Difference between revisions of "1977-03-11"
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− | John Taylor - future bass player of Duran Duran - was in attendance at this performance and in fact made a cassette recording of it. He describes the following incident in his autobiography, "In The Pleasure Groove", published in 2012: | + | John Taylor - future bass player of Duran Duran - was in attendance at this performance and in fact made a cassette recording of it. |
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+ | He describes the following incident in his autobiography, "In The Pleasure Groove", published in 2012: | ||
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Revision as of 12:37, 16 January 2013
1977-03-11 | |
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BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF PHOTOGRAPH. Should be a photo taken at that concert, or a ticket stub scan, or something similarly identifying of the event. | |
Performance summary | |
Artist performing: | Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers |
Tour: | 1977 Cherry Vanilla Tour |
Venue: | Birmingham University |
Location: | Birmingham, England, UK |
Support acts: | Cherry Vanilla, The Police |
Ticket prices: | TICKET PRICES |
On 1977-03-11, The Police performed at Birmingham University in Birmingham, England, UK.
Setlist
This section needs more information.
Recording information
This section needs more information. Please note if an official or unofficial recording, or recording(s), is known to exists of this performance.
Trivia
John Taylor - future bass player of Duran Duran - was in attendance at this performance and in fact made a cassette recording of it.
He describes the following incident in his autobiography, "In The Pleasure Groove", published in 2012:
The first time I saw the (Johnny) Thunders's magic was onstage at Birmingham University. The opening act was a band I had not heard of before, The Police. At that time I would sneak a cassette recorder into every gig I went to, and I set the machine to record when they began to play, even though I had no idea who they were. It was quite possible a band you had never heard of yesterday could become your favorite band tomorrow. The singer with The Police also played bass, which struck me as quite clever and quite "un-punk." After the second number, he struck up a rapport with the audience of mostly students. A little too familiar, I remember thinking at the time, not knowing then that Sting had been a teacher and spoke "student" way better than he would ever speak "punk." Sting: We've got the Heartbreakers coming on next. Cheer from me and one or two others) Sting: They can't play, you know. Me: Fuck off! Sting: Who said "Fuck off"? Me: I did. (all of this going down onto the cassette tape) Sting: It's true. They're great guys but they can't play. Me: Fuck off, you wanker! Sting: You'll see. This next song is called "Fall Out"! 1 2 3 4...
See also
External links
This section needs more information.
References
sources: Stewart Copeland's diaries; NME February 26, 1977; Sounds + NME ads March 12, 1977