City Gardens - Notable Bookings

Notable Bookings

A Flock of Seagulls, Thompson Twins and Sinéad O'Connor all made their American debuts at City Gardens. Danzig performed their first show ever at the venue.

The Beastie Boys, on an off night from their Madonna tour as her opening band along with Murphy's Law, performed at City Gardens in what would be the shortest set of any headlining band. With Rick Rubin as their stage DJ and armed with turntables that skipped due to the three other Beasties jumping across the stage like wild maniacs, the show lasted twenty minutes, also due to the fact they were out drinking at some other bar nearby and had decided to show up and go on around 1:30 am. Normal headliner start times were 12 midnight, and final live music always ended around 1:45 am back then.

Jon Stewart of Comedy Central's The Daily Show and also MTV fame was a bartender for several years at City Gardens before his stand up comedy career and later television career took off. Jon never performed at City Gardens, and there is only one known photo that exists of Jon Stewart inside the club.

James Murphy, leader of LCD Soundsystem, was a bouncer for City Gardens during the hardcore Sunday matinee shows for an unknown number of months.

Ween calls City Gardens their home base. Their first "club" show was opening for the Butthole Surfers as young teenagers. They had two cassette-only releases before the City Gardens live LP release The Live Brain Wedgie which sells on EBay generally for $200 or more and was recorded live at City Gardens in one of their first live shows.

The Ramones performed at City Gardens 25 times, including one of only two performances of the Ramones that featured drummer Elvis Ramone on drums (Elvis was actually Clem Burke of Blondie).

R.E.M.'s Peter Buck was quoted in the book "Remarks" by Tony Fletcher that sitting in the band's van outside of City Gardens watching children play football was part of the feeling that inspired their song "Perfect Circle".

The Members, from England, entire City Gardens performance was televised nationally on the old USA network.

Sparks performed at City Gardens three days after their Saturday Night Live appearance.

Radio personality and WPST program director Tom Cunningham, in conjunction with WPST, had Bon Jovi convinced to perform a free concert at City Gardens to feature their then soon-to-be-released LP New Jersey. The idea was turned down due to Bon Jovi asking for a Thursday night, and both the club owner Frank Nalbone and club promoter Randy Now rejected the performance for two distinctly different reasons. Nalbone was afraid it would break the consistency of the legendary Thursday Night 90 Cent Dance Party and had offered any other day of the week except for any Thursday to hold the free pre-LP release event, and promoter Now said no because he felt that Bon Jovi's music, even with a free show and probably one of the top bands in the entire world by that point, did not fit the mold and the style of the City Gardens live music format.

A few years later, Tom Cunningham, credited with signing Green Day to their mega-million dollar Geffen Records contract, saw Green Day perform at City Gardens. Oddly, Green Day had performed at City Gardens nearly one year earlier by Randy Now. In live recordings from Green Day's first show ever at City Gardens, Billie Joe Armstrong can be heard exclaiming, "This is the biggest crowd that we have ever played in front of" and "We've never had monitors before," and after the first Green Day concert at City Gardens, drummer Tre Cool kisses promoter Randy Now on the cheek due to them making literally quadruple their original guarantee and their total merchandise sales at that one venue topping four figures for the first time in their career. They left City Gardens by trashing the dressing room as a "right of rock and roll passage" or a "badge-of-honor and victory", thinking they were The Who. Another interesting trivia fact with Green Day and City Gardens is after Green Day's first appearance at the club, and having traveled cross country from California, legendary punk rock agent Andy Somers got wind of this career-changing concert performance in Jersey from this band out of California, and phoned from his Hollywood agency office City Gardens promoter Randy Now, asking him, "Hey, Randy. Andy here. What's this Green Day band all about?" and gave Somers the phone contact information which he used to pursue Green Day to become one of his clients, which they did. This started a relationship that would lead Green Day to be one of the headlining acts at the twenty-fifth anniversary of Woodstock entitled "Woodstock '94" (or Mudstock due to Green Day starting a mud fight with the audience that spiraled out of control).

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