Commenter   Comment   Posted On   Date  
 Krock Ticket price for the show was $10.00 (posted pic) Styx / Angel Sep 03, 2022
 Krock Ticket price for the show was $10.00 (ticket posted here) Styx / Angel Sep 03, 2022
 IceWhitePlatypus No Vanna Every Time I Die / The Acacia Strain / Vanna / Hundredth / No Bragging Rights Sep 03, 2022
 Darren Ingram Brilliant gig Machine Head Sep 03, 2022
 Diane smith Is it worth paying for VIP at this venue? I read rhe platform is at the back?? Alexandra Head, Cardiff Bay Sep 03, 2022
 KanTexCali The Music Hall at Fair Park (originally the Fair Park Auditorium, until renamed in 1957), is a performing arts theater in Dallas, Texas's “Fair Park”. The music call was originally opened October 10, 1925. Fair Park, the most visited attraction in Texas, is home to 5 museums (Including the Hall of State, the African-American Museum and the Children’s Aquarium of Fair Park) and 10 performance and sporting venues that include the Music Hall, Dos Equis Pavilion, the Band Shell, Texas Discovery Gardens and the famed Cotton Bowl Stadium. Fair Park is a State and National Historic Landmark and has the largest collection of 1930’s Art Deco exposition-style architecture in the United States, located on 277 acres of beautifully landscaped grounds. Over 5.3 million people visit Fair Park annually, attending over 1,200 special events, sporting events, concerts, performances and the State Fair of Texas. The music hall is of Spanish Baroque style with Moorish architectural influences, containing six stair towers capped with cast domes and arcade porches overlooking Fair Park. Air conditioning was added in 1954, and in 1972 the Hall was remodeled again with an expanded lobby and restaurant. In 1999 the theater was refurbished and updated. Because of the spacious nature of the Music Hall, the facility is a nationally recognized venue for Broadway musical touring companies and other large-scale public and private functions. The Music Hall is currently home to the Dallas Summer Musicals and was home to the Dallas Opera from 1957 to 2009 (at which time it moved into the new Winspear Opera House in the Downtown Dallas Arts District). During the 1936 Texas Centennial Exhibition, celebrating 100 years of Texas statehood, the Music Hall at Fair Park functioned as the exhibition building for GM (General Motors). It was a worldwide exhibition, that drew people from all across Texas as well as around the world. Liza Minnelli Sep 03, 2022
 Krock Classic show! Pat Benatar Sep 03, 2022
 Krock How about THAT show for $8.50 haaa! I posted the ticket Rush / Starz Sep 03, 2022
 Krock Had 3rd row for this show... wowww, what a CLASSIC! Posted the ticket Dire Straits Sep 03, 2022
 Krock PS. I HATE that they used to rip the tickets back in those days. I have hundreds of them from shows, and tried to preserve the part with the names on them as much as I could, but it was tough sometimes Eagles / Heart / The Little River Band Sep 03, 2022
 Krock OK, now you made me dig DEEP... just posted a pic of my ticket for this show! $15.50 ... haaaaa for these 3 bands? You can't see the Little River Band with 0 original members perform 1 song for that now hahaaa. I want those days back!!!! Eagles / Heart / The Little River Band Sep 03, 2022
 Krock No problem Smitty. Definitely no cell phones. Those pics was actually from a "slide" haaa... not sure what kind of camera I had but been taking tons of pics and vids of concerts since Eagles / Heart / The Little River Band Sep 03, 2022
 KSmitty Thanks for posting those pics Krock! We didn’t have cell phones back then. Eagles / Heart / The Little River Band Sep 03, 2022
 Drtouray 1st concert I ever attended. My mom dropped us off cuz we were so young! Was rad, joints may have been tossed into the crowd from the stage. We were randomly seated next to my ex-BF, that was awkward! However, it was a wild night! Met the group another night at a different venue many years later. They were shy and super nice, as well as crazy tall! I'm a tall girl, and wearing 4" heels, they all still towered over us. They were great to meet. This was my first most fave group ever growing up. Love you guys! Bone Thugs-N-Harmony Sep 02, 2022
 Guidorec https://www.tallinnamerepaevad.ee/kava?lang=en Around The Sun Sep 02, 2022
 Guidorec https://www.facebook.com/emeraldtrio/ Emerald Trio / Jemini Acoustic Sep 02, 2022
 BrianLR Roy Babbington's final appearance with the band, after 51 years, was at Ronnie Scott’s Club in London on December 6th 2020. Soft Machine Sep 02, 2022
 migo65 Wow, one of the best shows. Video screens were amazing. KoRn keep out doing themselves. KoЯn / Evanescence / Dana Dentata Sep 02, 2022
 Dobber1969 Injury to Dee Snyder Twisted Sister did not perform. Got extra 45 minutes of iron maiden Iron Maiden / Twisted Sister Sep 02, 2022
 Neil Partrick Manfred Mann’s Earth Band (MMEB) were the first band I ever saw live, when, 33 years ago, I went with my elder brother to see them at the Brighton Dome. Seeing a line up of the Earth Band with only two surviving members from the 1970s was never going to match a 16 year old’s rock rite of passage. Back then they were a band that, while far from hip, had had some success only a few months earlier with a consistently good album “Angel Station”. Then, only in their mid to late 30s, they had toured the album extensively. They also had a mixing desk at The Dome. And, they had Chris Thompson on vocals. His is the voice on the most highly rated MMEB albums, all of which, unsurprisingly, were released in the 1970s. He was never especially mellifluous or highly dextrous in the vocal department, but Thompson could do subtlety, and gritty, as required. Tuesday night’s man in the vocal spotlight was one Robert Hart. He doesn’t play much guitar, leaving himself free to pose with the mic stand like he was Rod Stewart in the 1970s. Close-up, in an intimately small venue like the Jazz Café, this is not a pretty sight. Hart is a competent but uninspiring member of the rock belter school of vocals. It was little surprise to discover later that he was Bad Company’s singer long after Paul Rogers had moved on. MMEB have a great bass player, Steve Kinch, almost a veteran himself as he joined way back in 1986; a solid and slightly more youthful drummer, Jimmy Copley; and of course an almost undimmed 72 year old Manfred Mann on trademark keyboards together with original member Mick Rogers (no relation) on lead guitar and occasional vocals. This was a relatively short performance; the night’s entertainment was partly filled with 45 minutes of Lesley Mendelson, a painfully sincere and wholly inappropriate 20-something female singer-songwriter from New York. The Earth Band themselves managed just eleven, admittedly not short, numbers, most of which would have figured on any “Best of” compilation. Subtler, but, for fans, highly popular numbers were probably out of Hart’s technical and emotional range. In some cases they would probably be too musically challenging for the rest of the band too, at least without that mixing desk and more time spent in rehearsal. The atmospheric quality found on numbers like “Waiting for the Rain” (from “Angel Station”, 1979); “It’s All Over Now Baby Blue” (a brave Dylan cover from 1972); or “Drowning on Dry Land” and “Circles” (from their most commercially and critically successful LP, “Watch” (1978)) was nowhere to be heard. The performance of “Martha’s Madman”, taken from “Watch”, failed to get remotely close to the drama of the original. “Blinded by the Light” (originally a Springsteen song) was both obligatory and, as it turned out, well performed on the night. Hart, for once, did not overdo the vocals, while he and Kinche provided a solid, but not overly dominating, chorus to accompany Manfred’s verse part (as per the band’s original version). MMEB are renowned for their covers; detractors would, a little unfairly, say not for much else. In most cases in the 1970s their interpretations actually complemented, even, in the above Springsteen example at least, arguably enhancing the original, in the process of often changing songs beyond recognition. “For You”, also performed, proved a far, far less satisfying cover of a Springsteen original. It wasn’t totally absurd though that a third should be added to the night’s repertoire. “Dancing in the Dark” though proved to be just about the worst cover I can remember having had the displeasure of hearing a name act do. (And I heard Westlife do “Matthew and Son” on a rainy morning in London in 1996). This was embarrassing, even, it seemed, to some of the members of the Earth Band. Total cabaret, and not particularly well done. Unlike “Blinded by The Light”, and the welter of Dylan covers for which they’re famous, it was made all the worse for being more or less a straight reproduction, at least until Manfred tried to rescue it with another blast of what, live, sometimes became an excess of keyboard noodling. Things picked up when Robert disappeared and Mick Rogers took over vocal duties. He is weaker in volume but more in keeping with the style for which the band is renowned. He sang lead on “Father of Night”, a relatively obscure Dylan song first recorded by MMEB in 1973, and made it one of the highlights of the evening. When most of the rest of the band then exited for a well-earned comfort break, Rogers dusted off another gem, this time from an even earlier Manfred incarnation: “Doo Wah Diddy”. Singing with only his guitar and the drummer for accompaniment, Rogers alternated between the pace of the mid-60s original and a bold, rockabilly-style, reinterpretation. A fairly decent fist was made of “Davy’s on the Road Again”, written by Robbie Robertson and John Simon, a live version of which MMEB are as equally renowned for as “Blinded by the Light”. For the encore yet another song from “Watch” was chosen, Dylan’s “Mighty Quinn”, which soon relapsed into a pub-style sing along. It has to be said that there was a lot of emotion on the stage. The band, very friendly, upbeat and engaging with the many apparently recognisable faces in the audience, were plainly having a good time, including even the irascible old anti-star himself, Manfred Mann. At times he would delight his long time followers by emerging from behind his fixed and rather defensive bank of keyboards and strut his stuff with a strap-on “keytar”. When the band linked arms for one of several bows, you wondered how much longer there would be as many as two original members still doing this routine. “For as long as people want to pay,” he recently commented, and there is a very hard core of devotees who will no doubt go on doing so for as long as he is still able to play. Mannfred Mann's Earth Band Sep 02, 2022