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The Marshall Tucker Band Concert

Raceway Park (Englishtown, NJ)

The Marshall Tucker Band concert at Raceway Park on Sep 3, 1977

Concert Details

  • Date:
    09.03.1977
  • Tracks:
    9
  • Total Time:
    1:09:05
  • Catalog:
    Silver Eagle
  • Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

This recording captures the original line-up of The Marshall Tucker Band, four years after they hit pay-dirt with their debut LP, released in March, 1973. This self-titled album is still regarded as a southern rock classic today.

The group was formed in Spartansburg, South Carolina, in 1972, when their contemporaries, The Allman Brothers Band, were still very much a blues-rock band, and not yet revered as kings of southern…entire summary

  • Anonymous | Sunday, September 20, 2009 | 2:23 pm

    I was there sept.03 1977 new riders of the purple sage, then marshall tucker and last but not least the greatful dead, hot as hell that day 100 , turned the water cannons on to keep us from frying!!! Jeff Zuckowich

  • EStreetShuffle | Monday, July 06, 2009 | 11:50 am

    Ah Englishtown, it was wickedly hot that weekend with cars abandoned on the Belt Parkway on my way down the nioght before. What an experience, great music, watched to girl fall in love on the blanket in front of me and on the way out saw a guy and girl getting it on, on top of a Coke truck. Oh yea and the music was amazing too

  • jetfan | Thursday, May 28, 2009 | 9:51 pm

    those were the days. tucker new riders and the dead , it doesnt get much better than that!!!!!

  • 1999flht | Wednesday, April 22, 2009 | 6:44 pm

    my first marshall tucker show was at the wollman rink in n.y.c....spring 1976...the outlaws opened up..terrific show for a 5 dollar ticket! englishtown..if you were there, it changed your life, lots of big brown blotter around. dead were on every single note..who can deny that?

  • slowhandfan | Saturday, April 11, 2009 | 7:37 am

    I agree with all who feel the great Marshall Tucker Band belongs in the Hall of Fame. I saw them play live twice in the seventies in Chicago. Both shows were among my most memorable from back in the day, which is saying something, as there were few artists whom I missed perform, from big names to the lesser known. Which leads me to another note, an entirely different musical style, the blues. I'm a huge fan of the late, great Paul Butterfield; I believe he was the best harpist ever. His son and his wife have a website devoted to getting Paul into the Hall. Which brings my thoughts to Butterfield's great friend and frequent partner, lead guitarist Mike Bloomfield. IMHO, it was a cryin'shame that those brilliant bluesmen never got the recognition they deserved.

  • fotd313 | Wednesday, January 14, 2009 | 2:50 pm

    First Dead show ...been on the bus ever since. NRPS, MTB, and the good old Grateful Dead....PRICELESS

  • Freddie Moller | Monday, January 05, 2009 | 12:00 am

    I just don't think that Toy Caldwell has had the recognition that he deserves as a guitar player. I mean he was a true rock n' roll original who could improvise as freely and as fluidly as Garcia or Duane Allman. He was a hell of a good player.

  • Anonymous | Wednesday, December 31, 2008 | 4:31 pm

    I was at this show too

  • azsquid | Tuesday, December 30, 2008 | 10:24 am

    i too was at the E-Town show we parked on some peoples lawn for a few dollars the night before,we had a couple of tanks of nitrous oxide and were eating dexedrine like candy,remember walking what seemed like a hundred miles to the show ,greeted by hells angels weilding baseball bats atop trailer truck boxes!! what a long strange trip its been!!!!

  • azsquid | Tuesday, December 30, 2008 | 10:18 am

    all the MTB, NRPS, GRATEFUL DEAD fans check www.archive.org get a library card and listen to thousands of dead shows!!!1

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