Heatwave | |
---|---|
Genre | Electronic music, new wave, rock |
Dates | August 23, 1980 |
Location(s) | Toronto at Mosport Park, north of Bowmanville, Ontario |
Years active | 1980 |
Attendance | 85,000+ |
Heatwave was a rock festival held on August 23, 1980 at Mosport Park north of Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada. The slogans used to promote the show were variously the "Punk Woodstock", the "New Wave Woodstock", or "The 1980s Big Beat Rock and Roll Party". The festival was noteworthy because of the importance of the headliner bands that played and the timing in the evolution of new wave music, and the size of the crowd.
History
The festival was noteworthy because of the importance of the headliner bands that played and the timing in the evolution of new wave music, and from the size of the crowd. Tickets were $20 ($25 at the gate). 85,000 people attended but at 5 pm Dan Aykroyd, in character as Elwood Blues, during a live radio interview from backstage with friend and festival promoter John Brower, asked Brower if he could invite everyone listening to come out and be on his guest list. Brower immediately agreed and within 90 minutes another 15,000 people poured into the park swelling the crowd to almost 100,000 just as Talking Heads took the stage as the sun set. The crowd inched forward to accommodate the "guests" and a sense of wonder swept over everyone as no one other than Brower and Aykroyd and the radio audience was aware of the last minute free invitation.[1] Scandal plagued the event with accusations tossed back and forth between the backers and park management, the latter claiming to have thrown away all the ticket stubs as "no one told them to keep them". The event reportedly lost a million dollars.[2]
Despite the fact that no rights agreements were signed, the entire concert was recorded professionally. The tapes surfaced sometime later that year and were secured by Brower after being turned over by the studio whose recording truck had been on location to record Teenage Head, the band. In the mid 1990s the tapes were handed over to Canadian independent record executive Jan Haust by Brower to ensure their professional restoration and safe keeping. 102 of those tracks, by the five most famous of the bands, were acquired by Wolfgangs, which also holds the rights to Bill "Wolfgang" Graham's archive; by 2017 they were posted on its website.[3] A video recording of a portion of the set played by The Kings has also been released.[4]
At the time of the festival, a new wave/punk festival seemed a novel idea to many, especially as many of these bands typically played at night, in clubs—not outdoors in the hot summer sunlight. Rock magazine CREEM published an overview of Heatwave from that point of view, using a few words of parody in comparison to Woodstock.
It may bear further verification, but some remember The Ramones as being initially announced for the festival.
Groups
The groups were:
- Vladymir Rogov (opening artist) with his band ARKITEX (not on poster)
- Teenage Head (not on poster)
- BB Gabor (not on poster)
- Holly and the Italians (not on the poster)
- Rockpile featuring Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe
- The Rumour without Graham Parker (just after he had gone solo) (not on poster)
- The B-52's
- Talking Heads (at sundown)
- The Pretenders
- Elvis Costello and the Attractions
- The Kings
The Clash were originally booked, and were on the poster, but cancelled[5] or, by another story, were held up at the border due to customs.
A partial order of appearance was: Teenage Head (opened at 11:00 am),[1] The Rumour, Rockpile, Holly and the Italians, Pretenders, B-52's, Talking Heads (sunset), Elvis Costello, and the Kings (midnight).[6]
Teenage Head set list
The reviewer saw "two scraggly guys playing guitar and bass, and a crop-haired singer in long-tailed livery coat and eyeliner. ... good ol' head-banging ramalama punk rock. A large and vocal following cheers them on, and they play with confidence, as if they belong up front of all those people."[1] A year or so later, Teenage Head's live album had a picture from their Heatwave set on the cover.[7] Their set included "Wild One" (from the Frantic City album).[7]
- Top Down
- Wild One
- Picture My Face
- Some Kinda Fun
- Little Boxes (Alimony)
- Fist to Face (Everybody's Growin' Old)
- Let's Shake
- Lucy Potato
- Brand New Cadillac
- You're Tearing Me Apart
- Somethin' Else
- Kissin' The Carpet
- Disgusteen
- C'mon Everybody
The Pretenders set list
The Pretenders played a full set[8][9] at Heatwave photo and ticket.
- Precious
- The Adultress
- Kid
- Space Invader
- Private Life
- Brass in Pocket
- Stop Your Sobbing
- The Wait
- Louie Louie
- Porcelain
- Tattooed Love Boys
- Up the Neck
- Audience
- Mystery Achievement
The B-52's set list
Performing the strongest material from their first album and debuting much of the Wild Planet material before the largest live audience they had experienced up to this point.[10]
- Planet Claire
- 6060-842
- Devil In My Car
- 52 Girls
- Quiche Lorraine
- Dirty Back Road
- Lava
- Give Me Back My Man
- Strobe Light
- Private Idaho
- Runnin' Around
- Rock Lobster
- Dance This Mess Around
- Party Out of Bounds
Talking Heads set list
The band that toured for the Remain in Light album, including Adrian Belew, performed for the first time at Heatwave as the sun was setting. Their segment began with the four original members plus Belew, and then, as the songs progressed, they added musicians and vocalists, including Nona Hendryx (vocals), Busta Jones, Steve Scales, Dolette McDonald, and Bernie Worrell (keyboards).[11]
Elvis Costello set list
The Heatwave festival was the only 1980 live concert in North America by Elvis Costello and the Attractions.
- Shot With His Own Gun (sometimes listed as "How does it Feel"), accompanied only by Steve on piano *
- Accidents Will Happen
- The Beat
- Temptation
- (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding
- Mystery Dance
- Green Shirt
- You'll Never Be a Man
- (I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea
- Secondary Modern
- Pump It Up
- Lover's Walk
- Less Than Zero
- Big Tears
- High Fidelity *
- Lipstick Vogue *
- Radio Radio
- I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down
- Alison
- Clubland
- Oliver's Army
- Watching the Detectives
- You Belong to Me *
Recorded and available as a two LP disk album. "Sounds like an audience recording..."[14][15][16][17]
The Kings
Their set started about midnight, and they played an hour long show which included "This Beat Goes On/Switchin' to Glide".[7]
- Borrowing Time
- Don't Let Me Know
- Run Shoes Running
- My Habit
- This Beat Goes On/Switchin' to Glide
- Partyitis
- California Girls
- One Day Off
- Go Away
See also
References
- 1 2 3 http://www.angelfire.com/rock/teenagehead/ShortArticles.htm from Trouser Press #56, Nov. 1980.
- ↑ Losses: http://philbrodieband.com/music_trivia-yesterdays_august.htm
- ↑ "Heatwave Festival, a Wolfgang's playlist".
- ↑ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: The Kings: Live At Heatwave Complete. YouTube.
- ↑ The Clash: https://groups.google.com/group/alt.music.canada/browse_thread/thread/58839384b5ce7c93
- ↑ Partial order: https://groups.google.com/group/alt.fan.elvis-costello/browse_thread/thread/f465d5b3e6222f22
- 1 2 3 "iPod Forums at iProng: Voice of the iPod Generation :: View topic - Did anyone attend either of these 80s music festivals". Archived from the original on 2007-10-08. Retrieved 2006-11-27.
- ↑ The Pretenders: soundboard cassette recording
- ↑ The Pretenders: http://zombtracker.the-zomb.com/details.php?id=10685
- ↑ "Home". wolfgangsvault.com.
- ↑ Talking Heads: https://groups.google.com/group/alt.fan.elvis-costello/browse_thread/thread/8c9880a55665dfec
- ↑ Remain in Love, Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club, Tina. by Chris Frantz
- ↑ Talking Heads set list: http://www.tradeu2.com/setlistsotherart/talking_heads_heatwave_festival_.htm
- ↑ Elvis Costello: ECHWC82380
- ↑ Elvis Costello: 74 minutes soundboard recording, also
- ↑ Elvis Costello: 74:59 audience recording
- ↑ Elvis Costello: back cover Archived 2006-11-18 at the Wayback Machine