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Dennis Donovan

(18,770 posts)
Thu Dec 3, 2020, 10:05 AM Dec 2020

41 Years Ago Today; 11 dead from injuries sustained at The Who concert disaster

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Who_concert_disaster



The Who concert disaster occurred on December 3, 1979 when British rock band the Who performed at Riverfront Coliseum (now known as Heritage Bank Center) in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States, and a crush of concert-goers outside the coliseum's entry doors resulted in the deaths of eleven people.

Background
The Who were in the midst of the United States leg of their 1979 world tour, which began in September with a total of seven dates split between the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, New Jersey and Madison Square Garden in New York City. The band then took some time off and would resume the tour on November 30 at the auditorium of the Detroit Masonic Temple. The Cincinnati concert was the third show played in this portion of the tour, after a concert the night before at the Pittsburgh Civic Arena.

The concert was a sellout, with 18,348 tickets sold. The majority of these, 14,770, were unassigned general admission tickets that were first-come, first-served.

A few hours before the show, a sizeable crowd had already gathered outside the front of the arena. Around 7,000 people were there by 7 p.m Entry to the arena was through a series of individual doors all along the front of the arena, as well as a few doors at each side. The crowd focused at each of the doors. The doors were not opened at the scheduled time, causing the crowd to become increasingly agitated and impatient. During this period, the Who undertook a late soundcheck. Some members of the crowd heard this and mistakenly believed that the concert was already starting. Some people in the back of the crowd began pushing toward the front, but this rush soon dissipated as the crowd realized that no entry doors had been opened and that the concert had not in fact begun yet.

Crush
People were originally told through a radio station that GA ticket holders would be admitted at 3:00 p.m. and therefore a sizable crowd formed by 5:00 p.m. Although all the doors were expected to be opened simultaneously, only a pair of doors at the far right of the main entrance were finally opened. As concert goers entered the stadium through these two open doors, those waiting in front of all of the other doors began pushing forward again. After a short period of waiting and then knocking on the doors and the glass next to the doors, the crowd assumed that none of the remaining doors would be opened. Then, about 7:15 p.m., the real trouble began, some say there was a very late soundcheck but others have said that they played The Who's Quadrophenia movie, in lieu of an opening act. Either way, the crowd assumed that The Who were on earlier than scheduled. At that point, the entire crowd surged and pushed toward the two doors which had been opened. This caused many people to get trampled while some suffered more serious injuries. Eleven people were unable to escape the dense crowd pushing toward them and died by asphyxiation. Twenty-six other people reported injuries.

The concert went on as planned, with the band members not told of the tragedy until after their performance. The following night, a lengthy segment on the tragedy aired on the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite examining violence at rock concerts. Guitarist Pete Townshend was interviewed by CBS News correspondent Martha Teichner, comparing crowd reactions at concerts to football and boxing matches, calling them "high energy events".[citation needed] The following show in Buffalo the next night, Roger Daltrey told the crowd: "We lost a lot of family last night. This show's for them."

Aftermath
In Providence, Rhode Island, Mayor Vincent A. Cianci cancelled a scheduled performance of The Who at the city's Civic Center that same month. This was despite the fact that the Providence venue had assigned seating. Thirty-three years later, the band returned to Providence and honored tickets from the 1979 show.

The families of the victims sued the band, concert promoter Electric Factory Concerts, and the city of Cincinnati. The suits were settled in 1983, awarding each of the families of the deceased approximately $150,000 ($377,300 today), and approximately $750,000 ($1,886,700 today) to be divided among the 26 injured. The city of Cincinnati also imposed a ban on unassigned seating on December 27, 1979, with minor exceptions, for the next 25 years.

Eleven weeks after the concert took place, the television sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati aired a special episode showing some of the show's characters attending the concert, learning afterwards of the deaths, and their reaction to having helped promote it on the radio station.

The eleven people who died in the crush were:

Walter Adams, Jr., aged 22, Trotwood
Peter Bowes, aged 18, Wyoming, Ohio
Connie Sue Burns, aged 21, Miamisburg
Jacqueline Eckerle, aged 15, Finneytown
David Heck, aged 19, Highland Heights, Kentucky
Teva Rae Ladd, aged 27, Newtown
Karen Morrison, aged 15, Finneytown
Stephan Preston, aged 19, Finneytown
Philip Snyder, aged 20, Franklin
Bryan Wagner, aged 17, Fort Thomas, Kentucky
James Warmoth, aged 21, Franklin


The incident was the subject of a book, Are The Kids All Right? The Rock Generation And Its Hidden Death Wish, as well as a second-season episode of WKRP in Cincinnati called "In Concert". It also inspired scenes in the film Pink Floyd—The Wall, whose 1982 premiere was attended by the Who's Pete Townshend.

In 2004, the city of Cincinnati permanently repealed its long-standing ban on unassigned seating, two years after temporarily making an exception for a Bruce Springsteen concert. The goal of lifting the ban was to attract more big-name acts. However, the city now mandates there must be nine square feet per person at a venue, and the number of tickets sold for each event is adjusted accordingly.

Paul Wertheimer, the city's first Public Information Officer at the time of the tragedy, went on to serve on a task force on crowd control, and later founded Crowd Management Strategies in 1992, a consulting firm based in Los Angeles.

In 2009, thirty years after the tragedy, rock station WEBN/102.7 aired a retrospective on the event, including clips from news coverage in 1979.

In 2014, Pearl Jam played in the city and acknowledged the tragedy. They dedicated a cover of the Who's "The Real Me" to those who died. Pearl Jam had experienced a similar tragedy in 2000, when nine people died in a crush during their concert at Roskilde Festival.

On the eve of the 35th anniversary of the tragedy, Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley promised to have a historical marker on the site of the tragedy in 2015. A Committee consisting of three concert survivors, and one family member of victim Teva Ladd were pivotal in getting the memorial placed, Mike Babb, Thomas, Brown, Kasey Ladd and Rick Schwitzer,The marker was dedicated at U. S. Bank Arena (as it was then known) on December 3, 2015.

The Showtime series Roadies dedicated an entire episode to the '79 event. The episode, "The City Whose Name Must Not Be Spoken", showcases the "roadies" of a fictional band completing many rituals after someone on the tour bus mentions Cincinnati.





The WKRP In Cincinnati episode, "In Concert"



The Who finally returned to Cincinnati last year: The Who Announce First Cincinnati Concert Since 1979 Tragedy

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/the-who-cincinnati-concert-2020-tour-921865/

The Who have extended their Moving On tour with the new slate of 2020 dates — including the band’s return to Cincinnati for the first time since December 3rd, 1979, when 11 people died during a stampede outside the Who’s show.

The Who announced their long-awaited live return to Cincinnati on the 40th anniversary of the tragedy, with Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend appearing on Cincinnati station WCPO’s documentary The Who: The Night That Changed Rock Tuesday to talk about the incident.

The Cincinnati-area concert will take place April 23rd at Northern Kentucky University’s BB&T Arena, just seven miles south from the 1979 concert site Riverfront Coliseum.

“Now we can have a conversation about it when we go back,” Townshend told the Associated Press of the Who’s return to Cincinnati. “We will meet people and we’ll be there. We’ll be there. That’s what’s important. I’m so glad that we’ve got this opportunity to go back.”

The Who will also donate a portion of proceeds from the concert to the P.E.M. Memorial, the organization founded to provide college scholarships for students at Finneytown High School, where some of the 1979 victims were students.



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41 Years Ago Today; 11 dead from injuries sustained at The Who concert disaster (Original Post) Dennis Donovan Dec 2020 OP
I was going to get tickets to that concert Cirque du So-What Dec 2020 #1
I saw The Who after that on 7/7/1980 in Baton Rouge exboyfil Dec 2020 #2
It was a tough day in Cincy, that's for sure. And concerts here have never been the same. CincyDem Dec 2020 #3
Should have been there.. luvs2sing Dec 2020 #4

exboyfil

(17,865 posts)
2. I saw The Who after that on 7/7/1980 in Baton Rouge
Thu Dec 3, 2020, 10:35 AM
Dec 2020

My only time seeing my favorite band when I was a kid.

CincyDem

(6,383 posts)
3. It was a tough day in Cincy, that's for sure. And concerts here have never been the same.
Thu Dec 3, 2020, 10:42 AM
Dec 2020


I've always wondered how much this impacted the concert circuit...seems like most meaningful tours include cities like Columbus but drive right through Cincy on their way to the next show in Louisville. I'm sure there are lots of reasons but I can't help but think this is part of it.

It's like Altamont - how many concert did they host after the Stone/Hell Angels experience?

luvs2sing

(2,220 posts)
4. Should have been there..
Thu Dec 3, 2020, 10:57 AM
Dec 2020

The guy I was dating already had the tickets and everything. But I broke up with because of a racist rant he went on while we were at a Bee Gees concert. I still remember opening my apartment door to get the paper that morning and seeing the headline and feeling the shock of realizing how easy it would have been for me to be in that crowd

It happened almost two years after I had several ribs broken during a crowd rush to get into an Emerson, Lake & Palmer concert at St. John Arena during a snowstorm. I’ve had serious personal space issues in crowds ever since.

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