Southern Music Museums: Why No Good Concert Posters?

I recently conducted my own musical-history tour through Memphis and Nashville, TN, and Tupelo and Clarksdale, MS.  I visited eight different music museums / institutions and saw some amazing stuff… B.B. King’s guitar, Hank Williams’ boots, Sam Phillips’ original studio console, Otis Redding’s suede jacket, and even the structural birthplaces of Muddy Waters and Elvis Presley.

But you know what I didn’t see?  ONE good concert poster.  Can you believe that?

We’re talking about GRACELAND, for heaven’s sake; plus Sun Studio, The Stax Museum, and the Smithsonian’s Rock ’N Soul Museum in Memphis; Hatch Show Print (!) and the wonderful Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville; Elvis’ Birthplace Museum in Tupelo; and the Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale.

Most of these places focused on personally owned items such as guitars and clothing, plus a huge array of support material.  That’s fine and good, and I enjoyed it all immensely.

But concert-poster wise, it was left wanting.  For example: Here I was, beholding the actual log cabin in which Muddy Waters lived as a child, on display inside the Delta Blues Museum.  And on the wall of the cabin is… a lousy 1970 common reproduction Muddy Waters / Howlin’ Wolf concert poster?

Here’s the 1970 poster which is displayed in the Delta Blues Museum. Although it’s a dream poster for blues lovers, it has two big problems: It’s widely attributed to 1964, when in fact most experts say it’s from 1970, some of them after extensive research. And with blues artists, it’s very muich a matter of “the earlier the better,” with things being commonly saved by the 1970s. The other problem is that this poster was heavily copied / bootlegged from an early time, perhaps even as early as the 70s. And the reproductions were spot-on perfect, using the exact same colors, cardboard stock and dimensions. So most collectors just steer away from it because it’s so difficult to tell the few originals from the thousands of knock-off’s. (These are not to be confused with the 21st century Globe Classics reprints, which are clearly marked.)

Yes, good blues concert posters that are 40 or 50 years old (http://www.postercentral.com/blues.htm) are hard to find, but not impossible.  Same with Hatch Show Print and the Country Music Hall of Fame… where were the vintage Hank Williams, Carter Sisters, Willie Nelson or Johnny Cash concert posters (http://www.postercentral.com/country.htm), or even that countrified “hillbilly cat” from 1955, Elvis Presley (http://www.postercentral.com/elvispresley.htm)?

Now perhaps to the layman, there were a few decent concert posters sprinkled here & there throughout the eight institutions.  But I’ve probably loaned 100 posters & artifacts to museums over the last two decades… from Los Angeles to Cleveland to New York to Paris.  As I write this, I have posters on display in L.A.’s Grammy Museum and Ray Charles Memorial Library.

So I know a decent poster in a museum when I see one.

I’ve pictured (to the left) the common Muddy Waters poster the Delta Blues Museum has on display, and then (down below) two authentic, rare, original Muddy concert posters which truly belong in a museum.  Sure, they’d be much pricier, but isn’t that what we expect from museums?

A source at the Rock ’N Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, which always has some outstanding concert posters on display, told me that it just means the curators of the Southern museums didn’t prioritize concert posters when they assembled their exhibits.  It’s as simple as that.

And I think that’s a shame.

(Pete Howard can be contacted by writing to pete@postercentral.com or calling 805.540.0020.)

Muddy Waters 1954 Chattanooga poster

A great 1954 R&B concert poster that’s so packed with talent, Muddy is down at the bottom… although it’s definitely a case of the concert promoters saying “last but not least.” Sorry about the torn-away corner, but you take what you can get with Muddy from the 1950s. Just take a look at that blues and R&B talent he shares the poster with… not a clunker in the bunch!

Muddy Waters 1968 Denver poster

A beautiful 1968 Muddy Waters concert poster from Denver, Colorado. This large cardboard gem presents a mystery right off the bat: What’s with that word “Paw”? I consulted some heavy Muddy authorities, including his biographer, and they haven’t a clue. Is it an obscure or erroneous song title, or possibly a nickname somebody gave him for five minutes? And then there are the glaring typos on the poster, which would send legendary keyboardist Otis Spann and Muddy’s More Real Folk Blues album running for cover. And no, vocalist Clear Waters was not related to Muddy.

Posted in **All Posters, Blues, Boxing-Style Concert Posters | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Jethro Tull Concert Window Card –1970s Tour Poster

An interesting, oddball, one-off Jethro Tull concert poster from April 1971, but beyond that — where? Where is a “Brewer” campus in the midwest? Hoping someone will know. Great use of the artwork from Tull’s second album Stand Up for this poster. Enthusiastically discussed by collector Pete Howard of PosterCentral.com (phone 805-540-0020, email pete@postercentral.com).

Posted in **All Posters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Jimi Hendrix Experience Concert Poster 1968 w/Soft Machine

A beautiful Jimi Hendrix Experience concert poster from 1968 in Toronto, Canada. Poster artist Gary Grimshaw created this enduring psychedelic concert-poster image for the Russ Gibb Presents / Grande Ballroom series, printed before the show to sell tickets to the event. Enthusiastically discussed by collector Pete Howard of PosterCentral.com (phone 805-540-0020, email pete@postercentral.com).

Posted in **All Posters, **Psychedelic Posters Only, *Jimi Hendrix | Leave a comment

The Who Concert Window Card – 1960s Psychedelic Poster by Griffin

Legendary poster artist Rick Griffin created this beautiful concert poster for The Who at the Hollywood Palladium in 1969, but only a small B&W handbill version was used before the show to sell tickets. Two years later, Griffin had this large, full-color poster version printed, and it remains one of his most popular posters to this day. Both the poster and handbill are enthusiastically discussed by collector Pete Howard of PosterCentral.com (phone 805-540-0020, email pete@postercentral.com).

Posted in **All Posters, **Psychedelic Posters Only, British Invasion | Leave a comment

Led Zeppelin Concert Tickets 1969 & 1977 Never Used

Three unused Led Zeppelin concert tickets, the first one from an out-of-the-way venue on their first-album tour in 1969, on a rare occasion when they played two shows in a casino ballroom. The other is a pair of unused tickets from the band’s final, barnstorming tour in 1977. (Sorry for the glitch: My broken sentence should have been, “They were selling 72,000 tickets a day through all the Ticketmaster outlets.”) Enthusiastically discussed by collector Pete Howard of PosterCentral.com (phone 805-540-0020, email pete@postercentral.com).

Posted in *Led Zeppelin, Tickets & Programs | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment