• Carter-Finley Stadium - July 10, 1990

setlist

  • Jack Straw
    Loser
    We Can Run But We Can't Hide
    Me and My Uncle
    Big River
    Friend of the Devil
    Masterpiece
    Bird Song
    Promised Land

    Iko Iko
    Playin' in the Band
    Uncle John's Band
    drums
    The Other One
    Stella Blue
    Not Fade Away

    Brokedown Palace

Ticket Stubs

Concert Photos

21 comments
sort by
Recent
Reset
Items displayed
  • Default Avatar
    DeadheadDoug
    17 years 4 months ago
    Glen: That's EXACTLY how I remember it!
    Glen, reading your comments above about the folks running down the hill brings back a flood of memories! I was one of the masses cheering and groaning and watching the progression of the heads. That, the amazingly oppressive heat, and the graphics on the video screens are definite memories that stay with me.
  • Default Avatar
    rjtriana
    17 years 4 months ago
    I bevieve the band cranked
    I bevieve the band cranked it up another notch to remind the crowd that they were still playing is more likely. This was one of the resons that the band started to get banned from playing at certain venues. They did not aprove of gate crashers and out of control partiers. Especially when it interfered with the making of music. Which was why we were all their, to listen to the music.
  • Default Avatar
    gleng1
    17 years 4 months ago
    Storming the Bastille During Masterpiece
    Yikes! The show had a floor area (special tickets required) surrounded by a big grassy hill, and then the stadium seats. Lots of deadheads standing all the way in the back, at the top of the hill, staring at the police (staring at them...). Every once in awhile a deadhead would take off -- sprinting down the hill, though the line of police, past a line of shrubs, and on to the floor, where they hoped to get lost in the crowd before the pursuing police could grab them. First one person would try this; then another. Some made it past the police; some didn't. During Masterpiece more and more deadheads tried their luck, dashing down the hill. The audience in the stadium seats is spellbound by this game of cat and mouse; cheering when someone makes it past the police; groaning when they don't. The crowd begins to cheer as the deadheads start to pour in, overwhelming the police. The band can't see what's going on in the back, but they seem to be looking at each other -- the crowd is cheering, we must be playing pretty good! So they dig in and play a little harder, and the crowd cheers as more deadheads make it on to the floor, and the band cranks it up even another notch... Glen
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 8 months
setlist
Jack Straw
Loser
We Can Run But We Can't Hide
Me and My Uncle
Big River
Friend of the Devil
Masterpiece
Bird Song
Promised Land

Iko Iko
Playin' in the Band
Uncle John's Band
drums
The Other One
Stella Blue
Not Fade Away

Brokedown Palace
show date

dead comment

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Crazy-hot day early on, then it was rainy during the show. The PA system shut off during Promised Land, I asked Dan Healy about it at the following show and he told me that they got a load of bad fuel in the diesel generators. Bruce sat in during 1st and second sets, and it was really cool to hear him jamming with Brent. In the words of my buddy Larry: "You can run from Brent, but you can't hide, cause he will track you down and sing to you!" ". . . Music is the best!" (fz)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

the lightening shut down Promised Land,and they picked up right where they left off when the power came back on. We were laughing and singing, folded up the folding chairs and kept on dancing. Lake
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I still have good memories of this show. Yes, it was hot as hell. Yes, it stormed and the electricity went out for a while. But that was all a part of the adventure. Jerry played a sweet guitar prelude to one of the songs in the first set - I think it was Friend of the Devil. It was so beautiful, the clouds were cotton candy and the sugar floated through the air. Nothing could have been more perfect. The guy behind me (Bill from Hickory) danced and danced and danced with me. We could hear the storm coming, and I swear to God, Mickey was dueling with the thunder. It was mighty and righteous! As someone mentioned before, the lightening shut down Promised Land. However, once things were a go, the boys picked it up EXACTLY where they left off. A friend has given me a copy of this show because he knows I loved it so much. I'm afraid to listed to it. If it's not as wonderful as I remember it, I'll screw up some really great memories. Liz
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

OMG....the heat! LOL! They sent the fire dept. out there with hoses to try to cool everyone down....sent one of my Birks flying down a racing river of water. (thanks for that!) The bleachers were metal, and every time there was a crack of lightening, my friend and I would just look over at each other with fear in our eyes. Or maybe it was a "you still here?" kinda thing. Heh heh. The guy next to me had alittle too much of something...he slipped from the wet metal bleacher and fell to the ground below, biting his tongue in half in the process. Cue the medical personel and alot of chaos. As wild and wooly as this show was, I absolutely loved it! I still have the clearest picture in my mind of the hill that sloped down to the stage, and how we descended that slope in the rain when the boys played MASTERPIECE. It was like watching a preacher call for believers, and the believers responding in droves. Definitely a religious experience.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I got my Jerry POPPED! Man it was so cool,rode up from the north Ga. mountains,and found the parking.Got some treats,and went on in the show.Then came the boys out,then came the thunder storm. The boys left the stage after 3 songs,cause the lightening striking in the lot!....Second set Iko~Iko brought out the dancing bears on the screens!!!!Man it was an out of control show! people sliding down the banks in the mud,people running unto the field from the seats being chased!It was wild~one kid clipped a state trooper,sliding down the hill in the mud,he got arrested I guess?It was funny though....how I remember,I dont know...but I'll never forget!!!!!You know OUR love is~NOT~FADE~AWAY
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Yikes! The show had a floor area (special tickets required) surrounded by a big grassy hill, and then the stadium seats. Lots of deadheads standing all the way in the back, at the top of the hill, staring at the police (staring at them...). Every once in awhile a deadhead would take off -- sprinting down the hill, though the line of police, past a line of shrubs, and on to the floor, where they hoped to get lost in the crowd before the pursuing police could grab them. First one person would try this; then another. Some made it past the police; some didn't. During Masterpiece more and more deadheads tried their luck, dashing down the hill. The audience in the stadium seats is spellbound by this game of cat and mouse; cheering when someone makes it past the police; groaning when they don't. The crowd begins to cheer as the deadheads start to pour in, overwhelming the police. The band can't see what's going on in the back, but they seem to be looking at each other -- the crowd is cheering, we must be playing pretty good! So they dig in and play a little harder, and the crowd cheers as more deadheads make it on to the floor, and the band cranks it up even another notch... Glen
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I bevieve the band cranked it up another notch to remind the crowd that they were still playing is more likely. This was one of the resons that the band started to get banned from playing at certain venues. They did not aprove of gate crashers and out of control partiers. Especially when it interfered with the making of music. Which was why we were all their, to listen to the music.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Glen, reading your comments above about the folks running down the hill brings back a flood of memories! I was one of the masses cheering and groaning and watching the progression of the heads. That, the amazingly oppressive heat, and the graphics on the video screens are definite memories that stay with me.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

What an experience!It was my first show, in my hometown no less. I was 18, and a whole group of us went very early to experience this "scene" we had heard so much about. It wasn't all fun and games though, as we partook in some of the plentiful "party favors", and one of my good friends got heat stroke while thoroughly dosed (as was I). Some of the "friends" I came with basically wanted to abandon him to fate. I however, did not, and took him to the medical tent, where he made a miraculous recovery... I learned a lot about what a true friend was that blisteringly hot day when I was oh so young... The show was incredible. I remember the violent storm, and remember thinking that I didn't know where the lightshow and video screens ended and where mother nature started. It seemed logical to me at the time that perhaps the band had "willed" this storm to happen... My favorite memory of that crazy, magical night was the heads storming down the hill. There was one this one guy who made it past the cops, all the way down to the first few rows where I was. He no sooner had climbed on top of a folding chair and began grooving, when he was full body tackled from behind by a NC state trooper, violently taking out about ten chairs around them. All the while, the girl directly to his left, OBVIOUSLY even more out of her mind than I was on god knows what, continued to stare at her shoes intently, oblivious to the insane display taking place a foot away... Anyways, I was hooked, and that night was the first of many wonderful memories I have of America's greatest band ever.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

I had totally forgot about the firehose outside the venue that day. I went to play in the firehose cause it was so damn hot all the while I forgot my ticket was in my front pocket. When I pulled my ticket out it was all wet and mangled. It actually got ripped and you could barley read the writing. I almost started crying I was so sad. I figured I might as well try to get in with it anyway. I explained to the ticket taking dude what had happened and he just said OK and let me in. Damn I was so happy. I couldnt read where my seat was so I just hung at the back of the stadium near the grass hill and like a bunch of others made the mad dash for the floor during Masterpiece. Fortunatly by that time the cops were to overrun and I made it down no problem. Turned out to be a decent show after all. :)
user picture

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

ok,i thought the power shut off in kentucky!i do remember that so well!it was such a smokin show!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 9 months
Permalink

remember before th' show after th gates opened...Jerry and Bruce dueling on pianos...was a real treat ...thnx
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

First show. Hillsborough Street (downtown Raleigh) flooded with fans- a beautiful sight indeed. Acquired SB recording from friend-of-friend- two of my cherished tapes. The heat, the lighting, the power outtage, the oneness. The beginning.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 9 months
Permalink

that lightning display behind the stage during Space and The other one was pretty crazy. 6 songs in the 2nd set (minus encore) and it was 2 hours long.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years
Permalink

gettin goosebumps read these reveiws as i was one of those who took the hill, i remember being egged on by the crowds on the floor an on the side bleachers. felt a little like gate crashing with out the gate or the crashing. i do rember the trooper getting plowed in to by a out of control sliding deadhead. first one over there then the other side then all of us it really was fun.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 9 months
Permalink

Copped some great seats on the 2nd row. Got dosed by a dude behind me with a squirt bottle full of tabs. Everything was going OK. "Left my home in Norfolk Virginia.. California on my mind".....power out..... 10 minutes or so. "I straddled that Greyhound And rode on into Raleigh And on across Caroline" Crowd went apeshyte!!!Then they started right back in Promised land where they left off. Just to show the caliber of musicianship. Thanks guys for a very memorable show. My 33rd...
user picture

Member for

10 years 7 months
Permalink

I was clean for this show. The 99 degree heat hit. The scorching silver benches, I had to drop. I scoped for the longest-longhair peer a few benches down and asked him, share a square for 5? He said, Yep. It was good!! Bruce H. warmed up. Never knew I liked him. It was tame but good. I remember those Grass hill-Crashers. It was beautiful. Hear the cheers on any good matrix mix on Masterpiece. The Band could see the kids tumbling down the rich open steep green sodded slope.. like wet paint dripping down a canvas. The grass blades changed colors with each tumbler's somersault trail. The vibe overpowered the law and Masterpiece ended with an intense lightning pulse and thunderbolt that set the tone. The green hill was full with 100 kids. -- 2nd set.. I moved down a dozen steps to see the band better. met a beautiful girl w/The Cure: Head on the Door t-shirt. I had the same poster back in my parents' house. She was maybe 19, I was 20. It sometimes was raining and it felt really good. We danced and I remember the Other One, we went wild dancing together. Stella Blue we were hugging and it was super sweet. We were speechless and holding hands during Brokedown. Afterwards she said, going to RFK? I said, YES. She said, See you there! I made the mistake of looking for her at RFK. 100,000 people.