/UErSJH1aOKrQW6e/file

The cover photo comes from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 3: Oingo Boingo

The third set presented here from Day One of the 1982 US Festival is performed by the new wave band Oingo Boingo.

If you've listened to my albums from the 1983 US Festival, you may have noticed they performed in that one as well. They were one of just a few musical acts to perform both festivals. I think the English Beat was the only other one, although Stevie Nicks played as part of Fleetwood Mac in the 1982 festival than as a solo act in the 1983 one.

Unfortunately, the 1983 Oingo Boingo set is a soundboard bootleg, while this one comes from an audience boot. So the sound quality here is worse. I did what I could to improve it, boosting the lead vocals relative to the instruments and removing most of the crowd noise throughout the songs while keeping the cheering at the ends of songs. But still, there was only so much I could do, so this sounds listenable, but a bit rough. However, there aren't that many live recordings of the band from this time period, when I would argue they were at their best, making this one of the better sounding ones.

A few months prior to this concert, Oingo Boingo released their second studio album, "Nothing to Fear." They would release a third album before the 1983 US Festival, so the set lists between the two sets are somewhat different.

This album is 51 minutes long.

050 talk (Oingo Boingo) (Oingo Boingo)
051 Ain't This the Life (Oingo Boingo)
052 What You See [Is What You Get] (Oingo Boingo)
053 Private Life (Oingo Boingo)
054 Little Girls (Oingo Boingo)
055 talk (Oingo Boingo)
056 Grey Matter (Oingo Boingo)
057 You Really Got Me (Oingo Boingo)
058 Wild Sex [In the Working Class] (Oingo Boingo)
059 Take the Whole Day Off (Oingo Boingo)
060 talk (Oingo Boingo)
061 Insects (Oingo Boingo)
062 talk (Oingo Boingo)
063 Capitalism (Oingo Boingo)
064 Nothing to Fear [But Fear Itself] (Oingo Boingo)
065 talk (Oingo Boingo)
066 On the Outside (Oingo Boingo)
067 Goodbye Goodbye (Oingo Boingo) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/17467868/VA-1982USFstvlDay0103OngoBngo_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/gvjCrLJg

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/CMtl1MnQOV2wzGP/file

The cover photo of the band's lead singer Danny Elfman comes from this exact concert.

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 2: The English Beat

Next up for the 1982 US Festival is a set by the English Beat. (In Britain, they were simply known as "The Beat.")

By the time the English Beat started their set, the crowd had grown to an estimated 130,000 people. 

Dave Wakeling, one of the band's two lead singers, later recalled how their set began. "We could see this huge mass of people with three sets of PAs going off into the distance and then a hill, and people on them, and they were really far away. I'd never seen that many people in one place. My knees were shaking. So for the first couple songs I had to lock my legs to stop them from knocking."

Wakeling also had some later comments about Apple Computers co-founder Steve Wozniak funding the festival as a whole. "It was an interesting gesture for the time. Of all the Apple folk, Wozniak did the thing that made you go, 'Wow.' However, it’s not that difficult to do something fantastic if you’re willing to lose $20 million." (In actual fact, Wozniak didn't lost $20 on the 1982 festival though he might have lost that much on both the 1982 and 1983 festivals combined. But the amount of the loss has never been publicly revealed.)

The band had trouble with the considerable dust though, like most bands at the festival. Blockhead, the band's keyboardist, later said, "We finally got the crowd clapping along and dancing during one song, and we thought it was great. Then we saw the dust cloud heading toward us. And there I was, wearing contacts." At times, bands were hard to see clearly, due to all the dust.

Very little from either US Festival has been officially released so far, but the English Beat is a partial exception. In 2012, the official album "The English Beat: Live at the US Festival, '82 & '83" was released. But as you can guess from the title, it's a combination of both their sets into one album. None of the songs are repeated. So what I've done is combine sources. I used the official source as much as possible, then filled in whatever was missing with an audience bootleg. It so happens the first few songs are from the bootleg, but the vast majority of the rest are from the official source. I think only the songs "Ranking Full Stop," "Big Shot," "Get a Job - Stand Down Margaret," "Spar wid Me," and "Jackpot" are from the bootleg. I also rearranged the song order some, since the album had some out of order.

I did my best to improve the sound quality of the bootlegged songs, removing crowd noise during the songs (but not the applause at the ends), and boosting the lead vocals some. However, the sound quality of the officially released material is still noticeably better.

This album is 51 minutes long. 

By the way, note that the track numbering resumes where the numbering of the previous album left off, in case you want to hear all the sets from the first day of the festival together without pause.

025 talk (English Beat)
026 Ranking Full Stop (English Beat)
027 Big Shot (English Beat)
028 talk (English Beat)
029 Doors of Your Heart (English Beat)
030 talk (English Beat)
031 Twist and Crawl (English Beat)
032 talk (English Beat)
033 I Confess (English Beat)
034 talk (English Beat)
035 Get a Job - Stand Down Margaret (English Beat)
036 talk (English Beat)
037 Sugar and Stress (English Beat)
038 Spar wid Me (English Beat)
039 talk (English Beat)
040 Two Swords (English Beat)
041 talk (English Beat)
042 Hands Off... She's Mine (English Beat)
043 talk (English Beat)
044 Save It for Later (English Beat)
045 talk (English Beat)
046 Too Nice to Talk To (English Beat)
047 Mirror in the Bathroom (English Beat)
048 talk (English Beat)
049 Jackpot (English Beat)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17467869/VA-1982USFstvlDay0102TEnglshBet_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/WW1mFcJL

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/a2Nx6F0xfcjqw71/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. Ranking Roger is closest to the camera. Dave Wakeling is second closest. I used the Krea AI program to improve the low-res image a bit.

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

US Festival '82, Glen Helen Regional Park, San Bernardino, CA, 9-3-1982 - Day 1, Part 1: The Ramones

Back in August 2024, I posted the entire 1983 US Festival. Now, a few months later, I'm ready to post the 1982 US Festival. I know that's kind of backwards, I probably should have posted the 1982 one first. But I was able to find most of the music to the 1983 festival with worthy sound quality. I didn't think I'd be able to post the 1982 one at all. But after digging deeper, I was able to determine that I had enough to post the 1982 festival as well. I didn't get every major performer, but I did nearly all of them. And the sound quality isn't as good as the 1983 festival overall, but everything I'm posting here I think is worthy of hearing.

I already explained a lot about both US Festivals in general when I posted the 1983 one, but I'll repeat the general gist here too for those who are new to this. The two festivals would never have happened had it not been for Steve Wozniak, co-founder of the Apple Computer company. 1982 was very early days in the history of that company. Apple was just starting to really hit it big with their Apple II personal computer. But that was so successful that Wozniak suddenly found himself making tens of millions of dollars in profits. He decided to celebrate his success with a big rock music festival strongly reminiscent of the 1969 Woodstock Festival. 

He called it the "US Festival" because by 1982 the 1970s got the nickname "The Me Decade," and he was hopeful that the 1980s would be "The Us Decade." (Sadly, that didn't happen. In retrospect, I think one could call it the "Greed Is Good" Decade, after a famous quote in a 1980s movie.)

Wozniak took a "spare no expenses" approach to the festival. He basically took a year out of his life to get the 1982 festival going. He had a lot of time on his hands due to being on sabbatical from Apple after getting in a plane crash that left him shaken and gave him troubles forming long term memories for many months. I'm guessing the festivals would never have happened had it not been for his injuries from that crash. He linked up with Bill Graham, the top rock concert promoter of the era. Graham and his team did most of the hard work for the 1982 festival, but he butted heads with Wozniak enough so that he wasn't involved with the 1983 one.

Wozniak called the 1982 festival "the Super Bowl of rock." He spent about $13 million on the festival, most of that paying for the stars to perform. Here's a quote from Rolling Stone Magazine: "The biggest dollars were offered to acts that declined: the Who turned down an offer of $1 million; Bruce Springsteen passed on an offer of $850,000. But a reported $500,000 did the trick for Fleetwood Mac; Pat Benatar and Tom Petty... each picked up approximately $250,000, while the Police took home about $350,000."

Rolling Stone Magazine later commented about the 1982 festival as whole: "It wasn’t a wild lost weekend by any standards, or even a large-scale frat party, but a remarkably sedate soiree - a well-run, impeccably professional outing. To say that it was a triumph of logistics more than art is not to disparage the musicians who performed generally decent but unspectacular sets; it's just that most of the music was eclipsed by the fact that Wozniak and Graham pulled off this mammoth event as... well, as uneventfully as possible."

The audio was crisp and clear, thanks to 400,000 watts of speakers. Attendees could see the stage from anywhere, thanks to strategically placed massive, fifty-foot-high video screens. That's pretty standard at concerts today, but it was innovative at the time. Bob Barsotti, who was one of the chief organizers of the festival, later commented, "If you went to Watkins Glen or Woodstock and you were the 148,000th person, the chances that you would hear or see the show were actually pretty slim. But if you’re the last person at the US Festival, you could hear it, you could see it, you could buy some food at a concession stand; there was a toilet that wasn't overflowing, and there were water spigots to get clean water out of, and it was all within walking distance from where you were. That had never been done before." 

That's not to say there weren't problems, however. The main ones related to the location and the weather. The festival was held in an open area fifty-seven acres in size on the outskirts of Los Angeles, with the stage and all the facilities built just for this concert. (It would remain and be the site of many other concerts, including the 1983 US Festival.) The main problem though was that early September was just about the hottest time of the year there, and it got very, very hot. Each day had highs between 105 and 110 degrees Fahrenheit! Furthermore, the crowds kicked up dust, lots and lots of dust, which led to the nickname "The Dust Festival." Luckily, the organizers were prepared and had some methods to deal with the heat, mainly by frequently squirting the crowd with giant water hoses. But still, the heat almost certainly drained the energy of the crowd. There was a noticeably better crowd reaction after dark, when the heat eased up.

Here's the Wikipedia link to the US Festivals, but it doesn't say much, and it lumps the 1982 and 1983 ones together:

US Festival - Wikipedia 

This Rolling Stone Magazine article from shortly after the 1982 festival is a lot more informative:

Backstage at the Us Festival: It's Only Rock & Roll

Before I get to the music on this album, note that one of the few acts I couldn't find the music for was the festival's opening act, the Gang of Four. One can find video footage to part of one of their songs from the festival, but I couldn't find any more than that. I would very much like to hear the Gang of Four set, as I like their music a lot. But according to Rolling Stone Magazine, "the fans didn’t have a lot of patience with the Gang of Four, a quirky English band most of them hadn't heard of before."

So that takes us to the second act of the festival, the Ramones. The Ramones are very critically acclaimed as one of the pioneering musical acts for punk rock. However, their record sales were never big, and they didn't get a lot of radio airplay, so probably many in the crowd of 100,000 plus weren't familiar with their music. They were still close to their commercial peak, but that peak wasn't very high. Their best selling album in the U.S., 1980's "End of the Century," only reached Number 44 in the U.S. album chart.

Unfortunately, for many of the acts in the 1982 US Festival, my only source was an audience bootleg. That's the case here. Luckily, due to the high quality sound system, the bootleg sounds pretty good, compared to most. But still, an audience bootleg is a step down from a soundboard bootleg or FM radio broadcast, so be warned. The sound quality suffers a little more with the Ramones set, since their style of raucous rock and roll sounds muddy with less than ideal recordings.

That said, I did what I could to improve the sound quality. In this case, I found that boosting the lead vocals relative to the instruments (using the UVR5 audio editing program) helped some. I also found a video with better quality and used that, but it's only for about 21 minutes, slightly less than half of the performance.

The set definitely was raucous. The band played 19 songs during a fairly short set, so each song was only a little more than two minutes long. There was very little to no breaks between the songs as well. Pretty much all the songs are from their six albums released prior to this concert. Most songs were originals, but there were a couple of covers, like "California Sun" and "Surfin' Bird."

This album is 43 minutes long.

001 talk (Ramones)
002 Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll Radio (Ramones)
003 Do You Wanna Dance (Ramones)
004 talk (Ramones)
005 Blitzkrieg Bop (Ramones)
006 talk (Ramones)
007 This Business Is Killing Me (Ramones)
008 All's Quiet on the Eastern Front (Ramones)
009 Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment (Ramones)
010 Rock 'n' Roll High School (Ramones)
011 I Wanna Be Sedated (Ramones)
012 Beat on the Brat (Ramones)
013 talk (Ramones)
014 The KKK Took My Baby Away (Ramones)
015 Here Today, Gone Tomorrow (Ramones)
016 Chinese Rocks (Ramones)
017 Rockaway Beach (Ramones)
018 Teenage Lobotomy (Ramones)
019 Surfin' Bird (Ramones)
020 Cretin Hop (Ramones)
021 California Sun (Ramones)
022 Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World (Ramones)
023 Pinhead (Ramones)
024 talk (Ramones)

NOTE: I'm posting three different download links for the first that. Don't expect that to last long. It's because I'm experimenting with a different download file service, Bestfile, after getting supposedly permanently banned from using Pixeldrain. In fact, Pixeldrain seems to be working for now, so I'm including that link, but who knows how long that'll last. Please try the Bestfile download link if you can and let me know how that goes. 

https://www.upload.ee/files/17467849/VA-1982USFstvlDay0101TRmnes_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/pshy4xzX

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/bYqBmlSu2wxmuwc/file

The cover photo shows the Ramones in concert at this very festival. However, the picture was rather low-res, so I used the Krea AI program to sharpen it up.