January 8-10, 1970 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting BB King & Cold Blood) September 25-27, 1969 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supported by Lonnie Mack, The Move)ĭecemSymphony Hall, Boston, MA (supporting Van Morrison) March 14-15, 1969 Woodrose Ballroom, South Deerfield, MA (supporting The Velvet Underground)Īpril 24-27, 1969 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supported by AUM) March 6-8, 1969 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Chicago)
but it had lost it’s license after a police raid five days before) Festival was due to take place at The Boston Arts Project in a loft over a bar at 1088 Boylston St. Benefit for Project 50, a YMCA affiliated organisation, with Sky People, The Third World Raspberry, Cloud, Travis Pike’s Tea-Party & The Collwell-Winfield Blues Band.
January 30-FebruThe Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Savoy Brown Blues Band)įebruary ?, 1969 Boston, MA (US TV "Mixed Bag")įebruary 14-15, 1969 The Catacombs, Boston, MA (Rock ‘n’ Roll Festival.
November 21-23, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supported by Listening)ĭecember 19-21, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Fleetwood Mac & Ill Wind) September 20-21, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Eden's Children) September ?, 1968 New Penelope Club, Montreal, QC June 19-22, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Bagatelle)
The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting BB King, with The Siegel–Schwall Band & The Cloud) March 8-9, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Canned Heat)Īpril 19-20, 1968 The Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA (supporting Siegal Schwall Band, with Cloud) January 23-27, 1968 The Catacombs, Boston, MA November ?, 1967 Psychedelic Supermarket, Boston, MA (May have supported Mike Bloomfield’s The Electric Flag) June ?, 1967 Unicorn Coffee House, Boston, MA (First Gig) Seth Justman (keyboards & vocals) – joined fall 1969 Stephen Jo Bladd (drums & vocals) – joined summer 1968 Keith Lahteinen (drums) – joined summer 1967, left summer 1968 (formally of Ultimate Spinach) Harold Stone (keyboards) – left summer 1967 (?) All rights reserved.Snoopy and the Sopwith Camels (Fall 1966)Īl Couchon (2nd guitar) – left summer 1967 ET at during which he’ll sign copies of Still Alright that will be available at the website.Ĭopyright © 2022, ABC Audio. Meanwhile, Loggins will take part in a livestreamed event this Wednesday, June 15, at 3 p.m. “t turned out to be probably the most commercial record I ever had,” Loggins notes. After finishing the album, Kenny says he played it for Ienner, who loved it, and it wound up yielding five singles. Loggins says he took a chance and kept working on overdubs with hopes that the tapes would be recovered, and they were a few weeks later. This happened at a time when the project was already overbudget, and when his label’s new president, Don Ienner, demanded to hear the album before deciding whether or not to drop Kenny. Kenny explains that he was while working on the record, a truck that was transporting the master tapes and some musical gear to another studio was stolen.
Loggins tells ABC Audio that one of his favorite stories in the book involved the making of his 1991 album Leap of Faith. In addition, Loggins discusses his two divorces, his struggles with addiction and his difficult relationship with his older brother, singer/songwriter Dan Loggins, who inspired the hit “Danny’s Song.”
In the book, Loggins details his many musical endeavors, including his work as a member of the popular duo Loggins & Messina, his collaborations with Stevie Nicks and Michael McDonald, and his 1980s solo heyday as the “King of the Movie Soundtracks” thanks to hits featured in films like Top Gun, Footloose and Caddyshack.Īlso in the memoir, Kenny shares his recollections of participating in the all-star 1985 charity single “We Are the World.” Kenny Loggins reflects on his decades-long career in a new memoir, Still Alright, which was released today.