Thursday, September 4, 2025

Various Artists - Monterey International Pop Festival, Monterey County Fairgrounds, Monterey, CA, 6-18-1967, Afternoon Show - Ravi Shankar

Here's the fourth part out of five of the 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival. The fourth part was not like the others. For all the other four parts, many different musical acts were featured, with each one getting a maximum of 40 minutes to perform. But for this part, there was just one performer: Indian sitar player Ravi Shankar. His set of instrumental music lasted close to two hours.

To understand the importance of this performance, one has to keep in mind the state of popular music at the time. There was virtually nothing in Western countries like what is called "world music." There had been some hints, especially in the last year or so with George Harrison of the Beatles dabbling with Indian music, especially with the song "Love You To" on the Revolver album. But those were a mixture of Western and non-Western musical styles. This festival was really the first mass cultural event in the U.S. to go all out with authentic music from India in the form of Ravi Shankar. On top of that, the previous day featured a set by Hugh Masekela, a South African who performed jazz influenced by South African musical styles. (Unfortunately, his impact was lessened by the fact that only one of the songs from his set has become publicly available.)

As a result, many if not most of the people in the audience were blown away to experience something so different and interesting for the first time. That included most of the stars of the other musical acts, who were very curious after knowing a little bit about Harrison being recently tutored in sitar playing by Shankar. For the recording I have of this performance, I was surprised that the cheering at the end went on and on and on, much longer than any other in the festival that I came across. And you can see some of that rapturous response from the "Monterey Pop" movie documentary, which chose to make about 12 minutes of Shankar's performance the finale of the movie. 

Instead of explaining more, I've found some interesting quotes about this performance from famous people who were there at the festival. 

Mickey Dolenz, drummer and vocalist for the Monkees: "Ravi Shankar was the most moving, spiritual experience, and it allowed you to get into the pulse and the rhythm and into the deepest meditation. If you opened your eyes, you saw people with their eyes closed just listening and being and swaying. No one was smoking, no cell phones [laughs]. It was two hours of uninterrupted meditation. In the afternoon. It probably had a great effect, but first of all it was dark in the sense most people had their eyes closed... It was just being in the presence of those musicians [Shankar, Ustad Alla Rakha, and Kamala Chakravarty] and experiencing a form of music not yet really known. The Beatles had sort of introduced [Indian music] to us, but we had never heard Ravi Shankar do a concert. This was something new to the entire audience. It was as close to a kind of 'born again' experience that anybody could have had in that audience. But to be honest, it wasn't just him. It was the tabla player, Rakha. Of course being into drumming, those rhythms I was very unfamiliar with, as were most people of those Indian rhythms. So it wasn't just Ravi, it was the whole thing, Rakha, along with the third performer Kamala (Chakravarty) on tamboura."

Al Kooper, keyboardist for the Blues Project, as well as Blood, Sweat and Tears: "Great set. I was sitting in the audience with another artist. And I'm getting an education because I don't know much about [Indian music]. Didn't know much about him, just picked up on him through the Beatles, like everybody else. Watching the musicianship between Alla Rakha and Ravi Shankar killed me. I thought that was amazing when they were trading passages."

Singer, model, and actress Peggy Lipton: "Monterey reached its climax for me when we took [some drugs] in the early afternoon and there was a light drizzle and we went to hear Ravi Shankar. I remember I left my body. That was it for me. It was beautiful, peaceful, and chilled everybody out. Ravi transported me. It was gently raining, and he transported everybody. We were all taken there. It was like we were put on a spaceship and driven to another planet."

I've read in places that the performance lasted three hours, which would mean this isn't complete. But the quote from Dolenz says it was two hours. I think this was the full thing. Part of the set was released as the live album "Live: Ravi Shankar at the Monterey International Pop Festival." That came out before the end of 1967, and it peaked at Number 43 on the U.S. album chart, a remarkable result for this type of music. But it was only 53 minutes long, far from the full performance here.

Personally, I found listening to this interesting, but it's not for everyone. I think of a lot of the rapturous response had to do with the exact circumstances of what was happening musically in 1967. One can easily find "world music" of many varieties these days, so the context is very different.

Here's another interesting quote, Shankar's own impressions of the performance: "In the afternoon, we set up a special section between 1:00-3:00 p.m. where there would be no one in front of me and after me. It was cloudy, cool, it had rained a little and that's when I played, and it was like magic. Jimi Hendrix was sitting there. [Jerry] Garcia was there. I remember a few names. All of them were there, and you can see on the [Monterey Pop documentary] film what magic it had. I was so impressed and it is one of my memorable performances. I didn't plan for this. I was grateful to God that I was sitting in the atmosphere without anyone disturbing me. It drizzled for a few minutes and then it stopped. So, it was was cloudy and there were flowers from Hawaii and you know, what atmosphere! After my set, it was crazy. I have never felt such a commotion of this sort. It was so pure, in spite of the fact that there were many people who were also strong. But it didn't matter, because the whole atmosphere was so clean and beautiful and I could give my best. That's all I can say."

I found all the quotes included in this write-up at this webpage. I highly recommend it if you want to know more about the festival, since it mainly consists of many more quotes from famous people who were there:

The 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival | Cave Hollywood 

As with the vast majority of everything else I'm posting from this festival, I got this music from Simon, a person who put together a collection of all the music from the festival he could find in 2022. There are more details in the PDF included in this download zip, written by Simon. This full version has excellent sound quality, despite being unreleased. 

Also, for once, I didn't do any audio editing. Since this was all instrumental, there were no vocals possibly needing adjusting. I did break the banter into their own tracks, however.

This album is an hour and 39 minutes long. 

01 talk (Ravi Shankar)
02 Raga Todi-Rupak Tal [Instrumental] (Ravi Shankar)
03 talk (Ravi Shankar)
04 Tabla Solo in Ektal [Instrumental] (Ravi Shankar)
05 talk (Ravi Shankar)
06 Raga Shuddha Sarang-Tintal [Instrumental] (Ravi Shankar)
07 talk (Ravi Shankar)
08 Raga Bhimpalasi [Instrumental] (Ravi Shankar)
09 talk (Ravi Shankar)
10 Dhun [Dadra and Fast Teental] [Instrumental] (Ravi Shankar)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/bErdoe6Q

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/6wIafIITkDSptke/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Various Artists - Monterey International Pop Festival, Monterey County Fairgrounds, Monterey, CA, 6-17-1967, Evening Show

Here's the third part of the 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival. As I mentioned previously, the festival was broken into five parts, and one had to buy separate tickets for each part. This one took place on the evening of the second day of the festival.

I've previously discussed where this material comes from. Basically, this collection was put together by someone named Simon in 2022. There's a PDF included in the download that shows the source material Simon used for each song here. For this part, I've only added in a version of the set by the Byrds, which was released as a "record store day" album in 2024.

In my write-ups to the previous parts of the festival, I've mentioned there's a Wikipedia page listing all the known songs performed at the festival. Here's that link again:

Monterey Pop Festival set list - Wikipedia 

Let's look at what's here compared to what's still missing. The first band up was Moby Grape. I have five of their songs here. They also played at least "Fall on You" and "Lazy Me." The Simon-made version actually had about seven seconds of "Lazy Me," but since it was so damn short, I didn't bother to include that. 

Here's an interesting quote about the festival from Peter Lewis of Moby Grape: "I'm not sure I thought about the night we played as a chance to prove anything. But our old manager did and had an argument with [producer] Lou Adler about it. Adler decided not to put us in the film. The band didn't know about this until after the fact. When we did find out what our manager had done, we fired him. But the real damage was undoable, and in retaliation, instead of playing in a prime Saturday night slot, Adler had us open the show on Friday night. ... As I recall, we had a good set anyway and it went by real fast. The vibe at Monterey just got better all weekend, and by the time it was over I really felt like I was part of something bigger than the sum of its parts. This all had to get worked out. But to me it really seemed like when it was over, all the bands left with a sense of renewal. It was as if the days of trying to out play each other were over and in its place was a common cause." 

There's just one song here performed by Hugh Masekela. The Wikipedia page lists two more, but says that other unknown songs were played as well.

The Byrds set is finally complete, I'm happy to say. The 2024 record store day release mentioned above included "I Know My Rider" (usually known as "I Know You Rider"), which previously was unreleased and even unbootlegged. So that's exciting, and it gives me hope that even after all these years (writing this in 2025), there's more in the vaults that can be released someday.

Next up was a set by Laura Nyro. At the time, she was an up and coming singer-songwriter, with her debut album "More than a New Discovery" released earlier in 1967. Unfortunately, the set was not well received. Music critic Michael Lydon wrote a review of the whole festival that appeared in Newsweek just a couple of days after the festival ended, and wrote that "the evening hit bottom with Laura Nyro," adding that her set was a disaster. In actual fact, if you listen to the performance, there's nothing wrong with it, and it doesn't sound like she was booed. But she probably didn't come off well mostly due to poor visuals. She wore a black evening gown dress and was backed by two female dancers, which would have fit in with a New York City supper club audience, but it didn't fit with the hippie vibe of the festival. 

Michelle Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas helped console Nyro after her performance. "After she came off the stage, I could see that she was really, really upset and in tears. I just grabbed her by the hand, I put her in one of the limousines in the back, and said to the driver 'let's go for a ride' so I could calm her down. And I think we were smoking a joint and I was telling her that 'she was great,' and she said, 'No, they hated me and I looked like an idiot up there.' I was just trying to do the sisterly thing."  

In any case, Nyro played at least four songs, but only one and a half are publicly available. By half, what I mean is only the second half of "Wedding Bell Blues" could be found. I didn't want just half of that song hanging there, so I found another version from that era. Unfortunately, there aren't many live recordings by her from then, and it seems she didn't play that song very often. The best thing I could find was a version from an audience bootleg of a concert in Berkeley in 1970, three years later. I used that to patch in the missing first half. But the sound quality difference is pretty great; it's easy to tell when the switch to the better sounding second half happens. Still, I figure that's better than only having part of the song.

Here's the link to the Newsweek review. Despite being too harsh about Nyro, in my opinion, there's a lot of interesting information and perspective in it.

Monterey Pop: The First Rock Festival | Current | The Criterion Collection 

After Nyro was Jefferson Airplane. This is their full set. That was followed by a set that started out with a few instrumentals from Booker T. & the MG's. Then Booker T. & the MG's backed Otis Redding. This is the full set for that as well. By the way, three songs into his five-song set, representatives from a musician's union demanded the show be stopped due to a curfew time limit, but the producers of the festival managed to fend that off until Redding's set was finished. (Thank God!)

At the time, Redding was a big soul star for the Black community in the U.S., but was little known to the larger white public. His Monterey Pop set changed that, drastically. Steve Cropper, who played lead guitar in Booker T. & the MG's at the festival, said, "Otis had found his audience. Monterey helped him cross over to a wider white pop market."

Redding's performance got a ton of good press at the time. For instance, that Newsweek review mentioned above summed up his set with these words: "ecstasy, madness, loss, total, screaming, fantastic." In 1968, two songs from his performance would be one of the highlights of the hit "Monterey Pop" movie documentary. Still later, in 1970, the whole performance would be released on a hit album (split with some songs by Jimi Hendrix from the festival). Unfortunately though, Redding didn't get to live long enough to enjoy this popularity breakthrough, since he died in a plane crash at the end of 1967.

By the way, here's a fun quote from Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead about Redding's performance: "I was pretty sure that I'd seen God onstage. Otis looked to be 12 or 14 feet tall, stalking the lip of the stage like a caged tiger, just shooting lightning and sparks. He was amazing!" And here's a quote from Lou Adler, who was the producer of the Mamas and the Papas, Johnny Rivers, and many more: "Otis just transported the entire audience to church. They became the congregation, and he was the preacher." 

And here's another fun quote from Roger McGuinn of the Byrds: "I remember watching Otis Redding and he really blew my mind. I had never seen anything like him before. I remember I was backstage listening to Otis and Paul Simon and I were talking. I said, 'Man, this guy is scary!' And Paul replied, 'He's not scary. He's great!' 'That was what I meant, Paul.'" 

That brings up an interesting aspect of the festival. The Wikipedia article on the festival explains it well: "Monterey was also the first high-profile event to mix acts from major regional music centers in the U.S. – San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Memphis, Tennessee, and New York City – and it was the first time many of these bands had met each other in person." That also was true for British bands meeting American ones for the first time, and vice versa.

So that's part of the reason why Redding was such a revelation, because most people in the largely white audience, even the other musicians, had never seen any soul music performance like his before. By the time the Woodstock Festival happened in 1969 it was very different, with many of these musical acts crossing the paths of the other acts many times over, and often becoming friends. 

The other performances here were all excellent too, even the Nyro one (now that the "hippie" vs. "square" dynamic no longer matters). For instance, here's what that Newsweek review had to say about Jefferson Airplane. "[They] were fantastically good. Backed with the light show put on by Headlights, who do the lights at the Fillmore, they created a special magic. Before they came on, the question hung: is the Airplane as good as its reputation? They thoroughly proved themselves."

As I mentioned in the write-ups for the previous two parts, the sound quality is excellent throughout, especially for a 1967 live recording. That said, the lead vocals were often low in the mix. I managed to fix that when it was needed, using the UVR5 audio editing program. I did that for about half the songs. For instance, Redding's booming voice didn't need any boosting, but the Moby Grape and Byrds sets benefited a lot from louder vocals relative to the instruments. 

This album is an hour and 55 minutes long. 

01 talk (Tommy Smothers)
02 Indifference (Moby Grape)
03 talk (Moby Grape)
04 Mr. Blues (Moby Grape)
05 Sitting by the Window (Moby Grape)
06 Omaha (Moby Grape)
07 Hey Grandma (Moby Grape)
08 Bajabula Bonke [Healing Song] (Hugh Masekela)
09 talk (Mike Bloomfield)
10 Renaissance Fair (Byrds)
11 talk (Byrds)
12 Have You Seen Her Face (Byrds)
13 talk (Byrds)
14 Hey Joe (Byrds)
15 talk (Byrds)
16 He Was a Friend of Mine (Byrds)
17 talk (Byrds)
18 Lady Friend (Byrds)
19 talk (Byrds)
20 Chimes of Freedom (Byrds)
21 I Know My Rider [I Know You Rider] (Byrds)
22 talk (Byrds)
23 So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star (Byrds with Hugh Masekela)
24 Wedding Bell Blues [Edit] (Laura Nyro)
25 Poverty Train (Laura Nyro)
26 talk (Jerry Garcia)
27 Somebody to Love (Jefferson Airplane)
28 talk (Jefferson Airplane)
29 The Other Side of This Life (Jefferson Airplane)
30 White Rabbit (Jefferson Airplane)
31 High Flying Bird (Jefferson Airplane)
32 Today (Jefferson Airplane)
33 She Has Funny Cars (Jefferson Airplane)
34 Young Girl Sunday Blues (Jefferson Airplane)
35 talk (Jefferson Airplane)
36 The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil (Jefferson Airplane)
37 Booker-Loo [Instrumental] (Booker T. & the MG's)
38 Hip Hug-Her [Instrumental] (Booker T. & the MG's)
39 Philly Dog [Instrumental] (Booker T. & the MG's & the Mar Keys)
40 Shake (Otis Redding)
41 talk (Otis Redding)
42 Respect (Otis Redding)
43 I've Been Loving You Too Long (Otis Redding)
44 [I Can't Get No] Satisfaction (Otis Redding)
45 talk (Otis Redding)
46 Try a Little Tenderness (Otis Redding)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Q28eTp32

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/0b13fTWg6oxVOK2/file

Like most of the cover art I've made for this festival, I had too many good options to choose from, so I broke the image into four smaller ones. From top left clockwise: Moby Grape, David Crosby and Roger McGuinn of the Byrds, Otis Redding, and Grace Slick and Marty Balin of Jefferson Airplane.

Various Artists - Monterey International Pop Festival, Monterey County Fairgrounds, Monterey, CA, 6-17-1967, Afternoon Show

Here's the second out of five albums I'm posting that make up the 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival. As I mentioned in the first album, the festival was broken up into five parts, and one had to buy tickets for each part. This part consisted of the afternoon show on June 17th, the second day of the festival.

Generally speaking, the different parts didn't really have musical themes, except for this one, because most of the musical acts in this part were heavily influenced by the blues.

As I mentioned in the write-up for the first part, I'm mostly just posting what a person named Simon put together in 2022, with some additions based on material made available since then. As with all the parts, I'm including a PDF Simon made that explains the different sourcing for each of the songs.

Also in my write-up for the first part, I mentioned a Wikipedia link that lists the known songs from the festival, including the ones where there's no publicly available recording. It's worth mentioning that link again:

Monterey Pop Festival set list - Wikipedia 

Let's review what's still missing. Canned Heat is known to have played the three songs included here, but also an unknown number of additional songs. The Big Brother and the Holding Company set is complete. This was the concert that turned that band's main lead singer, Janis Joplin, into a big star. In fact, they're the only band to play two sets in the festival. That's because their set here was one of the highlights, but a documentary film crew headed by D.A. Pennebaker failed to record any good footage of the band. So they were brought back to play a few songs on the third and final day.

Al Kooper had been a keyboardist for the Blues Project since 1965, but he quit that band shortly before this festival. The Blues Project got their own spot later in the festival, but Kooper got a solo spot too. (He would go on to form Blood, Sweat and Tears a year later.) According to the Wikipedia set list above, he only played two songs, and one of them is here. But according to a Newsweek article I linked to in the first part, Kooper's set lasted about half an hour, so he probably played more.

There are eight songs here performed by the Butterfield Blues Band, led by Paul Butterfield. Apparently there did more songs. But each act was allowed to up to 40 minutes, and their set already totaled 33 minutes, so there's probably just one or two missing songs. There are just two songs here by the Quicksilver Messenger Service, and they played five. One of the missing ones is a cover of "Who Do You Love," which they usually ended with a long jam.  There are two Steve Miller Band songs here, but they played at least one more, "Living in the U.S.A." 

The last act for this part of the festival was the Electric Flag. This band was formed in the spring of 1967 by guitarist Mike Bloomfield, and it was led by him, Barry Goldberg, and Buddy Miles. This actually was their very first concert. They would put out a studio album in early 1968 called "A Long Time Comin'," but by then the band's sound had already changed, with founder Bloomfield having less of a role. In fact, he left the band just a couple of months after the album was released. This concert is truer to the original vision he had for the band. There are six songs by them here, which actually is two more than the ones on the Wikipedia set list, so I don't know if there are still more missing ones.

I could say a lot more about all the different performances, but I think the music is all good and generally speaks for itself. The sound quality is excellent throughout, especially considering the time period. A lot of that quality is due to the unusually good sound system. Here's what the Wikipedia article on the festival has to say about that:

"Also notable was the festival's innovative sound system, designed and built by audio engineer Abe Jacob, who started his career doing live sound for San Francisco bands and went on to become a leading sound designer for the American theater. Jacob's groundbreaking Monterey sound system was the progenitor of all the large-scale PAs that followed. It was a key factor in the festival's success and it was greatly appreciated by the artists. For instance, in the 'Monterey Pop' film, David Crosby can clearly be seen saying 'Great sound system!' to band mate Chris Hillman at the start of the Byrds' soundcheck."

Note that that, like all the parts from this festival, this sounds even better than what Simon put together, because I boosted the vocals for the songs that needed that, using the UVR5 audio editing program. About half of the songs needed the boost, though there didn't seem to be much rhyme or reason to it. Some musical acts had low vocals across the board, or not, but often that was only the case for certain songs. Perhaps that's because this is a patchwork, put together from many different sources, both released and unreleased. 

By the way, here's a quote about the festival by Steve Miller: "I remember being really happy to be at Monterey, really excited. It was the first event I attended that was organized in such a really first-class way from top to bottom." 

And here are some quotes about the Big Brother and the Holding Company set, since that was the clear highlight of this part of the festival. Rock critic Keith Altham: "Janis Joplin was the staggering thing I saw on the whole show to me. Because I had never heard a woman sing like that. 'I told her afterwards, "you're the best female rock singer I've ever heard in my life.' She looked me up and down, smiled, and said, 'You get out much, honey?' I thought it was funny. She was very friendly. I liked her."

Record company executive Clive Davis: "When Janis (Joplin) took the stage, it was an unknown group to me totally, Big Brother and the Holding Company, and right from the outset it was something you could never forget. She took the stage, dominated, and was absolutely breathtaking, hypnotic, compelling, and soul shaking. You saw someone who was not only the goods but was doing something that no one else was doing. With that fervor, that intensity, and impact. So yes, that in effect, coupled with everything around me, the way people were dressing, what was going on in Haight Ashbury [the hippie district in San Francisco], the spirit in the air, and the feeling... I just said, 'You know, I am here at a very unique time. I'm feeling it. I'm feeling it in my spine. I'm feeling it in my sense of excitement. I'm feeling it in the impact. It's not only musical changes, but in societal changes.'" 

Davis immediately had the record company he was working for, Columbia Records, sign the band to a record contract, even though they had to buy out the band's existing contract with another company to do so.  

This album is two hours and 27 minutes long. 

01 talk (John Phillips)
02 talk (Canned Heat)
03 Rollin' and Tumblin' (Canned Heat)
04 talk (Canned Heat)
05 Dust My Broom (Canned Heat)
06 talk (Canned Heat)
07 Bullfrog Blues (Canned Heat)
08 talk (Chet Helms)
09 Down on Me (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
10 Combination of the Two (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
11 Harry (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
12 Roadblock (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
13 Ball and Chain (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
14 talk (Country Joe & the Fish)
15 Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine (Country Joe & the Fish)
16 talk (Country Joe & the Fish)
17 I-Feel-like-I'm-Fixin'-to Die Rag (Country Joe & the Fish)
18 talk (Country Joe & the Fish)
19 The Bomb Song (Country Joe & the Fish)
20 Section 43 [Instrumental] (Country Joe & the Fish)
21 Wake Me, Shake Me (Al Kooper)
22 Look Over Yonders Wall (Butterfield Blues Band)
23 Mystery Train (Butterfield Blues Band)
24 Born in Chicago (Butterfield Blues Band)
25 Double Trouble (Butterfield Blues Band)
26 Mary Ann (Butterfield Blues Band)
27 Driftin' Blues (Butterfield Blues Band)
28 One More Heartache (Butterfield Blues Band)
29 Droppin' Out (Butterfield Blues Band)
30 Dino's Song [All I Ever Wanted to Do] (Quicksilver Messenger Service)
31 If You Live (Quicksilver Messenger Service)
32 Mercury Blues (Steve Miller Band)
33 Super Shuffle [Instrumental] (Steve Miller Band)
34 talk (David Crosby)
35 Groovin' Is Easy (Electric Flag)
36 I'm Sick Y'All (Electric Flag)
37 Texas (Electric Flag)
38 talk (Electric Flag)
39 Over-Lovin' You (Electric Flag)
40 Night Time Is the Right Time (Electric Flag)
41 Wine [Drinkin' Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee] (Electric Flag)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/1mXxvn3Y

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/hpdZuZUHcB1hh9t/file

Like most of the cover art I've made for this festival, I had too many good options to choose from, so I broke the image into four smaller ones. From top left clockwise: Janis Joplin of Big Brother and the Holding Company, Country Joe McDonald of Country Joe and the Fish, Mike Bloomfield of the Electric Flag, and Paul Butterfield of the Butterfield Blues Band.

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Various Artists - Monterey International Pop Festival, Monterey County Fairgrounds, Monterey, CA, 6-16-1967

The 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival was the first famous rock festival. In my opinion, it was one of the best, if not the very best, in terms of the quality of all the musical acts involved. 

Here's what the beginning of the Wikipedia entry about the festival has to say: "The festival embodied the theme of California as a focal point for the counterculture and generally is regarded as one of the beginnings of the 'Summer of Love' in 1967 and the public debut of the hippie, flower power, and flower children movements and era. Because Monterey was widely promoted and heavily attended, featured historic performances, and was the subject of a popular theatrical documentary film, it became an inspiration and a template for future music festivals, including the Woodstock Festival two years later. Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner said 'Monterey was the nexus: It sprang from what the Beatles began, and from it sprang what followed.'"

Here's the link to the full entry, if you're interested:

Monterey International Pop Festival - Wikipedia

I had no plans to post this festival at this blog, because there a four CD box set of festival highlights was released in 1992. I had that for ages, and added some other songs to it as I found them. But I changed my mind a few days ago. I happened to notice that the complete performances by Buffalo Springfield and the Byrds were released last year, but obscurely, as "record store day" limited releases. Each of those contained extra songs that I'd never heard before, at great sound quality. That inspired me to dig further, and I found a project someone named Simon put together in 2022, gathering everything he could find from the festival that was publicly available up until that time. This is basically what Simon did, plus a few more recent releases, especially the Buffalo Springfield and Byrds ones mentioned above. 

The 1992 box set contains five hours of music. But thanks mostly to Simon's work, I'm able to present eleven hours of music from the festival! That's more than double! And all of it is in fantastic sound quality, despite the fact that a big chunk of it is from unreleased sources. There's no audience bootleg sourcing here, except for half of one song later in the festival. So this is a must have, in my opinion, for anyone who enjoys music from this era. 

It is now accepted fact that something very special happened in the San Francisco Bay Area in the summer of 1967, a time which is now widely known as "The Summer of Love." I don't want to go into it too much, but there's a very big Wikipedia article about that as well:

Summer of Love - Wikipedia

In short, young people from all over the U.S., and even the world, were drawn to the Bay Area to experience the rising counter-culture there. The Monterey Pop Festival was a big part of that. There was one rock festival that took place a week before that in my opinion sounds even MORE musically amazing, the Fantasy Fair and Magic Mountain Music Festival. You can read about that here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasy_Fair_and_Magic_Mountain_Music_Festival 

Rolling Stone Magazine wrote a great article about it in 2014, which you can find here:

Fantasy Fair & Magic Mountain Music Fest: Story of 1st U.S. Rock Fest 

Unfortunately though, very little audio from that festival has survived (even though it seems there was an attempt to record it all). So it has pretty much been forgotten. But Monterey Pop was the opposite in that a popular documentary movie about it, "Monterey Pop," was released in 1968, and had a huge influence. Here's a quote from Wikipedia: "The screening of Monterey Pop in theaters helped raise the festival to mythic status, rapidly swelled the ranks of would-be festival-goers looking for the next festival, and inspired new entrepreneurs to stage more and more of them around the country." 

Another factor to consider is the song "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," written by John Phillips, the main songwriter for the Mamas and the Papas, and recorded by Scott McKenzie. According to an NPR report, "local authorities in Monterey were starting to get cold feet over the prospect of their town being overrun by hippies" attending the festival. Phillips specifically wrote it "to smooth things over." It succeeded beyond all expectations. The single "only" reached Number Four in the U.S. singles charts. But it had a long staying power, ultimately selling over seven million copies worldwide. It had a very real impact, like a pied piper call, drawing people to the Bay Area, and specifically to the Monterey Pop Festival. It's estimated 30,000 people attended the first night of the festival, but that grew to 60,000 by the third and last night. This was the very first big rock festival anywhere, with the exception of the somewhat smaller Fantasy Fair and Magic Mountain Music Festival the week previously.

Monterey, California, an hour or more drive from the Bay Area, was chosen as the location because there had been a popular Monterey Jazz Festival taking place there annually since the 1950s, as well as a similar Monterey Folk Festival. It was thought that by giving this festival a similar name in the same location, it would help give rock more credibility as an art form, like jazz or folk music, both of which were much more respected at the time. Even the same stage manager and sound company were hired. That resulted in the festival having truly exceptional sound quality for rock concerts at the time, which resulted in excellent sounding recordings as well.

I'll write more about the festival as a whole later. But for now, I want to explain how I split up the eleven hours of available music. The festival itself was split up into five separate tickets: one for June 16th, then another for the afternoon of June 17th, another for the evening of June 18th, then afternoon and evening tickets for June 18th as well. So I'm splitting this up in a similar way. This one, containing all the available music from June 16th, is the shortest by far. I'm guessing that each of those five time periods contained roughly the same amount of music, give or take. But this is the shortest because it's the one with the most missing music.

Here's yet another useful Wikipedia link. It shows all the songs known to be played by all the performers at the festival:

Monterey Pop Festival set list - Wikipedia 

Each act was allowed to play for 40 minutes, but is possible some of the lesser known acts got less than that. The Association performed first. But two songs are missing, and there were an unknown number of other songs missing as well. The second act was the Paupers. Their entire performance is missing. (Simon did find a couple of songs, but they were of such poor sound quality that I couldn't even include them as bonus tracks.) Next was Lou Rawls. We have three songs from him, but two more are missing, plus an unknown number additionally missing. Next up was British folk singer Beverly Martyn. She just played three songs, all missing. 

After that was Johnny Rivers. He was a big star at the time. Interestingly, his keyboard player at the festival was the great songwriter Jimmy Webb. He played eleven songs, which must have been right at the full allowed 40 minutes, but only one song from his set is publicly available. Here's an interesting quote from Rivers about the festival: "Driving north on Highway 101, I had never seen so many VW buses pained with paisley and flowers, cars, trucks, and lots of out of state license plates. People were from everywhere. The vibe was very mellow and kind of the theme of the whole thing. It was a gathering of tribes and hadn’t really gotten to the wild hippie stage yet. The 'Summer of Love' was [really more] the summer that came after that. It wasn't going to be frantic, out of control, but everyone digging on the music. Because there was such a variety of music."

It seems we only have the full performances of the two final acts, Eric Burdon and the Animals, and Simon and Garfunkel. The Animals played for 27 minutes. As an aside, lead singer Burdon was so moved by the festival that he wrote a song praising it, "Monterey." It became a Top Ten hit.

Simon and Garfunkel played for only 22 minutes, despite the fact that they had to be the most popular act of the evening, by far. It appears they wanted to play longer, but they couldn't due to some kind of curfew for the evening as a whole. We know this because you can hear Paul Simon talking about how he chose the last song played, an unusual (and at the time still unreleased) final choice of "Punky's Dilemma," because he'd just been told they only had two minutes left and that song was two minutes long.

Normally, I put all the source material details in the mp3 tags of each song. But for this festival instead, I'm just including a PDF made by Simon, since that contains a great chart showing the sources. Hopefully, more music from this day in particular will come out in recent years. It seems at least one set from the festival has been released each year as part of "record store day" releases for the past few years. So far, most of those have been big-name performers where all or most all of the set was already available. But if that keeps going, maybe they'll get to things like Johnny Rivers' set, where 90 percent of it is missing.

Note that although the sound quality was already excellent in general, one problem I've often noticed with concert recordings is the vocals being too low in the mix. I checked every song in this festival for that, and I'd estimate about half of them had that problem. So for all those songs, I remixed them using the UVR5 audio editing program. So this should now sound even better than before. 

Oh, one last thing. I had so many other things to write about that I didn't really get to discussing the quality of the music. I'd say it's excellent across the board. But in case you're curious, here's the link to an article written by music critic Michael Lydon, which came out in Newsweek just two days after the festival. (Disregard the 2009 date shown at the top.) He was overly critical sometimes, as critics usually are, but still it's interesting to see a fresh take from that time. Plus, he has a lot of interesting information about how the festival came to be, and what happened behind the scenes. For instance, there's mention of a private jam at the end of the festival that lasted four hours consisting of Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, and Jimi Hendrix. Wouldn't it have been amazing to have been a fly on the wall for that?

Monterey Pop: The First Rock Festival | Current | The Criterion Collection 

Here's a couple of relevant quotes about the festival. Art Garfunkel: "Monterey was the cherry on top of the sundae that was the 1960s. It was unprecedented, and the audience was unprecedented in their joy." And Tommy Smothers, who was one of the festival emcees: "There were no problems. The only problem was, just how happy could you get without hurting yourself?"

This album is an hour and 15 minutes long. Each section of the concert reportedly lasted about five hours. No doubt a lot of that was down time between acts. But still, I would imagine a full version of this part of the festival would consist of at least three hours of music. If more gets released in the future, I will try to add it in and revise this.

01 talk (John Phillips)
02 The Machine (Association)
03 Along Comes Mary (Association)
04 Windy (Association)
05 talk (Peter Tork)
06 Love Is a Hurtin' Thing (Lou Rawls)
07 Dead End Street (Lou Rawls)
08 talk (Lou Rawls)
09 Tobacco Road (Lou Rawls)
10 Memphis (Johnny Rivers)
11 talk (Chet Helms)
12 talk (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
13 San Franciscan Nights (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
14 talk (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
15 Gin House Blues (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
16 talk (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
17 Hey Gyp (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
18 talk (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
19 Paint It, Black (Eric Burdon & the Animals)
20 talk (John Phillips)
21 Homeward Bound (Simon & Garfunkel)
22 At the Zoo (Simon & Garfunkel)
23 talk (Simon & Garfunkel)
24 Feelin' Groovy (Simon & Garfunkel)
25 talk (Simon & Garfunkel)
26 For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her (Simon & Garfunkel)
27 The Sound of Silence (Simon & Garfunkel)
28 talk (Simon & Garfunkel)
29 Benedictus (Simon & Garfunkel)
30 talk (Simon & Garfunkel)
31 Punky's Dilemma (Simon & Garfunkel)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/JdvDszNw

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/user/files/POFIfnCamxiHogl/edit

It was too hard for me to pick just one picture for the cover, so I chose four, just like I did with the "Live Aid" albums I've posted. From top left clockwise, that's the Association, Lou Rawls, Simon and Garfunkel, and Eric Burdon of the Animals. All of them are from this exact concert. 

Various Artists - Fifty Years of Country Music, Grand Ole Opry, Nashville, TN, 1-22-1978

Every now and then, I randomly stumble across some really interesting concerts on YouTube. (If you do as well, please let me know.) It seems there are many "various artists" concerts like this, often tributes, that one can find on video sometimes but have never been converted to an audio bootleg. I've seen a bunch of country-themed ones, such as annual awards ceremonies, that are just okay. But this one from 1978 stands out as exceptional. It was a three-hour TV special celebrating the last 50 years of country music. Just look at the names of all the stars in the song list and hopefully you'll see why I thought this was worth my time to convert this and post it here.

I'm not quite sure why the producers considered 1978 the 50th anniversary of country music. It was never explained in the banter of the show. I looked it up, and the first country records were recorded in 1922 and 1923. But a pivotal moment was the "Bristol sessions" in 1927, when both future country music legends Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family were recorded for the first time. That's probably what they were referring to here, since the special contained mini-tributes to country legends Jimmie Rodgers, the Carter Family, Bob Wills, and Hank Williams, so obviously they were thinking of Rodgers and the Carter Family specifically.

As I mentioned above, this TV special was three hours long, but if you remove the time spent on commercials, that leaves you with two and a half hours. That was divided into third. Glen Campbell hosted the first third, Dolly Parton hosted the middle third, and Roy Clark hosted the last third. So the three of them prominently feature in this, not just talking but singing lots of songs. At the end, all three of them came together to sing a final Hank Williams medley.

There are a couple of frustrations to watch out for. One is that to cram in as many songs as possible in the limited time allotted on TV, frequently shortened versions of songs were performed, often just a minute or two. Another is that although Gene Autry was still alive (he lived until 1998), a recording of him in his prime was used instead of a live recording. Normally, I edit out that kind of thing, but I kept it in here since it was short and I wanted to keep the banter talking about him.

Generally speaking, the recording I found of this on YouTube was complete and had pretty good sound quality. However, there were some exceptions. One problem was that the song "Wichita Lineman" by Glen Campbell got abruptly cut off after about a minute. I found another live recording of Campbell singing that song from the 1970s and I used that to patch in the missing portion. That's why that song has "[Edit]" in its title. Also, most of "One Piece at a Time" by Johnny Cash was missing. Luckily, I found another YouTube video of that song from this exact concert, so I was able to fill that in. I ended up splicing the two versions together because the other version was missing some of the intro. 

There were some other problems here and there. For instance, sometimes the overall volume would fluctuate. So I had to make fixes for that. Also, there usually were "coming up next" type teasers before commercial breaks. I got rid of all of those. And when there were commercial breaks, that often meant abrupt cuts. I carefully edited each of those, usually patching in some more applause to smooth over where there was a start and stop gap due to commercials.

On the plus side, in my opinion country music was a lot better back in the 1970s than it is today, with many legends still alive and even in their primes. Remarkably, this really is a pretty good history of fifty years of country music. Also, it's interesting for the duets and combinations, such as Glen Campbell singing a song with Ray Charles and Johnny Cash singing a song with Roy Clark. This special remains unreleased on video and audio, but it shouldn't be forgotten. 

This album is two hours and 28 minutes long.

01 Stars [Edit] (Glen Campbell)
02 Rhinestone Cowboy (Glen Campbell)
03 emcee (Introduction)
04 talk (Glen Campbell)
05 Wabash Cannonball (Roy Acuff & His Smoky Mountain Boys)
06 talk (Glen Campbell)
07 I'll Get Over You (Crystal Gayle)
08 talk (Glen Campbell)
09 That Silver-Haired Daddy of Mine (Gene Autry)
10 talk (Glen Campbell)
11 Back in the Saddle Again (Glen Campbell)
12 Southern Nights (Glen Campbell)
13 talk (Glen Campbell)
14 Louisiana Man (Doug Kershaw)
15 talk (Glen Campbell)
16 I'll Go to My Grave Loving You (Statler Brothers)
17 You and Me (Tammy Wynette)
18 Love Put a Song in My Heart (Johnny Rodriguez)
19 talk (Glen Campbell)
20 Take These Chains from My Heart (Ray Charles)
21 talk (Ray Charles & Glen Campbell)
22 Bye Bye Love (Glen Campbell & Ray Charles)
23 talk (Glen Campbell)
24 Gentle on My Mind (Glen Campbell)
25 Honey Come Back (Glen Campbell)
26 By the Time I Get to Phoenix - Wichita Lineman [Edit] (Glen Campbell)
27 Galveston - Country Boy [You've Got Your Feet in L.A.] (Glen Campbell)
28 talk (emcee)
29 Here You Come Again (Dolly Parton)
30 talk (Dolly Parton)
31 Blue Moon of Kentucky (Bill Monroe & the Blue Grass Boys)
32 talk (Dolly Parton)
33 Muleskinner Blues (Dolly Parton & Bill Monroe & the Blue Grass Boys)
34 talk (Dolly Parton)
35 Our Love Is Home Grown (Earl Scruggs)
36 talk (Dolly Parton)
37 Walking After Midnight (Loretta Lynn)
38 Sweet Dreams (Loretta Lynn)
39 Back in Baby's Arms - Crazy (Loretta Lynn)
40 talk (Dolly Parton)
41 I Just Wish You Were Someone I Love (Larry Gatlin & the Gatlin Brothers)
42 The Cowgirl and the Dandy (Dolly Parton)
43 talk (Dolly Parton)
44 Keep on the Sunny Side - Wildwood Flower (Carter Family)
45 Will the Circle Be Unbroken (Carter Family)
46 Hello Stranger (Carter Family)
47 talk (Dolly Parton)
48 If You're Ever in Nashville (Carlene Carter)
49 talk (Dolly Parton)
50 talk (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
51 Ida Red (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
52 talk (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
53 Faded Love (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
54 Roly Poly (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
55 San Antonio Rose (Merle Haggard & the Texas Playboys)
56 talk (Dolly Parton)
57 The Seeker - All I Can Do (Dolly Parton)
58 Jolene (Dolly Parton)
59 Two Doors Down (Dolly Parton)
60 I Will Always Love You (Dolly Parton)
61 talk (emcee)
62 Rocky Top (Roy Clark)
63 talk (Roy Clark)
64 In the Jailhouse Now - Jimmie Rodgers' Last Blue Yodel [Women Make a Fool Out of Me] (Ernest Tubb & the Texas Troubadours)
65 Waiting for a Train (Ernest Tubb & the Texas Troubadours)
66 talk (Roy Clark)
67 talk (Roy Clark & Minnie Pearl)
68 It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels (Kitty Wells)
69 You're the One (Oak Ridge Boys)
70 talk (Roy Clark & Mel Tillis)
71 Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town (Mel Tillis)
72 talk (Roy Clark & Charlie Rich)
73 Behind Closed Doors (Charlie Rich)
74 talk (Roy Clark & Johnny Cash)
75 Folsom Prison Blues (Johnny Cash)
76 One Piece at a Time [Edit] (Johnny Cash)
77 Orange Blossom Special (Johnny Cash & Roy Clark)
78 Ghost Riders in the Sky [Instrumental Version] (Roy Clark)
79 talk (Roy Clark)
80 Instrumental (Chet Atkins)
81 talk (Roy Clark)
82 Instrumental (Stoney Mountain Cloggers)
83 Hey Good Lookin' (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
84 Your Cheating Heart (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
85 Cold, Cold Heart (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
86 I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
87 I Can't Help It [If I'm Still in Love with You] - You Win Again (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
88 I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry - I Saw the Light (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
89 Jambalaya [On the Bayou] (Roy Clark, Dolly Parton & Glen Campbell)
90 talk (Roy Clark)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/VhNfssNn

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/LzjSJer5qXloFoA/file

The cover image is from this exact concert. I made it from screenshots taken from the last medley in the concert, when Roy Clark, Dolly Parton and Glen Campbell were singing together. However, the YouTube video I was using was very low-res. So I had to resort to taking close up screenshots of each of their heads, plus one of all three of them together, and then putting it together in Photoshop. I used the Krea AI program to help clean it up. That's a big portrait of Hank Williams on the wall in the background.

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada, 9-13-1969, Part 8: The Doors

This is the eighth and final album from the 1969 Toronto Rock and Roll Revival. This one stars the Doors.

I've already discussed some thing about the Doors and their role in this festival in my write-ups for previous albums. For instance, I've mentioned how the festival's main promoter John Brower got desperate when he saw that the 1950s stars he'd booked for the festival weren't selling many tickets. In desperation, he decided to spend $25,000 to hire the Doors to be the headlining act. In order to do this, he resorted to borrowing the $25,000 from a man named Edjo, who was the leader of a biker gang. If the festival was a failure, he would be in fear of injury or even death.

Unfortunately, Brower made a big mistake in hiring the Doors, in terms of filling seats for the festival. In March 1969, the Doors' lead singer Jim Morrison was arrested in Miami, Florida for public indecency. Supposedly, he exposed his privates on stage. The other band members denied that, and it seems he only teased doing that. But there was a big backlash just the same. Many of their concerts were cancelled, and some of those that took place were poorly attended. 

Luckily for Brower, the last minute surprise of John Lennon performing at the festival saved his hide. He had at least $110,000 in expenses, mainly paying the other acts (with the Doors costing the most), but he made about $150,000 in ticket sales. So he was able to pay Edjo back. In fact, Edjo and his biker gang, the Vagabonds, were delighted by what happened. About 100 bikers rode their motorcycles with the Doors from the airport to the stadium where the festival took place. Then, when Lennon arrived a few hours later, they did a motorcade for him as well. 

As I mentioned in my write-up for Lennon's set, the emcee Kim Fowley had the brilliant idea of having everyone in the audience of 20,000 to hold up candles or lighters at the start of the set. This was apparently the first time this happened at a rock concert.

Brower later explained, "The only problem was that the bikers figured, 'Well that shit is okay for John Lennon, but we need to welcome the Doors with something real.' The next thing we knew, they had broken open a broom closet, took out all the sweeping brooms, took the fuel out of their Zippo lighters, torched them, and came out in front of the stage. You have to realize, Jim Morrison had a very powerful male personality and presence, so the bikers related to the Doors. They certainly weren't Beatles fans. It was absolutely nuts." 

As I also mentioned in a previous write-up, the Doors got to the festival several hours before they were due to perform, so they spent most of that time watching the other musical acts from the side of the stage. Many of these acts were the 1950s rock stars that the members of the Doors idolized when they were kids, and they were very impressed by what they saw and heard.  

As a result of all that, Morrison made a unique speech for him during the early part of "The End." He very rarely bantered between songs, but he wanted to say something about the festival. Here are his comments: "I can remember when rock and roll first came on the scene, and for me, it was a very liberating experience because it burst open whole new strange catacombs of wisdom that I couldn't remember and I didn't know about, and I couldn't see any equivalent for in my surroundings. And that's why, for me, this evening has been really a great honor to perform on the same stage with so many illustrious musical geniuses." 

D.A. Pennebaker was making a documentary about the festival, which was later released as the movie "Sweet Toronto." But Morrison refused to allow Pennebaker's film crew to record the Doors' set. In all likelihood, he was very cautious about recordings in the wake of the Miami incident earlier in the year. Already, he was looking to spend six months in prison. (He died in 1971 before the legal dispute could be resolved.) If some disaster happened on stage and it got recorded, he could have been in even more trouble. 

Unfortunately, it seems most of the excellent audio recordings of the concert were due to the recording work of Pennebaker's film crew. Since they didn't film the Doors, there's no soundboard-level audio recording of it either. Instead, all we have is an audience bootleg. But luckily, it's a pretty decent one, as audience bootlegs go. Furthermore, I used some of my usual tricks to improve the sound. I used the MVSEP program to get rid of all the crowd noise during the songs, while keeping the cheering at the ends of songs. I also used the UVR5 audio editing program to boost the vocals relative to the instruments, since that needed help. I think it sounds a lot better now.

The music here is unreleased. As I said above, the sound is pretty good, but not great. 

As far as the quality of the band's performance, here's what band member John Densmore later had to say about that. "I mean, you know, John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band walked out on stage and it was the biggest roar of the century and we're supposed to follow this group? Kim Fowley introduced us and we played the best we could. In my opinion, we were fine. We weren't great. We weren't lousy. We were fine. But everyone was so in awe of the Mop Top [Lennon]. It was great."

The band mostly played their concert staples. However there was one surprise in the fact that while they were in the middle of playing "Back Door Man," Morrison sang some of the lyrics to the song "Roadhouse Blues." He even sang a little bit of another song, "Maggie M'Gill." Both those songs would be released on the band's next album, "Morrison Hotel," released in 1970. In a couple other 1969 concerts they played little snippets of those songs, but they wouldn't be played in full until early 1970. 

As far as the festival as a whole, promoter John Brewer's original idea was to highlight 1950s rock stars like Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Bo Diddley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and so on, who had largely been forgotten. He believes the festival was a success in that respect, saying, "Word went out about how great their performances were, which helped them enormously." Indeed, this was the start of a wave of nostalgia for 1950s rock and roll that would peak in the 1970s with retro bands like Sha Na Na and retro movies like "American Graffiti."

This album is 56 minutes long.

01 When the Music's Over (Doors)
02 Break On Through [To the Other Side] (Doors)
03 Back Door Man - Roadhouse Blues - Back Door Man (Doors)
04 The Crystal Ship (Doors)
05 Wake Up (Doors)
06 Light My Fire (Doors)
07 The End (Doors) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/imKzThdW

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/JX22YmRUOxzI4m2/file

As mentioned above, this performance by the Doors wasn't filmed. But surprisingly, it seems there are next to no photos from it either. I only found one, and that was blurry and generally bad. However, there is some photo and video of the band members back stage. I found a photo of Morrison watching the festival stage from the side and decided to use that as the closest decent thing I could find. Unfortunately, the photo was taken while the sun was still out and the band played when it was dark. So I used Photoshop to darken the image, and especially darken the sky in the background. So at least this gives you a good idea of what Morrison was looking like (he'd recently shaved his beard off) and a bit of what he was wearing.

Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada, 9-13-1969, Part 7: John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band

Okay, it's time for a big one, the pinnacle of the 1969 Toronto Rock and Roll Revival Festival, even though it wasn't the final musical act. The star was John Lennon, supported by his wife Yoko Ono and a great band that included famous lead guitarist Eric Clapton.

This is probably going to be one of the longest write-ups I ever did, if not the longest. But I find the story behind Lennon's involvement in this concert to be very fascinating, and I hope you will too. Seriously, someone could make an entertaining movie out of this, especially if you add in the drama of how Lennon got invited to the festival in the first place, which I discussed previously. 

I think, after several decades, it's hard for anyone to imagine just what a big deal it was for Lennon to perform at this concert. He was still a member of the Beatles, though he wouldn't stay one for long (and this concert would have a major impact on that, as we shall see). The Beatles stopped touring in 1966. Since then, Lennon had only performed a couple of times. He played one song in 1968 as part of the Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus show. He performed as part of the Beatles on the rooftop of their recording studio in London earlier in 1969. And that was it for the last three years. None of the other Beatles had performed in public since 1966, and nobody expected Lennon would.

In the first album I posted from this festival, the Chicago set, I explained how the festival came to be, and how the recruitment of Lennon at the last minute saved the festival from cancellation due to poor ticket sales. Let me pick up that narrative, of what happened to Lennon after he agreed to perform in the festival, over the phone, and on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, just one day before the festival was due to happen.  

The first thing Lennon had to figure out when he got off the phone was who would be in his band, especially on such short notice. His first idea was to include another Beatle, George Harrison. But Harrison turned him down, saying it would seem too much like a Beatles concert with both of them in it, and the popular demand would be that they just play Beatles songs, when he knew Lennon wanted to do something different. 

Lennon didn't push back too much on that. He knew Harrison had brought up valid points. Besides, he had someone else in mind he also was very interested in: Eric Clapton. As mentioned above, Lennon performed one song ("Yer Blues," from the Beatles' "White Album") in the 1968 Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus show, and Clapton had been the lead guitarist for Lennon then. Lennon had a very good rapport with Clapton in general at the time. In fact, during the Beatles' contentious "Get Back" sessions in early 1969, when Harrison quit the Beatles for a few days, Lennon suggested they might replace him with Clapton.

Unfortunately, the call asking Lennon to take part in the festival came at the last minute, almost literally. It was already the evening before the festival when Lennon got the phone call! Immediately, Lennon had people at the Apple Records office he was at try to call Clapton to see if he wanted to take part. The assumption was that Clapton would be willing if he could be reached, but nobody could reach him. People not only repeatedly tried calling Clapton's house in the middle of the night, but they tried calling his friends, as well as night clubs and any other likely places he could be late at night. But nobody knew where he was.

Meanwhile, Lennon had to figure out who the other members of the band would be. The choice for bass player was easy: Klaus Voormann. Voormann, a German, had met the Beatles when they were struggling and playing small clubs in Hamburg, Germany, in the early 1960s. He'd stayed friends with them ever since then, even designing the cover of their 1966 album "Revolver." He'd also become a very talented bass player, joining the band Manfred Mann from 1966 until 1969 and working a lot as a session musician. Lennon would use him a lot as bassist in future years.

The choice of drummer, though, was a very surprising one: Alan White. At the time, White was a teenager and essentially a complete known. He was drumming in the obscure band Griffin. But, by chance, Lennon and Ono attended a Griffin concert at a small club the night before. Lennon had been very impressed by White's drumming. (Indeed, White was a talented drummer who was destined for bigger things. In 1972, he would join the prog rock band Yes and stay with them for about 50 years.) 

Somehow, Lennon was able to find out the name of the Griffin drummer, then get his telephone number, and called him. But White later recalled, "I hung up on him. I thought someone was playing a prank. John Lennon's not going to call me." However, Lennon kept calling him back and managed to convince him that he really was John Lennon and he really did want him in his new band, to perform on a different continent the next day! White agreed, even though that meant cancelling a Griffin concert scheduled at the same time. "What was I going to say? No, to a Beatle? I don't think so."

Meanwhile, Lennon was desperate to get in contact with Clapton. He stayed up until five in the morning with an assistant, calling everyone they could think of, to no avail. The airplane to take Lennon and his new band to Toronto was due to fly out of London at 10 in the morning. However, around 9:30, Lennon called festival promoter John Brower from the airport and said he would have to cancel his role in the festival. Clapton couldn't be found in time, and Lennon wasn't willing to perform without him.

Brower was incredulous, and horrified. He'd borrowed $25,000 from a man named Edjo, who was the head of a biker gang, to pay the fee for the Doors to headline the festival. If the festival ticket sales bombed or the festival was canceled altogether, that biker had promised to severely beat Brower, for starters. Brower considered fleeing Canada just to save his life!

But luckily, with Lennon and others waiting at the airport, he was given the word that Clapton had been found after all. It turned out that Clapton had gone to bed early and slept during the entire search, far from his phone. A telegram had been sent to his house as part of the desperate search to find him. In the morning, Clapton's gardener saw the telegram, opened it, saw the urgency of it, and woke him up. Clapton was very willing to perform with Lennon at the festival. Still, there was no way Clapton could make it to the airport in time to catch the flight overseas. It seemed all was lost. Lennon said he would send Brower a bouquet of flowers as an apology.

Brower later recalled, "I saw Edjo [the biker gang leader] putting the flowers on my grave; everything was destroyed." He decided to try to call Clapton, now that Clapton was awake, and beg for help.

He claims he told Clapton on the phone, "Listen man, you've gotta help me. If John Lennon does not show up today, I am ruined. I have to leave my city. I have to leave my country. In fact, I'm going to come over there and move in with John Lennon, with my wife and kid, okay? You need to get him back on the phone and tell him he has to come.' Clapton started yelling, 'I don't get up at this time of the morning for anybody. Fucking Lennon gets us out here and then sends fucking flowers?'"

Clapton then immediately phoned Lennon back. Brower recalled, "He was furious. He just [told Lennon], 'What the fuck are you doing? There's some guy on the other end of the phone who is ruined if we don't go over there. He said he's going to come over and move in with you!' We later found out... that Lennon was mortified that Eric Clapton was mad at him. I mean, you just don't get Eric Clapton mad at you."

So Lennon scrambled to come up with a new plan. Arrangements were made to book a flight to Toronto that left at 3:15 in the afternoon, London time. It would be a tight schedule, but that would get them in Toronto in time to perform at the end of the festival, thanks to the time zone difference. While waiting at the airport, Lennon held an impromptu press conference, announcing to the world his involvement in the festival.

Now, Lennon had his band and the ability to get to the festival in time. But the band hadn't practiced whatsoever. They tried their best to do that during the plane flight. But it wasn't easy, because they didn't have amplified instruments, and White had to "drum" using the seat back in front of him. They could barely hear themselves over the noise of the airplane. At least they agreed on the songs they would play. However, while Lennon told the other band members that Ono would be singing a couple of songs, they didn't practice those at all. Voormann later said, "So, no rehearsal with Yoko. He kept it really away from us. He just wanted us to be surprised."

I normally don't add pictures to my write-ups, but since this one is so long, here's a photo of Lennon and Clapton trying to practice while on the plane flight. 

The drama continued when Lennon and his band arrived in Toronto. To their surprise, they were met at the airport by a biker gang led by Edjo, the same gang leader who had loaned Brower $25,000. There was a limousine waiting. Edjo and about 100 of his bikers led a motorcade from the airport to the stadium where the festival was taking place. Police joined the motorcade, redirecting traffic so Lennon's motorcade could blow through all the red lights, just as if he was a president or prime minister.

Lennon arrived at the stadium while Cat Mother was performing, and word somehow spread throughout the crowd, raising the anticipation. But Lennon and his band went to a grubby back room and essentially stayed cooped up there for a couple of hours until it was time for them to go on stage. They tried to practice some more, but they still didn't have adequate instruments to practice on. They apparently spent most of the time trying to figure out the lyrics to the songs they had chosen to sing. They wrote them all out so Lennon could read them on stage. When their performance actually began though, Lennon would forget about the notes and just winged it, except for reading the lyrics to his one new song, "Cold Turkey." 

Speaking of "cold turkey," in 1969, Lennon had become a heroin addict. So had Clapton. Both of them didn't dare sneak drugs on the plane. So they were very worried about falling apart if they couldn't find some drugs in Toronto - if not heroin, then at least something similar. Soon, Lennon asked Brower, "Can you get us some coke?" Brower later recalled that he replied, "Let's get six Cokes over here right away.' I looked back at the two of them like, 'No problem. No problem,' and they just had this horrified look on their faces. They were looking at each other like 'Where are we?' And Yoko goes, 'No, coke for the nose.'"

Brower was determined to do whatever it took to make sure the festival would be a success. He remembered he had a friend who did drugs and was attending the festival. He actually arranged a stage announcement to call that friend backstage. The friend soon showed up, and was able to find some cocaine. Brower said, "I went backstage to give it to John, and I swear to God he looked at me like, 'You're Jesus and this is the Lord's water.'" Lennon made sure Clapton got some of the cocaine as well.

That problem was solved. But still, Lennon was in a bad way. He was repeatedly throwing up due to nervousness from giving his very first concert as a solo performer. He even threw up again a few minutes before getting on stage. He also was tired from getting almost no sleep, due to spending most of the night trying to find Clapton.

Kim Fowley, a famous music producer, was the emcee for the festival, so he was the one to introduce Lennon to the stage. According to Fowley, shortly before Lennon was due to go on stage, he asked Lennon how he was doing, and Lennon replied something to the effect of: "I'm terrified. Imagine if you were in the Beatles as the only band you've only been in your life. The first time you are to step on stage with people that weren't in the Beatles. You’re about to go on stage with your wife, a friend, a friend, and a complete stranger with songs you had learned acoustically on an airplane on the way over from England with jet lag. You would be terrified. Do something so the kids don't know how scared I am."

Fowley came up with an idea to boost his spirits. He remembered a scene from a movie, "Our Lady of Fatima," where a bunch of children had held candles up together, and he asked everyone to do the same, to show their support and encouragement. You can hear Fowley doing this at the start of this album. It seemed to have really helped. Lennon later commented, "They all lit candles or lights up and it was really beautiful, you know, and the vibes were fantastic."

Remarkably, it appears this was the very first time lights were held up like this at a major concert. Due to the prominence of the festival, as well as a movie documentary about it, the practice spread, and it soon became a fairly common concert ritual. So kudos to Fowley for that.

Finally, the time came for Lennon to start playing music. He and his band ran through some classic rock songs from the 1950s, which was very much in keeping with the overall theme of the festival. They also played one Beatles song, "Yer Blues." Then they played "Cold Turkey." Lennon had just written this song about his recent heroin addiction (which, thankfully he was able to kick about a year later). This was the first time it was performed in public. Lennon would release it as a single a month later, and it would make the Top Forty in both the U.S. and Britain. Then he performed "Give Peace a Chance," which he had released as a single in July.

Overall, the band sounded ragged due to lack of practice, but they made up for it with enthusiasm. Plus, they played the kinds of simple, rocking songs where being ragged actually fit. Most people in the audience, which filled the stadium by now, probably were disappointed not to be hearing Beatles classics. ("Yer Blues" was a relative obscurity.) However, it seems they were in awe to be hearing Lennon sing anything, and they were very enthusiastic overall.

Lennon later recalled, "I can't remember when I had such a good time. Yoko was holding a piece of paper with the words to the songs in front of me. But then she suddenly disappeared into her bag in the middle of the performance and I had to make them up because it's so long since I sang them that I've forgotten most of them. It didn't seem to matter."

(Indeed, Ono spent most of the first half of the set inside a big white bag on the stage floor! That was an example of her performance art that helped attract Lennon to her. Robby Krieger of the Doors, who was watching from the side of the stage, later said, "I really thought it was cool that Yoko decided to do the whole show in a laundry bag. I really gained respect for her for that.") 

Clapton also recalled, "It was really refreshing to do these songs because they are very simple and uncomplicated. John and I really love that music. That's the kind of music that turned John on initially, and it's the same for me. In fact, I could go on playing 'Money' and 'Dizzy Miss Lizzy' for the rest of my life."

So far, everything was going great. Lennon was particularly pleased at how the audience responded to his new song "Cold Turkey." He said, "The way that we got it together was like we'd all been playing together for years. Then, 'Give Peace a Chance,' which was just unbelievable."

Then it was time for Ono to sing her two songs. Keep in mind that not even the other band members other than Lennon knew what was going to happen next. For the first song, Lennon had merely told the others that he'd start playing a riff on his guitar and they should all repeat it over and over.

Nowadays, Ono is rather notorious for her screaming style. But at the time, the audience was in for a shock when she began her screaming singing. There hadn't been any concerts or albums with her singing like that, at least not that the wider public was aware of.

Voormann, the bassist, later recalled, "This scream came [from Ono]. I said, 'She must have stepped on a nail or something.' And Eric [Clapton] looked at me, 'What's this?!'" But the band gamely rolled with the punches and kept playing.

Ono's first song was somewhat palatable to the audience, since there at least was a kind of rock and roll beat to it. But her second song went on for much longer, and it was all Ono's wailing and guitar feedback. (The other band members kept rolling with the punches, with Clapton even singing some backing vocals to Ono.) Lennon said, "Yoko's first number had a bit of rhythm, but the second number was completely freaky. It was sort of the thing she did at Cambridge [earlier in 1969], but it was more like Toronto 1984."

Some people seemed to "get it," and others didn't. 

Voormann later said, "The funny thing is that when I was up there, I was behind Yoko, and I felt suddenly what she was doing. She was actually telling the people, in her way, that all those people are dying [in the Vietnam War]. Those tanks and bombs falling and dead bodies lying about. What she was doing was really, really felt like a dying bird. She couldn't have stood there and talked about it and said, 'Yeah, peace. Just think of Vietnam.' No. This was far ahead of its time. The audience didn't understand a thing."

By and large, it seems the audience was baffled by Ono's performance, but were fairly tolerant just because Lennon was involved. There was some booing, but it seems accounts of this were later exaggerated. Few people left, especially because the Doors were still due to perform next.

Lennon was encouraged by the crowd's reaction, overall. He later said in an interview, "A lot of the audience walked out, but the ones that stayed, they were in a trance, man. They just all came to the front." In a different later interview, he felt even more encouraged. ""All I can say is that there were maybe 25,000 people there and maybe 15 didn't like it. I didn't hear any booing. It's always the man from the daily paper who does!" He further added, "It gave me a great feeling, a feeling I haven't had for a long time. It convinced me to do more appearances, either with or without the rest of the Beatles. Everything went down so well."

Lennon was so excited about this concert performance that he wanted to immediately release it on album. However, his record company, Capitol Records, initially resisted the idea. "They said 'This is garbage, we're not going to put it out with her screaming on one side and you doing this sort of live stuff.' And they refused to put it out. But we finally persuaded them that people might buy this. Of course, it went gold the next day." 

The album was released later that year under the title "Live Peace in Toronto 1969," and it sold over 500,000 copies (which is gold status). This recording here is essentially the same as the official release. I'm including it so one can have the full recording and story of this festival in one place.

The songs sung by Lennon were on one side of the album and the songs sung by Ono on the other. At the time, the Lennon songs were praised by music critics and the Ono songs were panned. But interestingly, over time, some famous musicians claim they were more inspired by Ono's songs. For instance, Iggy Pop said that Ono's side of the record is "the part that stands out. The rest of it's just kinda pedestrian." Perry Farrell of Jane's Addiction has made similar comments, stating that Ono's sound experiments were a cornerstone of his musical education. 

Personally, I think Ono's songs here make for an interesting listen once or twice, but it's not something I'd want to hear more often than that. Of course, you can choose to keep or delete those songs.

I have one final note to make about Lennon's performance. It seems undeniable that this was a pivotal moment in his music career and even his entire life, because it's when he fully committed to leaving the Beatles. Prior to this festival, he was drifting away from the Beatles, but he hadn't really figured out what would come next, and he lacked the confidence to leave the most famous band in the world. The success of this performance gave him that confidence.

Shortly after the concert was over,  he told his new band mates he would be leaving the Beatles. "I told Alan [White] I was leaving. I told Eric Clapton and Klaus [Voormann] that I was leaving. I announced it to myself and to the people around me. 'It's over.'" As soon as he returned to London the next day, he told his manager Allen Klein the same thing. Then he broke the news to the other Beatles on September 20th, about a week after the festival. However, they all agreed to keep that news quiet while they renegotiated their record contract. In the end, they didn't go public with the news until April 1970, but they were effectively broken up until then, with the four of them never all getting together a single time.

So this leads to a big question: would the Beatles have endured for much longer had it not been for the improbable chain of events that led to Lennon performing at the festival? My guess is maybe they would have stuck together for a few more months, but not longer than that. A break-up was in motion over many issues, mainly financial ones relating to a dispute over who would manage the band after Brian Epstein died. Plus, Lennon really wanted to go off and do his own thing with Ono, and he was just gathering the confidence to make the break. Had it not been this concert, something else would have come along soon that played the same role. (In fact, the same band with some other musicians added played another concert in December 1969, which was a benefit for the non-profit UNICEF.) And the Beatles had just finished recording the "Abbey Road" album in August, so they probably wouldn't have wanted to record a new album until well into 1970 anyway. The odds of them sticking together long enough to record another album had this festival never happened would have been extremely low, in my opinion.

This album is 39 minutes long. 

01 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
02 Blue Suede Shoes (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
03 Money [That's What I Want] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
04 Dizzy Miss Lizzy (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
05 Yer Blues (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
06 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
07 Cold Turkey (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
08 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
09 Give Peace a Chance (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
10 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
11 Don't Worry Kyoko [Mummy's Only Looking for Her Hand in the Snow] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
12 John, John [Let's Hope for Peace] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/JyMeVpN6

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/oADkPwOhcIM78cY/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from the "Revival69" documentary. I wanted to get an image that showed Lennon and Clapton. I succeeded, but we can only see the back of Clapton's head. The white blob on the floor at the bottom is Yoko Ono inside a large bag.

Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada, 9-13-1969, Part 6: Little Richard

Here's the sixth album from the 1969 Toronto Rock and Roll Revival. It's a set by 1950s rock legend Little Richard.

At the time, the 1950s stars in the festival were at low points in their career (other than Jerry Lee Lewis, who got a second wind as a country music star). New musical trends had passed them by, and 1950s didn't really kick in until the 1970s. Most of them spent much of the year performing at small motels and hotels in Las Vegas. Despite this, Little Richard was known for having a massive ego, and it showed at this concert.

Kim Fowley, a famous music producer, was the emcee for the festival, and helped manage things backstage. In a later interview, he recalled, "One thing that happened was Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard all came up to me at the same time backstage and 'We all think all four of us are the king of rock and roll and how are you going to solve that problem in the introduction?' So, one became the king of jungle rock, one became the king of across the tracks rock, somebody became the grammar king rock, etc..., and suddenly everybody had slightly different items of introductions. They had concerns about billing since each one wanted to be the king of rock and roll that night, so I had to amend each mention. The visual of all four of them in front of me…egomaniacs whose time had passed demanding to be kings of rock and roll." 

Later on, Jim Morrison of the Doors and Doors manager Bill Siddons met with John Lennon and festival promoter John Brower to decide who would go on last. (As an aside, this seems to be the only time it's known for sure Morrison and Lennon met, although unfortunately nobody thought to take any photos of them together.) The Doors had signed a contract stating they would close the festival. But after that, Lennon unexpectedly joined the bill. The Doors wanted to go on before Lennon, because they feared the famous Beatle would take all the attention, and much of the crowd would leave after his set ended. But Lennon had been told the Doors would go on last, and he wanted to keep it that way. He was feeling nervous and didn't want the added pressure of being the closing act.

While this was being discussed, Little Richard walked by and overheard the group talking. Brower later recalled, "Richard came right out and said, 'I will close the show, the way the show should be closed, by me, the King. You know that, Mr. Lennon. You know that, Mr. Promoter. You know that, Mr. Doors. I am the King and I should close the show.' Now, all four of us were standing there with our jaws dropped, especially Lennon and Morrison who were getting absolutely spanked, and I just said, 'Richard you’re on next.' So, he walked off, and in his incredible melodious soprano, about 25 feet away, he said, 'I am the King. You know that!'"

As an aside, the dispute between Lennon and the Doors was resolved a short time later when Brower talked to Morrison and Siddons in private. He claims that he said, "I’m not having John Lennon close the show. He'll play when he wants to play. If you don't want to play, just go back to the hotel. You don't even have to, I don't care. I just have to take care of John Lennon. You get it? John Lennon." The fame of Lennon and the Beatles was so great at that time compared to the Doors that that settled the dispute. 

Egotistical or not, Little Richard was known to put on an energetic, exciting show. He certainly did that this time. The likes of John Lennon, Eric Clapton, and the Doors all watched the performance with great interest from the sides of the stage. In the documentary, Robby Krieger, lead guitarist for the Doors, said, "Little Richard just tore it up. I remember he did the last couple of songs standing on the piano. ... I was standing with Jim [Morrison] and he goes, 'Man, we gotta follow that?'"

This recording is unreleased. As was the case for most of the recordings from this festival, the vocals were low in the mix, so I boosted them with the use of the UVR5 audio editing program. 

This album is 28 minutes long. 

01 talk (Little Richard)
02 Blueberry Hill (Little Richard)
03 Lucille (Little Richard)
04 talk (Little Richard)
05 Good Golly, Miss Molly (Little Richard)
06 talk (Little Richard)
07 Rip It Up (Little Richard)
08 talk (Little Richard)
09 Tutti Frutti (Little Richard)
10 Keep A-Knockin' (Little Richard)
11 Hound Dog (Little Richard)
12 Jenny, Jenny (Little Richard)
13 Long Tall Sally (Little Richard)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/HuHnZd94

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/mxA11hSVNEztr64/file 

The cover photo is a screenshot I took from the 2022 documentary about this festival. 

Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada, 9-13-1969, Part 5: Alice Cooper

Here's the fifth album from the 1969 Toronto Rock and Roll Revival. This time, it's the band Alice Cooper. 

(Note that initially that was the name of the band as a whole, but over time it became the name of the lead singer as well. In this write-up, I use both meanings, depending on the context.)

This performance has been bootlegged for many years. But boy, was the common bootleg a hot mess! Apparently, the bootlegger decided that the concert was too short at only 20 minutes. So two songs were added ("Ain't That Just Like a Woman" and "Goin' to the River") that were not Alice Cooper at all. The actual performer for those is Ronnie Hawkins, and they were recorded in 1964. I guess the bootlegger's idea was to pick something so obscure that people wouldn't recognize the source, but the voice and musical style was totally different. To add insult to injury, all the song titles on the bootleg were misnamed. For instance, the first song "No Longer Umpire" was called "Painting a Picture." Probably, the bootlegger didn't know the titles and just made (bad) guesses. But this persisted for decades, as this performance kept getting re-released in the "grey market" under different titles and different packaging.

Needless to say, I've gotten rid of the Ronnie Hawkins songs, and I'm using the real song titles. 

Alice Cooper got to be a famous band later, but it's important to keep in mind that was later. The band's debut album, "Pretties for You," was released in June 1969, just a few months prior to this festival. It didn't sell well, barely scraping into the bottom of the Top 200 albums chart. (200, mind you, not 100.) In 1971, the band would connect with producer Bob Ezrin who would drastically change their sound, resulting in a million-selling album that year, and quite a few more after that. But at this point, Alice Cooper was little known, much like other bands at the festival that have largely been forgotten since, such as Milkwood, Nucleus, or Whiskey Howl.

It seems the reason the band's set took place relatively late in the festival was because they were also the backing band for 1950s rock star Gene Vincent, and they did their set right after his set. One would think that wouldn't have been a good match, but the band members actually grew up listening to 1950s stars like Vincent, and were big fans of him. 

In the excellent 2022 documentary movie about this festival, "Revival69: The Concert That Rocked the World," the band's lead singer Alice Cooper said, "Backing up Gene Vincent was a very cool thing, really kind of a feather in our cap. Nobody had ever asked us to back them up before. And we were a pretty good rock and roll band, so we said 'sure.' You know, 'Be-Bob-a-Lula,' 'Woman Love,' all those songs. That would be a privilege to us."

It's unfortunate that I don't have any songs from Vincent's set to post. However, you can see him singing brief part of songs documentary mentioned above. I was able to record a section from that documentary where Vincent was introducing the members of the Alice Cooper band during his set. That's the first track here. Sadly, Vincent would die of heart failure in 1971, less than two years after this concert.

The performance by Alice Cooper was more performance art than a musical performance per se. I highly recommend you watch the documentary mentioned above, especially for the scenes from their set. They're showing doing all kinds of strange things. For instance, Cooper is seeing wildly waving a broom above it his head. Then at another point, he's simply carrying around a carved out watermelon. Then there's a scene of two band members viciously fighting each other while rolling around on the stage floor. 

Cooper said in the documentary, "We were always the underdog, so when we get on the stage, you're never gonna forget this show, musically and visually. We were just sort of this thing that existed that nobody could define, some sort of dark, hard rock vaudeville.We were an affront to everybody. We were the future."

He added, "At the end of the show was a feather pillow that got sprayed across the stage and blew the feathers up, 'cos it gave a beautiful effect on the lights. Feathers everywhere, it looked like a snowstorm, and then you hit it with CO2 and it even becomes more of a snowstorm. So the Doors were over here, and John [Lennon] and Yoko [Ono] were over here [at the side of the stage], and they were like, 'Yeah!' They're seeing this as art. It was truly art."

Someone connected to the band brought a live chicken in a pillowcase to the stage, surprising Cooper with it. Cooper explained in the documentary, "And the next thing you know, there's a chicken on stage. It seemed in the mayhem that it had feathers and wings, it should fly. I picked up the chicken, I figured I'd throw this in the audience. I figured, "Well, I'll throw this in the audience, and somebody will catch it, take it home, and it'll be a pet and they'll call it 'Alice.' [But it turns out] chickens don't fly as much as they plummet. Of course, the next day in the paper it said, 'Alice Cooper Kills Chicken.'"

That, in turn, quickly morphed into a story that Cooper had bitten off the head of a chicken. Rumors of that would follow their career for decades. But also, their wild performance got them a lot of attention and exposure at the time. It was their big break. It also was a template for their concerts once they became big "shock rock" stars in the early 1970s. Cooper said, "Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, that show in particular, was what launched us."

This album is 21 minutes long. 

01 talk by Gene Vincent (Alice Cooper)
02 No Longer Umpire (Alice Cooper)
03 Lay Down and Die, Goodbye (Alice Cooper)
04 Don't Blow Your Mind (Alice Cooper)
05 Freak Out (Alice Cooper)
06 Fields of Regret (Alice Cooper)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/y5bzRxG2

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/4T42AiQgdfPf5pK/file

The cover photo needs some explanation. Since the chicken throwing incident is so notorious, I wanted to have that for the cover. I watched the footage of the chicken throwing in one of the documentaries about this festival, and took a screenshot of the moment where the chicken is most visible. It's the white blog in the middle of the image. I didn't use Krea AI to improve the image, because that would probably only mess things up, due to all the feathers in the air and such.