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Bobby and The Midnites Concert

Capitol Theatre (Passaic, NJ)

Bobby and The Midnites

02.05.1982
Tracks: 19 / Total Time: 1:58:04
Catalog: King Biscuit

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Opening with a funky and fun version of the Coasters classic, “Youngblood" (also a hit for Leon Russell and Bad Company), Bobby & The Midnites give a memorable performance from New Jersey's Capitol Theater, one of several shows recorded for the King Biscuit Flower Hour.

“Bombs Away,” “Salt Lake City,” “Heaven Help The Fool,” “Josephine,” and “Too Many Losers,” all sung by Weir, shine, as does the opening jam song, “Bahama Mama” written by bassist Johnson. Billy Cobham, who was coming off of several successful years as a solo artist, is featured in a seven-minute drum solo. The band…entire summary

Concert Set List

Track Name Time Playlist Embed
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  • rube74 | Monday, December 29, 2008 | 12:45 pm

    old bobby sounds like new bobby. I dont think they were ready for his sound yet

  • StoneColdCrazy | Monday, December 15, 2008 | 3:54 pm

    I was at this show (& about 100 others @ the Capitol Theatre)& sat 4th row center. I love the Dead & all of Bobby's solo efforts but this band with Alphonso Johnson & Billy Cobham was sensational! One of the best bass soloists/players ever!

  • adamdean | Tuesday, December 09, 2008 | 7:41 am

    The best Bobby Wier band outside of The Dead! I caught this show at a bandshell in Atlantic City (can't remember the name of the venue) but Alphonso Johnson spent the evening bouncing bass bombs off the walls. It was an unforgettable performance.

  • gratefldiver | Monday, November 17, 2008 | 2:56 pm

    I saw this band on a double bill with Neil Young around '81 in Chicago. What a night! This is by far a tight, well meshed and relaxed group of outstanding musicians having a great time. Well worth the listen, over and over again.

  • steveo | Sunday, November 02, 2008 | 11:22 pm

    corry342, thanks for the update. I just saw Billy Cobham last month @ NY Blue Note. Soooo good. Reminds you how "big" the Dead were in the late-70's, able to attract great musicians to take part in their side-gigs. Bob Weir seemed to always assemble an all-star cast. Corry, I will pass on the B/MN 2nd album, thanks to you, to keep my sonic palate clean of weak albums.

  • corry342 | Thursday, October 16, 2008 | 9:58 pm

    steveo, there was a second Bobby And The Midnites album called When The Beat Meets The Street, produced by Jeff (Skunk) Baxter for Columbia and released in 1984. Kenny Gradney had replaced Alphonso Johnson on bass by that time, but it was a fairly weak album.

  • steveo | Wednesday, October 15, 2008 | 8:13 pm

    Bobby/ Midnites was my favorite Dead solo project, b/c of the unbelieveable line-up: ex-Weather Report, ex-Mahavishnu? With Bob Weir? Are you kidding me? And the band was tight, tight, not flashy - all groove, but enough Weir-some quirkiness to keep it interesting in a Dead way. Great stuff. Would've liked to hear album #2. This live set will do.

  • Blip | Friday, October 10, 2008 | 2:49 pm

    >>The best of all the vocalists in the Grateful Dead<< come on now. really.

  • Fifi de Paris | Wednesday, October 01, 2008 | 9:35 pm

    Crisp,fresh, tasty, clean sounding...a surprise for me.

  • trueecho | Wednesday, September 24, 2008 | 3:59 pm

    tight and excellent quality

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