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Incredible String Band 1968 Boston, MA Concert Poster. ...
Description
Incredible String Band 1968 Boston, MA Concert Poster. An original purple & olive green concert poster, printed before the shows to sell tickets, for the Incredible String Band performing at Jordan Hall in Boston, Massachusetts as promoted by the Boston Tea Party nightclub. The ISB, hailing from Edinburgh, Scotland, were often described as a psychedelic folk band. This first-ever Heritage offering measures 11 1/8" x 17 1/2" and grades to Near Mint condition. From the David Swartz Concert Poster Collection. COA from Heritage Auctions.More Information: The Incredible String Band, signed to Elektra, managed to chart seven LPs in America, but never entered the Top 100 albums.
BACKGROUND: The Boston Tea Party was to Boston as the Fillmore & Avalon were to San Francisco, the Whisky-a-Go-Go to Los Angeles and the Grande Ballroom to Detroit. The capacity started off at only about 550 but that limit was often exceeded. It was the place to see & be seen in Beantown, and drew a cross-section of college students, hippies, fashion models, Brahmins, bikers, local celebrities, media people, professionals and local white and Black high school kids.
The BTP first opened in January 1967, changed locations to larger quarters in July 1969 and ran until December 1970, when it closed after a glorious four-year run when bands started requiring larger venues. Similar to the format that Bill Graham used, older blues, soul, R&B and jazz acts were often paired with contemporary rock bands. Posters and fliers used to promote the shows were generally minimalist in design... in sharp contrast to the dramatic psychedelic posters being produced on the West Coast.
BTP posters are also infinitely more scarce than the West Coast psych posters of the same era... they were run in extremely small quantities, with a goal of just getting the word out and no aftermarket sought or desired. Thus, most of them were discarded after the engagements. Decades later, they became highly collectible.
That's because the roster of musicians who played the Boston Tea Party is quite head-spinning. They included Led Zeppelin, The Who, the Grateful Dead, Velvet Underground, Chicago, Kinks, Small Faces, Elton John, Jethro Tull, Neil Young, the J. Geils Band, Frank Zappa, Pink Floyd, Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, the Allman Bros. Band, the Yardbirds, Van Morrison and Jeff Beck.
In 1968, the legendary WBCN-FM, the first FM rock station in Boston, began broadcasting from a dressing room in the club, as the station was owned by the same owners as the BTP. Peter Wolf, the frontman for the popular local group the Hallucinations, was also a late-night DJ at 'BCN. He would later front the J. Geils Band, who broke through nationally. The Boston Tea Party was first managed by Steve Nelson, who booked the bands, and then by Don Law, who went on to become a major concert promoter in the 70's and onwards.
The Tea Party was founded by lawyer Ray Riepen and MIT grad David Hann at 53 Berkeley St. in the south end of Boston, again with a typical club capacity of around 550. Then in July '69 it moved to 15 Lansdowne St. in Kenmore Square behind Fenway Park, with the expanded capacity measuring more like 2,000. That held them over for another year & a half, but the exploding rock-concert business of the early seventies was needing even more capacity. So the club was simply outgrown by the end of 1970.
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Signature® Floor Session - The David Swartz Concert Poster Collection (Live Floor, Live Phone, Mail, Fax, Internet, and Heritage Live):
(Lots 26001-26096) - 12:00 PM Central Time, Friday, April 10, 2026.
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