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Eddie & the Tide (originally named "The Suburbs" until forced to change their name by court order) played frequently during the early 1980s in the Santa Cruz and San Francisco Bay Area at venues such as the Monterey Music Hall in Monterey, The Keystone in Palo Alto, The Keystone (aka The Stone) in San Francisco, and The Catalyst in Santa Cruz ...
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.
JamBase wrote, "While it is not strictly speaking a complete show, The Jerry Garcia Collection, Vol 2 is sequenced to approximate a two-set club gig, highlighting performances recorded November 17 and 18, 1975, during a pair of intimate gigs at Keystone Berkeley in front of a hometown crowd.
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]
Garcia Plays Dylan is an album composed of various live performances featuring Jerry Garcia playing covers of Bob Dylan songs. It is culled from performances from 1973–1995, and features Garcia playing with Grateful Dead, Legion of Mary, Jerry Garcia Band, and Garcia-Saunders. [3]
The master recording of the November 8, 1976 concert was recovered by Donna Jean Godchaux. While moving in 2015, she found the reel-to-reel tapes in a box in her possession. [6] [7] In a 2016 interview, Donna Jean talked about being in the Jerry Garcia Band.
Pure Jerry: Keystone Berkeley, September 1, 1974 is a three-CD live album by the Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders Band. It contains the complete concert performed at the Keystone in Berkeley, California, on September 1, 1974. The fourth in the Pure Jerry series of archival concert albums, it was released on December 28, 2004. [1] [2] [3]
He liked "Music Box Dancer" and added it to his station's playlist. The song's success at CFRA was swift. "Music Box Dancer" premiered on CFRA's top 30 chart on May 5, 1978; [5] by June 30, it was the #1 song on the station's playlist. [6] "Music Box Dancer" also began picking up play on other Canadian stations around this time, becoming a ...