Sunday, December 22, 2024

Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary - Madison Square Garden, New York City, 5-14-1988, Part 1: Nu Shooz, Stacey Q, The Coasters, Phil Collins, LaVern Baker, Foreigner, Iron Butterfly, & Laura Branigan

Here's another big benefit concert. As I've mentioned before, I think these tend to get overlooked, except for the portions performed by really famous musical acts. In this case, the concert is best known for the second Led Zeppelin 1980s reunion, after they reunited for Live Aid in 1985. But there's so much more to this, including other interesting reunions. 

The entire concert was about 12 hours long. I didn't find all of it, but I found the vast majority of it. Presumably, a big chunk of those 12 hours was dead time between acts. I was able to find six hours of music. I've broken that up into five albums.

This was a rather unusual concert, in that it celebrated the 40th anniversary of the Atlantic Records record company. I'd be hard pressed to think of any other records companies celebrated like this, other than Motown Records. And it's odd that it was a 40th anniversary concert with no similar one for the 25th anniversary, or 30th, or 50th, etc... But it was probably lucky that it happened when it did, before some of the older acts retired or passed on. Atlantic Records had an interesting history in that it started out in the 1950s as the most important record company for R&B music before branching out into all musical genres. So a lot of the 1950s and 1960s stars that made the record company successful were able to perform at this concert.

I found a newspaper article that explains a little bit about how this concert came to be. When the show was first planned, the idea was to have a smaller auditorium and invite just a couple thousand people, mainly Atlantic Records employees and special guests. Ken Ehrlich, who produced the show, explained, "When it first started, it was to be a two-hour black-tie event at Radio City Music Hall. But I said to [Atlantic Records founder and president] Ahmet [Ertegun]: 'You've made music for kids, now you want to invite your friends to a party. You have to do it at [Madison Square] Garden. You want kids to scream and yell.' Eventually, the size dictated that we do it at the Garden. We wanted to reflect 40 years and reach a new audience. I want 15-year-old kids to see Ruth Brown and the Coasters."

The concert was a curious mix of self-promotion and charity. The self-promotion was first that the record company was patting itself on its back while also using the concert to promote some of their young and up and coming acts. But at the same time, the concert was expected to make at least 10 million dollars in profits due to selling TV broadcast and radio broadcast rights, and all of that money was to go to charity. Furthermore, most of the charity money was sent to the Rhythm and Blues Foundation, a charity created by the record company to basically give their legacy acts the profits they deserved but had been screwed out of back in the 1950s and 60s.

Before I say more, I want to point out that while many big names did perform at this concert, many other long-time Atlantic Records artists did not. The ones who didn't perform included Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Cream, the Allman Brothers Band, the Rolling Stones, INXS, King Crimson, Dusty Springfield, Hall and Oates, Peter Gabriel, and Chic. But that's just the tip of the iceberg. Probably the biggest miss was the Rolling Stones. But they'd had a big falling out in the early 1980s and wouldn't reunite until a year later.

As far as I know, a couple of hours of highlights from this concert has been officially released on DVD, but nothing has appeared on album. So I've had to rely on bootlegs. The most easily accessible version of the concert is a portion that was broadcast on the HBO cable network. But that was less than half. Parts of it were also broadcast on ABC TV. Furthermore, other parts were broadcast on other networks. I found some bits from a German broadcast, for instance. Apparently, the entire show was broadcast on BBC, in one-hour weekly segments. But I haven't been able to find that anywhere. If anyone has any parts that I've missed, please let me know so I can add those bits in.

I've done my best to put this together as it really happened, but it's hard because I haven't been able to get a definitive list of the order of the performers. Still, the different versions did have a lot in common, and I've found clues from newspaper articles, so I've made best guesses. 

Let me mention some of the bits that I think are still missing from this portion of the show. Apparently, Crosby, Stills and Nash performed the song "Southern Cross" to open the show, and then returned for a longer set near the end of the show. LeVert did the song "Casanova." Bobby Short played two songs: "Hop Scotch Blues" and "Black and Blue." Rachelle Cappelli sang "The Truth'll Set You Free" plus an Aretha Franklin cover. LaVern Baker also did the song "Tweedle Dee." 

Note also that I have some introduction of acts, but I'm probably missing about half of those. In some cases, famous people who didn't perform themselves did the introductions, while in other cases performers from other parts of the show did the introductions. So, for instance in this part, Marv Albert, a sports broadcaster, introduced the Coasters. But Foreigner was introduced by Roberta Flack, who sang later in the show.

One notable event from this part of the show was the reunion of the Coasters. They were one of the biggest acts on the Atlantic label in the 1950s and early 1960s. But this was the first time the original members performed together in about twenty years.

Here's a Wikipedia article about the concert. But note that it doesn't say much, and its list of performers is incomplete and mostly follows the HBO broadcast:

Atlantic Records 40th anniversary - Wikipedia

This album is an hour and 12 minutes long.

001 talk (Robert Townshend)
002 Should I Say Yes - I Can't Wait (Nu Shooz)
003 Two of Hearts (Stacey Q)
004 talk (Marv Albert)
005 That Is Rock and Roll (Coasters)
006 Youngblood (Coasters)
007 Charlie Brown (Coasters)
008 I'm a Hog for You (Coasters)
009 In the Air Tonight (Phil Collins)
010 talk (Phil Collins)
011 Jim Dandy (LaVern Baker)
012 Saved (LaVern Baker)
013 talk (Roberta Flack)
014 Hot Blooded (Foreigner)
015 Urgent (Foreigner)
016 talk (Foreigner)
017 I Want to Know What Love Is (Foreigner)
018 Juke Box Hero (Foreigner)
019 In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida (Iron Butterfly)
020 Gloria (Laura Branigan)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/kCLD3BmR

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/ksQX0KcmnRSwASW/file

The cover photo of the Coasters is from this exact concert.

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