Sunday, December 15, 2019

Ebbets Field Denver 1973 Listings

1973


Mark-Almond Band February 13 -16, 1974

David Steinberg February 19 - 24, 1973



Larry Coryell February 28, 1973

Captain Beefheart & his Magic Band March 5 - 10, 1973


Here's a recording of Captain Beefheart's 3/9/73 gig



Rahsaan Roland Kirk and The Vibration Society March 12 - 17, 1973



John Hammond and Steve Goodman March 19 - 24, 1973

Tom Rush March 29 - 31, 1973


John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra April 2-3, 1973

Flash Cadillac and The Continental Kids April 4-7, 1973



Terry Reid April 9-14, 1973

Les McCann April 16-21, 1973



Magic Music with Tim Goodman April 23-26, 1973

Randy Newman & Sandy Denny April 27-29, 1973



Herbie Hancock April 30 - May 5, 1973

Dobie Gray May 8-13, 1973

Tom Waits May 17-19, 1973

Muddy Waters May 29 - June 2, 1973 (B.B. King sat in several nites)

Good recording of one of the shows B.B. sat in w/Muddy



Leo Kottke June 13-16, 1973

(Dana Cooper June 11-16, 1973)*

Dick Gregory June 19-24, 1973

(Melissa Manchester June 19-24, 1973) *

Cannonball Adderley June 26 - July 1, 1973

Surprise July 3-8, 1973

Michael Kamen July 10-15, 1973



Frampton's Camel July 16, 1973

Little Feat with Zephyr July 18-22, 1973

This is a fantastic SBD of both the Early/Late shows on 7/19/73 from the Feat



Pat Paulsen July 25-30, 1973



Robin Trower August 7, 193

Spirit August 8-12, 1973 (Spooky Tooth August 8-9, 1973 only)

Mark-Almond August 13, 1973



Lightnin' Hopkins w/Judy Roderick August 23-25, 1973

Howlin' Wolf August 28 - September 2, 1973



Flo & Eddie with Sopwith Camel September 5-8, 1973 

Flash Cadillac and The Continental Kids September ??

Little Feat September 9-12, 1973

Dan Hicks September 13-15, 1973

Moondog & Muledeer Show with Les McCann September 18-23, 1973



Eric Weissberg & Deliverance September 25-28, 1973

Jesse Colin Young September 29-30, 1973

Sons of Champlin October 1, 1973

Marshall Tucker Band October 3-6, 1973

El Chicano October 9-13, 1973

B.W. Stephenson October 14-15, 1973

Taj Mahal October 16-21, 1973

Kenny Rankin October 23-25, 1973

Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show October 26-28, 1973

Dr. Hook show review in Straight Creek Journal 10.30.73-11.6.73 
Freddie Hubbard October 30 - November 4, 1973

Chip Taylor November 7, 1973

Commander Cody November 8-11, 1973

Eric Andersen November 13-18, 1973

Earl Scruggs November 20-24, 1973


Doc Watson November 28 - December 2, 1973

Climax Blues Band December 3-4, 1973

Firesign Theatre Featuring Proctor & Bergman December 5-7, 1973

Judy Roderick December 8, 1973

Poco December 10, 1973



Lynyrd Skynyrd December 13-15, 1973

(Maria Muldaur December 13-16, 1973) *

David Steinberg December 18-23, 1973

Sopwith Camel December 27-31, 1973


* (LISTING IN ITALICS WERE BOOKED BUT CANCELLED)

Ebbets Field Denver, CO 1973 - 1977

Feminist protesters show up to protest the New York Dolls show. They feel the Dolls are mocking
women. Boy, the 80s will get much,much worse for misogynist rockers dressed in women's clothes.
Image credit - Getty Images 

Denver's first rock nightclub Ebbets Field opened on Tuesday night in the winter of 1973. Taking over the space in Brooks Tower formerly occupied by the MOR nightclub Marvelous Marv's at 1020 15th street, Ebbets Field was at the fore front of the "music-only" clubs that would proliferate all across America in the late 60's and early 70's.

First thing people will think of with Ebbets Field is legendary old baseball stadium in Brooklyn, home of the Dodgers before they were stolen to the Gold Coast of Los Angeles. What in the world could that have to do with Denver and the Seventies? Club owner Chuck Morris grew up in Brooklyn, in the shadow of the old ballpark. He thought it sounded like a cool name for a club. He was and still is right.


"Roger (Jim) McGuinn, David Crosby, Gene Clark,
Chris Hillman & Michael Clarke"
All prospective employees of Ebbets Field had to name the original Byrds lineup to get a job. Chuck Morris was a huge Byrds fan & 4 of them would eventually play Ebbets Field with Gene Clark playing there many times over it's 4 years. 

Second thing people will think of with Ebbets Field is the amazing amount of high quality bootlegs that survive from the club's short four-year lifespan. Go to YouTube and enter "Ebbets Field Denver" and marvel at the range of shows on offer. This is due to the club's arrangement with local A/V company ListenUp.

ListenUp's recording truck in action

Ebbets Field had worked out an arrangement early on with local free-form underground station KFML to simulcast a few shows on radio. Chuck Morris thought this would be a great way to advertise the club while also being a potential feather in the club's cap to show to record labels. Walt Stinson, one of the founders of ListenUp recalled it went down like this:
“I called Don Zucker, KFML’s general manager, and told him that I could dramatically improve the quality of the broadcasts, and I would do it in exchange for advertising — he wouldn’t have to pay us. Well, he thought that was a great idea – especially the part about not having to pay us. We tagged all the shows with the line ‘Sound by ListenUp’ and they ran a ton of radio spots for us.”  (from ListenUp's History)
KFML was only too happy to have a higher-quality broadcast of the shows while ListenUp was happy for all of the "exposure" the gig would bring them. By all accounts, KFML was the classic eclectic, DJ-drive radio station a lot of people will remember from the 60's and 70's. 

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Ebbets Field held 238 people. It was not a huge venue so it often brought in bands for multi-nightstands with and early and late show each night. Bands would be booked in from Tuesday thru Saturday and a lot of times Sunday too. The concert touring life in the early 70's was still beholden to the supper club booking practice of week-long stints in a venue. For the club owners it made sense to try and fill up the club twice a night to get 500 people or so into the venue.

One thing about the decor of Ebbets Field - it was fairly minimalist and distinctly Seventies - it was bare floors, wood paneling and loads of orange shag carpet. As of this writing in late 2019, sadly no known photographs of the actual club layout have been located. There are LOADS of photographs of the many legendary performers up on stage (a lot more on this to come) but there are none of the room itself.** Tracking down the pic at the top of this blog had taken many years too. In a world where photography was an expensive & time-consuming thing (remember taking your roll of film down to the FotoHut to drop it off for processing?) one didn't waste pictures on things like empty clubs with their tables and chairs. Sigh.

** - Gary C on Steve Hoffman Forums pointed me to the Dangerous Minds post abt the Ramones live at Ebbets Field.

Here's a pic of the orange shag carpet bleachers off to the side.

Photograph by Marc Campbell
Here's a great shot of the side of stage where you can see how low the ceiling was and see the bleachers off to the side. 

Photograph by Steve Knutson
So great to finally see some cool photographs of the inside of the club!

The first shows at Ebbets Field occurred in the middle of February in 1973. What follows will be my best attempt to piece together a show listing for the club's entire 4-year run. Information online has been scattered and mainly focused around the Friday & Saturday night shows that were broadcast & heavily bootlegged.

What follows has been constructed thru detailed microfilm research conducted down at the  Denver Public Library's downtown central branch using the alternative Denver underground newspaper Straight Creek Journal. SCJ had Denver's first comprehensive concert listing guide and it is a veritable treasure trove of ads, club listings and articles about Denver from 1972 - 1980. You just have to head out into the physical world, load up the reels and do the research the old fashioned way.

Here's the first bookings at the club - a British jazzy pop group and a comedian. This would be a harbinger for the club's booking M.O. - rock, jazz fusion, country and comics.


MARK-ALMOND BAND February 13 - 16, 1973

DAVID STEINBERG February 19 - 24, 1973

(LISTING IN ITALICS WERE BOOKED BUT CANCELLED)


The club's years of operation were from 1973 to 1977. The diverse roster of artists who graced the orange shag carpet venue is pretty staggering, from Muddy Waters to the Ramones. The listings will be separated into each individual year. Using SCJ along with Billboard magazine, there are still some significant gaps, a missing few months of bookings here and there. This first attempt at a comprehensive list was time-consuming yet very rewarding. Hopefully we can get all of the gaps filled in. Oh yeah, hopefully we can find some pictures of the inside layout and the front of the club. Fingers crossed. 

Here are the links to each year: