



Newest Info:

Cowsills walk to stage

Yankee Stadium

A Closer Look











Soundblast '66! Poster

Soundblast '66! Poster

including The Byrds

Soundblast '66! Poster

including The Byrds and Jerry Butler

New York Amsterdam News

June 11, 1966



Soundblast '66! Pin

The Cowsills were the opening act at Soundblast '66!, a concert held in Yankee Stadium on Friday June 10, 1966. There had been a free concert in Central Park to promote the Yankee Stadium show which The Cowsills also participated in (according to a fan who attended). See pics below. This is confirmed in a Daily News article. The article talks of a party/go-go girl contest, held on Saturday April 23, that was only supposed to last a couple hours but went on much longer. The Cowsills played and although they were to only be the music for the go-go girls, they were so good that people got up and danced in the aisles! TAJ Enterprises were the promoters. A New York Times article describes TAJ as "three young producers all less than 27 years of age." Ticket prices ranged from $2.50 - $8.50



Soundblast '66 was scheduled to begin at 7:30 and yet it was nearly 9:00 before The Cowsills sang their first note. It seems there was some Go-Go Dancers contest also involved. The contest started with 6,000 participants and ended with 66 girls riding bicycles into the stadium. The lined up along the baselines and tried to teach the crowd a 'new' dance called 'The Bike.' Although the stadium at the time could handle 70,000, only 9,000 tickets were sold. Originaly the line up was to include: The Beach Boys, Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, The McCoys, The Marvelettes, The Gentry's, and The Cowsills. All appeared as scheduled, except The Gentry's according to a Byrds book, however at intermission Gentry's albums were given away bringing this into question. The Byrds and Jerry Butler were added to the final lineup. Sherry Se-Bor was named Miss Soundblast '66.



The book So You Want To Be a Rock 'N Roll Star: The Byrds Day-By-Day 1965-1973 states: "The Beach Boys headline this New York concert at the enormous Yankee Stadium. The venue has a capacity for 70,000 but has sold only a disappointing 9,000 tickets, despite the varied bill. The concert promoted by TAJ Enterprised and advertised to begin by 7:30pm, does not get under way for almost an hour and a half after that time. Appearing in chronological order are The Cowsills, The McCoys, The Marvelettes, The Byrds (who are a recent addition), Jerry Butler, Stevie Wonder and The Jimo Tamos Orchestra. Ray Charles and The Beach Boys are saved until the last. The Gentrys and The Guess Who are billed but presumably do not appear. Jonathan Randal in The New York Times (June 11) reviews the happening but writes mostly about the 66 finalists in a dance contest who ride around the bullpen on bicycles, demonstrating a new dance called The Bike.



Richard Goldstein in Village Voice (June 16) terms the occasion worthy of Federico Fellani. "As the Byrds emerged from the home-team dugout, a bell-bottomed body burst from a nearby box and tried to leap the fence. She was stopped by a flying wedge of police. The group raced down the plywood path to the stage, but they had to wait a full ten minutes before their equipment could be assembled. Finally connected to their amplifiers by electrical umbilical cords, they began to play. But the sound wasn't worth the amps. The group seemed incapable of sustaining effective harmony in person, and their ambiguous raga-rhythms lost themselves in a maze of echo and feedback. Priceless details (Jim McGuinn doing a neat two-step as he sang, Gene Clarke's phosphorescent buttons, the grin on Mike Clarke's face as he dutifully pounded the drums) were lost on everyone in the audience who had neglected to bring a high power telescope."



Richard Goldstein in Village Voice on June 16, 1966:"Federico Fellini came to the Bronx last Friday night -- in spirit anyway -- when an assemblage of rock 'n' roll musicians took over the giant diamond at Yankee Stadium. Under the title "Soundblast 66," they staged a pop-happening masquerading as a concert. Participating were a battalion of public relations men, 66 (three and a half tons of) go-go girls, squads of city and private police, and a bored, restless, chilly crowd of fans.



The concert was billed with some of the biggest names in Pop. The acts spanned the spectrum of the American rock scene (an increasingly expansive spectrum it is). The Beach Boys brought their California surfsound, with its emphasis on material fun and games. The Marvelettes and Little Stevie Wonder came heavily doused in soul and negritude. The McCoys handled the double-entendre and rauc-rock. The Byrds were appropriately long-haired and psychedelic. And Ray Charles came along for the class.



So, "Soundblast 66" should have been a gratifying combination of jazz-folk gospel acid-dance-rock. But the potential got lost somewhere in the stadium's mammoth infield. The end product sounded like a cross between a Jehovah's Witness revival and a drag race. The Fellini touch hung heavy over the whole affair like oily Bronx pasta.



It began an hour and 15 minutes late, with the go-go girls. Fresh from rehearsals at the Riverside Table Tennis Club, they seemed confused by the open green. They circled the baselines on bicycles. They screamed and waved streamers like switched-on cheerleaders. They frugged and jerked in mid-riff drag.



From the home-team dugout, 16-year-old Randy Zehringer, who plays with the McCoys, watched the wiggling arms and torsos, and looked bored. He had sen it all before. Playing the stadium, he confided, was "awful, terrible. It's like singing in the middle of a freeway. With all the noise and open space, you can't hear the audience reaction and you can't hear your own sound."



But once out of the dugout, the McCoys lost their apathy. With plastic energy, they bounded down the plywood runway stadium officials had constructed to protect the grass. The audience (which one concert official estimated at 25,000) seemed lost in the immense grandstands. Most of the stadium's seats were unused, and the sound of trickling applause echoing off empty wood seemed anything but frenetic.



The stage was set upon the pitcher's mound. This initial separation between audience and performer was never breached. Rock 'n' roll is a big medium, and the stadium's acoustics -- with its automatic echo and feedback -- are immensely discothequable. But for groups like the McCoys, it was a hell of distractions. Fireworks exploded in the grandstand. Fistfights broke out. Autograph hunters roamed wild in the outfield. And a horde of press photographers knelt at the foot of the stage in homage. The sound was lost in the pseudo-event.



As the Byrds emerged from the home-team dugout, a bell-bottomed body burst from a nearby box and tried to leap the fence. She was stopped by a flying wedge of police. The group raced down the plywood path to the stage, but they had to wait a full ten minutes before their equipment could be assembled. Finally connected to their amplifiers by electrical umbilical cords, they began to play. But the sound wasn't worth the amps. The group seemed incapable of sustaining effective harmony in person, and their ambiguous raga-rhythms lost themselves in a maze of echo and feedback. Priceless details (Jim McGuinn doing a neat two-step as he sang, Gene Clarke's phosphorescent buttons, the grin on Mike Clarke's face as he dutifully pounded the drums) were lost on everyone in the audience who had neglected to bring a high power telescope.



The Beach Boys came out of the pitcher's bull pen in a green armored van. The vehicle stopped short of the stage and was immediately surrounded by police. But it was a false miracle right out of "La Dolce Vita." The anticipated riot of screaming fans never materialized, because the truck seemed miles away from the nearest female groupie, and males were distracted by the dancers.



Undaunted, the Beach Boys mounted the stage. There were screams. There was cheering. There were signs, placards, and bedsheets. But no fainting, no turmoils no adulation. "It's too cold," one reporter muttered. "I want a riot with racial overtones," whispered his photographer. "I've still got half a roll to shoot."



But all went well -- and dull -- as the group careened thorugh "Surfer Girl," "California Girls," and "Sloop John B." They finished with "Barbara Ann," waved goodbye in the general direction of the floodlights, and climbed into the armored van to be whisked away."



The management tried to fan the dying flames during the intermission. They gave away a couple of lightweight Suzuki cycles, a gross of albums by the Gentry, and other material goodies. But the audience, bored by the delays and chilled by the weather, wilted and grew thin. They were only mildly impressed as Miss Soundblast '66 (16-year-old Sherry Se-Bor, a sophomore at Massapequa High) came on stage to take her bows.



For the second half, the tempo changed abruptly. The go-go girls were gone. Their bicycles lay stacked along the foul lines. Their streamers littered the infield. The grandstand was virtually empty and those who remained in the boxes formed a primarily Negro audience.



So, the management gave them soul. Little Stevie Wonder waved in the imagined direction of applause, and smiled for the clicking cameras. But once on stage, he stopped being a blind man and started to sing.



His set was the evening's most successful. The catcalls ceased and the stadium quieted noticeably as he belted out his soul-scrubbed lyrics. His version of "Blowin' in the Wind" was magnificent in scope. It bounded off the walls and rows of empty seats. It echoed from the giant scoreboard and made the entire concept of holding a pop concert in Yankee Stadium seem plausible.



Ray Charles ended the evening with a medley of old favorites. By this time, the cold was beginning to get to everyone, and the Raelettes stood in the wings with towels from Consolidated Laundries wrapped around their bare shoulders. But the audience was with this act, and they sang along jubilantly with the evening's finale: "Let's Go Get Stoned."



A 14-year-old go-go dancer from Borough Park, Brooklyn, sat in the back of the grandstand, her head buried in her mother's lap. "They didn't pay us at all," she complained. "They made us rehearse three times. They made us wear our own costumes."



And, she explained, "I sprained my ankle trying to get a good look at the Byrds."







(2/1/19-->) Peter S. added his memories of this show - (I ask how long each band played) "Maybe 20-30 minutes if I recall. Little Stevie Wonder was the killer for me. He literally hopped from the dugout to the stage wearing a green lame jumpsuit. They just pointed him in the right direction and off he went. Lots of great music. Beach Boys jumped out of an armored van. Ray Charles was also incredible. By the way the Cowsills were a great bunch of people...Easy to deal with..I don't remember exactly how it happened but I helped them out at a Don Cornelius show at the Apollo theatre in New York.. Evening show and it went on for a good while with the number of acts...I was there in Central Park at the band shell for the GOG GO dancers contest. About 1000 girls showed up and I think they took about a 100..I was just 16 at the time so pretty wild."



Pre-show - Central Park

Neumberg Band Shell - April 23, 1966



Click here for more info



Click here for newspaper article about this pre-show.

Click here for another newspaper article about this pre-show.



Soundblast '66 - Yankee Stadium

Ticket



Cowsills walk to stage

Yankee Stadium

A Closer Look



The Beach Boys

The Byrds

Ray Charles and the Raelettes



