Rock history was being made at CBGB, a club with no dressing rooms and an incontinent dog in residence
Morrison was, as usual, lost in the music, getting so into it that he gave himself backaches
From getting arrested right before a show to throwing televisions from hotel rooms, The Stones did it all during their 1972 North American tour
The group injected New Orleans R&B swagger into their harmonious folk rock during the four-night stand at New York’s Academy of Music
Initially billed as the supporting act, the Allmans were promoted to headliner after they came out guns blazing the first night
The inmates booed when the blues artist took the stage, but by the end they were hypnotized
While other early jam bands played with virtuosic professionalism, Young's Crazy Horse produced raw chaos
Pete Townshend considered the crowd at the University of Leeds the greatest audience the band had played to
Relentless touring in Europe had turned Sabbath into a brutal assault force for their American debut
Before the private planes, mountains of cocaine and allegations of black magic, Led Zeppelin were four blokes tearing a path through America for the first time