Band T-shirts
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of 3786 'band' t shirts
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The Who's first appearance at the Fillmore in June of 1967 was also one of their first opportunities to show American audiences what they were all about. The Fillmore patrons approved of what they saw and so began a long and successful relationship between the band and Bill Graham.male - adult$34.00
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Tuten acquiesced to the power of the blimp in this Led Zeppelin poster. The concert was typical Graham fare and mixed the goofy sounds of the Bonzo Dog Band with jazz-great Rahsaan Roland Kirk & His Vibration Society. Kirk insisted that his band be named on event posters and billboards, but occasionally, and to his great annoyance, the name didn't always fit. The poster gave a heads-up to Stones fans for their concert on Sunday.male - adult$36.00
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Led Zeppelin's incredible appeal could guarantee a sell-out crowd of rebels or wannabees, but that talent and the generally hospitable demeanor of Robert Plant notwithstanding, the band was not among Bill Graham's favorites. Hedonistic and heavily protected by a personal security force of epic, in pounds and punching-power, proportions, the band was famous for leaving damaged digs and damsels in its wake. This performance in Oakland is memorable for a behind the scenes brou-ha-ha that sent some Graham staff to the emergency room and lawyers noble [Graham's] and oleaginous [Graham's take] opining over the proceedings. In the end, the band returned for the second night's performance in the fashionably late timeframe their fans had come to expect, and Graham and his people had their justice. In a sad footnote to this concert, Plant's young son died suddenly and unexpectedly a short time later, and Led Zeppelin cancelled the balance of their American tour. Day[s] on the Green were specialmale - adult$36.00
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Bill Graham invented "The Sound" to call to mind the home-brew, local San Francisco bands that he featured at his venues. In BG029, Wes Wilson captured the curvaceous female form in one of the best examples of his work.female - adult$28.00
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New Year's Eve 1993 at the Oakland Coliseum was a night of music by like-minded bands plus a nightclub comedian known for his grating, goofball persona. Butthole Surfers enjoyed the dubious honor of being one of the most "twisted and depraved acts..." to surface from the underbelly of the shock-rock genre, and underground rock band Chokebore had recently released hit single, Nobody/Throats. Nirvana rounded out the evening and had just released In Utero, providing the inspiration for Rossit's poster design.male - adult$32.00
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Led Zeppelin's incredible appeal could guarantee a sell-out crowd of rebels or wannabees, but that talent and the generally hospitable demeanor of Robert Plant notwithstanding, the band was not among Bill Graham's favorites. Hedonistic and heavily protected by a personal security force of epic, in pounds and punching-power, proportions, the band was famous for leaving damaged digs and damsels in its wake. This performance in Oakland is memorable for a behind the scenes brou-ha-ha that sent some Graham staff to the emergency room and lawyers noble [Graham's] and oleaginous [Graham's take] opining over the proceedings. In the end, the band returned for the second night's performance in the fashionably late timeframe their fans had come to expect, and Graham and his people had their justice. In a sad footnote to this concert, Plant's young son died suddenly and unexpectedly a short time later, and Led Zeppelin cancelled the balance of their American tour. Day[s] on the Green were specialfemale - adult$36.00
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In 2003 Canoe released their debut album "I Give You Canoe" on former Pavement band-member Scott Kannberg's Amazing Grease label.male - adult$28.00
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From this concert emerged "Bless Its Little Pointed Head," the definitive and first live-concert recording of San Francisco's premier psychedelic band. Recorded both at this concert and at the Fillmore East gig soon following, the album was released in early 1969 and revealed the Jefferson Airplane at their rocking to ribald-with-some-tripping-on-the-side best and treated the listeners to the vocal intertwining of Grace Slick and Marty Balin.female - adult$32.00
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Watkins Glen was the epic brainchild of Jim Koplik and Shelly Finkel, Connecticut rock promoters who had also orchestrated Summer Jam. Inspired by an onstage impromptu jam session between the Grateful Dead and Allman Brothers, they came up with the idea for Watkins Glen and commissioned Bill Graham to build the backstage compound and supply production. The three bands lined up for the show were favorites of all three organizers, and were perfect for an open-space gig. In a special and memorable turn of events, 600,000 people showed up for this show at the Watkins Glen racetrack in Upstate New York, and kids were everywhere, crowding the landscape the day before the concert. All of them expected to do a sound check before performing, but didn't plan on doing one before a live audience - but there was no way that huge crowd was going anywhere. The Band sound-checked first, doing their entire run-through in one song. The crowd rocked. The Allman Brothers were next, playing for an hour, anfemale - adult$32.00
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"If I hadn't done it, someone else would have. ???once we were going to do it, we wanted to do it right. ???" By the early 70's rock bands were burned out from the road. Performers wanted to travel less and make money faster. Bill Graham's Day on the Green concerts were the first prototypes of "festival" shows - multi performer sets in stadium settings. Staged on the lawn of the Oakland Coliseum, the Day on the Green concerts were a summer series started in 1973 that continued until shortly after Graham's death in 1991. "That was why I came up with the name "Day on the Green". I wanted to make these events special. I wanted to create giant outdoor sets so the bands would be going into a space that was like a theater piece."male, female - child$42.00
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The careers of The Wailers and Quicksilver Messenger Service overlapped, but had little in common. The Wailers started out in 1958 as an early American garage band. Their name was also their sound, but the band held onto their sax and organ sound too long and disbanded by 1969. Quicksilver, formed in 1965, rode the rock band wave until 1973, but made a few marketing decisions that eventually cut them out of recording contracts and the public eye.female - adult$34.00
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November 9, 1967 was Procol Harum's first gig in San Francisco, and band member Gary Brooker later credited the Fillmore with "... the absolute making of our whole style." A mythological griffin and lion alluding to the band's British roots, engage in Kouninos' vertical design.male - adult$36.00
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Bill Graham anticipated the national trend towards huge outdoor rock concert events that answered new industry demands: the bands' for maximum profit with minimum fan exposure, and the fans' for maximum band exposure at minimum cost. In 1973, Graham introduced San Francisco to his first Day on the Green at Kezar Stadium. The event, and the many others held at the Oakland Coliseum, was special and combined Graham's familiar balloons and posters with giant sets and urgent medical care for the sensorily-sated in a theatre-like atmosphere. Day on the Green became code for outdoor music immersion.male - adult$28.00
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Bill Graham closed the last of his three original venues, Winterland, with the Masquerade Ball in 1978, so the Dead performed their traditional New Year's Eve concert at the Oakland Arena instead. They played three sets that night, and 'Sugar Magnolia,' co-written by Bob Weir and one of the band's most beautiful, pretty-rhythm songs, was the number they chose yet again to ring in the New Year at midnight. The familiar Mouse/Kelley logo skeleton figures welcomed the fans, memories and traditions from the old venues to the new.male - adult$36.00
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The careers of The Wailers and Quicksilver Messenger Service overlapped, but had little in common. The Wailers started out in 1958 as an early American garage band. Their name was also their sound, but the band held onto their sax and organ sound too long and disbanded by 1969. Quicksilver, formed in 1965, rode the rock band wave until 1973, but made a few marketing decisions that eventually cut them out of recording contracts and the public eye.female - adult$34.00
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Chicago's first album, released in March 1969, was a smash hit and put the band [then known as 'Chicago Transit Authority'] on the map. From this auspicious beginning, Chicago went on to even greater fame and became one of the seminal American rock acts. The jewel-tones and simple composition of this Singer poster make it popular among Chicago aficionados and poster collectors.male - adult$36.00
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Chicago's first album, released in March 1969, was a smash hit and put the band [then known as 'Chicago Transit Authority'] on the map. From this auspicious beginning, Chicago went on to even greater fame and became one of the seminal American rock acts. The jewel-tones and simple composition of this Singer poster make it popular among Chicago aficionados and poster collectors.male - adult$36.00
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The story of Bobby and the Helmets goes like this: a British rock band called The Liverpool Scene formed in 1967 when a couple poets got together to make music. Despite the lukewarm reception of all three of their album releases, the Liverpool Scene landed a spot opening for Led Zeppelin in 1969 and performed their song "The Woo-Woo," a quirky narrative about a fictitious band named Bobby and the Helmets who was killed along with 234 other people in a tragic ice cream flood. Robert Plant was so impressed by the band and the song, he sported a super tight Bobby and the Helmets t-shirt on stage in tribute. Snapped for posterity by the prolific Joe Sia, the photo breathes a little life into the forgotten Liverpool Scene and their fictitious band Bobby and the Helmets.male - adult$28.00
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Bill Graham invented "The Sound" to call to mind the home-brew, local San Francisco bands that he featured at his venues. In BG029, Wes Wilson captured the curvaceous female form in one of the best examples of his work.male - adult$28.00
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The story of Bobby and the Helmets goes like this: a British rock band called The Liverpool Scene formed in 1967 when a couple poets got together to make music. Despite the lukewarm reception of all three of their album releases, the Liverpool Scene landed a spot opening for Led Zeppelin in 1969 and performed their song "The Woo-Woo," a quirky narrative about a fictitious band named Bobby and the Helmets who was killed along with 234 other people in a tragic ice cream flood. Robert Plant was so impressed by the band and the song, he sported a super tight Bobby and the Helmets t-shirt on stage in tribute. Snapped for posterity by the prolific Joe Sia, the photo breathes a little life into the forgotten Liverpool Scene and their fictitious band Bobby and the Helmets.male - adult$28.00
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Bill Graham closed the last of his three original venues, Winterland, with the Masquerade Ball in 1978, so the Dead performed their traditional New Year's Eve concert at the Oakland Arena instead. They played three sets that night, and 'Sugar Magnolia,' co-written by Bob Weir and one of the band's most beautiful, pretty-rhythm songs, was the number they chose yet again to ring in the New Year at midnight. The familiar Mouse/Kelley logo skeleton figures welcomed the fans, memories and traditions from the old venues to the new.female - adult$36.00
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New Year's Eve 1993 at the Oakland Coliseum was a night of music by like-minded bands plus a nightclub comedian known for his grating, goofball persona. Butthole Surfers enjoyed the dubious honor of being one of the most "twisted and depraved acts..." to surface from the underbelly of the shock-rock genre, and underground rock band Chokebore had recently released hit single, Nobody/Throats. Nirvana rounded out the evening and had just released In Utero, providing the inspiration for Rossit's poster design.male - adult$32.00
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These t-shirts get your little ones thinking on rock and roll terms at an early age. We reproduced some of our favorite images on soft, 100% cotton t-shirts so that kids can show the world their (or your) favorite bands. You may consider ordering a size larger as these shirts tend to run a bit small. Kid's Retro T-Shirtmale, female - child$30.00
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These t-shirts get your little ones thinking on rock and roll terms at an early age. We reproduced some of our favorite images on soft, 100% cotton t-shirts so that kids can show the world their (or your) favorite bands. You may consider ordering a size larger as these shirts tend to run a bit small. Kid's Retro T-Shirtmale, female - child$28.00
These are some of the best band t shirts and shirts on the Internet. These band tees range from funny to vintage to retro and they come in men's, women's and kids sizes.


