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Robert Palmer Concert

Capitol Theatre (Passaic, NJ)

Robert Palmer concert at Capitol Theatre on Oct 12, 1979

Concert Details

  • Date:
    10.12.1979
  • Tracks:
    6
  • Total Time:
    23:09
  • Catalog:
    King Biscuit
  • Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

This mini-set by the late British vocalist Robert Palmer shows the charismatic singer near the peak of his commercial career. Recorded while promoting his multi-platinum Secrets album, he was coasting on the popularity he had achieved with his early hits (such as "Sneakin' Sally Through The Alley" and "Every Kinda People"), and made himself a household name with his first big rock hit, "Bad Case Of Loving You."

"Bad Case Of Loving You," was written by Capitol Records artist Moon Martin, but his own version paled by comparison to the hard rockin' read by Palmer. Secretsentire summary

  • M. ABBA | Saturday, March 28, 2009 | 1:50 pm

    While listening to Robert Palmer's Bad case, I deeply regret not having seen him, at least once in my life. M. ABBA,(France)

  • john k joint | Monday, December 29, 2008 | 6:34 pm

    I raise my glass to one of the classiest performers of our generation. The man always wore a tie. Rest in peace.

  • Sonic | Sunday, December 07, 2008 | 11:36 am

    Five years since his passing. It's good to know that his music... in paricular his voice... will live forever. R.I.P. Robert Palmer.

  • JG/AWR - Houston | Sunday, December 07, 2008 | 12:09 am

    This is a really nice concert posting. Robert Palmer had so much quality work behind him and he was broadly appreciated by an almost cult-like following by the time everybody else discovered him with the the releases of "Addicted to Love" and "Simply Irresistible". Out of I suppose five concerts of his that I saw, never was there any hint of slop in the band or a disconnect with the audience. On record, he was not afraid to experiment with non-formulaic songs. In concert, these unique, sometimes quirky pieces always managed to live up to the promise of the studio cut - frequently blowing the original rendition out of the water. What a set of contradictions - a smart, suave, R&B-oriented, bad-ass straightforward rock&roll musician. These descriptive terms don't usually go together, but they did with Robert Palmer. J.Gilbert - Houston, Texas

  • Myakka | Friday, December 05, 2008 | 8:40 pm

    Bad Case sung by R. P. has to be one of the great rockers of all time!

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