The best opening act you've ever seen & heard?


 

I have two:

 

In 1983 I went to see The Plimsouls (Peter Case’s pre-solo career band) at The Garage, a tiny little "club" on Ventura Blvd. The room had filled up (elbow-to-elbow tight), and the opening act started their set. My woman and I both looked at each other, our mouths agape. It was Los Lobos, and they were great! Their debut album How Will The Wolf Survive? had yet to be released, but I sure picked it up when it was.

 

I went to see John Hiatt at The Roxy Theater on Sunset Blvd. during his Perfectly Good Guitar tour, entering the room just as the opening act was starting her final song. The ads for the show listed her name, which was unfamiliar to me. As the song started and progressed, I was stunned; the song she and her band were performing was a great one, and I knew I had missed a quality set of music. It was Sheryl Crow, whose debut album had not yet been released. Damn it!

 

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Since Santana & Michael Shrieve have come up a few times I’ll relate a story told to me by a friend of Michael’s:

Carlos & Michael were friends and hung out together a lot. To see the movie Woodstock they, like everyone else, went to the theater when it first came out.

At the end of the show, when the light came on, people looked over, recognized them, and everyone there started applauding them!

I would’ve loved to have been there.

 

Damn @petaluma, great post! I saw our (yours and mine) favorite band at The Berkeley Community Theater in 1969, on their tour in support of the brown album. By a wide margin the best band I’ve ever seen and heard live (and I’ve seen a lot). I sent for tickets to their ’74 tour with Dylan (held in my area at The Oakland Coliseum), but wasn’t one of the lucky ones whose number came up (it was a lottery). Damn it! And then I moved away from the Bay Area just before The Last Waltz was announced. Double damn!

I saw The Beatles at The Cow Palace in 1965, and they had a hot opening band, an instrumental one named Sounds Incorporated. Call me crazy, but I found them more exciting than the headliner. My first favorite band was The Ventures, whom I finally saw live in 2003, on the Surfin’ To Baja Cruise. Their opening act was another instrumental band, Los Straitjackets, who were a hard act to follow. And I don’t say that because their bassist was an old friend of mine (we met on the first day of 7th grade, and performed together in the 8th grade talent show). LS are now out on tour with Nick Lowe, doing an opening set and then backing him in his.

I’d give one my two hanging organs to have seen Emmylou with The Hot Band live.

 

I have to agree with everyone who's said this is a great thread!  Brought back lots of memories.

For me, the first great opening act I ever saw was UK with Bill Bruford, John Wetton, Allan Holdsworth and Eddie Jobson at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in 1978.  They did the entire first album and repeated "In The Dead of Night" for the encore.

The main act was Al Di Meola doing the Casino tour.  When he came out for his encore, he said he'd like to introduce "3 very special friends."  Chick Corea, Lenny White and Stanley Clarke came out and they did a 45 minute improv of "Romantic Warrior" mashed with "Duel of the Jester and the Tyrant."

No one was "better" than anyone else that night.  It was simply 8 of the best musicians on Earth at the top of their game playing for people who loved them.  A truly transcendental experience.

The only other one as memorable was seeing a young Joey Bonamassa at all of 10 or so doing a set with his dad's band at a place called the Beginning II in East Syracuse NY.  We saw him play a couple of years later with B.B. King in the Landmark Theater in downtown Syracuse.  5 or 6 years later, he was showing up on PBS specials.  We can truly say "we saw him when..."

Hey Richmon that must have been a great show! I did see Allen Toussaint open for Little Feat at the Irvine before Lowell left us. Caught The Captain with The Mothers for the Bongo Fury tour at the Trenton War Memorial and at Emerald City with Rootboy Slim opening. Saw him at the Bijou for the Bat Chain Puller tour also, a true original. We were shouting " webcor, webcor, webcor!

Loggins & Messina opening for Rare Earth in 1976.  Big mistake for Rare Earth.