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Keystone Palo Alto, at 260 California Avenue, opened 20 January 1977. [10] The Keystone Palo Alto closed in 1986. [9] The club became the Vortex in the mid-1980s, then The Edge in 1989, [11] and closed in April 2000. It was remade into a restaurant, finally as Illusions, a restaurant and nightclub.
It was recorded on February 13, 1976, at the Keystone in Berkeley, California. It contains most of the concert from that date, missing only the opening song, "How Sweet It Is". It also includes two bonus tracks from a show recorded two days later. It was released on June 14, 2024. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The premiere season was during the summer of 1986, it was planned to open with a concert by The Grateful Dead, who had to cancel as a result of Jerry Garcia's coma. The first performance at the amphitheater was comedienne Roseanne Barr , [ citation needed ] opening for Julio Iglesias on June 29, 1986.
Lonnell Williams, for example, paid $400 for a Stockholm ticket that would have cost him nearly $1,500 in Atlanta. As he told Today in May 2023, the entire European trip — including hotel ...
The Keystone: Earthquake February 26, 1977 Stoneground: February 28, 1977 Palo Alto: The Keystone — March 2, 1977 Sacramento: Slick Willy's March 4, 1977 Bremerton: Natacha's Baby: March 5, 1977 Aberdeen: Rocker Tavern — March 6, 1977* Seattle: Olympic Hotel: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: March 10, 1977 Encinitas: La Paloma Theatre ...
The Pacific Amphitheatre is regularly ranked in the top 10 of international venues in Pollstar's third quarter Worldwide Ticket Sales chart. [3] The fairgrounds are surrounded by dense residential developments and the amphitheatre was the focus of numerous noise complaints and litigation [4] from local residents resulting in its closure in 1995 ...
Reconstruction performed only for an eight-month period in 1979. The band's first performance was January 30, 1979 at the Keystone in Berkeley, California. Its last performance was on September 22, 1979, at the Keystone in Palo Alto, California. During that period, the band played 57 concerts, all of them in California and Colorado.
Tensions grew between Mogg and Schenker in the late 1970s, possibly owing to Schenker often leaving before or during shows. Soon after UFO's show at the Keystone Palo Alto, on 29 October 1978, Schenker left the band. [14] "Obviously we were disappointed," recalled Pete Way. "It's not easy to promote an album without a guitarist.