THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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Boomtown Rats

Sample this concert
  1. 1Blind Date04:00
  2. 2(I Never Loved) Eva Braun04:41
  3. 3Neon Heart04:06
  4. 4Me And Howard Hughes04:53
  5. 5Like Clockwork04:10
  6. 6Medley: Rat Trap / Kicks / Joey's On The Street Again13:55
  7. 7Living On An Island05:37
  8. 8(She's Gonna) Do You In07:05
  9. 9She's So Modern03:11
  10. 10Lookin' After No. 103:40
  11. 11Mary Of The 4th Form03:31
  12. 12Do The Rat06:59
  13. 13Never Bite The Hand That Feeds03:48
  14. 14I Don't Like Mondays06:01
  15. 15Don't Believe What You Read (Incomplete)04:24
Liner Notes

Bob Geldof - lead vocals, guitar; Pete Briquette - bass, vocals; Gerry Cott - guitar; Simon Crowe - drums, vocals; Johnny Fingers - keyboards; Garry Roberts - guitar, vocals; "Space" Jenner - saxophone

Despite hitting the top of the charts several times in their native Ireland, the Boomtown Rats never really caught on in America. Their label, Columbia Records, had hyped them as the next big punk band, saying they would be in the same league as The Clash and The Pretenders.

It didn't happen - mostly due to the fact that they never had the material to win over radio programmers, despite having a hit with "I Don't Like Mondays." Also an early promotion by the label involved sending actual dead rats in plastic bags (purchased from the New York City Sewer Department) to DJs across the country. The publicity stunt backfired and caused the media to react with such disgust that many of these radio personalities, programmers and journalists wrote off the band forever.

Led by the charismatic lead vocalist Bob Geldof, the group certainly had a great showman as their front man on stage. The band, assisted by former Graham Parker reed man Space Jenner, was certainly comprised of strong musicians. Their two studio albums produced by the future Mr. Shania Twain, Robert John Mutt Lange (who also produced some of the best records ever made by Foreigner, Huey Lewis and AC/DC) should have propelled them into stardom, but didn't.

So, why didn't they take off? Who knows, but some rock historians feel the material simply wasn't strong enough to cross over from the U.K. to American play lists. Check out this show, and judge for yourself.