Quicksilver Messenger Service Concert

Winterland (San Francisco, CA) Apr 15, 1970

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Quicksilver Messenger Service concert at Winterland on Apr 15, 1970

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  • Date:
    04.15.1970
  • Tracks:
    10
  • Total Time:
    1:22:43
  • Catalog:

Concert Summary

This is the opening set of a marathon show, with Quicksilver sharing the bill with Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful Dead.

This set captures QMS heading in a new direction, with Dino Valenti now fronting the band, shortly after the release of their Just for Love LP, which contained their only charting hit: the anthem "Fresh Air." British piano virtuoso Nicky Hopkins had also become a full time…entire summary

  • kornbak | Saturday, May 19, 2012 | 8:36 am

    Wow. Despite the terrible audio this is the best QMS performance I have heard compared to predating Vault recordings. Eclectic prog in my book! Simply great performance.

  • mikemcf | Tuesday, December 27, 2011 | 9:50 am

    Quicksilver was a great band no matter what incarnation. I still remember to this day going to the Drug King store to buy that incredible black album with the iconic silver foil logo. Back then I didn't have head phones so I took the speakers from my stereo layed on the floor between them and cranked it up.ever since then I loved everything that they turned some more than others. But all in all what an amazing band like them or not I was fortunate to grow up in the S.F. Bay area and luckier still to hear such a great group of innovators!

  • posthumanhero | Tuesday, December 20, 2011 | 2:38 am

    and, by the way, all u 'quicksilver purists' who like to spew vitriol at a corpse for his apparent flaws..........why don't u criticize dave's dubious sometimes bass playing, duncan's sometimes dubious leads and the bands sometimes dubious professionalism if your gonna get on your idiotic outdated and bigoted rants about what style means to you (i.e.'dino sucks')......it's 2011 and nobody gives a fuck about your aestehtic bigotry....keep it to yourselves, otherwise u destroy the experience for openminded loving people like us.......dino joined the band when the jam band thing was getting old and needed a new direction, plain and simple........if u want to only listen to davids guy-next-door baritone and 30 minute versions of bo didlley songs then stick to the old stuff and keep raving like it was still 1970...........i mean, really, your worse than metalheads.

  • posthumanhero | Tuesday, December 20, 2011 | 2:16 am

    whenever dino goes to do a ballad daves bass seems to say, 'i don't want to be here'.......lol...........funny how 'lady' gets past the first verse then just fizzles out.

  • sekander2 | Tuesday, June 21, 2011 | 9:32 am

    This was the best incarnation of QMS ever. No, I didn't really care for Dino, either, but if it meant having Gary Duncan back in the fold, then it was worth it. I saw this band a few weeks before this show in L.A.
    at the Olympic Auditorium. Just the greatest front line with Duncan, Cipollina and Hopkins. As much as I love Cip's stinging leads, my favorite solo is still Duncan's extended foray after the first verse of Who Do You Love. I used to wait for the singing to stop and brace myself for that beautiful, sweet tone of the hollow body, jazz Gibson.

  • Bungus | Sunday, February 06, 2011 | 12:14 pm

    Classic.....all I have to say

  • Duane | Friday, May 21, 2010 | 10:25 am

    Hello: You don't have nothing from the Fillmore East 1970, by the time that show was over we walked out into the morning light. GREAT SHOW

  • Cat Advocate | Sunday, May 16, 2010 | 9:30 pm

    Dino playing congas on Edward?

  • Ceaser's Ghost | Tuesday, May 11, 2010 | 1:17 pm

    Quicksilver was such a tight instrumental and melodically beautiful vocal band. Always interesting and eclectic. Fantastic talent in this band and, whoa, hearing "Edward The Mad Shirt Grinder" again. I think I was 17 the last time I heard that one. Was Nicky Hopkins with them on the keyboards on this tour???

  • rod/san francisco | Sunday, March 07, 2010 | 3:51 pm

    the original qms was one of my favoites at the fillmore valenti screwed up a great band and sound too bad the great and late nicky hopkins got in the middle of valenti's rock star/controlling/assholiness.

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