Wunnerful just wunnerful. But i wish to get the other 2 shows of this 3 show run, though 1-31 is so far the only date i've seen in circ. Show 1 was my friend RW's first, though like me he had attended the New Orleans Intl. Pop festival in Prarieville the previous Sept., 2 weeks after Woodstock & featuring many of the same artists. GD played just before Janis on day 2 but neither RW nor myself consider it our first..all the music blasting from the stage that weekend sounded like hopped-up psyched-out Bugs Bunny theme music. Must've been the doses. RW reported on the Warehouse set the next day in school..how after The Flock & Fleetwood Mac played these 'scruffy cowboy dudes' crossed the catwalk through the rafters and down to the stage & proceeded to emit 'bubble music'. The Warehouse was a century-old drygoods storage facility set directly on the river bank upriver from downtown on Tchopitoulas. It had rafter-crossed ceilings and support posts throughout (always the first spots grabbed because they were swell to sit against before curtain and swell to stand in front of). Sources say these shows were the venue's first and for the next 12 years the old barn saw the best of the best. The first few months saw Allman Bros. w/ Pink Floyd stop by (of course the Floyd's loaded equipment truck was driven away by thieves) and from then on it seemed ABB were dead-set upon playing this room as often as possible, including 2 consecutive New Year's Eve shows. Then came the intensely bittersweet New Years show without Duane, their first gig since his passing. And it was there that Jim Morrison wandered offstage mid-set and morphed to Paris, never to return. Thing about "A Warehouse" (as it referred to itself in flyers, ads & tickets) was that it was the deep south stop for artists who played the big houses on the coasts. Townshend & Dylan have said the joint was special to them & they regard it with the same fondness held for the Fillmores and funky rock joints in Europe in which they came of age years before. The place had no ventilation so in summer they'd park a row of ice trucks along the side of the building, run giant hoses from the trucks up through second story openings and blast fan-forced cool air out into the room. I caught The Who in the middle of the '71 'Who's Next" tour there & the feeling was exactly like going over that first big drop on a roller coaster..and it never let-up. I was humbled by the experience. Good ol' Warehouse.Somewhere along this portion of the spring 70 tour was TC's last show with GD, eh? Concert poster at http://forums.wolfgangsvault.com/forums/thread/11343.aspx