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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsInspired by deb; then "some_of_us's" hubs: What was the most unusual, or interesting place you heard/saw Live Music?
While it probably was temporarily halted during the covid years [in NYC, I'm pretty sure] - Make Music Festival: June 21st returned a couple of years ago; held in 1,000 cities across the world. It's their 20th anniversary this year! 🎉
The one event I remember most took place in Central Park; but not in the usual places: the skating rink if they still held music there, or more likely Summer Stage.
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It was in the southern area in a "mini valley", a sloped hill: wider at the top. Above it at the bottom was partly wooden building w a walkway. But you could see it from above standing on a big out-cropping. Plenty of people sat on the hill, I was up on the rock with others.
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Anyway they had a Classical Indian Music Ensemble; sitars, tablas, and more. It was a gloriously comfortable first day of summer late afternoon with wonderful music!
I'm going to check the festival schedule for this year. 👍
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The other place I actually didn't see anything bc nothing was happening but it was seeing the Venue itself that was amazing!
I was visiting my cousin who was at Denver University back in '80. He took me up into The Rockies n his motorcycle!
On our way there we stopped at the Red Rocks Amphitheater. Seating, and a stage built between a set of tall, sort of part diagonal, and horizontal craggy....
...taaa daaa...
red rocks!
If you're a rock geography fan- these are a wonderful sight to see in person. I am, and it was a fabulous surprise!
U2 fans would know the vid - U2: Live at Red Rocks pretty early in their career.
So....live music fans any extra interesting venues, places?
pfitz59
(12,999 posts)Performers would stop and freeze mid-song when jets flew overhead. Strange but entertaining. https://balboapark.org/arts-culture/starlight-bowl-balboa-park/
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Oh, I get it...
Waaay back in ?'69 we went to Forrest Hills Tennis Stadium to hear Simon & Garfunkle. Now, they weren't as loud as The Who would be two years later 😄 in '71 so....
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They had to stop when a jet was heading to, or from La Guardia Airport also in Queens, NYC.
niyad
(134,247 posts)SWBTATTReg
(26,460 posts)sang while playing music as he was lowered down into the grave. Very touching, moving. Lionel also wrote the song 'Swinging' sung by John Anderson. I miss him.
John Anderson Lyrics
Play "Swingin'"
"Swingin'"
There's a little girl in our neighborhood,
Her name is Charlotte Johnson and she's really lookin' good.
I had to go and see her, so I called her on the phone.
I walked over to her house and this was going on:
etc.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)blm
(114,780 posts)Saw John Anderson in Los Angeles opening for George Jones.
SWBTATTReg
(26,460 posts)Alpeduez21
(2,076 posts)In DC. It was under the bridge. Jumps out at me
A woman playing violin in one of the plazas by the music school in Venice Italy then was joined by a classical guitarist
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Oh, how lovely a small scene in Vence!
And that reminds me of (I'll put separate post).
johnp3907
(4,348 posts)Similar to these:


Might not have been too weird if there had been a crowd to fill it. The crowd size couldve been counted in the dozens! 🤣
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)of which there are thousands, and thousands!!
Two black women playing viloins in the '00s. There may be black violin players in our city's orchestras, but it was the first time seeing them in the subway.
In the '90s a guy was playing a digeridoo in the turning corner of a subway staircase. I passed him heading out. I think I could still hear him a bit as I got out of the stairway on to the street; but passed by the subway grating.
some_of_us_are_sane
(3,721 posts)(He's a Colonel now and a teacher there, but to walk around that campus and in that gorgeous chapel was a sight to behold. It made the spirit SOAR!)


electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)some_of_us_are_sane
(3,721 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Last edited Sat May 30, 2026, 12:37 PM - Edit history (1)
Obviously the rest (all those pipes) are in the church building!
jmbar2
(8,199 posts)The last place I would have expected such a world class organ.
u4ic
(17,145 posts)in Victoria BC. Various musical acts, culminating with the Victoria Symphony and fireworks at the end, play throughout the day and evening on a barge in the Inner Harbour. Around 40,000 people would attend each year, was free as well. Was there 4 years running, 3 years on the BC Legislature lawn, the 4th year friends went very early to place their chairs up front and took mine. The 5th year had some health issues, so I just sat on my balcony and listened to it, as I lived only a few blocks away.
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electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)And, yay, you could hear it when you had health issues that year.
jmbar2
(8,199 posts)Victoria is a magical town anyway. I'd love to see this festival.
JoseBalow
(9,791 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)jgo
(1,028 posts)Saw Carmen. The opera started precisely at sundown - glorious.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Harker
(18,211 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Harker
(18,211 posts)A couple of the best concerts I attended were at Red Rocks.
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band on The River tour, Stevie Ray Vaughan, B.B. King, Albert King, and Bobby Blue Bland were standouts.
My mom and I saw George Carlin there in the mid-70s.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)debm55
(62,058 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)displacedvermoter
(5,056 posts)Vivaldi's Four Seasons...
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)displacedvermoter
(5,056 posts)fierywoman
(8,646 posts)grass growing inside, at night (stars, moon above), something classical.
One of the most interesting places I played was in a winterized tent in the middle of what I seem to remember was the Palais Royale in Paris. We brought "Carnevale a Parigi", and in order to enter the concert the audience had to wear a mask. You have no idea how truly weird (and strangely erotic) it was to look out from the stage (which was just a platform maybe a foot above the ground) and see an ENTIRE audience masked (-- every type of mask you could imagine --).
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Wow for the masked concert event in the palace!
You're a violinist, if i remember right?
fierywoman
(8,646 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Ah, got it. Viola.
I played it in 5th grade. I really wanted the violin, but I think bc I had "sprouted up" to 5' 7" they decided to give the shorter, smaller girls the violins.
fierywoman
(8,646 posts)(stained glass, long gone) and see the flying buttresses ...
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)fierywoman
(8,646 posts)the architecture still makes you feel exalted.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)In NYC we have The Cathedral of St John The Divine. A very hig Gothc church. It's magnificent!
I also love some of the great Mosques.
The architecture, and the geometric, and floral designs are glorious!
Walleye
(45,593 posts)MichMan
(17,454 posts)electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Did see Devo in a regular club.
no_hypocrisy
(55,504 posts)Richie Haven lived in the Hood. He walked into the park with his guitar, got a milk crate, sat down, and started wailing away.
Unforgettable.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Yeah, I saw Richie a few times.
jmbar2
(8,199 posts)When I was in high school, I decided to learn guitar, and then found out about Lightnin' Hopkins, an old blues guitarist who had been "rediscovered" by Alan Lomax and some of the folkies of the 1960s. I learned that he would be performing at an after-hours dive in Houston's Third Ward, took my dad's car and went there alone - a white high school girl.
I never occurred to me that I might be in danger, because I was going to see Lightnin'. I walked into this tiny, smoky little neighborhood juke joint. It fell silent when I entered, and someone asked, "Miss, are you lost or in trouble?" I said "No. I came to hear Lightnin' Hopkins".
That's all it took. They pulled me up a chair at a table, and the rowdy fun resumed. It was a great night, and great people. I would have been grounded for life if my dad had ever found out.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Yes, I've heard, of him and some of the other blues players.
I'm guessing they appreciated you making your way over there see him.
Ohhh, yeah, your dad would have hit the ceiling!
MichMan
(17,454 posts)Never heard of them and didn't want to pay the $5 cover charge, but figured we were already there. They blew me away and during the set, they announced they had a record deal and to look for it later on that year.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)bamagal62
(4,572 posts)In Prague.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)bamagal62
(4,572 posts)To Letna Park at the time!
FadedMullet
(1,031 posts)......great acts. It's an open outdoor venue built in a natural bowl-shaped terrain where you can bring picnics and sit on blankets on the grass. Saw a bunch of shows when we lived nearby but the Orchestra was really special. Bonnie Raitt also was one of my favorites.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)FadedMullet
(1,031 posts)peacebuzzard
(5,891 posts)Close to Dupont Circle way back in the early 70s, Great dive bar and even better music.
I will never forget watching and listening to Rory Gallagher for the 1st time. He rocked my world....Damn he was sooo good....
The bar shuttered long ago....
Keepthesoulalive
(2,427 posts)Aretha, Isaac Hayes, Arthur Prysock and many more.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)I've been there, too.
Tikki
(15,236 posts)the Hollywood High School Auditorium on Sunday June 4, 1978.
The show was brilliant.
The Tikkis
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Silver Gaia
(5,441 posts)at this little dance club south of Kalamazoo, Michigan called The Crazy Horse that was in the loft of an old barn.
My friend, Kathi, and I would go there a lot. It was fun to dress up in crazy outfits and dance all night! But that night I will never ever forget.
We had never heard of Alice Cooper. The word of mouth rumor was that it was gonna be Al Kooper. We just knew he played blues. Well, imagine our surprise when it was, well, the show it was, complete with Alice Cooper's now well-known makeup, a baby doll, and even a guillotine! Whoa! We were stunned. LOL
But we danced ourselves into oblivion and I have never forgotten that night! I even still have the outfit I wore (it was wild) - it was that memorable a night. This was right before Alice Cooper's first big hit song came out, "I'm Eighteen." I'm not saying I was a huge fan or anything (my younger brother was), but it was definitely not something easy to forget!
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)Sounds great to have gone alot, dress wild, and dance all night!
I loved going to clubs to see bands. Now most clubs back then '70s, early '80's didn't have dancing.
Then a wonderful club called Hurrahs opened neat Lincoln Center. It had performers, and also a dance floor w a DJ. Loved to dance!
niyad
(134,247 posts)years at Territory Days. I could sit on my porch and listen without the annoying crowd, or I could get a spot right in front so that I could also watch the dancers.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)I like you had a choice for listening for afar, or going up to listen and view the dancers.
In the '80s I'd been to a few pow wows here in Manhattan, and once the big summer one in Queens. So, yes, I've seen some dancing, too.
Also was in South Dakota and the Black Hills for a environmental, Native America event.
niyad
(134,247 posts)Still have several of their early CD's.
I was fortunate to attend one of the Gathering of Nations powwows in Albuquerque years ago. I was sad to learn that this year was its last.
When you were in SD, were you able to see the incredible statue "Dignity: Of Earth and Sky"? She is incredible.
I was just on the Chamerlain, SD fb page, and saw that there will be a tenth anniversary celebration of "Dignity" in September.
electric_blue68
(27,426 posts)I was in SD in '80 quite before she was created. I've seen photos - powerful & beautiful!
What a shame the Alberquerque pow wow is ending!
I stayed w my dad's work associates/friends in Alberquerque overnight on my '79 cross US trip. They took me to the Native American market.
