•
The Three Stooges - February 14, 1959 •
Melanie - February 19, 1972 •
The Four Seasons - 1972 •
Frank Zappa - October 31, 1972 - 2 shows (With the Petite Wazoo Orchestra) •
The Beach Boys - November 19, 1972 •
Genesis - March 1, 1973 •
Edgar Winter - March 17, 1973 •
Bette Midler - March 10, 1973 •
Jerry Garcia Band - June 6, 1973 •
Jerry Garcia Band - June 16, 1973 •
Jerry Garcia Band - September 6, 1973 •
The Pointer Sisters - December 1, 1973 •
The Byrds - 1973 (last concert before break-up) •
Mountain - 1973 •
Johnny Winter - January 9, 1974 •
Melanie - April 5, 1974 •
Mountain - April 20, 1974 •
Hot Tuna - October 4, 1974 •
Lou Reed,
Hall & Oates - October 5, 1974 •
Santana,
Tower of Power - October 10, 1974 •
Bruce Springsteen,
John Sebastian,
Dan Fogelberg - October 18, 1974 •
Kiss - October 23, 1974 •
Frank Zappa - November 8, 1974 •
Jerry Garcia Band - November 9, 1974 •
Gregg Allman - 1974, Several recordings appear on
The Gregg Allman Tour •
Procol Harum - 1975, Several recordings appear on Procol's Ninth (Deluxe Edition) •
Queen,
Argent,
Kansas - February 21, 1975 (
Sheer Heart Attack Tour) •
Jerry Garcia Band - April 5, 1975 •
Lou Reed - May 3, 1975 •
Kiss - October 4, 1975 (2 shows) •
Fleetwood Mac - October 17, 1975 (on their tour for
Fleetwood Mac across the US and Canada. Show was recorded for broadcast on the
King Biscuit Flower Hour.) •
Jerry Garcia Band - November 11, 1975 •
Linda Ronstadt - December 6, 1975 •
Peter Frampton - February 14, 1976 (2 shows) •
Dan Fogelberg - March 20, 1976 •
Jerry Garcia Band - April 2, 1976 •
Janis Ian - April 18 1976 •
Steve Goodman - April 18, 1976 •
Grateful Dead - June 16, 17, 18 and 19, 1976 (released as
Grateful Dead Download Series Volume 4 and as part of the
30 Trips Around the Sun and
June 1976 box sets) •
Billy Joel - October 2, 1976 •
Sparks - November 27, 1976 •
Rush - December 10, 1976 •
Peter Gabriel - March 5, 1977 (his first concert as a solo artist) •
Grateful Dead - April 25, 26 and 27, 1977 (released as
Capitol Theatre, Passaic, NJ, 4/25/77 and as part of the
30 Trips Around the Sun box set) •
Al Stewart - April 30, 1977 •
Jerry Garcia Band - November 26, 1977 •
Rick Danko - December 17, 1977 •
Randy Newman - February 11, 1978 •
Jerry Garcia Band - March 17, 1978 •
Ramones,
The Runaways,
Tuff Darts - March 25, 1978 •
Journey - June 10, 1978 (first tour with
Steve Perry) •
Elvis Costello and the Attractions,
Mink DeVille,
Nick Lowe &
Rockpile - May 5, 1978 •
Meat Loaf - May 26, 1978 •
The Rolling Stones - June 14, 1978 •
Bruce Springsteen & The
E Street Band - September 19–21, 1978 (the Sept. 19 show was broadcast throughout the tri-state area) •
Player - October 8, 1978 •
Frank Zappa - October 13, 1978 (two shows on one day) •
The Roches - October 21, 1978 •
Harry Chapin - October 21, 1978 (performing alone, without his band) •
Parliament-Funkadelic - November 6, 1978 •
Outlaws and
Molly Hatchet - November 10, 1978 •
Grateful Dead - November 24, 1978 •
Cheap Trick - December 8, 1978 •
Robert Gordon and
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes - December 30–31, 1978 •
Heart - January 26, 1979 •
Willie Nelson and
Leon Russell - March 1, 1979 •
Judy Collins - March 10, 1979 (
Hard Times for Lovers tour) •
Irakere - March 23, 1979 •
Toto with Sad Cafe - April 21, 1979 •
The Who - September 10–11, 1979 •
Van Morrison - October 6, 1979 •
Talking Heads - November 17, 1979 (part released on
The Name of This Band is Talking Heads) •
Rainbow - December 1, 1979 •
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes - December 31, 1979 •
Jerry Garcia Band - March 1, 1980 (released as
Garcia Live Volume One) •
The Clash - March 8, 1980 •
Willie Colón & his Orchestra, featuring
Rubén Blades and
Celia Cruz - March 22, 1980 •
Cheap Trick - March 29, 1980 •
Grateful Dead - March 30, 31, and April 1, 1980 •
The Brothers Johnson - April 25, 1980 •
Genesis - May 28, 1980 •
Jerry Garcia Band - July 26, 1980 •
The English Beat - September 26, 1980 •
Gary Numan - October 18, 1980 •
Talking Heads - November 4, 1980 •
The B-52's - November 7, 1980 •
The Police - November 29, 1980 •
Boz Scaggs - November 30, 1980 •
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes - December 31, 1980 •
The Allman Brothers Band - January 3 and 4, 1981 •
Jerry Garcia Band - February 13, 1981 •
Ozzy Osbourne - April 24, 1981 (with
Randy Rhoads,
Tommy Aldridge and
Rudy Sarzo) •
Alice Cooper - October 10, 1981 •
Jerry Garcia Band - November 6, 1981 •
Blue Öyster Cult - December 26, 1981 •
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes - December 31, 1981 •
Prince - January 30, 1982 (with
Bobby Z.,
Brown Mark,
Dez Dickerson,
Doctor Fink and
Lisa Coleman) •
Jerry Garcia - April 10, 1982 •
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers - June 18, 1982 •
Jerry Garcia Band - June 24, 1982 •
Warren Zevon - October 1, 1982 (show was recorded for a later broadcast on the
King Biscuit Flower Hour) •
Stray Cats (
Stevie Ray Vaughan &
Double Trouble were added to the bill a half-hour before showtime) •
Randy Newman - March 26, 1983 •
U2 - May 12, 1983 •
Jerry Garcia Band - June 3, 1983 •
R.E.M. - June 9, 1984 •
Culture Club - September 3, 1983 •
Jerry Garcia Band - December 10, 1983 •
George Thorogood and The Destroyers - July 5, 1984 •
Lou Reed - September 25, 1984 •
Jethro Tull – October 28, 1984 •
Dave Edmunds’ Ten Great Guitars with
Link Wray,
Dickey Betts,
Johnny Winter,
Brian Setzer,
Steve Cropper,
David Gilmour,
Neal Schon,
Lita Ford and
Tony Iommi - November 3, 1984 •
Jerry Garcia Band - November 24, 1984 •
Dave Edmunds - February 28, 1985 •
Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes with guest appearance by
Little Steven - September 20, 1985 •
Stevie Ray Vaughan &
Double Trouble - September 21, 1985 •
Jerry Garcia Band - January 31, 1986 •
Metallica with
Metal Church opening - November 29, 1986 (Damage, Inc. Tour) •
The Kinks - March 4, 1987 •
Beastie Boys - April 1, 1987 (
Murphy's Law and
Public Enemy open. The first show in which
Flavor Flav wears his signature clock necklace on stage.) •
Megadeth with
Warlock and
Sanctuary opening - April 23, 1988 (So Far, So Good. . . So What! Tour) •
Duran Duran - March 11, 1989 Pig Light Show appeared from the Opening Night in December 1971 till the end of June 1973, performing with all artists during those dates. ==References==