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Pink Floyd Concert

Oakland Coliseum Arena (Oakland, CA)

Pink Floyd

05.09.1977
Tracks: 8 / Total Time: 1:19:31
Catalog: Bill Graham

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Pink Floyd's 1977 tour is widely considered to be one of the band's most memorable. Following the truly massive sales of Dark Side Of The Moon and Wish You Were Here, the Animals album had not been as commercially successful, but the group's popularity was at an all-time peak. The tour sold out arenas and stadiums across North America and Europe, eclipsing all previous scale and attendance records. The tour was also the first since 1972 that the group did not use backing singers, with the only…entire summary

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  • theclause | Friday, November 21, 2008 | 2:08 pm

    oops...74 exactly

  • theclause | Friday, November 21, 2008 | 2:07 pm

    PINK FLOYD. been rockin with em since i saw em in England in da '60's. their establishment of rock-order rules

  • Anonymous | Thursday, November 20, 2008 | 4:54 pm

    WOW!!!!! That about sums this show up. I remember this same show at the Philadelphia Spectrum.

  • SlicPayne/Canada | Thursday, November 20, 2008 | 12:22 pm

    Listening to this brings back the best, and some of the worst, concert memories for me. The best is the first Floyd show I saw in Montreal around '75. Outdoors, the band played Wish You Were Here start to finish for the first set, returned with the complete Dark Side, then encored with Echoes! Incredible. The full moon appeared behind and above the stage as if on queue during the latter half of DS! (I think I read in Nick Mason's book "Inside/Out" that the band often would plan their dates with this bit of stellar special effect in mind) WHAT A SHOW!!! I was also one of the 80,000 at Montreal's Olympic Stadium on July 7th, 1977. This was the last date of the NA tour and became infamous when Roger lost it with the crowd, laid a fat gob (spit) on some a-hole that tried to climb the barrier in front of the stage, then Gilmour didn't return for the encore. Some of the inflatables didn't or wouldn't work properly. The band didn't seem very tight, possibly tired? Maybe this was only my impression because the quad sound bounced off the concrete a lot. The crowd was out of control. Security was very poor, I think overwhelmed by the volume of people. Most fans were, of course, well medicated in some way or other, (my group included). The gates opened very early and there was a long wait. This, plus the heat and humidity,(combined with the stimulants), caused more than a few people to lose it. Some just got sick or passed out for the evening, but others wouldn't shut up to watch or listen. Roger was right to tell them off, he just wasn't very polite about it. (There are pictures of the show on Y-Tube, look for PF - Montreal.) We'll all miss Richard, gone to the great gig, God bless his soul. Great memories from that first show. Glad to have this music to listen to,.....I'm going to go looking for my ticket stubs. Thanks to the Vault.

  • B&J&CO. | Monday, November 17, 2008 | 10:17 pm

    When are you to start the videos. I love this site great music. Please let us know soon. B&J&co.

  • Pickgrin | Monday, November 17, 2008 | 9:25 am

    Not sure what makes you think this is a "Bill Graham partial soundboard recording" - its obviously the same audience recording that is widely available in trading circles albiet a good one (just listen to the crowd noise at the beginning and end of songs). There are no Pink Floyd soundboards available from 1977 that I am aware of. If one ever surfaced it would be monumental. Nice to have this available streaming online though it is incomplete. Thanks

  • zappatlaw | Saturday, November 15, 2008 | 10:49 pm

    I was 14 or 15, went to this very small dance club in Sacramento, Sound Factory in 1968, and did not have the $2.75, for the door, so I had to stand out front and spare change up the whopping fee! By the time I got inside my mind was already sideways. The band, Pink Floyd was up above the floor on a riser no higher than two feet. We all sat or laid on a wood floor stoned out of our minds, while a light show from Symotanious Avalanch played movies of Betty Boop in the backround, two girls on stage danced to the beat with a string of beads that they tossed back and forth without their hands, all to the beat of both the music and the beat of a strobe light, it was very very intense! The roadies locked the doors as the band played beyond the 12 midnight closing time, cops beat down the doors, pulled the plug on the power, the drummer kicked off the stage, this large gong, and as it slowly fell, we could see the sound waves off of it. I will never forget that night, my head rang for a week. Thank you for bringing it all back. Zap from Sac

  • Anonymous | Friday, November 14, 2008 | 4:27 pm

    I saw this show on July 4, 1977 at Madison Square Garden in New York. Absolutely amazing. Glimour at his best. 1977 was a great year for concerts.

  • jrule1999 | Wednesday, November 12, 2008 | 11:08 pm

    I was at this concert, mom worked in the radio industry and got tickets about 15 rows back...still have the stub. I recall this show as being the peak of teenage nirvana, it was about amazing as it got. I recall the animals going overhead. Again, this was about as good as it got...a tenth grader with the world by it's tale.

  • usajagroltyd | Wednesday, November 12, 2008 | 1:04 pm

    One of the few shows I never saw live but wanted to. Truly, the 70s were a musical Rennaisance, there'll never be another decade as groundbreaking, we set the standard of what live music really is! Long live Rock n Roll!!

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