Ritz Theatre

251 Port Richmond Avenue,
Staten Island, NY 10302

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Showing 26 - 50 of 92 comments

somoman
somoman on March 14, 2009 at 2:38 pm

Although this site focuses exclusively on theaters, let me offer up my opinion on what I feel was the best venue in New York. The Wollman Rink at Central Park, aka the Budweiser Music Festival, then the Schaefer Music Festival and then the Dr. Pepper Music Festival. When the weather was right, and the band was up, it just didn’t get better. The Byrds in 1971 races to mind. By that time the band featured Clarence White on guitar and Skip Battin on bass. The Byrds were always feel good, and when Roger played his 12 string, the crowd would light up. Oh yeah $2.00 tickets didnt hurt the experience

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on March 14, 2009 at 2:11 am

Going back to the 3/11/09 comment, remember that Bruce Springsteen opened for Anne Murray once, and the audience didn’t want him to leave the stage. That was the last time he was an opening act.

limnos
limnos on March 14, 2009 at 1:44 am

The Fillmore East used International Ticket Co. The RITZ used Globe Ticket Company
I found Central Park and Schaefer Music Fest tickets too.
Will continue searching for the RITZ photos and tickets beyond what’s been already posted.
More RITZ stuff though includes:
During WWII – no I’m not that old. Admission to a movie included the show, a news reel (aka propaganda) and a piece of dinnerware (aka depression glass. Young women would collect for “the war effort” outside the RITZ, often in ethnic clothes of the allied country of ther forefathers, whose sons were now US GI’s

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 10:21 pm

Honestly, I enjoyed listening to the Monkees and watching their show too. All 4 had talent individually, and as a group. JH was a legend and an awesome guitarist, but… I could see how it would end up as you explained above.

somoman
somoman on March 11, 2009 at 9:53 pm

farmersdtr

i’d like to swap .jpg images with you if you are willing and able to scan or take camera images of some of the items you mentioned. any chance you can get in touch with me at my home email?

I’d like to send you images of the ritz ticket stubs that I have and get your feedback. i’ll also send you some images of my stub collections.

I’m at

Thanks

somoman
somoman on March 11, 2009 at 9:02 pm

Yes, it is widely known that Hendrix opened for the Monkees. I believe he toured with them for 2-3 weeks leading up to the Forest Hills show. The Forest Hills was his last. Hendrix and the Monkees came to a collective decision that the crowd was not a Hendrix crowd and that it was unproductive for him to continue. In fact the crowds generaly booed Hendrix on that tour as the teenage girls chanted for the Monkees.

It is unclear whether or not he actually played that night in Forest Hills. I beleive he may have actually played an abbreviated set. The Monkees often refer to their relationship with Hendrix in interviews. They acknowledge him as the greatest guitarist they’d ever seen.

It was very popular for new and aggresive acts to tour with teeny bopper bands, ala Hendrix and the Monkees. The Who opened for Hermans Hermits in the summer of 1967. The Doors opened for Linda onstadt and the Stone Ponys in 1967.

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 8:36 pm

Wow…. That’s some combination. Let me keep diging, and see what I have for Forest Hills.

EcRocker
EcRocker on March 11, 2009 at 7:04 am

Didn’t Jimi also play the Forest Hills Tennis Stadium? He opened for the Monkeys.

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 3:24 am

OK The Jimi Hendrix Experience Friday Eve. Aug. 23, 1968
The Singer Bowl Flushing Meadow

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 3:11 am

FE tickets:
5/10/68, 11/11/68, 9/27/68,12/26/68, 12/31/68
9/13/69, 10/4/69, 11/28/69, 12/31/69
2/28/70, 3/19/70, 4/28/70

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 3:05 am

OK, one mor from the RITZ – Deep Red color
RITZ THEATER
255 Richmond Avenue
Staten Island
JAN'RY 30, 1970
Friday at 7:30
Front Orchestra

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 3:02 am

OK, I found one from the RITZ. This is alot of work…..
JAN'RY 31 1970 Upper Balcony $3.50
Section C Row I Seat 22

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 3:00 am

OK, I have one FE completely intact
12/26/68 Thursday EVE at 8:00
MC – 5 Free Concert

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 2:56 am

Above dates are all RITZ

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 2:55 am

Mountain – April 11th
Richie Havens and the James Cotton Blues Band – April 17th
Chambers Brothers – April 24th

Tuesday May 5th
Jefferson Airplane
Jamming as Hot Tuna

Sunday May 10th
The Hollies – First & Only Time in N.Y. One show 8:30pm

Saturday May 23rd
Canned Heat
Pig Iron

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 2:44 am

ok, the FE playbills have real dates inside.
Accordingly on 2/26, 1970 it was advertised that:
TYA (Ten Years After)
Zephyr
John Hammond
Joshua Light Show was to perform
Same line up on 2/27 – 2/28 but with Doug Kershaw in place of John Hammond

limnos
limnos on March 11, 2009 at 2:36 am

Abbreviations:
SB = Singer Bowl
CPSR = Central Park Skating Rink
F = Fillmore
FH = Forest Hills
P = Pavillion
U = Ungano's
MSG – Madison Square Garden
1969
7/3 – Jeff Beck – Jethro Tull F
7/4 and 7/5 – Iron Butterfly – F
7/9 – Blood, Sweat & Tears – CPSR
7/11 and 7/12 – John Mayall – F
7/12 – Byrds – CPSR
7/12 – Blind Faith – MSG
7/13 – Vanilla Fudge, Jeff Beck, T.Y.A, – SB
7/14 – Jeff Beck CPSR
7/16 – T.Y.A., Spencer Davis – CPSR
7/18 – Creedence Clearwater Terry Reid AUM – F
7/19 – Janis Joplin, Richie Havens – FH
7/21 – Led Zep, BB King – CPSR
7/22 – Muddy Waters – U
7/23 – Joni Mitchell, Tim Harden – CPSR
7/25 – Three Dog Night – P
7/26 – Fleetwood Mac – P
7/28 – 7/31 – Terry Reid – U

somoman
somoman on March 10, 2009 at 2:19 am

Farmersdtr

Wow that is quite a find. The 5x7 cards are fabulous momentos to that golden era, 1968-1971. Some of them are worth lots of money,(but most of us music purists have no interest in selling them. They range in value from $20 – $200. Since I have the entire schedule of the Fillmore East through all 3 years of its existance, it is quite easy to identify the year of the billboard cards. Treat them well as they are wonderful and precious items.

Ticket stubs values are much more dependent on who the acts were. Again, give me dates and I’ll tell you all 3 bands who performed that evening. I love stubs beccause I find that the 1 ½" torn squares really bring back the memorable moments of the evening. And best of all, they take up almost no space, very important when you live in manhattan.

But most important, let me know how i can get feedback on the ritz stubs i have.

limnos
limnos on March 9, 2009 at 11:17 pm

I have found all the Fillmore East Billboard! As you know, there is no year posted on the Billboards (they were actually 5x7 postcards that were mailed to my house), and leaflets that were of lighter paper that were circulated. Same motif that went into the newspapers advertising same. I also have the Fillmore ½ stubs, but could make out most artists. I’ll post the RITZ dates and the FE dates when I can. It might not be this week.

somoman
somoman on March 6, 2009 at 2:24 am

I was a dedicated concert goer from 1969 to 1978. Having worked for Cash Box magazine (a worthy competitor to Billboard in the mid to late 60s), I went to concerts at least 3 times a week. The record companies gave out tickets generously to people like me, as they were always fishing for editorial favor, or better position on the top 100 charts. Besides, the tickets had a face value of $5-10 dollars back then, and the record labels gladly reimbursed the promoters for those freebies. Sadly, like everything else done in excess, going to concerts so often can make you lose your taste for the live experience. And don’t be fooled by the Bill Graham approach of “3 acts for $5”. In the days of the Fillmore East, those 3 bands would introduce styles and sounds that would ultimately shape the music we grew to love. But by 1976 we were being force fed crap by bands like Wet Willie or J.F.Murphy & Salt. Recycled pop version of their ground breaking counterparts.

I stopped attending concerts in 1978 having had more than my fill of music. Passion, innocence and the love of music , the founding qualities of rock and roll were long gone, replaced by a record label “corporate sensibility”. Gone were the days of LPs, soon to be know as “product”. Record store chains and retailers, who once bought albums from their local “one stop” distributors soon became slaves to the regional corporate “pipeline”, often force fed retail garbage that was imposed on them if they expected to get their Frampton Comes Alive order filled.

Punk came along to “save the day”,having injected the scene with a genuine angst ridden urgency. But those of us who grew up in the 60s couldn’t help but see that the punkers were “working too hard” at it, as if they were trying to convince themselves along with every other person they could intimidate. It smelled like a marketing scheme covertly disguised as a grass roots uprising, and financed by the major record labels. And of course it wasn’t a scheme when it first laid its roots, but punk became the property of clothing retailers just a little too soon, and a little too blatantly. The record labels spoon fed us The Knack, an innocuous, run of the mill group of wannabes,who were signed to Capitol Records after a protracted bidding war that could only be compared to the Yankees signing of Carl Pavano (who accepted a four year contract worth $39.95 million with the New York Yankees before falling off the map). The Knack, just punk enough to attract the loyalists who were looking for an icon, just pop enough to become a #1 album. I was on my knees, begging for mercy with the release of that album. If the Knack was the future of music than Lord Strike Me Deaf.

In 2002 or 2003, my buddies convinced me to see the Allman Brothers Band again. I had last seen them in 1971 at Carnegie Hall, a few short weeks after Duane died. Living in New York City I had the good fortune of choosing from a run of 12 ABB shows at the Beacon that year. At worst, I owed the band a thanks for the wealth of options. Thursday nights werre always my favorite night of the week, and so getting tickets for a Thursday was a breeze. I also began shopping on Craigslist for tickets under $100 each. When a band plays 12 consecutive nights, you’re gonna get some get choice seats for under $60. All the disdain, the greediness and the jacked up ticket prices were put aside for that night.

I had heard about this boy wonder Derek Trucks, and I had heard about this rock and roll “torch bearer” Warren Haynes. But I never expected that the ABB would find two musicians that could bring back the fire, I mean BRING BACK THE FIRE that so drew me to the band the first time around. I saw Duane Allman play with the band on 5 seperate occasions. I loved Duane, but with all due respect, Derek Trucks was a better guitar player, and he was humble, passionate, sincere, and the real article in a world or grunge posers. And Derek always paid homage to the musicians who inlfluenced him, the musicians on whose shoulders he stood.

More recently I had the good fortune of seeing Zappa plays Zappa at the very intimate Blender Theater in New York City, Maybe, just maybe it seats 500. And then I saw Warren Haynes and Govt Mule play at the Angel Orensanz theater, an acoustic, and a laid back electric show. Maybe, just maybe the Orensanz Theater ( a preserved and converted Jewish temple) sat 250 people. Was there a movement back to intimate venues again, spearheaded by the very same arena bands who got rich filling stadiums. Hmmmmm, I was beginning to see a little light here, a movement, a newfound respect for individuals like who put down their hard earned cash to listen to 2 short hours of musical entertainment. Small venues eh… a place where a band could really connect with their audience,. And was it true what I had heard on the radio? The entire Zappa band had agreed to stick around after the show and sign autographs until the very last person in the audience got his or hers? It was true. I have my Dweezil signed laminated necklace. And on the backside, a secret code that would allow me to download a free copy of the show we had just heard. Wow, integrity had returned to the music scene. My vote counted. They respected me.

Which brings me back to Woodstock. Do I think a Woodstock can ever happen again? Innocense is fleeting, and once the Genie gets out of the bottle there’s no putting it back. Do I think music will ever be the mouth piece of a political movement again, the soundtrack to a countercultural revolution. NOT IN MY LIFETIME. And will tickets ever come back to affordable? Hmmm maybe…if this recession keep up it just might.

Music will never be again what it was in the 60s. And that’s sad, but progress is progress. BUT remember on any given night a band can sneak up on you, come around the bend slow and easy, then blow you away with a musical crescendo so dynamic that it can make the hair on your back stand up. Yes there are still magic moments. And these magic moments remind us that we humans can still move still the world forward, one tiny step at a time.

limnos
limnos on March 6, 2009 at 1:38 am

I remember how the crowds swelled out to the streets. It was a sight. Across the street was the bank and the"goldrush" jeans company, next door was the shoe repair store and on the other side, Garbers and Perry’s Luncheonette. I remember the Goldrush being open and the “head shop” down toward the train tracks, with the smell of incense burning. Stechmans was open for us too.
Way before the rock bands…. 25 cents got me to the Ritz on the R114 from Bulls Head, and into the theater for a show or 2 on a Saturday morning (early 60’s)

EcRocker
EcRocker on March 5, 2009 at 10:34 pm

Movie your right. Something like Woodstock will never happen again but the promoters did antisapate a crowd of up to about 150,000 people. What they werent expecting was the other 350,000 or more people that showed up. Considering there was no such thing as the internet and Ticketron was not even in the picture at that point ticket sales were done through a series of outlet stores. Also it was a general admision so that meant where you wound up is where you wound up. However some of the unknown bands cought a big break up there and some of them eventualy had a chance to play at the Ritz. I had to toss that in here to get this back on topic.

But also long gone are the days of going to a show and seeing 2-3 top bands on the same stage for under $5 especialy in 2000-4000 seat theatres. The Ritz was a good example of that. It also gave the residents of Staten Island a place they could call their own and not have to pay to get off the island. Staten Island has always been sort of isolated from the rest of the city. The Ritz at the time was the Fillmore East of Staten island. That was up until the Pagans MC nearly cause a riot out side the Ritz at a Badfinger concert.

markp
markp on March 5, 2009 at 1:46 pm

It is something to think that a festival like Woodstock could never happen again, not in todays world. And yes the promoters had no idea what was coming because that festival had been going on for a few years with maybe a few thousand people showing up over the 3 days. But in 1969, it was like all the planets aligned and we all know the result from the great movie that was to follow. What I wouldn’t give to see it on the big screen again in 35MM stereo.