Did you know that Paste owns the world’s largest collection of live music recordings? It’s true! And what’s even crazier, it’s all free—hundreds of thousands of exclusive songs, concerts and videos that you can listen to and watch right here at Paste.com, from Dizzy Gillespie to The Kinks to Public Enemy to HAIM. Every day, we’ll dig through the archive for the coolest recording we have from that date in history. Search and enjoy!

Forget roses and chocolate: On Valentine’s Day, 1976, it was date night at Bill Graham’s Winterland Arena in San Francisco, where couples were give a set-full of electro-prog tunes in a lively holiday performance by Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra.

Hailing from Birmingham, England, ELO had was already riding high in the United States by the time of this performance at Winterland in 1976, with a run of Top 10 hits beginning two years prior and lasting throughout the decade. In the mid-70s, Lynne infused the band with a more structured orchestral pop sound, including scintillating harmonies and lofty string sections cut with disco flair. The changes were reflected in their fifth studio album, 1975’s Face the Music, and memorable songs like Strange Magic,” “Fire on High” and “Evil Woman,” which hit the Top 10 in the UK.

“Evil Woman” lives on as one of the most emphatically embittered (and catchy) pop tunes of all time, with anti-romantic verses like:

Evil woman how you done me wrong

But now you’re tryin’ to wail a different song

Ha ha funny how you broke me up

You made the wine now you drink the cup

I came runnin’ every time you cried

Thought I saw love smilin’ in your eyes

Ha Ha very nice to know, that you ain’t got no place left to go

Swoon! This Valentine’s Day, listen to an exclusive recording of ELO performing a propulsive “Evil Woman” at Winterland 42 years go on this date.