Showing posts with label 1974. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1974. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2026

"Bill Graham Presents Sounds Of The City" Winterland Ballroom, San Francisco, CA: September 24, 1974-March 30, 1975

 

 


"Bill Graham Presents Sounds Of The City" Winterland Ballroom, San Francisco, CA: September 24, 1974-March 30, 1975
Bill Graham's last show at the Fillmore West had been on July 4, 1971. From that point onwards, Graham had promoted shows all around the Bay Area. But his primary concert homes were at the Berkeley Community Theater and at the Winterland Ballroom at Post and Steiner. Winterland, originally conceived as an ice rink, had been opened in 1928. Just two blocks from the Fillmore Auditorium, in the glory days of the 60s it had been the "upgrade" for Fillmore shows that transcended the auditorium itself, like for Cream or The Band. Many of the "classic" BGP shows of the 1960s had actually been at Winterland, which a careful analysis of the fine print on the posters will reveal.

By the 1970s, the polarity had reversed somewhat. Rock concerts were bigger business than ever. The Winterland ballroom, officially with a capacity of 5400 (ha ha, for any old San Franciscans), was being sized out by the Oakland Coliseum and the Cow Palace. Acts like Bob Dylan, George Harrison and Elton John were not going to play Winterland, even for multiple nights, when they could pack a hall three times as big.

At the same time, the rock audience had gotten older since the 1960s. By the mid-seventies, a lot of rock fans had cars and jobs, and while they weren't as free as they used to be, they weren't as constrained either. Around the Bay Area, nightclubs were making inroads into the rock market. Rock fans were over 21, they could drive, they didn't need their parents permission to do anything and they could have fun on a school night if they were so inclined--they weren't in school, after all. Clubs like the Keystone Berkeley, the Great American Music Hall, the Orphanage and others were booking original music and thriving. Bill Graham wasn't going to let this pass without competing.

None of the bands from the BGP Fillmore poster for the weekend of July 1-2-3 '66 had an album except Love (who were from Los Angeles)

Back In The Day

When the Fillmore Auditorium and the Avalon Ballroom began putting on regular concerts in 1966, by and large the fans coming to those shows knew nothing about the music being performed. This fact has been muted by the famous posters, where we see a billing with, say, the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service from 1966 and imagine the possibilities. The reality is that in 1966, while the Dead and Quicksilver were written about in the San Francisco Chronicle and elsewhere, they had no records, there was no radio play, and only people who had heard them in concert knew their music. Anyone attending a Fillmore concert by those band was depending on the implied status of word-of-mouth--now the province of "Social Media Influencers"--to make something worthy of checking out. Concerts at the Fillmore were only two or three dollars, not much even then. So fans came from the suburbs to check out the Fillmore (or the Avalon) because they heard it might be cool. In fact, it was--but fans didn't know it until they got there.

By 1974, that had changed, not least because of concerts promoted by Bill Graham Presents. Rock concerts were a regional thing now, not local. When Bob Dylan and The Band had played the Oakland Coliseum in February of 1974, for example, it had been a seismic event across the entire Bay Area. There had been huge rock concerts at Kezar and Oakland Coliseum Stadiums (headlined by the Grateful Dead, Led Zeppelin and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young) and entire high schools had made the pilgrimage

Live rock music was bigger than ever, but it was focused on the biggest artists with the highest profile. To the extent there was fan interest in checking out something new, that had migrated from the old ballrooms to Bay Area nightclubs like Keystone Berkeley or the Lion's Share in Marin. One byproduct of the focus on big stars, however, was that it was harder to find acts to put in Winterland every weekend. There were fewer bands that could fill up the 5400-capacity arena, much less for multiple nights. So it was in Bill Graham's interest to get Bay Area rock fans interested in checking out new music in return for low admission prices.

Sounds Of The City
The stated concept for BGP's "Sounds Of The City" concerts was that they would feature San Francisco bands on Tuesday night for a $2.00 or $2.50 admission charge. Of course, regular concert prices were about $5.00 or $6.00, and even with inflation we can't help but chuckle at that. Nonetheless, it was shrewd. Tuesday night wasn't a big club night, and the type of band that would headline a nightclub on a weekend was very likely free on Tuesday night. Also, by having three bands--essentially all nightclub headliners--the Winterland show was a bargain. 

Back in '74 a lot of rock fans weren't even 21, or at least didn't have a 21-year old girlfriend. So the fact that Winterland didn't require ID, didn't have a two-drink minimum and offered 3 bands for one admission was a pretty good deal. There was a bar at Winterland, in fact, in the rear on the balcony, but the hall wasn't designed for a drinking clientele. Graham's strategy was clearly to introduce the local rock audience to some good local bands, and build some local acts that could play Winterland on weekends when the major touring acts weren't available. It was an intriguing plan. It almost worked.         i.


September 24, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Jefferson Starship/Earth Quake/Link Wray/The Rubinoos (Tuesday)
The Bill Graham organization introduced the Sounds Of The City Tuesday night series with great fanfare. In particular, they promised a "Surprise Mystery Guest" for the opening night. In fact, it was Jefferson Starship, playing their first concert with their new lineup. The band had toured in the Spring of 1974, but the Starship had released a new album, Dragonfly, in early September. Although no ads listed the Starship, it was made pretty clear on FM rock radio that they would be appearing, so Winterland was pretty full. The lineup of Jefferson Starship was a classic one, the core of the band that would lead them back to rock and roll prominence

Grace Slick-vocals
Paul Kantner-vocals, rhythm guitar
David Freiberg-vocals, keyboards, bass
Craig Chacuiqo-lead guitar
Papa John Creach-electric violin
Pete Sears-bass, keyboards
John Barbata-drums

Jefferson Starship had toured in the Spring because the members of the Jefferson Airplane were basically broke. Record sales had declined, and their contract with RCA that allowed them unlimited studio time was of course charged against their royalties, so the band members had no cash coming in at all. Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady had refused to reunite with the Airplane for a 1974 tour, so Kantner had put together another band to tour. David Freiberg, recruited in 1972 to take over Marty Balin's vocal parts, had taken over the bass guitar slot. Kantner recruited lead guitarist Craig Chacuico, then not yet 20 years old, from another Grunt act out of Sacramento, called Steelwind. Jorma's brother Peter, also an artist on RCA's Grunt Records label, was signed on as an additional lead guitarist (who also played bass,when Freiberg played organ). The band sounded pretty good, and ticket sales were good, but Peter Kaukonen wasn't a good fit. 

The band had sounded pretty good, and ticket sales were good, but Peter Kaukonen hadn't been a good fit. So Kantner left lead guitar duties to Chacuiqo, and signed up was veteran English bassist Pete Sears, recently relocated to the Bay Area. Sears had played with Rod Stewart and many others in London. Sears excelled at both bass and keyboards, freeing up Freiberg to sing. On stage, Freiberg could take the instrument Sears wasn't playing. It made for a good live ensemble. The band's new album Dragonfly was getting plenty of airplay on KSAN, and the album even featured a guest appearance by former Airplane lead singer Marty Balin on the song "Caroline."

The other acts on the initial Tuesday night bill were more typical of the planned Sounds Of The City fare. Earth Quake had formed at Berkeley High School in the 60s as The Purple Earthquake. In 1972, they would release their second album on A&M Records, Why Don't You Try Me. A&M would drop Earth Quake by the end of that year. Earth Quake had refused to give up, however, and lead guitarist Robbie Dunbar and singer John Doukas kept the flag flying. 

By 1974, Earth Quake had built up a huge following at the Long Branch, regularly headlining Friday night shows. With their own fan base, they were starting to build a crowd at the Keystone Berkeley as well. Earth Quake played in a somewhat anachronistic "British Invasion" style, but it would end up coming back into fashion. Earth Quake had original material, but they also covered obscure hits from the 60s (like "Friday On My Mind," by the Australian band The Easybeats), so they distinguished themselves from other bands. Earth Quake would resuscitate their career in 1975 by releasing records on their own label, Beserkeley Records, presaging the punk/DIY movement by some years. 


Guitarist Link Wray was a Bay Area club act, but he was also a rock legend. Fred Lincoln "Link" Wray (1929-2005) was from Dunn, NC. Wray's first hit was the 1958 guitar instrumental "Rumble," followed later by "Raw-Hide." Way back in the 1950s, Wray was using feedback and distortion, and he pretty much single-handedly invented the power chord. Wray's records were an inspiration to young guitarists like Pete Townshend. By 1971, Wray had moved to the Bay Area.

Wray had recorded for a variety of labels throughout the sixties, mostly singles. He started to release albums in the early 70s, mostly recorded at his own 3-track studio in rural Maryland. In 1973, Polydor had released Be What You Want To, recorded at Wally Heider Studios. It had all-pro lineup of Bay Area session heavies, including Jerry Garcia (on pedal steel) and David Bromberg. In person, Wray usually worked with members of John Cippolina's bands. sometimes including Cippolina himself. In 1974, Polydor had released another album, The Link Wray Rumble, again recorded in Maryland.

The Rubinoos were the junior partners of Earth Quake. The band was led by lead singer Jon Rubin, and guitarist Tommy Dunbar, brother of Earth Quake's lead guitarist Robbie Dunbar. The Rubinoos were much poppier and not as loud as Earth Quake, but their seemingly out-of-date style also became more popular later in the 1970s (for the record, I saw the Rubinoos in Berkeley in 1976, and they were great).

October 1, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Butch Whacks and The Glass Packs/Gideon & Power/Holly Penfield (Tuesday)
The second weekend of Sounds Of The City had a more typical configuration, with three popular acts in the local clubs, but no marquee headliner.

Butch Whacks and His Glass Packs were a 15-piece rock and roll band dedicated to performing old style rock and roll hits from the 50s and early 60s. The band got their start as students at St. Mary’s College in Moraga playing frat parties, and eventually morphed into a very popular bay area club and theater act.

Gideon & Power's only lp, released on Bell Records in 1972

Gideon & Power
was a high-energy Gospel/Soul band from San Francisco with a dynamic lead singer, Gideon Daniels. and a swinging soul chorus. Their one album (I Gotta Be Me, released on Bell in 1972) featured former AB Skhy guitarist Dennis Geyer and Elvin Bishop keyboardist Stephen Miller. Gideon & Power was a sort of farm team for the Elvin Bishop Group (apparently Elvin and Gideon had been housemates at some point). By 1974, Mickey Thomas was singing in the Power band, and Thomas credits Gideon Daniels with teaching how to sing. Somewhere along this time, Melvin Seals would join on organ, although I don't know if he was already in the band.

Holly Penfield has been a singing star in London and Europe for over 25 years, known for her sophisticated jazz styles. Yet Penfield was a native of San Francisco, and back in the 1970s, she was writing her own songs and accompanying herself on piano. At this time, of course, Carole King was one of the most popular recording artists in the world, and the singer/songwriter track was a viable one. Penfield played many club gigs around the Bay Area, but did not thrive until she went to London and re-invented herself in the 1980s.


October 8, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Alice Stuart and Snake/Clover/Steamin' Freeman/Atlanta Rhythm Section
(Tuesday)
Atlanta Rhythm Section was not a local band, of course. They were the house band for Studio One in suburban Atlanta. They had just released their third album, Third Annual Pipe Dream, on Polydor. The band's management got them on to the Tuesday night bill in order to showcase the group to San Francisco fans. The local rock critics (the Examiner's Phil Elwood and the Chronicle's Joel Selvin) both mentioned that there was some "controversy" over ARS' booking for a supposedly local forum. This means that band managers complained to the writers, as some sort of backhanded criticism of Bill Graham Presents, since local fans had no such rigid expectations. ARS was actually pretty good, and in 1977 they would have a big hit with "So Into You."

Clover's Fourty-Niner album released by Fantasy Records in 1971

Clover
was a Marin band, but one whose members were really from Marin. Clover had formed in late 1967, out of a group called The Tiny Hearing Aid Company. Fantasy Records, flush with Creedence money, had signed Clover. The band released two poorly-produced but pretty good albums, their self-titled debut in 1970, followed by Fourty-Niner in 1971. Clover was a four-piece band, with lead and pedal steel guitarist John McFee, lead singer and guitarist Alex Call, bassist John Ciambotti and drummer Mitch Howie (McFee, Call and Howie had been in Tiny Hearing Aid). Clover worked out of Mill Valley.

By the end of '71, Fantasy had dropped Clover. Paradoxically, the band went and added two additional members, keyboardist Sean Hopper, who joined in August '71, and singer and harmonica player Hugh Cregg (aka Huey Louis), who joined shortly after.  Both were from Marin as well. Eventually, Hugh Cregg--today better known as Huey Lewis--and Sean Hopper finally scored with The News, John McFee was in the Doobie Brothers and other hit bands, and Alex Call wrote a big hit single for Tommy Tutone ("867-5309/Jenny"), but Clover had to grind it out for years before that. Elwood reviewed the show, and specifically praised Hugh Cregg (Lewis)

Believin'-Alice Stuart & Snake (1972, Fantasy Records)

Alice Stuart
was a fine blues guitarist and singer. Although she was from Seattle, she had been playing in the Bay Area since about 1964. Stuart had performed and recorded in a variety of solo and group settings. Since 1971, she had been leading an electric trio named Snake, and they had released the album Believing on Fantasy Records in 1972. Stuart was still grinding it out in the clubs, and generally well-regarded, but Snake was treading water. Elwood mentioned that Snake was now a quartet, including organist John Detherage.

Steamin' Freeman included violinist and lead singer Freeman Lockwood and keyboard player Dorothy Moskowitz. Moskowitz had been in the unique band United States Of America around 1968, and had toured with Country Joe McDonald for a few years in the early 70s. The band would release their debut Greatest Hits album on their own Caramba label in 1975.

Journey's debut album on Columbia was released in April 1975

October 15, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Journey/Redwing/Nightshift
(Tuesday)
The ensemble that would become Journey had originally come together in early 1973, with the intention of being a studio band like the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section (their original name was the Golden Gate Rhythm Section). Guitarist Neal Schon was the anchor, and initially he was going to work with bassist Pete Sears and drummer Gregg Errico. The unit had evolved, however, and once organist Gregg Rolie left Santana to join them, they realized they were a band and not a rhythm section.

Journey had debuted on New Year's Eve, 1973, opening for Santana at Winterland. The band had been Schon on lead guitar, Rolie on organ and vocals, drummer Prairie Prince from The Tubes, and bassist Ross Valory and guitarist George Tickner, both from an obscure Lafayette, CA band Frumious Bandersnatch. A few gigs later, Journey realized they were a real band, and Prairie Prince in turn remained with The Tubes. For a drummer, Journey had recruited the great Aynsley Dunbar, most famously ex-Mothers Of Invention (and Jeff Beck, John Mayall and others). The new Journey had debuted at The Great American Music Hall in February of 1974, and were promptly signed by Columbia. The band had played Winterland a few times as an opening act, but this Tuesday night was their first headline concert booking there in their home city.


Redwing had roots in Sacramento. Some form of the band had been together since 1963. Initially a folk trio (Tim Ron & Tom), then a surf band (The Contenders) and then Beatles-style (The New Breed). When they were signed and moved to Los Angeles, they had released a heavily produced 1968 album as Glad. When bassist Timothy B. Schmidt left to join Poco in 1969, Glad renewed itself as the country rock band Redwing. By 1973, the band had released four albums on Fantasy. Original Contenders members Tom Phillips (guitar, and later pedal steel), Ron Flogel (guitar) and George Hullin (drums) were still in the band, along with bassist Buddy Halsam (who had replaced Andy Samuel, who had replaced Schmidt). Redwing mostly played Bay Area clubs, and their current Fantasy album was Dead Or Alive.

Frank Biner and Nightshift regularly played weeknights at the Keystone Berkeley. Over the course of the 70s, Tower Of Power recorded a few of his songs, and he put out a few albums as a bandleader, but back in '74 Biner was just another guy working the clubs. Biner was originally from Chicago, where he had recorded a few singles, but he had moved to the East Bay in the late 60s.

Pablo Cruise's debut album would be released on A&M Records in August 1975

October 22, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Stoneground/Pablo Cruise/Nimbus
(Tuesday)
Stoneground had originally formed in 1970, as the "house band" for Tom Donahue's Medicine Ball Caravan adventure. They had released a few albums, and had built a sort of following, but they had broken up in early 1973. In 1974, the core members re-formed the group. This time, instead of 5 lead singers, there was just one, and initially there were only four band members, fronted by lead guitarist/singer Tim Barnes and organist Fred Webb. Terry Davis was on bass, and Sammy Piazza (ex-Hot Tuna) was the drummer. Although I'm sure they did some of the same songs, the new Stoneground would have only been vaguely similar to the earlier incarnation. 

Pablo Cruise had formed in 1973 with veterans from other local bands. Pianist Cory Lerios and drummer Steve Jenkins, both from Palo Alto, had been in Stoneground. Bassist Bud Cockrell had been in It's A Beautiful Day, and guitarist David Jenkins rounded out the group. Jenkins and Cockrell were the primary singers, but Lerios joined in for harmonies. The band would release their debut album on A&M Records in 1975. While Pablo Cruise had a smooth, poppy rock sound, they actually had a more expansive and flowing live musical style. Lerios in particular was an excellent pianist and he sounded great in concert. Pablo Cruise was starting to make a name for themselves locally, even though their debut album had not yet been released.

Nimbus was a band from Southern Alameda County (Hayward or Fremont) that had been around since at least 1970. It seemed to be a pattern at the Sounds Of The City concerts that two of the bands were at the level where they headlined the bigger clubs (like the Keystone Berkeley) on weekends, and the third band was a little lower on the tree.

October 29, 1974 Ali-Foreman fight pay-per-view at Winterland (Tuesday)
Bill Graham Presents used Winterland as a site for a Pay-Per-View showing of the Ali-Foreman fight.

October 31, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: The Tubes/Crossfire/Lightyear Halloween Masquerade Ball (Thursday)
Since the Ali-Foreman fight had taken up Winterland on Tuesday, Sounds Of The City was moved to Thursday. Thursday was Halloween, and no band was more San Francisco-on-Halloween than The Tubes.

Tubes lead singer Fee Waybill as Quay Lewd, ca 1974-75, probably singing "White Punks On Dope"

The Tubes'
members were from Phoenix, AZ. Initially, some of them had been in a band called The Beans (guitarist Bill Spooner, organist Vince Welnick, bassist Rick Anderson) that had moved to San Francisco in late 1970 and had even played the Fillmore West Tuesday audition night under that name. They played jammed out blues-rock, like every other aspiring Fillmore band. Some members quit, however, so two other Phoenix musicians (drummer Prairie Prince and guitarist Roger Steen) joined the band in March, 1972, and the band changed their name.

The Tubes played a sort of progressive rock, quite well, but with satiric lyrics and an engaging stage show. Their roadie John "Fee" Waybill had taken over as lead singer. Prince's art school pal Michael Cotten was added on synthesizer, as well as chief creator of props. The group were supposedly quite popular in gay bars, normally not a money making proposition for long-haired rock bands. In an era where every San Francisco band stared at their guitars and talked about how much they loved the blues, The Tubes were raving about "White Punks On Dope."

Unlike every other San Francisco band, The Tubes played neither jamming blues nor funky soul. More importantly, all of their songs featured Fee wearing different costumes and inhabiting different personas. In the early days, many of the props and costumes were just made out of cardboard, but The Tubes were genuinely theatrical in a way that was unlike any other San Francisco band. In effect, each song was a miniature live music video, but of course MTV was still 8 years in the future. It's hard to fathom today how far ahead of their time The Tubes were back in /74.

By Fall 1974, The Tubes were getting noticed on the club circuit. The Tubes had opened for Led Zeppelin at Kezar Stadium in 1973, and also for a few Winterland shows. In the Sunday Chronicle of July14, 1974 critic Joel Selvin had devoted a whole column to them. Selvin's column introduced the Tubes to the Bay Area music public at large--I had never heard of them before that--even though they had no recordings. The Tubes were soon signed by A&M, and would release their debut album in the Fall of 1975.

A unique feature of the Tuesday night Sounds Of The City shows was that professional audio and sometimes even video of the performances has been retained. Always ahead of his time, Bill Graham had a black-and-white video screens set up behind the stage at Winterland, broadcasting close-ups of the musicians  as they performed. We take that for granted, and expect it in color and hi-def, but even grainy B&W closeups of the guitarist's fingers were revelatory in 1974. Many of these videos are now accessible at Wolfgang's Vault, on YouTube and the site itself (many more of the tapes were lost in a 1985 Bill Graham fire, sadly). The Tubes Halloween '74 show is accessible, and it's so far ahead of it's time that it seems contemporary. The Tubes made for particularly good video, obviously, and their 1974 and '75 Winterland shows were regularly broadcast between sets at other Winterland shows until the old ice rink closed.

I know that Lightyear was a local progressive rock band, so they probably fit in with the Tubes sound, if not their stage act. I think Crossfire was a Marin band.


November 5, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Chepito/Dakila/Mingo
(Tuesday)
All three of the bands had direct links to San Francisco Latin Rock and Santana.

Jose "Chepito" Areas had been the timbales player in the Woodstock version of Santana. When the band had gone through numerous personnel changes in the early 70s, Chepito had gone solo. In 1974, he had released an album on Columbia.

Dakila's 1972 debut album on Epic Records
Dakila was a home-grown Latin rock band from the Mission District, just like the Santana band. Dakila, however, was made up of Filipino-American musicians. For a variety of historical and geographic reasons, Filipinos were an integral part of San Francisco culture, so while Dakila was proud of their Mission roots and their Latin-rock style, they rightly saw themselves as distinctly different from Mexican-heritage bands like Santana or Malo.

Conguero James "Mingo" Lewis had joined the Santana band under emergency circumstances in New York in 1971, and ultimately moved to San Francisco. Mingo was a regular contributor to numerous albums in the San Francisco studios. He was also a regular part of guitarist Al DiMeola's touring band (and albums) for several years in the 1970s, and in 1977 he would join The Tubes. 

In 1974, however, Mingo also formed his own fusion jazz band, with some very heavy players. The band included Alameda, CA guitarist Pat Thrall, ex-Cookin' Mama (and later in Automatic Man and the Pat Travers Band), bassist Brian Godula (ex-Stoneground), drummer Chuck Burgi (later Brand X and Rainbow) and keyboard player Kincaid Miller (Sapo).

November 12, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Toni Brown and Terry Garthwaite/ Anna Rizzo and The A Train/Yazoo (Tuesday)
Joy Of Cooking had been a Berkeley band, founded in 1969. The leaders were guitarist Terry Garthwaite and pianist Toni Brown, both of whom sang and wrote. What distinguished Joy Of Cooking was that while Garthwaite and Brown were fine singers and songwriters, they rocked pretty hard as well. Joy Of Cooking had long improvised sections between verses, just like bands with boys in them.  Joy Of Cooking had established themselves at Mandrake's, playing weeknights. By 1972, they had released their third album for Capitol, Castles. While locally popular, they hadn't been able to get over the hump and they had disbanded. 

In 1973, however, Brown and Garthwaite reconvened and recorded an album in Nashville (Cross Country, also on Capitol). Toni Brown also released a Nashville album in 1974 (Good For You). By the end of 1974, they were touring together. At this time, their emphasis was more on the singer/songwriter side, rather than the danceable jam music of Joy Of Cooking. 

Anna Rizzo had been in the Berkeley band Sky Blue in the 60s. While she sang and wrote, typical of the "chick singers" of 60s Berkeley bands, Rizzo also played drums. In the 70s, Rizzo largely played with Country Joe McDonald in his All-Star Band, mostly as a drummer. In 1974, she fronted her own band, Anna Rizzo and The A-Train. The band featured veterans of many other Berkeley ensembles:

Anna Rizzo - lead vocals
Phil Greenberg - guitar, vocals
Carl Natt - saxophone
Tucki Bailey - saxophone, flute, vocals
Austin DeLone- piano
John Dunstan - bass
Jay David - drums

Some audio from the BGP vaults has persisted as well. Thus, remarkably, even though Anna Rizzo And The A-Train never released an album, and was only together for a short time, a professionally recorded live tape is just a few clicks away. Pretty good music for $2.00 on a Tuesday night.

Opening act Yazoo is unknown to me.

Yesterday & Today, probably from the late 1970s

November 19, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Link Wray/Nimbus/Yesterday & Today
(Tuesday)
Link Wray returned to a Tuesday night show, this time as an implicit headliner. Nimbus also returned.

Yesterday & Today, later famous in the 80s as Y&T, were a hard rock band from Oakland. For whatever reasons, they are always associated with Hayward, but they were actually founded in Oakland. When Y&T hit it big in the 80s, they were somewhat lumped in with Heavy Metal--I saw them at Heavy Metal Day On The Green in the mid-80s with Motley Crue and Poison, for example--but they actually preceded the genre.

Yesterday & Today had been formed in Oakland in 1972, as a cover band. The name was chosen because that Beatles' album happened to be on the turntable when they got a call for their first booking. At some point, guitarist Dave Meniketti joined, and they started playing original material. Yesterday & Today sounded more or less in the vein of Humble Pie, loud and rocking, with high energy vocals, but still playing within a song structure. In the 70s, at least, the band did not fall into the cliche of playing elaborate little hooks that were sort of "pseudo-prog" (one of the marks of latter metal bands).

The band would play all over the Bay Area and open for numerous Winterland concerts in the next several years, even though they did not rise to success until the 80s. Their first album would be released on London Records in 1976. Ultimately they changed their name to Y&T when they signed with A&M in 1980. They would finally hit it big with their sixth album, In Rock We Trust. 

November 26, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Earth Quake/Grayson Street/Soundhole (Tuesday)
Earth Quake returned, a clear sign that Graham was trying to establish bands as regular performers, not just showcase them once.

Grayson Street were a sort of roots-rock band from the East Bay. They were co-led by harmonica player Rick Kellogg and tenor saxophonist Terry Hanck, both of whom sang. Grayson Street never recorded, but many of its members ended up working with Elvin Bishop, Coke Escovedo, Tower Of Power, Santana and others.  Lenny Pickett had been in Grayson Street, prior to answering the call from Tower. Grayson Street played Berkeley's Long Branch even more often than Earth Quake (Grayson Street was actually a short street near the Branch). 

Soundhole was a Marin County band that had formed around 1973. In 1974, Soundhole had hired on as Van Morrison's backing band, so they had a certain status around the Bay Area, even if they had never made an album. Soundhole played rock with some jazz and soul edges, appropriately enough in the style of mid-70s Van Morrison. Soundhole never did make an album, but a 50-minute professional video of this performance has been preserved. Most of the band members went on to bigger things. Guitarist Brian Marnell was in SVT (with Jack Casady), organist John Farey was in Zero, and saxophonist Johnny Colla, bassist Mario Cipollina and drummer Bill Gibson would go on to Huey Lewis and The News (tenor saxophonist Brian Hogan was the other member). Soundhole were pretty good, if not well-known.   

Booker T (Jones of Booker T and The MGs) Evergreen album, released by Epic Records in 1974

December 3, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Stoneground/Booker T/Dave Alexander (Tuesday)
This show was reviewed by local writer Jack McDonough in Billboard.

Stoneground returned, having added two lead singers. Annie Sampson had been an original member of Stoneground, and Jo Baker had sung in Elvin Bishop's band from 1968 to '73. So with those two and lead guitarist Tim Barnes handling the vocal chores, Stoneground would have had a sound closer to their original front line (which had 5 lead singers).

While Booker T Jones was nationally famous from leading Booker T and The MGs, he in fact lived in the Bay Area at this time. He had left Stax Records and the MGs, and had been living in the North Bay with his wife, Priscilla Coolidge (Rita's sister). Booker T and Priscilla had put out two albums on A&M in 1972 and '73. In 1974, Booker T made a solo album for Epic under his own name. Evergreen had been recorded at the Record Plant in Sausalito, but with heavyweight session men from LA and Memphis (Michael Utley, David T. Walker, Jim Keltner, Bobbye Hall, Bob Glaub). Booker T's band featured Bay Area players: Fred Burton on guitar (ex-Southern Comfort), Doug Kilmer on bass and Pete Melios on drums.  Burton and Kilmer were veterans of the San Francisco studio scene, although there were far fewer paying session gigs than their had been a few years earlier. Drummer Melios, meanwhile, had been discovered in some bar.

Oakland-based blues pianist Dave Alexander was actually from Shreveport, LA. He had moved to Oakland in 1957, after a stint in the US Navy. He was a largely self-taught piano player, although he had played with many blues artists. In 1973, he had released his second solo album on Berkeley's Arhoolie Records, Dirt On The Ground. Often, Alexander played solo, itself a rarity on the local blues scene, but McDonough reported that he played as a trio, with a rhythm section.

December 10, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Clover/Rowan Brothers/Nielson-Pearson (Tuesday)
Clover returned.

Also on the bill was a revised version of the Rowan Brothers. Chris and Lorin Rowan were a singer/songwriter duo that had been signed to Columbia Records. Their producer was David Grisman, and thanks to that connection, Jerry Garcia got involved. The Rowan Brothers were one of the early 70s bands loosely associated with the Grateful Dead. As a result, Garcia played a few live shows with them and played on their record. The duo's 1972 debut on Columbia was promoted with a sincere, but unfortunate quote from Garcia implying that the Rowan Brothers could be the next Beatles.

The Rowan Brothers were dropped by Columbia in mid-1973 when Clive Davis was pushed out of the company. By mid-74, Chris and Lorin had teamed up with their older brother Peter. The band name was nominally "The Rowans" but just as often they were called the Rowan Brothers. Peter, too, had a critical Grisman/Garcia connection. Grisman and the younger Rowans had moved to Stinson Beach in 1971, so when Rowan left his band Seatrain in 1972, he moved in with them. Peter and David Grisman liked to play bluegrass together and--guess what?--a banjo player lived just up the hill. So Grisman, Jerry Garcia and Peter Rowan had played bluegrass together as Old And In The Way. That band, too, had slid away, and Peter's attempts to get a solo contract didn't reach fruition, so he teamed up with his brothers. The trio would release albums with Asylum starting in 1975.

The Nielsen-Pearson band had its roots in Sacramento. Guitarist Mark Pearson had been in the band Sanpaku, part of the Bill Graham stable in 1969. Sanpaku was an intriguing band with a great history, but they had disintegrated by 1970. Reed Nielsen, mainly a songwriter, had also been a drummer in various Sacramento bands. Nielsen-Pearson would release three albums between 1978 and 80.

Guitarist Les Dudek, who had become well known in the Bay Area as part of Boz Scaggs' band, was listed in the original ad, but had been replaced by Nielsen-Pearson.

December 17, 1974 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Moby Grape/Lucky Strike/Frisco Kids (Tuesday-canceled)
Moby Grape had reformed, and not for the first or last time. Jerry Miller and Peter Lewis were on guitars, along with Santa Cruz songwriter Jeff Blackburn. Bob Mosely was on bass, and Johnny Craviotto was on drums. Blackburn, Mosley and Craviotto would go on to perform stealth shows in Santa Cruz with Neil Young in 1977 as The Ducks, and Blackburn would write "My My Hey Hey (Out Of The Blue)" with Neil.

This Tuesday night show was canceled, however. Lucky Strike was bluesy East Bay band, but I don't know anything about Frisco Kids.

January 7, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Mike Bloomfield/Howard Wales/Raw Soul (Tuesday)
The first Sounds Of The City concert of 1975 had a trio that symbolically reflected the state of San Francisco music at the time: a genuine star past his prime, a uniquely talented artist who would never make it, and a rising band that was still some years away from selling huge numbers of records and a monumentally successful career. Phil Elwood reviewed the show in the next night's Examiner.

Guitarist Mike Bloomfield was a genuine rock guitar hero, by any accounting. By 1975, however, he was such a regular at Bay Area nightclubs and smaller venues that the glow of his stardom was tarnished, particularly to younger rock fans who did not recall the Butterfield Blues Band or Super Session. Bloomfield played with a regular, but rotating, set of sidemen, but he never rehearsed. Thus his performances were comfortable but sloppy. I myself saw him in mid-1974 (opening for Jesse Colin Young at Stanford University) and there were a few stunning moments punctuating an otherwise shaky performance. Per Elwood, his Winterland lineup had singer Nick Gravenites, Mark Naftalin (ex-Butterfield) on piano, Roger "Jellyroll" Troy on bass and vocals, George Rains on drums (which was the lineup I had seen at Stanford the year before) and the surprising appearance of Barry Goldberg (ex-Electric Flag) on organ. I'm sure Bloomfield was his usual erratic, engaging self, but this wouldn't have been anything special to regular Bay Area concert-goers.

Organist Howard Wales was known for having played with Jerry Garcia at the Matrix back in 1970. Wales had even released the album Hooteroll?, featuring Garcia, on Douglas Records back in 1971. Wales, with a long history playing rock, blues and jazz in the 60s, in Cincinnati, El Paso and San Francisco, played some seriously out-there music and was a huge influence on Garcia. He had stepped aside, however, leaving Merl Saunders the opportunity to be Garcia's alternate partner. Nonetheless, Wales would periodically leave his cocoon. Elwood reported that Wales' band on this night featured expatriate Chicago guitarist Jim Vincent, who had played with Wales often in prior years.

Frankie Beverly and Raw Soul, sometime in the mid-1970s. Raw Soul, though from Philadelphia, was based in San Francisco at the time. They would go on to huge success after they changed their name to Maze around 1977.

Frankie Beverly was from Philadelphia, and he had recorded some singles in the 60s as part of The Butlers. In 1970, he had gotten signed by ace producer Kenny Gamble, and had formed a group called Raw Soul. Raw Soul recorded a few singles, but wasn't right for the smooth sound created by Gamble, however. Somehow, Raw Soul had gotten support from Marvin Gaye, and they ended up relocating to San Francisco.  Raw Soul toured around with Gaye, who suggested they change their name to Maze. Maze would release their first album in 1977, and the band remains a huge success, still touring in the present day. 

Amazingly, BGP video exists of Raw Soul live at Winterland, just a month later (Feb 15 '75, opening for Alvin Lee and Gentle Giant). They were a powerful, engaging live band

January 14, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Kingfish/Valley Boys/Little Roger and The Goosebumps (Tuesday)
Kingfish had already existed for several months, but they had taken on a new importance by adding Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir. The Grateful Dead had given up performing after some Winterland shows in October, 1974. Matthew Kelly, a childhood friend of Weir's, had formed Kingfish with his old pal Dave Torbert back in April. Torbert, the bassist for the New Riders of The Purple Sage from 1970-73, had grown frustrated with the band and joined the new group with Kelly. Kelly and Torbert had been in various obscure 60s bands together. The other Kingfish members were young Los Altos hotshot Robbie Hoddinott on lead guitar, drummer Chris Herold and pianist Mick Ward. Ward, sadly, had died in auto accident, and Weir's serendipitous arrival in the Fall of 1974 had filled the void in Kingfish's sound.

After quietly sitting in with Kingfish on the Peninsula in November, Bob Weir had comparatively high profile bookings at Keystone Berkeley on December 29 and in Palo Alto on New Year's Eve. Even though Weir and Torbert were well-known commodities, Kingfish was a new band. Headlining a Sounds Of The City Winterland concert was a cheap way for prospective fans to check out the new group. There's a nice board tape circulating--Kingfish played a 50-minute set of mostly covers, with Weir and Torbert splitting lead vocal duties.

From various club listings, I know the Valley Boys played some kind of country rock. Presumably they were from the San Joaquin (Sacramento) or Central Valley.

Little Roger and The Goosebumps were a poppy rock group with an arch sense of humor. They were led by guitarist and singer Roger Clark, and violinist Dick Bright. In later years, their showstopper was a version of the theme song to the TV show "Gilligan's Island," done to the tune of "Stairway To Heaven." I saw the Goosebumps open at Winterland in 1977 (for Thin Lizzy and Graham Parker), and when they did "Stairway To Gilligan's Island" the house went batshit crazy (I can't link it, because the song was blocked for copyright reasons--but you gotta trust me). The group had just formed in 1975 and they weren't doing "Stairway To Gilligan's Island" yet.

January 18, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Journey/Yesterday & Today/Fever (Saturday)
Journey and Yesterday & Today had both played Sounds Of The City concerts previously. It's worth noting that a decade later, Journey plus Y&T would have been a major arena booking. The intriguing thing about this show was that it was on a Saturday, rather than a Tuesday. There weren't many bands on tour in January 1975, so this show was the only Winterland event for the weeking.

It's easy to discern Bill Graham's thinking here, and he was fairly prescient. Although rock concerts were becoming bigger business, correspondingly there were fewer events. Graham was trying to encourage local rock fans to come see local bands for what amounted to half the cost (or less) of a major show. Whatever you personally think of the music of Journey or Y&T, they were going to become hugely popular, so these were worthwhile bargain shows. The scheme to regularly hold Winterland concerts for half-price would never reach traction, for a variety of reasons, but it was a good plan, and would have created a parallel track to the larger events that Graham regularly held anyway.

Fever is unknown to me.

January 31, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Kiss/Eli/Third Rail (Friday)
Two weeks after the Saturday night Journey concert, there was a whole weekend of Sounds Of The City concerts. The Friday night show, of course, was headlined by an out-of-town band, yet it was telling that it was advertised as Sounds Of The City. Rock at the time, and particularly in San Francisco, was predicated on being new and happening. "Sounds Of The City," as a tag, was meant to encourage patrons that they were cool and on top of it, which is what San Franciscans like to hear.

Kiss was a New York city band that had released their second album in November 1974 (Hotter Than Hell, on Casablanca). Kiss was as un-San Francisco band as you can imagine. They played loud, hard rock, they wore elaborate white-face stage makeup, they had all sorts of stage props, and unlike the Tubes it wasn't ironic. There were loud guitar solos, but no jamming. Kiss received no discernible airplay on any Bay Area radio station. They were popular on the East Coast at this time, but not yet out West. 

I was in High School at this time. A few friends of mine liked Kiss, so I had heard the records. I thought the records sounded dumb and their makeup looked stupid. But the sister of one of my friends would drive us to Winterland in the big family station wagon, and it was only $2.00. As a High Schooler, I would go to literally any concert I could get to, if I had the money, so despite my distaste for Kiss, I was definitely in. I joined several of my friends in the big car, and the big sister found a parking space in the seedy neighborhood around Winterland. 

Eli and Third Rail opened the show, but I don't really recall much about them. One of them was a power trio. Neither were terrible, neither were memorable. By the time Kiss came on stage, Winterland was still awfully empty. There was a clump of several hundred people near the stage, and a few people in the seats. I think the balcony was closed off. In a dark arena, it's hard to tell about attendance--perhaps there were 1000 people, perhaps 2000 at most. Kiss came out and did their full show, dry ice, spitting fire, flashing lights, loud guitars. The crowd, modest as it was, was very enthusiastic.

Now, to be clear--all my opinions of Kiss were confirmed by this concert. If anything, their songs were dumber in person, and whether by accident or design they sounded like a band that could barely play. The "stage show" was idiotic. I have had contempt for Kiss and their music ever since.

I had a great time. It was two dollars spectacularly well spent. For ever and ever--even now--I could say "yeah, I saw Kiss way back when for two bucks and they were terrible then, they haven't changed." In that respect, it showed the value of these Sounds Of The City shows. Instead of feeling like your money was wasted by a bad show, you felt like you were experimenting. That was what a nightclub was for, but I was far too young to go to any nightclub, so it was a great Saturday night. My friends loved the show, but I just laughed at them (it was High School). 

The show did not run late, probably only until about 11:00pm. We walked back to the car only to find someone in the process of breaking into it. It was a weird moment which fortunately ended without any trouble (there were five of us, but we were skinny suburban teenagers). Incidents like that were what made people from the suburbs leery about Winterland, one of the reasons that the cleverly conceived Sounds Of The City concerts couldn't gain enough traction.

Eddie Money, ca 1977

February 1, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Earth Quake/Nimbus/Eddie Money
(Saturday)
Earth Quake and Nimbus both returned to Sounds Of The City. New to the program was East Bay singer Eddie Money (note the incorrect spelling of "Eddy" in the newspaper ad above). Transplanted former NYPD trainee Eddie Mahoney had become the lead singer of The Rockets in 1972, and they regularly played the Long Branch in Berkeley. By 1974, they were Eddie Money and The Rockets, and by 1975 they were just Eddie Money. They regularly packed them in on weekends at the relatively small Berkeley Long Branch and other East Bay clubs.

This first bite of the Winterland apple was critical for Money's career. By the end of 1975, Bill Graham would be Eddie Money's manager, and by 1977 he would have huge nationwide hits like "Baby Hold On To Me" and "Two Tickets To Paradise." Money (1949-2019) had various health issues, but he went on to have a hugely successful career. Eddie Money was just one of plenty of soon-to-be-successful performers working in San Francisco at the time.

February 7, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Terry and The Pirates/Shadowfax/Frisco Kids (Friday)
Terry Dolan (1943-2012) had arrived in San Francisco in 1965 during the Haight Ashbury hippie migration and began his music career as a guitar-strumming folk singer in North Beach clubs and coffee houses. Warner Brothers had signed Dolan as a songwriter in 1970, and Nicky Hopkins (then living in the Bay Area) had been signed as a producer. Hopkins then left to tour with the Rolling Stones, and the album had been finished by Pete Sears, another transplanted English pianist. The album was completed in 1972. Though a catalog number was assigned, an album cover photo shot, and art designed -- there was even a publicity campaign in place -- Warner decided not to release the recording and subsequently dropped Dolan from its roster without explanation.

In 1973, Dolan had formed Terry And The Pirates, anchored by guitarists John Cipollina and Greg Douglass. Other members rotated in and out, including Nicky Hopkins when he was in town. The band was inherently part-time, but they knew Dolan's material. For a band that did not record until the 1980s (on various independent labels), Terry And The Pirates was fairly high profile, performing live shows on KSAN and getting airplay from tracks of those shows. The exact lineup for this weekend's show is unknown, although Cippolina and Douglas can be assumed. David Hayes (also with Van Morrison and many others) was a regular bassist, and drummers included Greg Elmore or Spencer Dryden. 

Shadowfax was a Marin band, but I don't know much about them. 

February 21, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Tubes/Hoodoo Rhythm Devils/Fleshtones (Friday)
The Tubes had opened a number of regular shows at Winterland throughout 1974, and had headlined a Halloween Thursday Sounds Of The City (above). Although still without a record, they had already performed live on KSAN, and there was a definite buzz about them. Now they headlined Winterland on a Friday night. This video circulates as well. 

The Hoodoo Rhythm Devils were a funky rock band from San Francisco. They were apparently great live, and much beloved by their fans, but they never got over the top. In the early 70s, they were led by singer Joe Crane and lead guitarist John Rewind. The band released an album for Capitol in 1971, and two for Blue Thumb in '72 and '73, and then broke up by 1974. By 1975, the band had gotten back together. They would record an album in 1975 that did not get released, before releasing two more albums on Fantasy in '76 and '78, and then breaking up again. I'm not precisely certain who was in the band at this time, other than Joe Crane.

March 1, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Link Wray/Yesterday & Today/Eddie Money (Saturday)
The Sounds Of The City program ended with two weekend nights in March (Dave Mason had been booked as the headliner on Friday, February 28, but that show was canceled). All three Saturday night bands were returnees. Link Wray was a legend, and both Y&T and Eddie Money would go on to huge success in later years. Sounds Of The City did not find traction, probably mainly due to the crumbling arena in a seedy neighborhood, but the idea didn't fail due to lack of soon-to-be-popular bands.

March 2, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Kingfish/Terry and The Pirates/West (Sunday)
Kingfish returned, and this time New Riders of The Purple Sage pedal steel guitarist Buddy Cage sat in. Alice Stuart had been booked, but Joel Selvin reported that her new band wasn't ready, so Terry And The Pirates returned as well. West is unknown to me (there had been a 60s band called West, with guitarist Ron Cornelius, but they were different). 


March 30, 1975 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Queen/Mahogany Rush/Yesterday & Today (3.00) (Sunday)
The Sounds Of The City program was discontinued by Bill Graham Presents with little fanfare. Nonetheless, the idea of cheaper concerts to give fans a chance to see new groups had one last intriguing fare-thee-well. The band Queen had just released their 3rd Elektra album Sheer Heart Attack in November of 1974. At the time, Queen was framed as a sort of Led Zeppelin-type band with Beach Boys harmonies, with a bit of a prog-rock overlay. They were getting some airplay on FM radio, but by and large the Bay Area rock market was still more about hippies and jamming, and less about Glam and hard rock, so Queen was a bit outside the circle. For whatever reasons, Bill Graham Presents booked Queen as a Sunday night headliner for just $3.00. Besides Canadian trio Mahogany Rush, the openers were Yesterday & Today, regulars from Sounds Of The City (and, by this time, other Winterland shows).  

In a very similar replay to the Kiss concert several weeks earlier, two of my best friends really liked Queen (these were not the ones who liked Kiss) and were determined to go. I was going along, no question, live rock and roll in any form was all I asked. I had heard the Sheer Heart Attack album (and its predecessor Queen II) and thought they were OK, but it wasn't my thing. Since I had hated Kiss and had had a great time, I was looking forward to the concert no matter what.

I found Y&T sort of dumb. Mahogany Rush (touring behind their second album Child Of The Novelty) were talented, but guitarist Frank Marino just seemed like a Hendrix knock-off. Queen, much to my surprise, were just great. Brian May absolutely killed it as a guitarist, Freddie Mercury had an engaging presence on stage and their songs had a lot more power in concert. There was a little dry ice and some flashing lights, but the band was about music and they could really, really play. I went for fun with my friends, because it was cheap, and came away a big fan (of course, when I saw Queen 15 months later in Berkeley, with the same friends, for the Night At The Opera tour, I was turned off by the advanced theatricality, and missed the long guitar solos. But it was fun while it lasted).

The low-priced concert concept could have worked, but the stars did not particularly align in San Francisco. Parking was bad near Winterland, and the neighborhood wasn't appealing. Yes, there was a racist undertone to suburbanites fear of a largely African-American neighborhood, but such were the 1970s. Within a few years, the rock audience would get older and start preferring nightclubs for checking out new bands, and the economics of liquor made that more viable. The Sounds Of The City program was a final whiff of the old Fillmore days, by the proprietor of the Fillmore. Lots of bands that went on to success played the concerts--just as such bands had played the Fillmore--but the idea could not sustain itself.


 

Friday, July 19, 2024

2504 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley, CA: The Long Branch Performance History October-December 1973 (Long Branch III)




The Long Branch, 2504 San Pablo in Berkeley, some time in the 1970s

By the end of 1973, live rock music was booming, and as rock audiences aged, rock nightclubs became more viable. Once rock fans were of drinking age, spending too much time in a large, dark cavern with thousands or tens of thousands people didn't seem as rockin' as relaxing with a cold drink in a place where you could actually see the stage. If you were on a date, or hoping to meet someone, the attraction of a rock club was even more pronounced. If two people liked the same band, or the same kind of music, you were both halfway there to getting together.  Rock nightclubs started to thrive in almost every big city and near every college campus. Berkeley was no exception. 

The Long Branch, at 2504 San Pablo Avenue (at Dwight), had opened in May 1971. The venue had been a music club going back to 1962. As the Cabale Creamery, it had been Berkeley's essential stop for traveling folk musicians. It was at the Cabale where Jerry Garcia saw the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, and the Cabale was a regular date for Clarence White and the Kentucky Colonels, too. Later, in early 1966, as the Questing Beast, 2504 San Pablo was the place where Country Joe McDonald and Barry Melton first plugged in to amplifiers as Country Joe & The Fish. Later still, it became Tito's (1967-68) and then Babylon (1969-70). In 1971, former Avalon Ballroom staffer Malcolm Williams took over the venue, doubled the capacity to 350 and re-opened it as the Long Branch Saloon. I wrote a post about the club's first seven months in 1971, and then another post about acts playing the first half of 1972. By the end of 1973, the Long Branch was well-established on the Berkeley rock scene, booking bands six or seven nights a week. 

Now, in the East Bay, the top rock night club was the Keystone Berkeley, right next to the University of California campus. The Keystone was right in downtown Berkeley at 2119 University Avenue (at Shattuck Avenue). On weekends, the Keystone booked popular local acts like Jerry Garcia, Elvin Bishop and Tower Of Power, and touring acts as well, plu some smaller acts on weeknights. Keystone drew crowds from all over Berkeley and Oakland, and even Marin and San Francisco. Parking wasn't difficult in downtown Berkeley--amazing as that may seem today--so the club attracted a wide audience. 

The Long Branch, meanwhile, was 2 miles West and South of campus. The Branch drew mostly from the neighborhoods near the club, and it was as much a hangout as a destination. We have a good picture of what was happening at the club then because former Long Branch publicist Lydia Frazier Bosley was kind enough to send scans of long lost flyers. Frazier herself made the flyers for the Long Branch, and helped distribute them around the East Bay. With these, we can get a great look at who played the club in 1973 and '74, and how that defined the economics of the scene at the time

Since the same bands played the Long Branch over and over--that was the whole point--I am just focusing on the last three months of 1973, to avoid needless repetition. Anyone with additional information, insights, corrections and real or imagined memories, please include them in the Comments. Flashbacks encouraged. 


Scan of the back of a Long Branch flyer, October 1973

The Long Branch was a hangout, but a hangout that booked rock bands and wanted its patrons to dance. But it mainly wanted them to hang out. Admission was cheap, and often free, and beer was often cheap, too. The goal was to get the locals to come early and stay late. They would likely meet people who lived nearby, and make friends, and maybe dance and perhaps even get married. The back of one of the flyers (above) explains the attractions of the Long Branch:

Howdy...we'd like to turn you on to the LONG BRANCH Saloon, Berkeley's Hot Nite Spot famed for it's FINE ROCK & ROLL and Good Vibes

The Club opens at 8pm Tues-Sun, and if you come before 9 pm, the admission is half-price. Also on Tues-Wed-Thurs-Sun, BEER will cost 10c a glass between 8 and 9pm.

Since our fuss ball games are so popular we have plans to expand and add some new games like POOL, PONG & AIR HOCKEY.

Meanwhile, as always we'll entice you onto the DANCE floor with some to the hottest young bands around. Really the MUSIC is outstanding, terrific and wonderful.

The LONG BRANCH is a great place to hang out, meet friends, get high and treat yourself to PRIMO ROCK & ROLL. Come on down and check it out.

THE LONG BRANCH call us to find out what's happening
2504 SAN PABLO at DWIGHT 848-9696

The doors usually opened at 8:00pm at the Long Branch, but the Examiner and other papers reported the bands as starting at 9:30. That meant a lot of people were there only to hang out. Since many nights were free admission, or close to it, the band wasn't necessarily the main attraction for every patron.

The Long Branch had a very different approach to booking than other contemporary Bay Area rock clubs. Clubs like the Keystone Berkeley typically had the most popular local acts once a month, a lot of touring bands coming through, and filled in the other dates with more local bands. The Long Branch, however, pretty much had the same bands every week. There were three "house bands" that played almost every week (Earth Quake, The Rockets and Grayson Street), and new bands added to the mix would play the same night for an entire month. As far as I know, the regular Long Branch bands all had large repertoires, typically including a lot of cover versions, so their fans didn't hear the same set every week.

October, 1973 flyer for The Long Branch, 2504 San Pablo Avenue (designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley). Note that there is no Area Code for the phone number, because Berkeley, San Francisco and the entire Bay Area North of San Jose used the 415 Area Code.

October 1, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: The Rockets (Sunday)
The Rockets had been playing the Long Branch since January 1972, and mostly just played the club. Lead singer Eddie Mahoney was a transplanted NYPD cop trainee. Guitarist Dan Alexander, bassist Chris Sohlberg and drummer John Cuniberti were all from Berkeley. All of the Rockets went on to some success in the music industry. Cuniberti and Alexander were successful on the production side, Sohlberg played with many artists, and Mahoney went on to huge success as Eddie Money ("Two Tickets To Paradise," "Baby, Hold On To Me").

October 3, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Audition Night (Wednesday)
The calendar says "surprise night," but Wednesdays was the night to give new bands a chance to play. The Long Branch wasn't high on the Bay Area rock food chain, and many bands got their first break at the Branch. Keep in mind that it was all but impossible for penniless new bands to make a listenable tape, even of a live performance, and they generally had to lug their gear to a club and actually play a set in order to get heard by a club owner.


October 4, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Asleep At The Wheel/Alice Stuart & Snake (Thursday)
October 5, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Asleep At The Wheel/Clover
(Friday)
Asleep At The Wheel was a hippie Western Swing band from the DC area, based in Paw Paw, WV. In Fall 1971, they had opened in West Virginia for Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen, perhaps the only band remotely like them, and the Cody crew encouraged them to move to Berkeley. On October 8 & 9, 1971, Asleep At The Wheel had opened for Cody and the Airmen at the Long Branch. By December 10, 1971, they were headlining the Branch. Asleep At The Wheel had played relentlessly throughout the Bay Area ever since, building a crowd in all the clubs around.

By 1973, Asleep At The Wheel had released their first album, Comin' Right At Ya (on United Artists). The Wheel was managed by Joe Kerr, who also managed Cody and the New Riders of The Purple Sage, giving him a big chunk of the San Francisco country-rock sound.

Alice Stuart and Snake's Believing album (Fantasy Records 1972)

Alice Stuart was a blues guitarist and singer, originally from Seattle, who had moved to the Bay Area in 1964. Initially a solo, she had "gone electric" around 1970, and formed her trio Alice Stuart & Snake. Drummer Bob Jones (ex-We Five, ex-Mike Bloomfield, ex-Southern Comfort) shared vocals with Stuart, and bassist Karl Sevareid completed the band. In 1972, Fantasy had released the Believing album. Fantasy released a single in 1973 (with tracks from the album), and Snake stayed together until at least 1974, but the band was never able to get much traction. Nonetheless, Stuart continued a successful solo career well into the 21st century. 

Joe Kerr's business card when he managed Clover, ca 1973

Clover had been founded in Mill Valley in 1969, an outgrowth of the band Tiny Hearing Aid Company. As a quartet, Clover had released two albums on Fantasy in 1970 and '71. Fantasy had dropped them, but the band had since added two additional members. By this time, Clover had Alex Call as the main lead singer, Huey (Cregg) Louis on vocals and harmonica, John McFee on lead and pedal steel guitar, Sean Hopper on keyboards, John Ciambotti on bass and Mickey Shine on drums. Joe Kerr also managed Clover.

Why Don't You Try Me, Earth Quake's second album on A&M Records, released in 1972


October 6, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake
(Saturday)
Earth Quake, from Berkeley, were the ultimate Long Branch band. The band had played the opening night of the Long Branch on May 28, 1971. Originally, they had been a Berkeley High band called Purple Earthquake. The members of Earth Quake had met Long Branch proprietor Malcolm Williams back in the 1960s, when he had been promoting shows at Maple Hall in nearby San Pablo. By 1971, they had been a quartet, with Robbie Dunbar on lead guitar, lead vocalist John Doukas, bassist Stan Miller and drummer Steve Nelson. Earth Quake would release their debut album on A&M Records sometime that year. Earth Quake would play the Long Branch at least every month for five years, and in many cases every Friday night.

In contrast to most Bay Area bands, who typically played longer songs in an improvised blues style, Earth Quake had been inspired by British Invasion bands like The Who and Small Faces. In 1972, A&M Records had released the second Earth Quake album, Why Don't You Try Me. The album didn't go anywhere, and A&M dropped the band. Besides their original material, however, Earth Quake had a huge trove of relatively obscure covers (like The Easybeats "Friday On My Mind"), so they were still endlessly engaging to their local fans in Berkeley. At least some of the members of Earth Quake, possibly all of them, lived in Berkeley. Earth Quake were the "house band" at the Long Branch if anyone was.


Once the band had been dropped by A&M, Earth Quake's imaginative manager Mathew "King" Kaufman had the idea that they should release their own records. Although against any kind of record business orthodoxy at the time, Kaufman created Beserkley Records, and started releasing 45 rpm singles on a shoestring. The quixotic label's first production was a single of "Mr Security," by Earth Quake, released on October 11, 1973. Unlikely as it may have seemed, and although it took a few years, Beserkley Records turned out to be hugely successful. Kaufman anticipated the punk rock/Indy label surge years before it happened elsewhere.

Grayson Street band, ca Fall 1973 (promo photo from December 23 '73 Examiner)

October 7, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street
(Sunday)
Grayson Street was named after a short street in Berkeley that ran from Aquatic Park to San Pablo Avenue, terminating four blocks south of Dwight Way and San Pablo, the site of the Long Branch. Grayson Street played the Branch just about every week from 1972 through 1975, sometimes more than once a week. They, too, were a house band.  

Grayson Street was fronted by saxophonist Terry Hanck and harmonica player Rick Kellogg, both of whom sang, and played in a funky blues style that was good for dancing. They had been formed before 1972, but their first advertised show at the Long Branch was June 24, 1972. In late '72, Grayson Street had included Berkeley High's Lenny Pickett, previously in the band Linx. By 1973, however, Pickett had joined Tower of Power. Grayson Street was full of experienced musicians. Guitarist Tim Kaihatsu and organist Clay Cotton had both played extensively with Charlie Musselwhite and other blues musicians. Kellogg had played harmonica for Elvin Bishop for a while, and Kellogg and bassist John Knight had been in Linx (with Pickett). Drummer John Otis rounded out the band.

Also in the band in Fall '73 was singer Jo Baker, who had been in The Elvin Bishop Group from 1970-73. Bishop and Baker had been a couple, having met a jam session in Boston in 1967 (Baker had been in the group Clouds, and Bishop had been with the Butterfield Blues Band). In mid-1973, Baker and Bishop had split up personally and musically. 

Grayson Street pretty much confined its performances to the East Bay, but most of the members went on to thriving musical careers. Terry Hanck would tour with Elvin Bishop for many years, Kaihatsu (1945-2014) would tour and record with Robert Cray, Clay Cotton was a popular club attraction in the Bay Area for decades and Jo Baker would join the revived Stoneground in early 1974.

October 10, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Audition Night (Wednesday) 

October 11, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Thursday)
Rubin & The Rubinoos were led by singer (and rhythm guitarist) Jon Rubin, and guitarist Tommy Dunbar. Tommy was the younger brother of Earthquake's Robbie Dunbar, so it was no surprise they were getting a chance at the Branch.  The Rubinoos played short, poppy rock songs with hooks and harmonies, completely at odds with any other Berkeley bands at that time. 

The Modern Lovers album Live At The Long Branch, released in 1998, and recorded at the Branch on April 21, 1972. The Modern Lovers were in California attempting to record an album for Warners.

October 12, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/The Modern Lovers
(Friday)
The Modern Lovers were from Boston, and their sound was modeled on the Velvet Underground. They had been signed by Warner Brothers, and in early '72 the label had flown them out to Los Angeles to record demos with John Cale. Thus the Modern Lovers had played a show at the Long Branch on April 21, 1972, opening for Earth Quake, one of their few shows outside of the Boston area (a recording of the show was released in 1998). The Modern Lovers at this time were a quartet, with songwriter Jonathan Richman on guitar and vocals, future Talking Head Jerry Harrison on organ, Ernie Brooks on bass and drummer Dave Robinson (later in The Cars).

Richman became well-known for his lively, innocent acoustic sound, but this version of the Modern Lovers was dark and loud. Warner Brothers had flown the band back out to LA in 1973 to record more demos (which were later released), but the Modern Lovers never managed to complete an album for the label. Ultimately Richman would achieve international success after he moved to Berkeley and recorded for Beserkely Records, the label started by Earth Quake's manager.

October 13, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: The Rockets/The Modern Lovers (Saturday)
On Saturday night, the Modern Lovers opened for The Rockets. Jonathan Richman opening for Eddie Money--that didn't happen again. Must have been a memorably bizarre evening.

October 14, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

October 16, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Tuesday)

October 17, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Audition Night (Wednesday) 

October 18, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Off The Wall (Thursday)
Off The Wall are unknown to me. 

Good N Cheap, Eggs Over Easy (A&M, 1972)

October 19, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Alice Stuart & Snake/Eggs Over Easy
(Friday)
Opening act Eggs Over Easy featured three New Yorkers, two of whom (guitarist Jack O'Hara and pianist Austin De Lone) had met in Berkeley in 1970. They had released one album for A&M in 1972, Good N' Cheap. Most people had not (nor have not) heard the album. Nonetheless, Eggs Over Easy played a significant role in the history of English rock, and not by coincidence, and their Wikipedia entry is well-deserved.

DeLone and O'Hara had returned to New York in 1970, where they met Brien Hopkins and formed Eggs Over Easy as a no-drummer trio (all three played various instruments). Their manager had English connections, so when the band was signed they went to record at Olympic Studios in Barnes, London. Recording was completed by January 1971. There were management issues, however, and they were advised to stay in London while it got sorted. Eggs Over Easy played a few college gigs (with ex-Animal John Steel on drums). The trio took a house in Kentish Town, in North London, near a large pub called The Tally Ho.

The Tally-Ho had a "jazz-only" policy for performers, a common restriction of London Pubs at the time. Eggs Over Easy, used to playing in bars in the States, persuaded the Tally Ho to let them perform. They debuted at the Tally Ho in May 1971 (with Steel on drums), and started to draw large crowds. Ultimately they were playing three nights and Sunday afternoon at the Tally Ho, and drawing huge crowds. Nick Lowe and other members of his band (Brinsley Schwarz) regularly joined them on stage. Eggs Over Easy single-handedly invented "Pub Rock," and a wave of groups like Brinsley Schwarz followed them throughout England. Eggs Over Easy became a sort of underground sensation, but the band played their last show in England on November 7, 1971

Ultimately Eggs Over Easy's album recorded in London was never released, and the band returned to the States. Their debut A&M album included new recordings of what they had done in England. In 1973, they returned to the Bay Area, and Eggs Over Easy toured the US with major bands (like The Yes and The Eagles), but never got traction. The band struggled on until 1981, but despite their legendary status they never got any honor in their own country.

October 20, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/Rubinoos (Saturday)
Rubin & The Rubinoos would shorten their name to just The Rubinoos by the end of the year.

October 21, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

October 23, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Tuesday)

October 24, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Audition Night (Wednesday) 

October 25, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Thursday)
Swan are unknown to me.  

October 26, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Perry And The Pumpers (Friday)
Perry And The Pumpers was a blues band led by harmonica player Perry Welsh. They often backed up touring blues musicians. Welsh was from Cedar Rapids, IA, and had moved to San Francisco in 1967. He was friendly with another Iowa transplant, organist Stephen Miller. Miller had been in the band Linn County in the 60s, and his organ anchored the Elvin Bishop Group from 1970-73. Welsh recorded with Bishop and Miller on two Bishop Group albums (1970's Feel It and 1972's Rock My Soul).

Bishop sat in with Perry And The Pumpers on occasion. As far as I know, some members of Perry And The Pumpers ended up in the 1974 edition of the Elvin Bishop Group, including guitarist Johnny Vernazza, pianist Phil Aaberg and bassist Fly Brooks, while Welsh and Stephen Miller returned to Iowa.

October 27, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Dave Brown Resurrection/Big Art and The Trashmasters (Saturday)
Both Dave Brown Resurrection and Big Art and The Trashmasters are unknown to me. There was a local musician (a bass player and producer) named Dave Brown, but I don't know if this was his band. From peripheral evidence I think The Trashmasters were a sort of Long Branch All-Stars group from other "house" bands. "Big Art's" was also the name of a Berkeley club in the basement of LaVal's Pizza (near Hearst & Euclid, on Northside).

October 28, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

October 30, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Tuesday)

October 31, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/Rockets (Wednesday) 3rd Annual Hootchie Kootchie Ball
Halloween was always a Big Deal in Berkeley, so it's no surprise that two of the house bands played it.
November 1973 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)

November 1, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) free
Chains are unknown to me. 

November 2, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Friday)


November 3, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Copperhead/Earth Quake
(Saturday)
Copperhead had been formed in late 1971 by ex-Quicksilver Messenger Service guitarist John Cipollina. They had gone through a number of personnel changes, but by mid-1972 the lineup had stabilized. Cippolina was joined by pianist and singer Jim McPherson (ex-Stained Glass), who was the principal songwriter, guitarist Gary Phillipet, bassist Hutch Hutchinson and drummer David Weber. The band had a harder sound than Quicksilver, with more of an R&B feel. Columbia records signed the band, and they had released their debut album in Spring 1973. Copperhead played all the Bay Area clubs, but they had not yet toured Nationally.

Unfortunately, Clive Davis was pushed out as CEO of Columbia Records in the Summer of 1973. Many of the Bay Area bands signed by Clive, including Copperhead (as well as the Sons Of Champlin, the Rowan Brothers and David Rea) were dumped by the label. Copperhead had a local following in the clubs, but their album was left high and dry. They would break up by the end of the year.

November 4, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

November 5, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Monday) free
The fact that the flyer lists some weeknight shows as free is an indicator that the principal weeknight business of the Long Branch was selling beer to the locals. 

November 6, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Tuesday)

November 7, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)

November 8, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) free

The Tubes at Winterland ca 1974, with Fee Waybill as Quay Lewd, probably singing "White Punks On Dope"

November 9-10, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: The Tubes/Spotlight (Friday-Saturday)
The Tubes had only formed around March, 1972. Most of the band members were from Phoenix, AZ. Initially, guitarist Bill Spooner, keyboard player Vince Welnick and bassist Rick Andersen had been in a popular Phoenix band called The Beans. The Beans had moved to San Francisco in Fall 1970. They had played numerous local gigs, but hadn't really made much headway. After some band members left the Beans, it had turned out that another popular Phoenix band had lost some members, so guitarist Roger Steen and drummer Prairie Prince had relocated to San Francisco to join The Beans. Their roadie John "Fiji" Waldo was added as lead singer, and The Tubes were born.

The Tubes played a sort of progressive rock rather than modified blues. They also had a fairly elaborate stage show, which was pretty much unheard of at the time. Initially, of course, their props were just cardboard and confetti, but they were a performing band from the beginning. The Tubes had first played the Long Branch on June 4, 1972, and periodically returned. By late '73, there was an underground buzz about them. They played a lot of gigs in gay bars, which were quite lucrative but not advertised in the mainstream press. In the early 70s, gay culture was the source of style and cool in the Bay Area, so the Tubes managed to always be right on the cutting edge of that cool. On June 1, 1973, the unknown Tubes had opened for Led Zeppelin at Kezar Stadium (fifth on the the bill), which for the wider Bay Area was the first time rock fans would even hear of them (this included me). 

Spotlight is unknown to me.

November 11, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

November 13, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos/Above & Beyond (Tuesday)
Above & Beyond are unknown to me. 

November 14, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)

November 15, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) free

November 16-17, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Sutro Sympathy Orchestra/Enola Faye Moss [16 only] (Friday-Saturday)
Sutro Sympathy Orchestra were from Reno, although they played regularly in the San Francisco area. Singer Lynne Hughes had been in The Charlatans back in the 1960s.

Enola Faye Moss is unknown to me.

November 18, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

November 19, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Monday) free
Even The Rockets, a house band, played for free on a Monday night. 

November 20, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos (Tuesday)

November 21, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)
Closed for Thanksgiving Thursday (22).

November 23, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Friday)

November 24, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Saturday)

November 25, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

November 27, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubin & The Rubinoos/Above & Beyond (Tuesday)

November 28, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)

November 29, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) free

November 30, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake (Friday)


December 1973 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)
December 1, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Saturday)
We are missing listings for December 2 and 3 (Sunday and Monday), but it's reasonable to assume that some of the usual suspects played. 

December 5, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)

December 6, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) 

December 7, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Asleep At The Wheel/Topkela (Friday)
December 8, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Asleep At The Wheel/Alice Stuart & Snake
(Saturday)
Topkela is unknown to me. 

December 9, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday) 

December 10, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Titans/Rockets/Country Thunder (Monday) Legal Aid Benefit
It's easy to make fun of Berkeley--I for one never tire of it--but there's no question that things happen in Berkeley long before they happen elsewhere (for example, Berkeley's Freight And Salvage club banned smoking in 1968, and the city of Berkeley would ban smoking in restaurants around 1977). As a result of its forward-looking nature, some things catch on in Berkeley that never catch on elsewhere. One such trend was "white reggae," hippie bands that played sped-up reggae for dancing. They were very popular in 1970s Berkeley, and pretty much nowhere else. The Titans, formerly Knee Deep, were the first such band. Titans would evolve into The Shakers, and became Long Branch regulars a few years later, even releasing an album, but they too are forgotten. 

Country Thunder are unknown to me.

December 12, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Swan (Wednesday)

December 13, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday)  

December 14-15, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake (Friday-Saturday)

December 16, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Sunday)

December 17, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Monday)

December 19, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubinoos (Wednesday)

December 20, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets (Thursday)

December 21, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rockets/Grayson Street (Friday)

Country Casanova, the third Paramount Records album by Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen. George "Cody" Frayne leans on a Lincoln.

December 22, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen/Asleep At The Wheel
(Saturday)
Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen and Asleep At The Wheel could both pack the Long Branch on a weekend, and had done so many times. There would have been no reason to book both of them, so the bands must have wanted to do it. Since the bands were good friends and shared management, it wouldn't have been hard to arrange.

Cody and The Airmen had been playing the Long Branch since before their first album was released, and indeed at least one track on their immortal debut Lost In The Ozone had been recorded there (either "What's The Matter Now" or "20 Flight Rock"). The band's third Paramount Records' album, Country Casanova, had been released in May 1973. In November, the Airmen had recorded their next album (Live From Deep In The Heart Of Texas) at the Armadillo World Headquarters in Austin, TX (it would be released in March, 1974). 

Asleep At The Wheel, meanwhile, had decided to move to Austin, as it was their spiritual home. Since the band moved to Texas in early 1974, it's possible that this show was a celebration and fare-thee-well for the Wheel's departure.

December 23, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

December 26, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Rubinoos (Wednesday) 

December 27, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Chains (Thursday) 

December 28, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/Rubinoos (Friday)

December 29, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Saturday)  

December 30, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street (Sunday)

December 31, 1973 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/Rockets (Monday)

Beserkeley Chartbusters, Vol 1, released by Beserkeley Records in July 1975, was put together by Earth Quake's management. It featured songs by Earth Quake, Greg Kihn, Jonathan Richman and The Rubinoos, all of whom had played the Long Branch many times.

Outcomes Assessment: Long Branch Bands

Berkeley's Long Branch was essentially a neighborhood club, booking bands every week for regular patrons who lived nearby. Yet rock music was booming in the Bay Area, so many of the aspiring bands who played the Branch ended up leaving a much larger mark than you might think for a 350-capacity beer joint in West Berkeley.

Bill Graham signed Eddie Money to a management contract in 1975. His 1977 debut album on Columbia included "Two Tickets To Paradise" and "Baby Hold On," and sold millions

The Rockets broke up in early 1974. All of them thrived. Lead singer Eddie Mahoney debuted the Eddie Money Band in June 1974, and they played the Long Branch regularly too. In early 1975, Money was signed by Bill Graham's management team. Ultimately Money would be hugely successful, selling millions of records on the back of giant hits like "Two Tickets To Paradise" and "Baby Hold On To Me."

Drummer John Cuniberti has been a successful producer, particularly with "New Wave" bands. Guitarist Dan Alexander is well-regarded in production and audio circles, and bassist Chris Sohlberg played with Santana and many other artists.

In 2021, Ray Benson and Asleep At The Wheel released Half A Hundred Years, on Home Records

Asleep At The Wheel
moved to Austin in early 1974. They are still together, still touring and established legends. Pretty good for a band from Paw Paw, WV.

Love On The Wire, Clover's 4th and last album, and their 2nd on Mercury Records, was released in late 1977. It's a very good album, even if almost no one has heard it.

Clover
struggled on until 1977. They were "discovered" in 1976 by producer Nick Lowe, who had loved the first two Fantasy albums and had no idea they hadn't broken up. Lowe facilitated two excellent Clover albums recorded in England in 1976 and '77, but the band never caught on. The Lowe association, however, was how members of Clover ended up backing Elvis Costello on his debut album My Aim Is True.

After Clover, broke up, Huey Lewis and pianist Sean Hopper teamed up with members of Soundhole and became hugely successful as Huey Lewis & The News. Guitarist John McFee, meanwhile, joined the Doobie Brothers (they were still touring in 2023), and singer Alex Call wrote some hit singles.

8.5, by Earth Quake, released by Beserkeley in 1976

Earth Quake had been dropped by A&M, but their manager Mathew "King" Kaufman started the Beserkley Records label. Besides releasing Earth Quake and Rubinoos albums, the label had big hits with Jonathan Richman and Greg Kihn. Earth Quake broke up in the early 80s, ultimately releasing 5 albums.

Grayson Street never recorded, but many members of the band moved on to bigger groups. Tenor saxophonist Lenny Pickett still leads the Saturday Night Live Band. Founder Terry Hanck joined Elvin Bishop and toured with him in the late 70s for many years.

Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers, released by Beserkeley in 1976

Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers released albums on Beserkley Records, starting in 1976. "Egyptian Reggae" became a hit,  and songs like "Road Runner" and "Abominable Snowman In The Market" are underground classics.

Tubes lead singer Fee Waybill, at Winterland ca 1974, as Dr. Strangelove, singing Tom Jones' "It's Not Unusual" (a regular showstopper for the band--you had to have seen it, just trust me...)

The Tubes released their first album in 1975, and it was a huge sensation. Their stage show, with every song its own self-contained "music video'--six years before MTV--was inspired and unforgettable. They toured America and the UK to well-deserved acclaim, and they had popular radio hits as well. The economics were unworkable, however, and the financial woes of the band eventually ground them to a halt. Keyboard player Vince Welnick joined the Grateful Dead in 1990. Versions of The Tubes have continued to perform intermittently over the decades. 

Appendix: Long Branch Performers, January-July 1974
Lydia Frazier Bosley was kind enough to send some additional flyers, and for historical value I have included them below. Since the Long Branch had a repetitive booking strategy, I didn't write out each booking. I did note when there was a band that had not appeared at the Long Branch before.



January 1974 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)

January 15, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Asleep At The Wheel/Naomi Ruth Eisenberg (Tuesday)
Asleep At The Wheel had supposedly moved to Austin by this time, but they toured so much that they regularly appeared in Bay Area clubs anyway. 

Naomi Ruth Eisenberg had been in various local ensembles, but she was best-known for having been one of the original "Hot Licks" with Dan Hicks. She sang and played fiddle, and was also a singer-songwriter. 

Terry Dolan and Terry and The Pirates finally released a 1979 album of live performances, with an All-Star cast (including John Cipollina, Greg Douglass, Lonnie Turner, Nicky Hopkins and Grateful Dead engineer Dan Healy as producer)

January 18-19, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Terry and The Pirates
(Friday-Saturday)
Copperhead finally disintegrated by the end of 1973, so John Cipollina promptly hooked up with numerous local ensembles. One such band was Terry And The Pirates, led by singer/songwriter Terry Dolan. Dolan had moved from the Washington, DC area in 1969 and had been playing around the Bay Area ever since. Terry And The Pirates was a somewhat casual ensemble that played Dolan's songs. Cipollina was the only regular "member," with a rotating cast depending on who was available. Typical members included guitarist Gregg Douglass (ex-Country Weather, future Steve Miller Band) and the old Copperhead rhythm section (Hutchinson and Weber).

Dolan's songs were pretty good, but not really great. Terry And The Pirates were popular locally, and his demos got some airplay on FM, but he never really got over the top.

January 20, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Valley Boys (Sunday)
The Valley Boys were a country rock band, possibly from Fresno, who regularly played Bay Area clubs.  

I Gotta Be Me, Gideon & Power's 1972 album on Bell (recorded in 1971 at Keystone Korner in San Francisco with members of the Elvin Bishop Group)

January 25-26, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Gideon & Power/Grayson Street
[25]/Frank Biner and The Nightshift [26] (Friday-Saturday)
Gideon Daniels was a powerful singer with a gospel background, and the band Gideon & Power played in a sort of gospel-rock style. Gideon & Power recorded a 1971 album live at the Keystone Korner, supported by some players from the Elvin Bishop Group. Since Gideon Daniels had been Elvin Bishop's housemate at one point, it's not surprising to find out that various members came and went through Gideon & Power over the years, and the band was somewhat of a farm team for Bishop. Singer Mickey Thomas and organist Melvin Seals had successful shifts with Gideon and then Elvin, too (Seals of course went on to play with the Jerry Garcia Band for 15 years).

Frank Biner was a popular local soul singer. Over the course of the 70s, Tower Of Power recorded a few of his songs, and he put out a few albums as a bandleader, but back in '74 Biner was just another guy working the clubs. Biner, with his band Nightshift, was a regular on weeknights at the Keystone Berkeley, but he played some gigs at the Long Branch, too. Biner was originally from Chicago, where he had recorded a few singles, but he had moved to the East Bay in the late 60s.



February 1974 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)
February 8, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/Son Of Pete (Friday)
The Friday show was reviewed by Berkeley Gazette critic Todd Tolces. It seems that Stoneground was booked to open for Malo at UC Berkeley's Zellerbach Auditorium. Stoneground had a band illness, and had to cancel, so Earth Quake did the opening set, and then hustled the 2 miles down to the Long Branch to headline.

Tolces also described Son Of Pete's set, extended somewhat due to Earth Quake's delayed arrival. Son Of Pete appears to have been a reggae "Toaster," a very odd thing outside of Jamaica and some neighborhoods in New York City. Toasters dj'd reggae records for dancing over customized sound systems, playing with the stereo mix and various effects, while also singing or talking over the records. As I understand it, the "Toaster" setup, pioneered in Jamaica, was a technological building block for rap music. Nascent rappers apparently took Toaster-type setups (sound system, multiple turntables, mic) and layered different music onto it. Outside of New York (or Kingston), however, many did not recognize the configuration.

It's easy to laugh at Berkeley--and fun too--but here was a guy playing gigs as a Reggae Toaster, playing a style of music unseen outside parts of New York Metro. Tolces praised Son Of Pete particularly for having numerous cool, unheard Reggae 45s, and I assure you that Berkeley took record snobbery seriously indeed. I have seen references that suggest that Son Of Pete was Earth Quake manager (and Beserkley Records founder) Matthew Kaufman, but I can't confirm that.

February 22-23, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: The Tubes/Kid Gloves (Friday-Saturday)
Kid Gloves are unknown to me. They regularly opened for The Tubes. 

SF Examiner March 8, 1974
March 8, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Earth Quake/New Stoneground (Friday)
I do not have flyers for March and April 1974, but I did some research on booked bands. I am including notes on any of the groups that hadn't played in the previous several months.

Stoneground had been formed in 1970 out of various San Francisco bands, to provide a "house band" for KSAN boss Tom Donahue's Medicine Ball Caravan. The Medicine Ball Caravan was meant to be a sort of traveling Woodstock, busing freaks around the country to put on mini-Woodstocks everywhere. The Grateful Dead backed out at the last moment. A strange film was made of the peculiar trek. Stoneground was signed by Warner Brothers and recorded 3 moderately successful album. Stoneground had no less than five lead singers, and had a sort of gospel-ish feel laid on top of a typical rock band. Stoneground broke up in mid-1973.

In early 1974, Stoneground lead guitarist Tim Barnes re-formed the band, initially just as a quartet. Barnes was the only lead singer. They probably did some of Stoneground's old songs, but they would have sounded different with just one singer. Other band members were organist Fred Webb (ex-It's A Beautiful Day), bassist Terry Davis and drummer Sammy Piazza (ex-Hot Tuna). Somewhat later, Stoneground would add two lead singers, including Jo Baker, and return somewhat to their older sound, and they eventually rose to at least a similar level to what they had been in the early 70s.

SF Examiner March 21, 1974
March 21, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Jimmy Baric Group (Thursday)
The Jimmy Baric Group are unknown to me. They played the Long Branch regularly during March 1974. I suspect that it might be guitarist Jimmy Berick, later in the Epic Records band Masters Of The Airwaves.

 

SF Examiner, March 23, 1974
 

March 23, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Naomi Ruth Eisenberg/Mitch Woods and His Red Hot Mama (Saturday)
Brooklyn-born pianist Mitch Woods had been playing in the Bay Area since 1970. Woods backed singer Gracie Glassman, as Mitch Woods And His Red Hot Mama, but I'm not sure if they had a band or were a duo. In the next few years, Woods would form Mitch Woods and His Rocket 88s, who had a throwback R&B sound. Woods has had a successful career ever since, and he still appears to be going strong.  

 

SF Examiner, March 30, 1974

March 30, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Valley Boys/Soundhole (Saturday)
Soundhole was a Marin band, who seemed to have debuted at the Branch on this Sunday night. By year's end, Soundhole would headline every Sunday night for a couple of months. Bay Area geography is odd, and West Berkeley was actually very near to Marin County (particularly after rush hour), so this was really a local gig for them. 

Soundhole was a rock band, but they had a sound that was influenced by jazz and soul. Kinda like Van Morrison, which is why Van Morrison--another Bay Area club regular--hired them as his backing band around 1974. Heady stuff for some guys from Marin who were still pretty new to the music scene. Soundhole was led by guitarist Brian Marnell, who would become somewhat known in the Bay Area for leading the band SVT (with Jack Casady) in the later 1970s. John Farey (later in Zero) played organ, and Brian Hogan played tenor sax.

Bassist Mario Cipollina (John's younger brother), drummer Bill Gibson and saxophonist/guitarist Johnny Colla would team up with two members of Clover (see above) to form Huey Lewis And The News, going on to fame and fortune.


May 1974 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)

May 2, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Fluid Drive (Thursday)
Fluid Drive are unknown to me. They were regular performers at the Long Branch on Thursdays in May 1974.

The Long Branch did not advertise bands on Monday, Tuesday and Wednsday nights. I don't know if the club was closed those nights, or if they just didn't book music. 

May 10-11, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Frank Biner and The Nightshift/Lucky Strike (Friday-Saturday)
After his club debut a few months earlier, Frank Biner was now headlining weekends at The Long Branch

Lucky Strike was a blues-rock band fronted by singer and harmonica player David Burgin. They had some good success in East Bay clubs, but never climbed any higher on the ladder.

May 17, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Grayson Street/Steel Band (Friday)
The Steel Band are unknown to me.  Possibly it's "a" (Caribbean) steel band.


June 1974 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)

June 16, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Frank Biner and The Nightshift featuring The Stovall Sisters (Sunday)
Lillian, Netta and Joyce Stovall were three of 22 (!) children raised in a gospel-singing family that had moved to Oakland in the late 1950s. The trio had released a sort of gospel-soul album on Reprise in 1970 which included the hit "Hang On In There." They were also the backup singers for Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit In The Sky." I assume Biner and Nightshift backed them for a set, and also played their own set.

June 29, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Eddie Money/Lucky Strike (Saturday)
The Rockets had broken up at the end of 1973. In June 1974, Eddie Mahoney re-introduced himself as "Eddie Money," with a new band led by guitarist Jimmy Lyons. They dominated the Long Branch, just as the Rockets had done.

July 1974 flyer for The Long Branch at 2504 San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley (flyer designed by and courtesy of Lydia Frazier Bosley)
July 5, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Norman Greenbaum & Crossfire/Yesterday & Today (Friday)
Norman Greenbaum was an anomaly at the Long Branch, as he was at every club he played at. Greenbaum, a guitarist and singer, had been in a 60s band that played in a sort of Lovin' Spoonful style band called Dr West's Medicine Show and Junk Band. In 1969, Greenbaum wrote a song that got him signed by Reprise, and assigned to staff producer Erik Jacobsen, former producer of the Spoonful. After a re-arrangement, Greenbaum's gospel-folk "Spirit In The Sky" sold millions of copies and went #1 all over the world. It is still heard regularly today on soundtracks on commercials.

He did release a second album, which included a minor hit "Canned Ham."Greenbaum lived quietly on his farm in Petaluma and didn't perform much, because he didn't have to.  Nonetheless, he sometimes toured around local clubs. We can guess his last number. Crossfire seems to have been an existing group, but I don't know anything else about them.

Yesterday & Today was a band from Oakland. Initially a cover band, they had started to play their own material in a hard rocking English style, kind of like Humble Pie. The quartet slugged it out in East Bay clubs for years. In 1984 when "hair metal" was popular on MTV, they finally made it big as Y & T, releasing the hit album In Rock We Trust.

July 11, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Frisco Kids (Thursday)
The Frisco Kids are unknown to me.

July 31, 1974 Long Branch, Berkeley, CA: Butch Whacks And His Glass Packs (Wednesday)
Butch Whacks and His Glass Packs were a 15-piece rock and roll band dedicated to performing old style rock and roll hits from the 50s and early 60s. The band got their start as students at St. Mary’s College in Moraga playing frat parties, and eventually morphed into a very popular bay area club and theater act.

For the post about shows at the Long Branch from its opening in May 1971 through December 1971, see here

For the post about shows at the Long Branch from January through June 1972, see here