Posts Tagged ‘Live In New York’

Zappa In New York – Deluxe consists of five CDs from the Vault celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the album’s release in 1978. Featured is the main album in its original mix, remastered by Bob Ludwig and available for the first time digitally. Also included is a disc of relevant Vault nuggets and over 3 hours of unreleased live performances from the NYC Palladium concerts, representing every composition played during the post-Christmas 4 show engagement of 1976 and newly mixed in 2018. Extensive Liner Notes by Ruth Underwood, Ray White & Joe Travers with Jen Jewel Brown.  Limited edition metal tin mimicking a New York street manhole houses the 5CD collection.

 

Zappa In New York Deluxe CD Set Preorder

The Cure were arresting enough as a band to land its first album “Three Imaginary Boys” into the U.K. charts in 1979. A year later, with their sophomore effort “Seventeen Seconds” ready to be released in April, the band arranged for a brief tour of the of the United States, the first time they had “jumped the pond” after having played entirely British gigs up to that point, with the exception of a handful of dates in Europein places like Netherlands, Belgium, and France.

The Cure’s first-ever show on the North American continent was not in New York City. It was in scenic Cherry Hill, New Jersey, at the Emerald City Lounge, on April 10 or 12, 1980. Actually, a local fanzine review of that show in Cherry Hill by Frank Chmielewski show survives, and it’s interesting to note how unusual the Cure seemed to the writer.

So original, this Cure, it is really hard to expalin it. It is not a dance band, yet it is very rhythmic, and has a textured sound. … The Cure’s music is brain-stroking, maybe.

Remarkably, according to Chmielewski one of the openers for the Cure at that show was The Dickies.

Anyway, the Cure then headed to D.C. for a show at the Bayou and then traveled to NYC for a three-show stint at Hurrah on West 62nd Street on April 15th, 16th, and 17th. Some of you might recall that Hurrah was the club where in December 1978 Sid Vicious got into a fight with Todd Smith (the brother of Patti Smith) during a gig, which incident led to the incarceration of Sid Vicious in Rikers Island. It was also where “Divine” starred in the play The Neon Woman. These three Cure gigs took place towards the end of Hurrah’s existence, as it was defunct by 1981.

It’s not entirely clear which show of the three this footage comes from. The Cure was taped by Charles Libin and Paul Cameron, who took video footage of many bands in New York during that era. For any band playing multiple gigs in New York, their whole M.O. was to watch the first one(s) as prep for the final show, where they would do the actual taping. So it’s likely this show took place on April 17th, 1980.

We presented a portion of this footage early last year, but only two songs were available then. Fortunately for us “new shit has come to light,” as a certain fictitious stoner once said. In this clip we have an actual majority of one of the shows, with eleven songs represented from a set that probably would have had somewhere shy of twenty.

Of the Hurrah dates, Robert Smith said that “we’d obtained cult status … but we only played New York, Philly, Washington and Boston. We played three nights … at Hurrah in New York and it was packed.” Simon Gallup noted one of the key differences of playing in the United States, that “instead of having cans of beer backstage, we’d have shots of Southern Comfort!”

This is not a “complete” show, as already mentioned, and indeed it’s not even continuous, there are breaks between the songs. Libin and Cameron knew what they were doing for sure, which makes this footage very enjoyable to apprehend.

Thanks to Dangerous Minds

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szQjujMwaw8

Setlist :

1. Three Imaginary Boys – 0:00
2. Fire In Cairo – 2:54
3. In Your House – 5:50
4. M – 9:35
5. 10.15 Saturday Night – 10:32
6. At Night – 16:06
7. Boys Don’t Cry – 21:26
8. Jumping Someone Else’s Train – 24:00
9. Another Journey By Train – 26:25
10. A Forest – 29:46
11. Secrets – 35:53