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Nazareth Concert

St. Paul Civic Center (St. Paul, MN)

Nazareth concert at St. Paul Civic Center on Jun 11, 1976

06.11.1976
Tracks: 13 / Total Time: 1:01:45
Catalog: King Biscuit

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Concert Summary

Nazareth was a good, rockin' Scottish bar band when they formed in 1968. They got their name from the first line of the quintessential Band song "The Weight," from the lyric, "I pulled into Nazareth. I was feeling about half past dead…" By the time they released their third album, 1973's Razamatazz, they had already topped U.K. charts with the rollicking "Bad Bad Boy." This concert was recorded three years later for the King Biscuit Flower Hour, in St. Paul, Minnesota, the heart of the Midwest; and shows what a powerful live act they had become in just a few years.

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  • mstern | Thursday, October 01, 2009 | 1:06 pm

    Transporting back to the 70's PALEEEEEEEEEEEEEEZZZZZ.

  • DJ | Friday, September 25, 2009 | 9:19 pm

    The last half of the song labeled "Whiskey Drinking Woman" is actually another HUGE Nazareth hit titled "Hair Of The Dog". I'm glad to be of assistance, again...WV ROCK$

  • Anonymous | Sunday, August 23, 2009 | 3:13 am

    I grew up to Nazareth. As a child I used to listen in bed to them (as the Shadettes) knocking stuff out at Burntisland Palais up the road from my home. As a teenager, I would see them weekly at the Belleville Hotel and as the house band at the Kinema ballroom in Dunfermline. Memorable nights were when they opened for "The Love Affair" (that notorious contrived boy band) and they finished their set with a knock-out version of "Evarlasting Love". And the time they opened for the Who, 29th April 1969.

  • syniad | Friday, May 08, 2009 | 11:41 am

    An excellent recording and a welcome addition to the vault. It is good to know that America gave the band some well deserved recognition. In the summary it is stated that "their original material was nothing exceptional." I think this is very harsh as Nazareth are far more than a covers band. It also seems to suggest that they were washed up by the time Zal joined in 1979. How do you explain then, that their album of that year, No Mean City, is one of the most stunning hard rock records ever to be released? An absolutely essential addition to every fan of the genre's collection. It is Dan's finest hour as he sneers and snarls through each magnificent song. The band had never sounded better as they deliver classic after classic. If your idea of an essential Nazareth song is Love Hurts, please take the time to dig a little deeper and check out Simple Solution, Just To Get Into It, Star and, of course, the dark and sinister title track.

  • Anonymous | Sunday, February 15, 2009 | 11:38 am

    I forgot to mention that not only did he do the show from a bar stool - he was in a body cast from head to toe and 2 roadies had to carry him onto the stage and set him down with his mike while a third roadie set 2 fifths of painkiller on the table next to him. Throughout the show - he made very good use of the painkiller but did not lose his edge on the lyrics. Amazing Performance!!!!!!!!

  • Anonymous | Sunday, February 15, 2009 | 11:31 am

    I too saw the 76 tour where Dan McCafferty sat in a bar stool. He drove his mazarati off a cliff in the carribean somewhere and was scheduled to play Cobo Hall the very next weekend. We all heard the show was going to be cancelled and were amazed when it wasn't. Dan's dedication to not dissapoint his fans was phenomenal and watching him drink his whiskey and belt out those wicked lryics remains one of my favorite memories of the 3 or 4 years I virtually lived at Cobo Hall in Detroit. Nazareth was a welcome as J. Geils in MoTown. Always a killer show!

  • THEWIZARDTRUCK | Saturday, January 31, 2009 | 8:21 am

    This band helped me make it through school in rural MI in the late 1970's. Still don't understand how bands with less talent got more attention than Nazareth.

  • ian marks | Sunday, October 12, 2008 | 10:38 am

    great show from a great band but why did you split telegram up into 3 parts? it was three sections and played as one complete song,it don't half ruin the flow of their never ending opening number.and dan still hasn't lost that great voice

  • Stew | Tuesday, August 05, 2008 | 1:55 pm

    I too saw this band at the Swing Auditorium in San Bernadino Ca. during the Expect No Mercy Tour. It ranks as one of the Top 3 shows I've seen. Changing Times and Shapes of Things is what really still stands out as the loudest most perfect two numbers ever played.

  • haifal | Friday, July 11, 2008 | 8:22 pm

    I SAW NAZERETH SOMETIME IN THE MID 1970'S IN TEXAS. THE ENTIRE CONCERT WAS TELECAST. WHAT AN HONOR!!! THE BAND AC/DC SHOULD OF HIRED DAN McCAFFERTY, INSTEAD OF "BRIAN JOHNSON". THE BAND PROBABLY WOULD OF WENT FURTHER?

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