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Fillmore East

Posted on October 12, 2011 by Comments are off

The Fillmore East was Bill Graham’s NY companion to his home base at The Fillmore West in San Francisco. The Fillmore West had been open since ‘65 and was an integral part of the psychedelic scene and the counterculture movement of the mid to late 60′s. It closed along with the Fillmore East in 1971.

The Fillmore East was opened in ’68, on Second Avenue near the corner of East 6th Street, in the East Village, Manhattan. It hosted some of the biggest music acts of the period until ’71, when Graham closed the doors because of “Woodstock Syndrome” – a term he coined to describe the inflation of the live music scene from “musicians” playing in small venue’s to ”stockholders in large corporations – only they happen to have long hair and play guitars”. He didn’t like the industries (and its musicians) move towards “gigantic-hall concerts” with “high-priced tickets” and “miserable production quality.”

Graham felt that the “Music Industry” was (even 40 something years ago) destructive to the music and the countercultures it created and supported and he was “not assured that the situation” would “improve in the future.”

“The rock scene in this country was created by a need felt by the people, expressed by the musicians, and, I hope, aided to some degree by the efforts of the Fillmores. But whatever has become of that scene, wherever it turned into the music industry of festivals, 20,000-seat halls, miserable production quality, and second-rate promoters.”

He felt that larger venues lacked intimacy, that his hand was forced to support artists that were more commercially popular than musically valid and that “in the early days of both Fillmore East and West, the level of audience seemed much higher in terms of musical sophistication. Now there are too many screams for “More” with total disregard for whether or not there was any musical quality.”

In ’67 it was called The Village Theater and began to present bands like The Doors, Cream and The Who but when Graham took it over it had fallen into disrepair. It provided Graham an East Coast counterpart to The Fillmore West and became known as “The Church of Rock & Roll”.

The “Joshua Light Show” was an integral part of band performances at the Fillmore and Joshua White’s psychedelic backdrop of liquid light art was a staple at performances in the Fillmore East.

Many amazing Live Albums were recorded at the Fillmore East because of the great acoustic’s that Bill Graham felt was an important part of the presentation of live music. Hendrix’s classic “Band of Gypsys” was recorded at the Fillmore East on New Years Day, 1970. The Allman Brothers Band, (sometimes called the Fillmore East Hose Band because they played there so many times), released “At The Fillmore” in 1971 and Frank Zappa’s Mothers – “Fillmore East” released in 1971.

Many recordings of other Fillmore East performances have been released over the years including Joe Cocker, Miles Davis, Derek and the Dominos, The Grateful Dead, Humble Pie, Jefferson Airplane, King Crisom, Al Kooper & Mike Bloomfield, John Lennon, Taj Mahal, John Mayall, Ten Years After, Johnny Winter and Neil Young & Crazy Horse.

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Morrison Hotel Photos

Posted on June 13, 2011 by Leave a comment

Managed to snap a few shots in the back room of Morrison Hotel, the amazing fine art music photography gallery, next door to the now closed and world famous club, CBGB’s, at 315 Bowery.

They represent loads of photographers, such as Eddie KramerHenry Diltz and the late great rock photographer – Jim Marshall – the king of rock photography.

They also have a large part of the archive available to flick through on their website. It’s well worth a look and has a lot of unseen shots of some of the biggest in the business by some of the best in the business.

These few I managed to quickly shoot in the flagship Bowery gallery before “the Dude” told me to stop but really this only got the conversation going and we ended up chatting for quite a while about their archive.

He spoke of the many unseen shot’s of artist’s that may potentially never see the light of day, shot’s of party’s, people and debauchery, covered by the photographers. We also spoke at length about Jim Marshall and his amazing body of work and the incredible access he had to many of the most important musicians of our time.

Great shots here of Clapton by Pattie Boyd (the former wife of both George Harrison and Clapton), Keith Richards and Ron Wood having a great laugh in the Stones jet and The Doors hanging out in the street. Check Out the archives at www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

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