Showing posts with label Allman Brothers Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allman Brothers Band. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2015

Alexander Memorial Coliseum

  • 965 Fowler Street NW, Atlanta GA (on Georgia Tech campus)
  • Capacity: approx. 8600
  • Note: In 2010, the arena received $45 million facelift, which included additional seating expanding the capacity to over 9100. Upon completion, the facility was renamed the Hank McCamish Pavilion. It continues to be home court for Georgia Tech's basketball teams.
Alexander Memorial Coliseum
1970
  • The Guess Who - April 24
  • Allman Brothers Band, Smith - May 9
  • Blood, Sweat & Tears - 
1971
  • Judy Collins - April 17
  • Steppenwolf - May 14
  • Chicago - October 28 (benefit for Voter Education Project)
1972
  • Bread - January 22
  • Richie Havens - January 29
  • The Beach Boys - March 30
  • Ten Years After, Wild Turkey - April 22
  • Stephen Stills & Manassas - May 15
  • West, Bruce & Laing; Edgar Winter; Mose Jones - October 26
1973
  • Yes, Poco, Les Moore - April 19
  • Uriah Heep; Earth, Wind & Fire; Tucky Buzzard - September 21
  • Loggins & Messina, Mark-Almond, Shawn Phillips  - October 24
  • J. Geils Band, Foghat - October 28
  • Sly & The Family Stone - November 1
  • Black Oak Arkansas, Spooky Tooth - November 22
  • Emerson, Lake & Palmer - November 28
  • The Isley Brothers - December 8
1974
  • Yes - February 11
  • Traffic - April 23
  • Blue Oyster Cult, Manfred Mann, Hydra - May 4
  • Kool and The Gang, Eddie Kendricks, The Bar-Kays - May 5
  • Doobie Brothers, Henry Gross - May 11
  • Earth, Wind & Fire; Richard Pryor; Chambers Brothers - May 25
  • Lynyrd Skynyrd, Hydra - September 20
  • Seals & Crofts - November 16
  • Black Oak Arkansas, Trapeze, Kiss - November 23

The Allman Brothers Band, Atlanta, July 1971

My teenage self attended the afternoon show, which, no surprise, remains in my top five lifetime concerts. Duane and Berry were still with us that summer...

The Allman Brothers Band,
display ad, The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 4 No. 29

Friday, March 13, 2015

Honorary Locals

In the early 1970s, some out-of-town musicians became so ubiquitous in Atlanta that they may as well have been locals. Those who had settled in Macon (e.g., Allman Brothers Band, Wet Willie, Cowboy) were already part of the family, but others hailed from further afield. They played Atlanta clubs and concert venues frequently, and built devoted followings in the city. South Carolina's Marshall Tucker Band and Florida's Lynyrd Skynyrd are maybe most obvious, but these others gained an early toehold in Atlanta as well. Club venues ranging from the tiny 12th Gate to the larger Richards drew the best. Part of the draw and interaction within those clubs was the physical layout: an approachable open stage adjacent to tabled seating, devoid of extreme risers or other off-putting barriers. In contrast, a venue like Alex Cooley's Electric Ballroom, though technically a club, created a distinct division between audience and performer with a high elevated stage, seating at a distance, and a deafening* barricade of PA equipment flanking the performers. It was simply not very friendly to spontaneous, organic interaction.

Little Feat at the 150-seat 12th Gate in 1971,
for only ONE DOLLAR.

California's Little Feat spent a lot of time in Atlanta early on, as their longtime fans know. In January 1971 they were playing the cozy 12th Gate on 10th Street; by October 1974 they were opening for Traffic at The Omni coliseum. In between were numerous bookings at Richards and return visits to the 12th Gate.
Country rock jamband Goose Creek Symphony hailed from Arizona and Kentucky. After appearing with Bobbie Gentry on The Ed Sullivan Show, they joined Jimi Hendrix and the Allman Brothers at the 1970 Atlanta International Pop Festival. They played for free in Piedmont Park, and also became familiar from bookings at the 12th Gate, The Great Southeast Music Hall, and Richards. (Update 3/23/15: In late 1971, the band actually pulled up roots and moved to Atlanta.)

May 1973, Cactus was booked at Richards.
Johnny Winter and Gregg Allman dropped in.

Texas bluesman Johnny Winter would pop up everywhere in Atlanta. He frequently was booked in the city for concerts, but he was also one who loved to jam and would just show up in clubs unannounced. It is undeniable that altered states were part of the musical chemistry of the time. I recall Winter laid out flat on his back on the stage floor of Richards late one night playing brilliantly unbounded blues solos while sitting (or lying) in. (Might have been that week in May 1973 when Cactus–the Mike Pinera/Duane Hitchings incarnation–headlined. Gregg Allman also sat in that week.)

Charlie Daniels (right) onstage with Leonard Cohen c. 1971

Another familiar drop-in was Charlie Daniels, a Nashville fixture originally from North Carolina. By 1970 Daniels was already renown and respected for his songwriting and musicianship across multiple genres, especially country and bluegrass, working with the likes of Bob Dylan, Marty Robbins, The Youngbloods, Leonard Cohen, and many others. He stepped quite naturally into the arena of Southern Rock as it evolved. Anyone who's ever been around him knows the formidable presence of the man: a tall mountain brimming with big-heartedness. Like Johnny Winter, he would show up unexpectedly in a club to spontaneously jam, no matter the genre. The most interesting impromptu collaboration I ever witnessed was the time Daniels stepped onstage at Richards to jam with British rocker Terry Reid, who appeared as surprised as everyone else. Charlie Daniels towered over elfin Reid, and brought out his fiddle to accompany Reid's reflective folk/blues/rock from his then-new River LP that verged at times on jazz abstraction. I wish there was a photo in existence of the unlikely duo. Their strange musical mesh worked, though, and lifted the room to someplace entirely new.

Bonnie &  Delaney Bramlett with Duane Allman

Icing on the cake was the camaraderie of the musicians themselves. It was still a time when love of music prevailed and contract restrictions were much looser than today. Also key was that the time period was pre-handheld devices, pre-social media, and pre-paparazzi. There was more freedom of movement and more respect for privacy. The players showed up for each other, and late-set jams became the stuff of legend. Credit must be given to Duane Allman, too. During his time as a session player in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, he drew many musicians to Georgia, including California-based Boz Scaggs and Delaney & Bonnie Bramlett. (Even after the spouses split in 1973, Bonnie Bramlett, on her own, was booked frequently in Atlanta.) There was no shortage of talent, no matter which direction you turned.

*I permanently lost hearing in my right ear there during a Bill Bruford performance in August 1979 while taking photographs from stage right. 

Friday, January 23, 2015

The Marshall Tucker Band

Living on Seal Place, I spent a large amount of time at Richards around the corner on Monroe Drive. I didn't work there, but was sort of a family member, friends with many of the club's team. In retrospect, I might have driven them a bit crazy. The club was closed during the day. They kept a grand piano at the far left side of the stage, and sometimes I'd carry my stack of sheet music from the house over to practice my mediocre musical skills during the afternoon. A bit of Mozart, Bach, Debussy, mixed with lame attempts at Procol Harum. My apologies to anyone who had to listen, and thanks to those who indulged me. I digress.
Richards launched on February 1, 1973. February 12-16, Spartanburg SC's Marshall Tucker Band opened for Bo Diddley. When Marshall Tucker returned to the club for another week in mid-April, they were the headliners.

The Marshall Tucker Band in 1972;
(L-R) Toy Caldwell, George McCorkle, Jerry Eubanks, 
Doug Gray, Paul Riddle, Tommy Caldwell

My disjointed spiel about piano practice leads here: sometimes I was asked by day manager Diane to handle the phones as they attended to other business. The one call that has stuck in my head for these past decades is when I picked up the receiver and Doug Gray* was on the other end of the line. The Marshall Tucker Band's eponymous debut album had been released by Phil Walden's Capricorn Records only a couple of weeks prior. It was getting massive radio-play, particularly their first single "Can't You See," as well as "Take the Highway." Doug was positively giddy. He kept saying "I can't believe it!," "We worked so hard!," talking a mile a minute, and was simply blown away by their accelerating success. It remains one of the most insanely unbounded enthusiastic celebratory phone conversations I've ever experienced. We were all thrilled for them, and the band received a hero's welcome when they returned to Richards the next week. Beginning in June that same year, the band went on tour with the Allman Brothers. In 1974, MTB continued to tour, the album went platinum, and they earned top billing.
Fast-forward forty years, and Doug Gray is still humbly amazed at Marshall Tucker's success. In 2014, contestant Patrick Thomson performed "Can't You See" on NBC's The Voice. A contestant on American Idol also covered the song. Doug spoke with Billboard:
"When Toy Caldwell wrote that song, none of us knew that it was going to be as popular forty years later. We had no idea that any of us would make it past the weekend. So, to watch those guys do it, and all the emails and calls, was amazing."
In 1973, it was the wonderful circumstance of truly great things happening to truly good people (who realized their talents and knew the value of hard work.) In the many years since, Doug Gray has held the band together throughout its losses and changes. The Marshall Tucker Band continues to tour and retains a devoted fanbase while bringing their music to new generations. Good on them. As their friend Gregg sings, "the road goes on forever." Check out MarshallTucker.com for details on their history, evolution, discography, tour dates, and other information.

*Doug Gray was, and still is, founding member and lead singer of The Marshall Tucker Band.

Sources:
Billboard.com, Artists, The Marshall Tucker Band
Billboard.com, "Marshall Tucker Feels the Love on Both 'The Voice' and 'American Idol,'" by Chuck Dauphin, April 21, 2014

Monday, January 19, 2015

Discovery, Inc.

Booking agencies have always navigated the often tricky waters of coordinating artists with promoters and venues. In Atlanta's late 1960s and early 70s, there were several operations handling such business. Discovery, Inc., founded by Steve Cole in 1968, within a few years became the busiest and largest of the local agencies, at least in the rock-and-roll marketplace. Cole was part of the Atlanta music scene from which emerged the Southern Rock genre. He played a key role in mobilizing the legendary Piedmont Park free concerts (which propelled the Allman Brothers Band), and supplied clubs, colleges, and other settings throughout the Southeast with talent as required. Big name national tours, when in the region, often turned to the local talent pool for opening acts. Discovery provided.

Steve Cole (left) and promoter Alex Cooley at Piedmont Park, Atlanta GA,
photo by Carter Tomassi
From the outset, Discovery marketed the agency's presence, profile, and mission. They also promoted their bands' appearances, bolstering any advertising that club and concert promoters might provide. By 1974, Discovery handled about 20 acts. The Hampton Grease Band was with them from the beginning and, in 1970, landed a recording contract with CBS/Columbia. Discovery represented Lynyrd Skynyrd early in the band's career, also Mose Jones (formerly Stonehenge). In 1972, those two bands became label-mates for Al Kooper's Sound of the South, the first acts Kooper signed. Hydra likely logged the most road miles of any band in Atlanta back in the day, and signed with Phil Walden's Capricorn Records by early 1973. A point could be reached when range and volume of requests for a band outgrew the size of the agency. As happened with those mentioned, the time came when an agency with larger reach and capability was required. It was a good problem to have, and reflected success for both artists and agency.

Discovery, Inc., 1973 roster sample,
(click to enlarge)
In 1974, Discovery, Inc., merged with Holliday Group, another agency in the city. They retained the Discovery name and secured their standing as largest agency in Atlanta. Search results past the merger return very little information. A posting at thestripproject.com indicates that Steve Cole has since passed. Longtime Atlanta musician Darryl Rhoades wrote that Cole "understood the possibilities of the music scene way before other promoters actually acted on it. He predicted that one day bands would be playing huge venues to packed audiences." Atlanta's musical past owes much to Steve Cole.


Steve Cole, Discovery, Inc.,
photo from Billboard, May 24, 1974

Acts represented by Discovery between 1968 and 1974 include: Albatross, The American Cheese, Applejack, Armon, Atlanta Vibrations [later, Vibration], Avenue of Happiness, Axis, The Bag, Booger Band [later, just Booger], Brick Wall, Brother Bait, Buster Brown, Caliban, The Celestial Voluptuous Banana, Choice, Clear, The Coconut Confetti, The Daze After, Dear John, Dogwood, East Side Blues Band, The Electric Collage Light Show, Fifth Order, Flint, Foxes, Gingerbread, Glass Menagerie, Hampton Grease Band, Heat, Hydra, Interprize, Kudzu, Leviathan, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Micropolis, Milkweed, The Mud Child, The New Explanation, The Night Shadows featuring Little Phil, Orpheum Circuit, Pale Paradox, Papa Doc, The Peppermint Confederacy, Perpetual Motion [later, The Motion], Protrudamus, Radar, Resurrection, Rude-Frye, Russian Butt Broil, St George and the Dragonlite Show, Scald Cats, Smokestack Lightnin', The Soul-Jers, Soul Support, The Spontaneous Generation, Stillbrooke, Stonehenge [later, Mose Jones], Stump Brothers, Sweet Fire, Sweet Younguns [later, just Younguns], Traktor, Warm, and West End.

I promise I did not make up any of these names.


Sources:

"Bookers See Southern Bands Still to Be Recorded, Allman Brothers Success a Continuing Momentum," Billboard, May 24, 1974
"Inside Track," Billboard, October 26, 1974
The Great Speckled Bird, advertisements, 1968-1974

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

The Hampton Grease Band

While compiling information for these early 70s Atlanta venues and events, a common link recurred throughout: The Hampton Grease Band. Formed in 1967, they were on the Atlanta scene before the Allman Brothers, before Lynyrd Skynyrd, before the pop festivals, before record companies came sniffing around for "Southern Rock." Various incarnations of the Hampton Grease Band [HGB] morphed over time, but its central figure remained the "Colonel," Bruce Hampton.


The Hampton Grease Band
Bruce Hampton, Glenn Phillips, Jerry Fields, Mike Holbrook, Harold Kelling

Founding member, guitarist/composer Glenn Phillips documented the eclectic history of HGB online. It's a great read. You can't make this stuff up. The band's stage performances were unpredictable, at times chaotic, always artistic (albeit Dada and surreal), ultimately entertaining, and they cultivated a dedicated following in Atlanta and beyond. Live performances were the keystone of their fanbase.

According to Phillips:
The stage was frequently filled with friends doing anything from watching TV, doing a duet with the guitar on a chain saw, or sitting at a table eating cereal. Hampton, who at one point sported a crew cut with an H shaved in the back of his head, would tape himself to the microphone stand while talking to the audience about the supposed Portuguese invasion of the U.S. through Canada. At an outdoor show, Bruce slept through our set under a truck, while at another show, he turned around in the middle of a song, jumped in the air, and kicked Mike [Holbrook, bassist] in the chest. Mike flew back into his amp, which he knocked over and short-circuited. Holbrook recalls another time when "we got the idea that we wanted to put mayonnaise all over our friend Eric Hubbler. We got a gallon of mayonnaise and Hubbler came out and sat down in a chair while the band was playing. I stuck my hand down in it and glopped it all over his head."
The Hampton Grease Band adapted to any venue, from the tiny room of the 12th Gate to fields full of hundreds of thousands at the Atlanta International Pop Festivals. They were already playing free concerts in Piedmont Park on Sundays before the Allman Brothers Band started doing the same in May 1969. Columbia Records got wind of HGB's unique act and contacted Capricorn Records chief Phil Walden to try to track them down. Long story short, Walden brokered a record deal for HGB with Columbia (CBS). Music To Eat, a double LP, was released in 1971. It notably became Columbia's 2nd worst-selling record ever. (The very worst was a yoga instructional record. Unsurprisingly, Music To Eat is now a collectors item.)
Decades later, Julian Cope's headheritage.com declares:
[W]hile the temptation is there to view the Hampton Grease Band as a possible answer to the trivia question "what is the silliest hippy-shit record ever released on a major record label?" in truth it's actually damn near a masterpiece that almost exists outside of history.
Despite their calamitous vinyl debut, HGB maintained a fiercely loyal fanbase, one of whom, Duane Allman, recommended to his friend Bill Graham that he book HGB for the Fillmore in NYC. Graham did exactly that. He perfectly paired the band with Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention the weekend of June 5-6, 1971. HGB performed brilliantly, and Fillmore East manager Kip Cohen sang the band's praises to then-CBS head Clive Davis:
Dear Clive:
As you know, this is the first time I've ever written a letter like this one to you--but even though John Lennon and Yoko Ono guested on our stage last night, my memories of the past weekend will reside exclusively with the Hampton Grease Band.
Aside from their totally delightful, unique brand of humor, and the obvious fact of their being good people, there is a musical intelligence within that band that truly excites me.
I can only hope that they enjoy the total success they deserve. They were one of the most pleasant surprises we have had on our stage in many, many months.
That was likely the high point for the Hampton Grease Band. Unfortunately, the label relationship did not survive, nor did the band. For whatever reason, CBS/Columbia dropped them. Frank Zappa's Bizarre/Straight label stepped in and signed them, but the band crumbled before a record could be completed. It all fell apart in 1973 when Bruce Hampton left for California to audition for a spot in Zappa's band. The audition was unsuccessful, and the rest of the band had gone their separate ways by his return. Years following, various configurations would resurface. Glenn Phillips tells this story best, and I'll refer you back to his site for the rest of the story.

Sunday, January 4, 2015

The Grateful Dead at the Sports Arena

Follow-up to December 23, 2014 post:
Here are two promo ads for the Grateful Dead's May 10, 1970 concert at Atlanta's Sports Arena. The Hampton Grease Band opened. As mentioned previously, the Allman Brothers were not on the bill, but lent their equipment to The Dead and joined in for an epic jam that still echoes.

The Great Speckled Bird
Volume 3, Number 18
May 4, 1970
The Great Speckled Bird
Volume 3, Number 19
May 11, 1970

Saturday, January 3, 2015

The Sports Arena

  • 310 Chester Avenue SE, Atlanta GA
    "Only 8,020 Feet East of State Capitol on Memorial Drive"
  • Owners: L.C. "Pop" Warren created the venue in the 1930s; sold to Clyde Darby during WWII; in 1965 bought by wrestling promoter Paul Jones
  • Capacity: 3600 
The Sports Arena was designed to host wrestling and boxing matches. It was also home to AAU "semipro" women's basketball team The Atlanta Blues. Musical events were interspersed, wherein the wrestling ring was adapted for performances. Early on, square dances were held several times a week, the main moneymaker of the time. Musical prodigy Brenda Lee performed there when she was just 9 years old. Elvis Presley played the Arena at age 20 on December 2, 1955, as his popularity was beginning to surge. Sports events at the venue were phasing out by the mid-1970s. In the mid-1980s the building was demolished. 


        Photo by Steve Deal, staff photographer,
        Atlanta Journal, October 28, 1983

        "The Arena is a ramshackle building [without air-conditioning] long used for local wrestling, boxing, country music, and square dances. Inside, the atmosphere is one of wood and honest corruption, not steel, concrete, and hydraulic hype. Outside, the feeling is, well, like the industrial part of town, you know, warehouses, steel mesh fences, truck loading docks, cotton mill buildings, and even some plain red dirt road dear to the heart of a country boy."
        --The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 3, No. 5, February 2, 1970, article by Cliff Endres

        1970
        • Fleetwood Mac, Hampton Grease Band, Radar, River People - January 25
        • The Kinks, Osmosis, Booger Band, Brick Wall (Kinks cancelled day before; replaced with Pacific Gas & Electric) - February 22
        • Kenny Rogers & The First Edition, The Glass Menagerie - March 8
        • Spirit, River People, Ruffin - March 22 (Spirit cancelled less than 24 hrs before show; Hampton Grease Band and What Brothers added)
        • John Mayall, Hampton Grease Band, Chakra - April 5
        • Johnny Winter, Radar, Georgia Power Kompany - April 12
        • Canned Heat, The House - April 19 
        • "Rock and Roll Marathon" - Hampton Grease Band, Radar, Stump Brothers, Axis, Perpetual Motion, Brick Wall, Georgia Power Kompany, What Brothers, Ruffin - April 26 (9 hour benefit for The Midtown Alliance and Community Center)
        • Grateful Dead, Hampton Grease Band - May 10 (members of the Allman Brothers Band joined Grateful Dead for an extensive jam; The Dead had borrowed the ABB's equipment as theirs was stuck in Boston)
        1971
        • Captain Beefheart, Ry Cooder, Booger Band - February 4
        • Quicksilver Messenger Service, Brewer & Shipley - March 21
        • Spirit, Trapeze, Radar - April 18
        • John Mayall, Stonehenge, Randals Island - May 9
        • Goose Creek Symphony, Chakra - May 23
        • Steve Miller Band - June 10
        • Buddy Miles and the Buddy Miles Express, Sugarloaf, Florida's Fabulous Tropics - June 20
        • BB King, East Side Blues Band - June 27
        • Chuck Berry, Ted Nugent & The Amboy Dukes, Sunday Funnies - October 17
        • Fanny, Hydra, Orpheum Circuit, Phat Max - November 14
        • The Guess Who, Peace Corps - December 2
        1972
        • John McLaughlin & The Mahavishnu Orchestra, Hampton Grease Band - May 7
        • Edgar Winter, Groundhogs, Eric Quincy Tate - June 11
        • Procol Harum, Eagles, Radar - July 13*
        • Uriah Heep, John Baldry, White Trash - July 19
        • The Byrds, Eric Anderson, New Riders of the Purple Sage - August 2
        • T. Rex - August 21
        • J. Geils Band - September 1
        • Cheech & Chong, Hampton Grease Band - September 28
        • John Mayall, Delbert & Glen - November 5
        1973
        • Mom's Apple Pie, Silverman, Joy - January 28
        • Trapeze, Hydra - May 24
        • Marshall Tucker Band, Wet Willie, Mose Jones, Eric Quincy Tate, Greg Scott & Eddie Terrill Band - July 1 (benefit for C.A.R.E.)
        • Joe Walsh - August 19
        • Fleetwood Mac, Jambalaya, Dixie Grease - November 4
        *Conflicting tour databases put Procol Harum and Eagles at both Atlanta's Sports Arena and The Warehouse in New Orleans July 14, 1972. Eagles opened several times for Procol Harum on their 1972 tour, promoting the May 1972 release of their debut single "Take it Easy." A couple of online accounts of Sports Arena attendees place both bands in Atlanta on July 14. Promoter Howard Stein advertised only the July 13 concert in The Great Speckled Bird's July 10 and 17, 1972 issues. I will stick with the 13th as evidenced in the display ads. Joe Roman's definitive concert review in the July 24, 1972 issue of The Bird also nails the event to Thursday the 13th.

        Sources:

        "Arena of Memories," by Sam Heys, staff writer, Atlanta Journal, October 28, 1983
        Just for Fun: the Story of AAU Women's Basketball, by Robert W. Ikard, published by The University of Arkansas Press, 2005

        Tuesday, December 30, 2014

        The Omni

        • 100 Techwood Drive, Atlanta GA
        • Opened: October 14, 1972
        • Demolished: May 11, 1997; replaced by Philips Arena, opened 1999 
        • Capacity: 15-16,500
        • Note: The Omni Coliseum was created primarily to serve as home arena for the Atlanta Hawks (NBA) and the Atlanta Flames (NHL).
        The Omni Coliseum
        1972
        • Cat Stevens, Ramblin' Jack Elliott - October 30
        • Bob Hope with Mark Spitz, Vic Damone, Roberta Flack, "and special guest stars"  - November 3
        • Elton John, Family - November 15
        • Isaac Hayes - November 20
        1973
        • Flip Wilson, Wilson Pickett, The Friends of Distinction, José Feliciano, Linda Hopkins, The Jimmy Castor Bunch - January 15 (benefit for Martin Luther King Center)
        • Neil Young, Linda Ronstadt - January 31
        • Lawrence Welk - March 5
        • Santana - March 11
        • Alice Cooper, Flo & Eddie - March 23
        • "Rock & Roll Revival" - April 6
        • Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen, Mother's Finest - April 11 (Muscular Dystrophy Association fundraiser) 
        • Sonny & Cher, David Brenner - April 17
        • The Temptations - April 30
        • "Rock & Roll Revival" - Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Little Richard, Bobby Comstock, The Shirelles - May 19
        • Jethro Tull - May 20
        • Allman Brothers Band, Marshall Tucker Band - June 2
        • Al Green - June 9
        • Deep Purple - June 14
        • Elvis Presley - June 21, June 29-30, July 3
        • Three Dog Night, T. Rex - July 29
        • Isaac Hayes - July 16
        • Grand Funk Railroad - August 9
        • Jackson 5 - August 11
        • The Osmonds, Springfield Revival - August 13
        • Jerry Butler - August 16
        • Mandrill, Osibisa, Funkadelic - August 19
        • Seals & Crofts - August 25
        • Faces "featuring Rod Stewart" - September 14
        • Roberta Flack, Donny Hathaway, Gladys Knight & The Pips - September 16
        • Moody Blues - November 6
        • Focus, Spencer Davis Group - November 18
        • Al Green, The Stylistics, The Independents, Osibisa, Walter Heath - November 25
        • The Who, Lynryd Skynyrd - November 27
        • Grateful Dead - December 12
        1974
        • Mandrill, Ohio Players - January 13
        • Sly & The Family Stone, Ramsey Lewis, The O-Jays, Maxine Weldon - January 14 (benefit for Martin Luther King Center)
        • Bob Dylan, The Band - January 21-22
        • Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Stray Dog - January 24
        • Black Sabbath, Spooky Tooth - February 7
        • Johnny Winter, Brownsville Station, Thunderhead - March 4
        • Deep Purple, Savoy Brown, Tucky Buzzard - March 11
        • Humble Pie, Spooky Tooth, Montrose - March 18
        • Joni Mitchell - April 6
        • James Brown - April 11
        • Frank Sinatra - April 13
        • J. Geils Band, Poco - April 23
        • Marvin Gaye - April 24
        • The Temptations, The Spinners - May 3 (benefit for United Negro College Fund)
        • Cat Stevens, Linda Lewis - May 15
        • Seals & Crofts - May 16
        • "Rock & Roll Revival" - Little Richard, The Coasters, The Crystals, The 5 Satins, Danny & The Juniors, Freddie Cannon, Lloyd Price - May 18
        • Ten Years After, Golden Earring, Argent - May 22
        • James Brown - June 7
        • Grateful Dead, Maria Muldaur - June 20
        • Edgar Winter, Robin Trower - June 25
        • Uriah Heep, Manfred Mann's Earth Band - July 7
        • Cat Stevens, Linda Lewis - July 14
        • Joe Walsh & Barnstorm, Eagles - July 31
        • Eric Clapton, Yvonne Elliman, Jamie Oldraker, Carl Radle, Dick Sims, George Terry, Ross - August 1
        • ZZ Top, Atlanta Rhythm Section - August 30
        • The O-Jays, Richard Pryor, Rufus - September 6
        • Santana, Golden Earring - October 2
        • Stevie Wonder & Wonderlove - October 6
        • Traffic, Little Feat - October 16
        • Sly & The Family Stone, Rare Earth - October 28
        • Jefferson Starship, Triumvirat, Fleetwood Mac - October 31
        • Elton John - November 10
        • George Harrison & Friends - November 28
        • Yes, Gryphon - November 30
        • David Bowie - December 1
        • "Rock & Roll Revival" - Wolfman Jack, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Shirelles, Bobby Rydell, The Drifters, The Clovers, Lloyd Price - December 7

        Monday, December 29, 2014

        Atlanta Municipal Auditorium

        • 30 Courtland Street SE (at Gilmer Street), Atlanta GA
        • Capacity: 5000
        • Note: The building, built 1909, was sold to Georgia State University in 1979.
        Atlanta Municipal Auditorium
        Photo: Special Collections Department,
        Pullen Library, Georgia State University
        1970 
        • Steppenwolf - January 10
        • Jerry Lee Lewis - January 17
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Merle Haggard, Bonnie Owens, The Strangers - March 14
        • James Brown - March 16-17
        • Santana, Allman Brothers Band, Insect Trust - March 19
        • Allman Brothers Band - March 26
        • B.B. King, Judy Clay, Wild Man Steve & His Revue - April 6
        • Johnny Winter - April 12
        • Delaney & Bonnie & Friends, Norman Greenbaum - April 30 (D&B refused to play, blaming sound system; Norman Greenbaum performed for small crowd, for free)
        • Pink Floyd, The Guess Who - May 12
        • Van Morrison, Sabudi, Shelly Isaacs - May 14 (partial benefit for Community Center bail fund)
        • The Who - June 22
        • Steppenwolf, Chakra - August 3
        • Fleetwood Mac, Hampton Grease Band - August 20
        • Jefferson Airplane, Radar, Glen McKay's Head Lights - August 24
        • Mountain, Mylon LeFevre, Joel Osner - October 8
        • Ike & Tina Turner Revue, Chakra, David Kennedy & Fire Power - October 22
        • Bloodrock, Hydra, Rusha - October 31
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Sonny James & his Country Gentlemen, Ray Price & his Cherokee Cowboys, Compton Brothers - November 28
        • Ten Years After, Stonehenge - December 1
        • The Band - December 10
        • The Temptations, Carla Thomas, The Bar-Kays - December 19
        • The Amboy Dukes, Bob Seger System, MC-5 - December 29
        1971
        • Allman Brothers Band, Hampton Grease Band - January 16
        • James Taylor, Carole King, Jo Mama - March 2
        • Eric Burdon & War - March 11
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Conway Twitty, Bill Anderson, Tom T. Hall, Bobby Bare, Jan Howard, Bobby Johnson & The Swinging Gentlemen - March 13
        • Blood, Sweat & Tears - March 25
        • Small Faces "featuring Rod Stewart," Savoy Brown, The Grease Band - March 30
        • Alice Cooper, Ted Nugent & The Amboy Dukes, Brownsville Station - April 1
        • Jethro Tull, Brethren, Younguns - April 13
        • Judy Collins - April 17
        • Mountain, Procol Harum, Hydra - April 29
        • Johnny Winter, Booger - May 15
        • "Super Heavy Blues Express" - Big Mama Thornton, John Lee Hooker, T-Bone Walker, Joe Turner, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Al Hibbler - May 16
        • Elton John, Mark-Almond - June 8
        • Edgar Winter's White Trash, Mott The Hoople, J. Geils Band - June 17
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Conway Twitty & The Twitty Birds, Loretta Lynn & The Nashville Tennesseans, Dave Dudley & The Roadrunners, Anthony Armstrong Jones - June 26
        • Melanie, Janey & Dennis - June 30
        • Black Sabbath, Blues Project - July 7
        • Allman Brothers Band, Cowboy (7:30pm), Hampton Grease Band (2:30pm) - July 17 (2 shows)
        • Bloodrock, Savage Grace, Robert Savage Group - July 22
        • Mother Earth, Doobie Brothers - August 2
        • Emerson, Lake & Palmer; Humble Pie - August 4
        • Faces "featuring Rod Stewart," Southern Comfort - August 5
        • Ten Years After - August 11
        • John Sebastian, Savage Grace - August 12
        • James Gang, Mylon, Smoo's Barn Dance - August 17
        • Leon Russell, Freddie King - August 18
        • Savoy Brown - September 2
        • Alice Cooper, Lee Michaels - September 11
        • Long John Baldry, Cactus, Savoy Brown - September 23
        • It's A Beautiful Day, Boz Scaggs - October 16
        • Traffic, Fairport Convention - October 18
        • Mountain, J. Geils Band, Stray Dog - October 27
        • Cat Stevens, Mimi & Tom - November 10
        • Grateful Dead, New Riders of the Purple Sage - November 11
        • David Cassidy - November 13
        • Emerson, Lake & Palmer; Yes - November 22
        • The Who - November 23
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Porter Wagoner, Dolly Parton, Sonny James & The Country Gentlemen, Freddy Weller - November 27
        • Canned Heat, Gary Wright, REO Speedwagon - December 15
        • Bloodrock, Spirit, Crabby Appleton - December 20
        1972
        • Alice Cooper, Redbone, White Witch - January 8
        • Smokey Robinson, Georgia Prophets - January 20
        • Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother & The Holding Company, Malo featuring David Santana - January 24
        • Allman Brothers Band, Alex Taylor - January 25
        • Traffic, J.J. Cale - January 31
        • Melanie - February 16
        • Ike & Tina Turner Revue, Wet Willie - February 19
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - Waylon Jennings & The Waylors, Freddie Hart, Jim Ed Brown & The Gems, Stonewall Jackson & The Minutemen, Barbara Mandrell & The Mandrells - March 11
        • Joe Cocker - March 21
        • Emerson, Lake & Palmer - March 28
        • The Guess Who - April 5
        • Humble Pie, Alexis Corner, Edgar Winter - April 6
        • Jethro Tull, Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band - April 27
        • Jackson 5 - May 8
        • Chicago - May 15
        • Black Sabbath - June 19
        • The Staple Singers, Joe Simon, Stylistics- July 13
        • "Rock & Roll Revival" - Bill Haley & The Comets, The Coasters, Chubby Checker, Gary U.S. Bonds, Freddie Cannon, Bobby Comstock & The Comstock Ltd - July 15
        • Rare Earth - July 18
        • Leon Russell - July 20
        • Black Sabbath - July 22
        • Badfinger, Bloodrock, Kindred - August 3
        • Jackson 5 - August 7
        • James Gang, Captain Beyond - August 14
        • Deep Purple, Fleetwood Mac, Silverhead - August 28-29
        • Allman Brothers Band, Wet Willie (8/30), Eric Quincy Tate (8/31) - August 30-31
        • The Al Green Review, The Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose, Herb Jubrit - September 16
        • T. Rex, Doobie Brothers - September 23
        • Yes, Eagles - September 30
        • Brother Bait, performing "Tommy" - October 10
        • Ten Years After - October 12
        • B.B. King, Bobby Womack with Peace, Eric Quincy Tate - November 6
        • The Hollies, Raspberries, Danny O'Keefe - November 8
        • New Riders of The Purple Sage, Eric Quincy Tate - November 14
        • "Bluegrass Music Spectacular" - Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt, Osborne Brothers, Jim & Jesse, Ralph Stanley, Lewis Family, Jimmy Martin, Mac Wiseman, Reno-Harrell, James Monroe, Clyde Moody, Curly Seckler - November 18 (12 hours!)
        • The Supremes, Jackson 5 - December 1
        • Humble Pie - December 14
        • Edgar Winter, Wild Turkey - December 16
        1973
        • Rare Earth - January 20
        • Charley Pride, Freddie Hart - January 27
        • The Delfonics - February 10
        • Traffic, John Martyn, Free - February 14
        • Johnny Rivers, Brewer & Shipley - February 15
        • Stephen Stills & Manassas - February 17
        • Uriah Heep, Silverhead, Spooky Tooth - February 22
        • Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention, Dr Hook & The Medicine Show - February 26
        • "WPLO Shower of Stars" - George Jones, Tammy Wynette, Waylon Jennings - March 10
        • Pink Floyd - March 24
        • Loggins & Messina, Doobie Brothers - March 29
        • Stephen Stills & Manassas - April 2
        • Wishbone Ash, Vinegar Joe, Dr Hook & The Medicine Show - April 26
        • Chi-Lites, The O-Jays, The Main Ingredient, Detroit Emeralds, Moments, Millie Jackson - May 2
        • David Gates & Bread - May 3
        • Waylon Jennings - May 12
        • Kris Kristofferson & Rita Coolidge - May 28
        • George Carlin - June 21
        • Ike & Tina Turner - July 12
        • Black Oak Arkansas, Jo Jo Gunne - July 14
        • Beck, Bogert & Appice; Dr John - July 16
        • Curtis Mayfield - July 19
        • "CTI Summer Festival" - Esther Phillips, Milt Jackson, Hubert Laws, Hank Crawford, Johnny Hammond, Eric Gale, Ron Carter, Jack DeJohnette, Bob James, Ralph McDonald, CTI Strings, Frankie Crocker MC - July 21
        • Porter Wagoner, Dolly Parton, Speck Rhodes & The Wagonmasters - July 28
        • Cactus - August 3
        • Kool and The Gang, Ebony - August 5
        • Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons - August 11
        • Roger McGuinn - August 22
        • Sha Na Na, Wet Willie - August 23
        • Roy Buchanan - September 6
        • Al Green, Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose - September
        • ZZ Top, Albert King - September 29
        • Yes, Eagles - September 30
        • Mott The Hoople, Aerosmith, New York Dolls - October 4
        • Pat Boone - October 9
        • Ten Years After - October 10
        • Joe Walsh, Paul Butterfield Blues Band, REO Speedwagon - October 11
        • Steve Miller Band - October 17
        • Arlo Guthrie - October 21
        • John Denver - October 25
        • Conway Twitty, Loretta Lynn - October 27
        • John Mayall, Ballin' Jack - November 1
        • Freddie King, Tower of Power, Sylvester & The Hot Band - November 14
        • John McLaughlin & The Mahavishnu Orchestra, Argent, Papa John Creech - November 21
        • "Shower of Stars" - Hank Williams, Barbara Mandrell, Tom T. Hall, Johnny Rodriguez - November 24
        • David Crosby & Graham Nash, David Blue - November 28
        1974
        • Slade, Brownsville Station - January 16
        • Emerson, Lake & Palmer - January 24
        • Billy Preston - February 14
        • Dave Mason, James Gang - February 21
        • B.B. King, Bobby Blue Bland, Ann Peebles - February 25
        • Foghat, Maggie Bell, Frampton's Camel - March 27 
        • Beach Boys - April 11
        • King Crimson, Grin - April 13
        • Bachman-Turner Overdrive, Climax Blues Band - May 6
        • Procol Harum, Renaissance - May 8
        • Slade, 10cc, Brownsville Station - June 5
        • "Guitar Battle of the Century" - Ted Nugent & The Amboy Dukes, Cactus featuring Mike Pinera - July 26
        • Foghat, Brownsville Station - August 5
        • Choice, Stories, Brother Louie - August 19
        • Mountain - August 21
        • New York Dolls, White Witch - September 7
        • Joe Cocker - September 9
        • Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt - October 31
        • Lou Reed - November 7
        • Dave Mason, Poco - November 16

        Tuesday, December 23, 2014

        The Allman Brothers & The Grateful Dead

        Several acts from the 1969 July 4th weekend Atlanta International Pop Festival stayed in town to participate in a free concert Monday, July 7th, in Atlanta's Piedmont Park. (These included Spirit, Chicago Transit Authority, It's A Beautiful Day, and Delaney & Bonnie & Friends.) Macon's Allman Brothers Band had not performed at the pop festival, but joined the roster for the Monday concert. The Grateful Dead, also not at the festival, played the free concert, too. It was the first meeting of the two bands, and, by the end of the day, their first jam together. The history of both bands would come to include their shared propensity for extensive jams. The Allmans, in July 1969, were already familiar with The Dead, having seen them at the December 1968 Miami Pop Festival. The Allman Brothers Band formed in early Spring of 1969, and by July they drew substantial crowds for their spontaneous Sunday performances in Piedmont Park. Their local following had become well-rooted, and the band commuted weekends from Macon to Atlanta to showcase what they'd worked on during the week. Their eponymous first album would be released in November that year by Phil Walden's Capricorn Records.


        Jerry Garcia, photo by Bill Fibben
        The Great Speckled Bird,
        Vol, 3, No. 20, May 18, 1970

        May 10, 1970, the Grateful Dead were booked to perform at Atlanta's Sports Arena. Their equipment was stuck in Boston, the fault of their airline. The Allman Brothers generously loaned them their gear to ensure The Dead could fulfill their engagement. (The ABBs had played the Georgia Tech coliseum the night before.) It helped that the two bands were of a similar configuration. One photo, taken by Bill Fibben of The Great Speckled Bird, confirms the story. The Allman Brothers Band was not on the bill, but Duane, Gregg, Berry Oakley, and Butch Trucks joined The Dead in a legendary jam to close out the show, including "Will The Circle Be Unbroken."
        The Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers continued to cross paths and share stages for years. 

        Monday, December 22, 2014

        Al Kooper & Duane Allman on Free Concerts: Point/Counterpoint

        On June 24, 1969, Don Speicher of The Great Speckled Bird interviewed musician/producer Al Kooper prior to the first Atlanta International Pop Festival. Kooper was one of the performers booked for the July 4th weekend event. 
        Their conversation included discussion of ticket pricing, corporate sponsorship, and their divergent attitudes regarding free concerts.

        DS:
         There's some talk of sometime during that weekend trying to do a free thing in the park, with some local people and anyone else who might be interested.
        AK: No one will do it. No one will do it just because they can't. I mean really. If I'm in a big group and I'm sitting in New York and someone wants us to do a free gig in Atlanta in the park and you're gonna reach about a hundred thousand people I'd say groovy, how are we gonna get there? Where are we gonna stay? Who's doing the sound? How are we gonna transport the equipment? You can't just go up.
        ...
        DS: ...to me, free things in the park, with local bands, are much more of the whole total experience and a lot more overwhelming a lot of times than like a rock festival.
        AK: Yeah, but you don't understand that we can get Coca Cola to foot the bill for Blood, Sweat & Tears to come to town. And they got to be groovier than any local band you got. And they're paying the bill for you to lie in the grass and get high and have a good time. Now if that's wrong, then you're wrong.
        ...
        DS: Yeah, but there's this really big hangup about hitting Coca Cola to give us some music because Coca Cola....
        AK: You already got the wrong approach. 
        DS: I'm not so sure. Coca Cola is like all the evil there is, sitting on Atlanta, Georgia.
        AK: You got to trick them. Now, what you're saying is that you want Coca Cola to bring you some music. 
        DS: No. No, we don't. I dig that, but it's whether you want to play that game at all.
        AK: That's not a game, man, that's a means to an end.

        Atlanta disproved Al Kooper's theory on the Monday after the pop festival, when the festival's promoters staged a free concert in Piedmont Park. The 
        Grateful Dead, Chicago Transit Authority, Spirit, Delaney & Bonnie & Friends, Allman Brothers Band, and Hampton Grease Band played for free for a huge crowd of fans. [The park by that time had become a popular venue for local and regional musicians. The Allman Brothers were major forerunners.] Duane Allman gets the last word on the subject:
        "Playing the park's such a good thing because people don't even expect you to be there. About the nicest way you can play is just for nothing, you know. And it's not really for nothing. It's for your own personal satisfaction–and other people's–rather than for any kind of financial thing."

        Sources: 
        The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 2 Nos. 10, 17
        Skydog, The Duane Allman Story, by Randy Poe, published by Backbeat Books, 2006, 2008.

        Tuesday, December 16, 2014

        Piedmont Music Festival

        Piedmont Music Festival ad/poster
        Piedmont Park, Atlanta, October 17-19, 1969
        The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 2, No. 32, October 20, 1969

        Monday, December 15, 2014

        Piedmont Park Free Concerts

        By Spring 1969 midtown Atlanta's Piedmont Park had become the primary setting for free concerts, usually on Sundays, from the afternoon into the evening. The central location drew local and regional talent, most memorably the Allman Brothers Band, who had recently relocated from Jacksonville FL to Macon GA. Atlanta had yet to open any substantial rock clubs, therefore the park became a key venue for musicians to showcase material to a large audience. 


        Piedmont Park, Atlanta, 1969
        Photo by Carter Tomassi

        Allman Brothers drummer Butch Trucks recalled:
        "After several weeks of work learning this new material we were busting to get out of that [Macon] warehouse and play it for people. So... we loaded ourselves and our equipment into our Econoline and what other rides we could glom and headed to Atlanta (later to be renamed Hotlanta, I believe we coined this term but can't prove it). We went straight to Piedmont Park and found a perfect spot to set up. It was a rather large flat space at the top of some stairs with some electrical outlets within reach. We didn't ask permission, we just set up and started pouring out all of this music we had only played for ourselves up to that time.... When we finished some people were so transfixed they simply laid down and spent the night there. Others made sure that the place was cleaned up. Of course the next Sunday we went back and there was a shit load more folks than were there the week before as well as a couple of other Atlanta bands that wanted to play. This grew into a weekly event that went from that little place to a big flatbed stage set up on the end of a very large field that someone provided complete with a massive generator. Plus many more bands. The crowd grew to the level of around 10,000 after a few weeks and I don't recall a single incident of violence in all the months that this magical thing continued."


        Duane Allman, Piedmont Park, Atlanta, May 11, 1969
        The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 2, No. 10, May 19, 1969
        Cover photo by Bill Fibben
        According to Duane Allman:
        "Playing the park's such a good thing because people don't even expect you to be there. About the nicest way you can play is just for nothing, you know. And it's not really for nothing. It's for your own personal satisfaction–and other people's–rather than for any kind of financial thing."
        UPDATE, APRIL 2018: Glenn Phillips (guitarist, composer, co-founder of the Hampton Grease Band) left a comment 4/4/18 on my 1/19/15 Discovery, Inc. post. Here's an excerpt in which he pinpoints the essential birth of the Piedmont Park free concerts. (For full context, click the Discovery label in the right column, then read the comments section.):
        "The [Hampton] Grease Band's spontaneous Piedmont Park shows started [...] in the spring of '68 when I discovered there was a live outlet in the pavilion [...]. We started playing there pretty much every week and did shows there by ourselves on the grass by the pavilion, in the pavilion, in the tall brick gazebo off to the side of the pavilion (which also had a live outlet at the time, but was a pain in the ass to carry our equipment up to), and on the stone steps (which is where the Allman Brothers first appeared with us on May 11, 1969, when Phil Walden called the Grease Band personally to see if it was okay if the Allman Brothers played with us that day)."  

        1969

        • Hampton Grease Band, Crust, Smoke, Nail, Little Phil & The Night Shadows, Toni Ganim, Anne Romaine - March 29 (The Great Speckled Bird first birthday celebration)
        • "BE-IN. Atlantis Rising festivities in the park. Music, food, etc." - April 20
        • "BE-IN. Atlantis Rising festivities in Piedmont Park, all afternoon, music, rapping etc." - April 27
        • "ROCK CONCERT/BE-IN. Celebrate opening of Atlantis Rising community trade fair, six rock groups" - May 3
        • Allman Brothers Band, Hampton Grease Band - May 11
        • Allman Brothers Band - May 18
        • Booger Band - May 25 (during Atlanta Arts Festival)
        • "BE-IN. Nexus House sponsors a be-in with bands, 2 pm, community supper, 5 pm" - June 22 
        • Brick Wall, The Bag, Jim Cross, Semore, Barry Bailey, John Ivy - June 28 ("Grand Opening Be-In" for Atlantis Rising)
        • Grateful Dead, Chicago Transit Authority, Spirit, Delaney & Bonnie & Friends, It's A Beautiful Day, Allman Brothers Band, Hampton Grease Band - July 7 (Monday concert following July 4th weekend's Atlanta International Pop Festival in Hampton GA, arranged by festival promoters)
        • The Unpolished Brass - August 10
        • Solid Blues - August 24 ("Socialist politics, folksingers, rock music, and guerrilla theatre... Jenness for Mayor rally")
        • "Free Grease Job - Labor of Love" - Hampton Grease Band, Robin - August 31
        • Allman Brothers Band - September 14
        • "Mini-Pop Festival" - Allman Brothers Band, Hampton Grease Band, Brick Wall, Sweet Younguns, Booger Band, Radar, Hand Band - September 21 (rally for firebombed Atlantis Rising trade mart; 23 arrests made, initiated by disclosure of undercover narcotics officers; police used tear gas and batons on crowd, some of whom threw rocks; GSB photographer Bill Fibben arrested for taking pictures of police action, "interfering with arrest")
        • Allman Brothers Band - September 27
        • "Piedmont Music Festival" - Allman Brothers Band, Mother Earth with Tracy Nelson, Billy Joe Royal, Joe South, Boz Scaggs, Second Coming, Royal Blues, Hand Band, Boogie Chillun, Lee Moses - October 17-19
        • Community Council of the Atlanta Area, Inc., meeting in the park with free music - November 2
        1970
        • "Free Music In The Park" - February 28-March 1 (sponsored by Universal Life Church)
        • "Free Music In The Park" - March 7-8 (sponsored by Universal Life Church)
        • Axis, Handle, Chakra, Paul Hanson & Pat Alger - March 20
        • Screaming Yellow, Shayde - April 19
        • "Spring Peace Festival" - Stump Brothers, Axis, Ether, Celestial Voluptuous Banana, Country Pye, Eric Quincy Tate, Light Brigade, Eros, Robyn, Perpetual Motion, Ruffin, What Brothers, Stuff, White Lie, Stonehenge, Last Era, Bremrod, Booger Jam, Total Electric, Corn Cobb Jam, Pegasus Lantern Light Show - June 6-7
        • Allman Brothers Band, Majester Ludi, Chakra, Ether - June 14
        • "Peace Festival" - Stump Brothers, Axis, Celestial Voluptuous Banana, Eric Quincy Tate, Nancy Harmon & The Victory Voices, Robyn, Twelve Eyes, What Brothers, White Lie, Pegasus Lantern Light Show - June 21 
        • Hampton Grease Jam, Chakra, Milan, Flint - June 28
        • Brewer & Shipley - July 19
        • "Free Music" - July 26
        • 15 Minutes, Joel, Buckwheat, What Brothers, Malford Mann, Babylon - August 9
        • Duckbutter, Axis, Hydra, Flint, Joel, Ewing Street Times - August 16
        • Younguns, Perpetual Motion, Hydra, Plymouth Rock, Interprize - August 30
        • Sunrise, Horizon, Milkweed, Chakra, Street Explosion - September 13
        • Radar, Younguns, Booger, Perpetual Motion, Chair - September 20
        • Allman Brothers Band, Hampton Grease Band, Eric Quincy Tate, Avenue of Happiness, Stump Brothers, Chakra - September 27
        • Stonehenge, Jelly Roll, Crossover, What Brothers, August, Underground Balloon Corporation, Kaleidoscopic Light Show - October 4
        • "Women's Festival" - Anne Romaine, Ruthie Gordon, Carol & Barbara, Esther LeFevre, The Ribs - October 10
        • Sweetwater; Warm; Looney Tunes; Red, White & Blue(grass); Chair - October 18
        • Hydra; Red, White & Blue(grass); Younguns - October 25
        • Joe South, Glass - October 30
        • Avenue of Happiness - December 23
        1971
        • Stonehenge, Chakra - March 28
        • Stump Brothers, East Side Blues Band, Horse Roscoe - April 3
        • Wet Willie; Alex Taylor, Friends & Neighbors - April 4
        • Thunder, What Brothers, Smooth's Barn Dance, Perpetual Motion, John Flynt, Flood - April 11
        • Hydra, Flint, Foxes - May 23
        • Goose Creek Symphony, Sunrise, Kudzu, Signal, Gladstone, David Harris (speaker) - May 30
        • Allman Brothers Band - May 31
        • What Brothers, Kudzu, Howling Bull - June 13
        • Milkweed, Hansen & Alger, Fox Watson, Doris Abrahams, Vince Quinn, Jeff Espina - June 20
        • Hydra, Duckbutter, A Man Called Joad, Glass Menagerie, Perpetual Motion - July 4 (12th Gate benefit)

        Sources:
        thebutchtrucks.blogspot.com/2011/08/piedmont-park.html

        The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 2 Nos. 6, 7, 11, 15, 16, 24
        The Great Speckled Bird, Vol. 3 Nos. 9, 25, 29
        en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_International_Pop_Festival_(1969)
        www.allmanbrothersband.com
        www.hittinthenote.com/first_mountain.asp
        Midnight Riders, by Scott Freeman, published by Little, Brown and Company, 1995
        Skydog, The Duane Allman Story, by Randy Poe, published by Backbeat Books, 2006, 2008.

        Note: Entries in quotes are from The Great Speckled Bird calendar pages.