The Kinks were my first concert. Not the first concert I ever saw, but my first rock concert, the first concert I saw that I chose to see. You know what I mean.

I have gotten a lot of mileage out of the fact that such a seminally cool band was my first concert, as though I was an in-the-know 11-year-old little hipster. Truth is, I was never really that cool or in the know, I have just always liked what I like and despite being self-conscious in most other matters, am always pretty confident about my musical tastes. Plus, The Kinks were on a bit of a mainstream run in the early ‘80s. Being storytellers in their songs, they were not afraid to make music videos with just enough narrative and MTV rewarded them with the gift of exposure. 

I have ticket stubs and other mementoes from hundreds of the concerts I have seen in the 40 years since this one, and while I remember exactly what the stub looked like, can still visualize the stage from the vantage point of where I sat, and recall the fact that I was in Section Two of the old New Haven Coliseum (in fact, I have a note in with my ticket stub collection that says "Sec 2, Row 21, Seat 4" - go figure), I have no souvenirs. I bought a tour shirt which I lost within days and that ticket stub is long, long gone. After years of Google searches I did find the backstage pass pictured here.

Something that was kind of funny about the show was that they kept teasing “Lola” – maybe 2 or 3 times – but instead of playing it, would stop and tear into something else until late in the show when they finally provided the payoff and played the song in its entirety. Good schtick.

Something else I remember was that this was a school night, a Monday. I was in sixth grade. It was the final weeks of elementary school. Right on the cusp. The weather had changed, it was already warm in New England. I remember all of those things. I even remember that the opening act was a band named Sheriff, from Canada. They had something of a hit, called, “When I’m With You”. It represents the worst of what the 80s had to offer. So bad is was a hit twice.

This concert was not the start of my lifelong love affair with music, that began several years earlier, but it was the start of my connection with the live experience, something I get incredibly energized about to this day.

Further Reading:

The Kinks Official Website

Ray Davies episode of VH1 Storytellers

Artists who played New Haven Coliseum

Bootlegs and official live albums from the Coliseum

Last Days of the Coliseum PBS Documentary