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The tour began in January 1970, and ended in August of the same year. All four members of the Doors in 1969. The Doors played 24 dates in the United States and Canada throughout the first half of 1970. [2] One of the tour's concerts was held in Felt Forum, which marked the start of the tour as well.
The band rescheduled the date for 23 October, with original tickets still valid. The band offered free posters to fans attending the 23 October show. [7] The second appearance to be cancelled was on 2 November at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, California—the first show of the tour's North American leg. [7]
Tour Dates Number of shows; 1974 Bob Dylan and The Band Tour: January 3 – February 14, 1974 40 This tour reunited Dylan with The Band on stage after the release of the Dylan's Band-backed Planet Waves album. This was a high-profile comeback for both sides of the bill. While virtually all the songs here were familiar and might be considered ...
The band became famous after playing the Woodstock festival in 1969 and began the '70s with two #1 albums: 1970's "Abraxas" and 1971's "Santana III." In 1998, Santana was inducted into the Rock ...
The Allman Brothers Band became a word-of-mouth favorite after two studio albums, but more than with any other band of the ‘70s, only a live LP could have packaged their explosive and unique ...
In the pre-streaming era, bands would go on tour as a way of marketing an album. ... Pop-rock band 311 announced it had canceled upcoming European tour dates due to the “rising costs of touring ...
The first tour starting in 1969 and finishing with three dates in Europe in January 1970, was the first Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young tour. The tour was notable for performing at many of the era's major festivals including their second ever gig, a one-hour show at the Woodstock Festival in the early morning of August 18, 1969, which was a baptism by fire for the group.
The line-up for the tour unchanged throughout its duration, and was the fifth incarnation of Yes. [8] Steve Howe joined the band two months previously: all concerts during May and June were cancelled while the band found a replacement for original guitarist Peter Banks, and Tony Kaye was replaced by Rick Wakeman shortly after the tour ended in time for rehearsal sessions for Fragile.