The Kinks' 1965 US tour

English rock band the Kinks staged their first concert tour of the United States in June and July 1965. The sixteen concerts comprised the third stage of a world tour, following concerts in Australasia, Asia and the United Kingdom and before later stages in continental Europe. Initially one of the most popular British Invasion groups, the Kinks saw major commercial opportunity in the US, but their tour was plagued with issues between the band, their management, local promoters and the American music unions. Promoters and union officials filed complaints over the Kinks' unprofessional conduct, prompting the US musicians' union to withhold work permits from the band for the next four years, effectively banning them from US performance.

The Kinks' 1965 US tour
Tour by the Kinks
Associated albumKinks-Size
Start date18 June 1965
End date10 July 1965
No. of shows16
The Kinks concert chronology
  • 1965 UK Tour
  • 1965 US tour
  • 1965 Nordic tour

The programme was in the package-tour format typical of the 1960s, with one show per day, several support acts on the bill and the Kinks' set lasting around 40 minutes. Concerts were characterised by screaming fans and weak sound systems. The US press, who still largely viewed rock music as simple teenage entertainment, generally avoided reporting on the tour. Shows were sometimes poorly attended due to a lack of advertising and promotion, leaving local promoters sometimes unable to pay the band the full amount. A payment disagreement led to the band refusing to perform at the Cow Palace near San Francisco, and an argument over a union contract before a television appearance resulted in bandleader Ray Davies physically fighting a union official.

The relationship between Ray and the Kinks' personal manager Larry Page was marked by continual friction. Bothered by what he saw as Ray's prima donna-like behaviour, Page departed to England in the tour's final week. On their return to London, the Kinks sought to dismiss Page for what they saw as an abandonment. The dismissal took three years to litigate in English courts. Unable to promote their music in the country via subsequent tours or television appearances, the Kinks saw a decline in their US record sales. Cut off from the American music scene, Ray shifted his songwriting approach towards more overt English influences. Ray resolved the ban in early 1969, and the Kinks staged a comeback tour later that year, but they did not achieve regular commercial success in the country again until the late 1970s.

BackgroundEdit

Larry Page, the Kinks' personal manager, announced the band's intention to tour the United States in April 1965, with dates scheduled across three weeks in June and July. It was the band's first tour of the US.[1] The shows formed the third leg of a world tour, following concerts in January and February in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and Hong Kong and concerts in the United Kingdom in April and May.[2]

After witnessing the enormous commercial success the Beatles experienced in the United States in 1964, Page hoped to break the Kinks into the American market before their contemporaries the Rolling Stones, who Page felt had been underpromoted.[3][nb 1] Like their contemporaries, the Kinks were part of the British Invasion, a cultural phenomenon where British pop acts experienced sudden popularity in the US.[8][9] Among the second wave of British Invasion acts, made up of groups like the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds, the Kinks were initially the most popular.[10] The band's first two singles in the US – "You Really Got Me" and "All Day and All of the Night", issued in September and December 1964, respectively[11] – had each reached the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 chart, while their first US album was moderately successful,[12] reaching number 29 in the magazine's Top LPs chart in March 1965.[13] Major American success appeared close for the Kinks,[14] and the band and their management viewed a US tour as the next pivotal step in their career.[15][16]

 
The Kinks, greeted by Reprise executives during the band's first trip to New York City, February 1965

From 10 to 14 February 1965, while returning to Britain from the first leg of their world tour, the Kinks visited the United States for the first time.[17] The original plan had the band appearing on two musical variety programmesHullabaloo in New York and Shindig! in Los Angeles – along with two concert dates, but only the Hullabaloo appearance went forward.[18] When the band appeared on the programme,[19] they drew the ire of trade union officials for initially refusing to sign paperwork with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), the US performers' union, joining which was a requirement of their appearance.[18][20] Two weeks after the band's visit, their US label Reprise Records issued "Tired of Waiting for You" as a single in the US.[21] It subsequently reached number six on the Billboard Hot 100,[22] making it the Kinks' third consecutive top ten single in the US.[19] To capitalise on the nation-wide publicity the band were experiencing,[19] Reprise rushed out a second album in late March, Kinks-Size,[23] which peaked at number 13 in the third week of June,[24] the same week the US tour commenced.[25]

By early 1965, the Kinks had developed a reputation for violence and aggression.[26][27] The band's concerts were characterised by hysterical fans, whose attempts to swarm the group sometimes left them bruised, concussed and with torn clothing.[28][29] The band sometimes broke into physical altercations during rehearsals, recording sessions and concerts, with infighting common between brothers Ray and Dave Davies and between Dave and drummer Mick Avory.[30] Tensions within the group were more elevated than usual following a violent inter-band dispute on 19 May at a concert in Cardiff, Wales,[31] where Avory struck Dave in the head with a hi-hat stand, resulting in his brief hospitalisation.[32] The Kinks initially considered replacing Avory with another drummer, but the band's management forced them to downplay the incident to both avoid police charges and so they could fulfill their commitments, including the upcoming US tour.[15]

Repertoire, tour personnel and equipmentEdit

 
Dave Davies used a Gibson Flying V for the first time on the tour, after his custom black Guild guitar was lost in Los Angeles.

The US shows were in the package-tour format typical of the 1960s. The Kinks and contemporary English rock band the Moody Blues were set to be joint headliners,[33] but when the Moody Blues were unable to enter the country after having been denied US visas,[34][35] they were replaced with different acts throughout the tour, including the Supremes, the Dave Clark Five and Sonny & Cher.[33] Local groups and musicians performed as support acts, including Paul Peterson, Dick and Dee Dee, the Hollywood Argyles, the Rivieras and Dobie Gray, among others.[36][nb 2] Shows ran around three hours,[39] and the Kinks' set generally lasted around 40 minutes.[40][41] On Page's recommendation, they based their shows around their first hit single "You Really Got Me". To generate anticipation, they played the opening bars of the song at the start of each of concert before abruptly switching to a different number. They performed a complete version of the song midway through the set and repeated it during their encore.[40]

The Kinks wore matching red jackets, frilly shirts, black pants and Chelsea boots,[42] all of which was custom-ordered from Bermans & Nathans, a major theatrical costumier in London.[43] Page commissioned the outfits in April 1964 as part of his early efforts to rework the band's image,[44] providing them a distinctive look like the collarless suits the Beatles wore in 1963.[43] Collins and Wace regarded the Kinks' look as ironic, since the aristocratic gentlemanly outfits were subverted by the band's working class origins.[45] While not historically accurate to the Victorian era,[43] the look emphasised the band's Englishness, especially to an American audience who knew little about English culture.[46] Paired with the band's long hair, the look gave the Kinks a more androgynous and less masculine appearance than that of other contemporary pop acts.[47][48][nb 3]

Sound quality at the band's shows was poor, as the venues' often weak PA systems struggled to compete against the loud screams of fans. Drums were typically not miked, and Avory later recalled struggling to hear himself play at larger venues.[50] A contemporary news article recounting a show at one of the smaller venues reported that the band's vocals were "lost in an array of electric guitars".[51] Dave began the tour with his main guitar, a black Guild archtop electric with two Guild humbucking pickups and a Bigsby tailpiece,[52] a custom-built instrument originally meant for Beatle George Harrison.[53] An airline lost it as the band flew to Los Angeles,[54] and as the band did not carry extra guitars, Dave went to a local music store to find a replacement.[55] He bought a 1958 Gibson Flying V, which he debuted on Shindig! on 1 July.[37][56] Dave played the guitar at chest-height, placing his arm through the cut-out V shape at the guitar's base.[53][nb 4]

The Kinks were accompanied on tour by Page and road manager Sam Curtis, who was hired two months earlier before the band's recent UK tour.[60] In the final week of the US tour, California businessman Don Zacharlini served as temporary tour manager in Page's place.[37] The band's two original managers Grenville Collins and Robert Wace remained in the UK for the duration of the tour.[47][61] The band were regularly visited by their publisher Edward Kassner, who took time to promote Ray's songwriting catalogue.[62] The band's publicist Brian Sonmerville and booking agent Arthur Howes arrived in the US three weeks beforehand to perform advanced work, while the tour was booked by Ken Kendall Associates in New York City.[63]

TourEdit

Final preparationsEdit

After announcing the tour, Page made numerous changes to the itinerary. He announced different start dates in press releases before announcing a delay until 17 June,[64] something necessitated by Dave's head injury in Cardiff.[65][66] Early plans included different locations, including a Canadian show, probably for Vancouver on 11 July.[67] By 16 June – the day before the Kinks departed for the tour – five of 16 finalised shows were cancelled, prompting the addition of several hastily arranged concerts.[25][nb 5]

We got the contracts sent from America. These were standard agency contracts. ... I went round to see Ray [Davies], sat there, showed him the contract and said, "Fine, you've got to countersign them with me". And I gave him a fountain pen and I watched him empty it on the floor. .... There was no way he wanted to put pen to paper to do the American tour ...[68]

– The Kinks' personal manager Larry Page, 1982

The Kinks signed contracts for the tour on 16 June at Denmark Productions,[25] the London offices of Page and Kassner.[69] Among the forms were applications to join the American Federation of Musicians (AFM), the US musicians' union.[25][66] The union's main purpose was to regulate the movement and placement of professional musicians in America,[70] and joining was a requirement for working in the country.[71] Concerned that foreign workers would take away jobs from American citizens, the AFM in 1964 initially opposed allowing any British rock musicians to perform in the US.[72] British groups often found the regulations of the AFM and AFTRA overly complicated,[73] and some complained about the requirements to pay hundreds of dollars in fees for each visit.[74] Ray initially expressed reservations about signing the necessary paperwork;[75] after working a union job as a teenager, he had come to see trade unions as needlessly corrupt and militant.[76] Page instead ascribed Ray's hesitance to his tendency towards prima donna-like behaviour.[75]

While each of the Kinks had held romantic notions about the United States since they were young,[77] Ray was apprehensive about visiting the country, having become more cynical of it after the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy in November 1963.[78] He worried in part how American police would respond to the Kinks' sometimes violent inter-band disputes,[75] especially since only a month had passed since the incident in Cardiff.[78] He was further disappointed by the poor financial returns of the band's February visit and was unhappy about leaving his wife at home with their first-born child, who was born weeks earlier in mid-May.[79]

Arrival and initial issuesEdit

The Kinks departed London at midday on 17 June and arrived in New York City early that afternoon. The same day of their arrival, the band appeared on The Clay Cole Show to promote their latest single "Set Me Free",[25][80] which entered the Hot 100 the week before at number 83.[81] The tour's first show occurred the following day at the Academy of Music, a cinema in New York City.[25] The appearance was beset by numerous issues; the band were disappointed by the old venue's facilities and the theatre's employees, who showed open contempt to those in the rock and roll business. The venue's marquee initially incorrectly advertised "The Kings", while dispute arose when the Kinks, the Supremes and the Dave Clark Five realised that promoter Sid Bernstein had promised each group that they would be topping the bill.[82][83] Problems continued at the following day's performance in Philadelphia, where Page was arrested and briefly jailed for failing to pay a local tax as demanded by a union official.[41][84]

The wild, piercing sounds of the four long-haired Englishmen brought the crowd to a near frenzy as it screamed its approval and pushed towards the stage. The "Kinks," who gyrate on stage as if they were all flea bitten, had to be protected by a human barrier formed by Springfield policemen and security guards.[85]

The State Journal-Register, report on 23 June concert in Springfield, Illinois

The Kinks experienced regular fanaticism from their fans, many of whom were teenage girls.[86][87] Curtis recalled women following the band throughout the tour out of a sexual interest, especially for Dave.[88] Upon their arrival in New York, the band were unable to enter their hotel for about two hours due to a large crowd, while on other nights fans clung to the side of their moving vehicle or smashed its windows with their fists.[87] After fans rushed the staged at the conclusion of the band's concert in Chicago, police and security guarded the stage at a show two nights later in Springfield, Illinois.[85] To keep the fans further at bay,[86] police escorted the band throughout the day and were posted at their hotel.[89]

Tensions among the Kinks remained high during the tour.[90][91] Since the incident in Cardiff, Dave and Avory had generally stopped speaking to one another,[91] and Page later recalled separating the group to prevent additional fighting.[47][90] He further recalled that while bassist Pete Quaife was generally a calming influence among his bandmates, he remained hesitant to take sides.[90] Throughout the tour, Page experienced regular issues from Ray, who often pestered his manager for enjoyment.[92][93] Page ascribed Ray's behaviour to being a prima donna, while Curtis summarised Ray's attitude as: "'You're earning money out of me – have trouble!'"[94]

The Kinks' shows received little to no coverage in local newspapers, as journalists generally viewed the band as simple teenage entertainment.[95] In contrast with the effective publicity work done by the Beatles and their management, the Kinks were aloof with the press in interviews.[96] The band often tried to make interviewers look foolish or feel uncomfortable.[97][nb 6] Band biographer Jon Savage writes that compared to the British Invasion's "packaged pop groups", like the Dave Clark Five and Herman's Hermits, the Kinks were instead "brooding, dark, androgynous mutants" whose attitudes seemed anarchic to Middle America.[47] The band later described sometimes feeling resentment from Americans during the tour, especially as they proceeded into the American Midwest, where attitudes skewed more conservative.[89][101][nb 7] Ray further sensed disgust on the part of those in the American music business, whose unhappiness with disruption of their industry by British acts was compounded when the Kinks' appearances were drawing less money than originally expected.[105] Having been hastily arranged only weeks earlier, the band's shows in downstate Illinois were poorly advertised and poorly run, contributing a growing feeling among the band that the tour was not meeting their original expectations.[41] A show scheduled for 27 June in Stockton, California, was cancelled a week beforehand, probably due to poor advance-ticket sales.[89]

The Kinks and their management experienced regular issues with local promoters, who often looked for reasons to avoid paying the full amount required by contract.[106] The band's 25 June concert in Reno, Nevada, was poorly attended due to both a lack of advertising and because it conflicted with the opening day of the popular Annual Reno Rodeo. The show's promoter Betty Kaye offered the band half of the agreed payment upfront, promising them the rest after the next night's performance in Sacramento, California.[50][84] In retaliation, Page threatened to sue Kaye, while the Kinks only performed for 20 minutes rather than the 40 minutes originally contracted. At the Sacramento show, Kaye was further offended when the Kinks played for 45 minutes but filled much of their set with a prolonged version of "You Really Got Me".[89]

Promotional workEdit

 
The Kinks photographed in Los Angeles by KRLA Beat, 27 June 1965[103]

From 27 June to 2 July, the Kinks had a week off from concerts, during which time they mostly did promotional work in Hollywood, California. The band lip-synched performances on the television programmes Shivaree, The Lloyd Thaxton Show, Shindig! and Dick Clark's variety show Where the Action Is. At the same time, Kassner promoted Ray's songwriting catalogue around Los Angeles. By the end of the week he had secured four agreements, including from Peggy Lee, who recorded "I Go to Sleep" as a single.[105][nb 8] The same week, as Cher finished sessions for her debut album at Gold Star Studios in Hollywood, Page convinced her to record "I Go to Sleep" as well.[105]

Cher's recording inspired Page, who booked studio time for the Kinks at Gold Star on 30 June.[105] The band's regular producer Shel Talmy – whose contract with Pye Records specified that he was to supervise all of their recording sessions – had anticipated Page attempting to usurp his role.[107] Talmy filed a legal notice before the band left England advising them to not record in the US without him, but the session proceeded anyways.[108] The Kinks were enthusiastic at the prospect of recording in an American studio for the first time, especially after plans to do so the day before at Warner Brothers Studios failed to materialise.[105] During the session, the band recorded Ray's composition "Ring the Bells".[105] Page hoped to issue the recording as their next single,[109] but Talmy again served the band legal papers to prevent it, leaving the recording unissued.[105][nb 9]

The Kinks were the featured performers on Shindig! for the week of 1 July, and the band selected "Long Tally Shorty" to play as the show's closing number. Rather than have the band mime to the version they recorded for their first LP, AFM requirements dictated that a new backing track be made, which the show's house band the Shindogs recorded at a separate evening session on 30 June. The Kinks attended the session, but Dave was the only one of them who appeared on the recording, adding a rhythm guitar contribution.[105] Among the Shindogs was lead guitarist James Burton, whom the Kinks were especially excited to meet, having known him for his guitar solos on many of Ricky Nelson's hits; Ray later recalled that getting to play with Burton was both "the biggest thrill" and "the only good thing" to happen during the tour.[105][nb 10]

On 2 July, the Kinks appeared at the Cinnamon Cinder club in North Hollywood for a daytime shoot of Where the Action Is. Before taping the segment, Dave refused to sign a contract presented to the band by AFTRA. The refusal prompted a union official to threaten to have the Kinks banned from ever playing in the US again.[37] After a further exchange of words, a physical altercation occurred between the official and Ray,[37] which ended when Ray punched him in the face.[114] Ray later said the worker taunted the Kinks by calling them "communists", "limey bastards" and "fairies".[114] He also recalled:

I remember a guy came down – they kept on harassing us for various reasons ... and this guy kept going on at me about, "When the Commies overrun Britain you're really going to want to come here, aren't you?" I just turned around and hit him, about three times. I later found out that he was a union official.[115]

Final weekEdit

 
Larry Page regarded the band's sell-out Hollywood Bowl show as the pinnacle of the tour (venue pictured, 1971).

Ray's fight with the union official on 2 July marked a low point on the tour for him,[37] a depression exacerbated by the absence of his wife Rasa.[116][117] The following day, after the afternoon soundcheck at the Hollywood Bowl, Ray informed Page that he was not going to perform the evening's show.[37] Page regarded the concert as the pinnacle of the tour and an opportunity to present the Kinks as a second Beatles, and he later recalled trying to convince Ray to perform: "I spent all day pleading, begging, grovelling – and this was after a very heavy tour ... it was totally degrading for me."[116] Ray demanded of Page that Rasa and Quaife's girlfriend Nicola be flown out to see them, and Page contacted Collins back in London to arrange the flight.[118] Ray agreed to perform and the concert proceeded as normal in-front of a sell-out crowd of over 18,000 concertgoers. Rasa and Nicola arrived in Los Angeles after the show and joined the group for the remainder of the tour.[37][119]

After weeks of being agitated by Ray's behaviour, Page lost his patience at the Hollywood Bowl.[120] He abruptly departed back to London on the morning of 4 July.[37][116] In his place, he arranged for the band to be led by both Curtis and temporary tour manager Don Zacharlini, a local businessman who owned a chain of laundromats.[121] Page advised Dave, Quaife and Avory of his intentions but did not tell Ray, who learned of Page's absence later that day. Ray was incensed by what he saw as an abandonment of the band; after expressing his feelings to his bandmates, the group decided that they would extricate Page from their business dealings upon their return to the UK.[37]

 
The Kinks refused to perform at the Cow Palace near San Francisco after the promoter refused their request for upfront payment (venue pictured, 2018).

The same day as Page's departure, the Kinks arrived at the Cow Palace near San Francisco for an afternoon show. Due to poor ticket sales – only 3,500 sold out of 14,000 – the promoter, again Kaye, lost a significant amount of money. The band demanded to be paid upfront, but a lack of cash receipts meant that Kaye was only able to offer a cheque. In light of their earlier pay disputes with her while in Reno and Sacramento, the band refused to perform the San Francisco show.[37]

The final week of the tour proceeded generally without incident.[122] The band arrived in Hawaii on 5 July and held two concerts in Honolulu the following day,[37] including a show for US Army troops at Schofield Barracks.[123] Ray had expected Hawaii to be overly commercialised, but he was charmed by the islands' quiet beaches; he later named it his best holiday ever,[95][124] and Rasa described her time there with Ray as like a second honeymoon.[125] After an off-day spent in Waikiki, the band flew to Washington state and held three concerts, concluding the tour in Seattle on 10 July.[95][nb 11] Ray and Dave arrived home in London on 11 July while Quaife and Avory remained behind for ten days,[95] sightseeing southern California with Zacharlini.[129] Subsequent legs of the world tour followed in the Nordics in September and West Germany, Switzerland and France in October.[130]

AftermathEdit

American performance banEdit

Following the issues between the Kinks and promoter Betty Kaye in Reno, Sacramento and San Francisco,[84][131] she filed a formal complaint with Local 6,[114] the San Francisco branch of the AFM.[132] Union officials in Los Angeles and likely San Francisco filed additional complaints.[131][nb 12] In response, the AFM withheld future work permits from the Kinks,[121] in effect banning the band from future US performance.[134][nb 13]

The AFM made no public statements regarding their action against the Kinks,[136] but union officials subsequently stated that it related to the Kinks' "unprofessional conduct".[137] The union did not communicate to the band an explanation or possible duration,[134][136] resulting in vague explanations of the situation from Ray, Dave and the band's management in interviews over ensuing decades.[138] The Kinks hoped to return to the US soon after,[95][139] but four tours booked for between December 1965 and December 1966 were each cancelled a month beforehand after the band proved unable to obtain work visas.[140] Anticipating further visa issues, they declined an invitation to the Monterey International Pop Festival,[141][142] a June 1967 Californian music festival which elevated the American popularity of numerous acts.[143][144][nb 14] The ban persisted for four years.[148] Ray negotiated with the AFM to lift it in April 1969, which they did only after he and the band's management wrote apologies to Kaye.[149][nb 15]

The American ban hampered the development of the Kinks' career. Unable to promote their music in the US via tours or television appearances, they saw a decline in their American record sales.[153][154] The band experienced continued success in the UK, but only two of their singles entered the top 30 of the Billboard Hot 100 while the ban remained active.[155][nb 16] By late 1967, after a string of poor performing singles, American record stores had generally stopped stocking the band's releases.[158] The band steadily lost American fans,[159][160] but they retained a cult following and received coverage from America's new underground rock press.[134][158] After the ban was lifted, the Kinks sought to reestablish their American popularity, holding a return tour from October to December 1969.[161] Other than their single "Lola", which reached number nine in the US in 1970, the band did not achieve regular commercial success in the country again until the late 1970s.[162]

The American ban had a profound effect on me, driving me to write something particularly English in a way which made me look at my own roots rather than American inspirations. I realised that I had a voice of my own that needed to be explored and drawn out.[163]

Ray Davies, 2004

In later interviews, Ray regularly cited the ban as producing a pivot in his songwriting towards English-focused lyrics.[164] The situation left the Kinks comparatively isolated from American influence and changes in its music scene,[165] guiding the band away from their earlier blues-based riffing towards a distinctly English style.[166][167] While American songwriters explored the emerging drug culture and the nascent genre of psychedelia,[168] Ray focused on English musical influences like music hall.[167] Ray later suggested that visiting America ended his envy of the country's music,[95] leading him to abandon attempts to "Americanise" his accent while withdrawing into what he later termed "complete Englishness and quaintness".[169][nb 17]

Dismissal of Larry PageEdit

Upon arriving home in London, Ray and Dave immediately conveyed their angry feelings about Page to Wace.[95] Page was initially unaware of the others' plans to oust him, and while Ray and Wace continued to be friendly in their interactions with him, the two met with a solicitor on 2 August to begin planning the separation.[170][171] The following day, Ray arrived unannounced at a Sonny & Cher recording session at which Page was present, angrily objecting to the duo recording one of his compositions,[170] "Set Me Free", while also expressing his wish for Page to terminate any involvement with the Kinks.[172]

On 2 September, Wace and Collins' firm Boscobel Productions served a legal notice advising Page and Kassners' firm Denmark Productions that the Kinks' intended to terminate their existing contract.[173][174] Page subsequently claimed he continued to be owed 10 per cent of all of the band's earnings since September 1965,[175] while Kassner continued claim to Ray's songwriting publishing rights.[176] The disagreements led to a protracted legal dispute between the two parties, which saw Denmark Productions suing Boscobel in London's High Court in May–June 1967, followed by the Court of Appeal from March to June 1968.[177][178] Key aspects of each of the hearings centred on whether Page's departure to London in the final week of the tour constituted an abandonment, something which generated disagreement among the three justices hearing the appeal.[179][180] While the legal analysis between the High Court and Court of Appeal differed, the result was the same when both maintained that Denmark Productions was not entitled to its ongoing claim of ten per cent of the Kinks' income, awarding Page only his 10 per cent earning for 30 June to 14 September 1965.[181][182] The management dispute ended on 9 October 1968, when a final appeal filed by Page was rejected.[183][nb 18]

Set listEdit

The Kinks played for around 40 minutes,[40][41] but no complete set lists from the US tour are known to band biographers.[36] Below are examples of set lists from the second and fifth legs of the world tour, roughly a month before and two months after the US tour, respectively:[186]

Tour datesEdit

According to band researcher Doug Hinman:[36][nb 19]

List of tour dates with date, city and venue
Date
(1965)
City Venue
18 June New York Academy of Music
19 June Philadelphia Philadelphia Convention Hall
20 June
(2 shows)
Peoria Exposition Gardens
21 June Chicago Arie Crown Theater
22 June Decatur Kintner Gymnasium
23 June Springfield Illinois State Armory
24 June Denver Denver Auditorium Arena
25 June Reno Centennial Coliseum
26 June Sacramento Sacramento Memorial Auditorium
27 June
(cancelled)
Stockton Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium
3 July Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl
4 July
(cancelled)
Daly City Cow Palace
6 July
(2 shows)
Honolulu Conroy Bowl
Honolulu International Center
8 July Spokane The Coliseum
9 July Tacoma University of Puget Sound Field House
10 July Seattle Seattle Center Coliseum

Note

  • The above table includes neither those shows which were cancelled before the tour began nor those which were not finalised.[36]

NotesEdit

  1. ^ By May 1965, the Rolling Stones had toured the US three times,[4] but their only single to reach the US top ten was "Time Is on My Side", which peaked at number six in December 1964.[5] That same month, "Little Red Rooster" reached number one on the British charts,[6] but it was not given a US release.[7]
  2. ^ The 3 and 4 July shows in California were headlined by the American rock band the Beach Boys,[37] the Kinks serving as one of ten and sixteen support acts, respectively.[38]
  3. ^ When the band appeared on Hullabaloo in February 1965, Ray and Avory angered the show's producers for doing an impromptu cheek-to-cheek dance.[18] Ray later suggested that the outrage stemmed from it being "the first time they had ever seen guys acting like queers on American television".[49]
  4. ^ The guitar sold poorly when first introduced, but its prime-time appearance with the Kinks generated interest.[57] Gibson resumed manufacturing two years later,[58] while the roughly 100 originals became super-rare as its popularity expanded.[59]
  5. ^ The cancelled shows were in Indianapolis, Louisville, Rockford, San Jose and San Diego. The last-minute additions were in downstate Illinois, Denver and Honolulu.[25]
  6. ^ After it was announced on 11 June that the Beatles were to be awarded MBEs,[98] Ray joked in multiple interviews that he and his bandmates were to receive the medal as well but planned to return it,[99] a joke reported seriously by some American journalists.[88][100]
  7. ^ The band were regularly taunted by Americans for their appearance, especially their long hair.[102][103] Ray later recalled that in the tour's final week, police confronted him at a coffee shop in Spokane's airport after he kissed his wife in public.[95][104]
  8. ^ Bobby Rydell recorded "When I See that Girl of Mine" and the San Diego group the Cascades recorded both "I Bet you Won't Stay" and "There's a New World (That's Opening for Me)".[105]
  9. ^ Talmy and Page argued over the issue in public statements and interviews before resolving the disagreement in person on 12 July. "See My Friends" was issued as the band's next single on 30 July.[110] The band's re-recorded version of "Ring the Bells", done with Talmy once they returned to England, appeared on the album The Kink Kontroversy in November.[105]
  10. ^ A month after the interaction, the Kinks started regularly covering the blues standard "Milk Cow Blues", styling their arrangement after Nelson and Burton's version.[111] Burton also inspired Dave's spontaneous guitar playing style on the band's 1965 single "Till the End of the Day",[112] which they recorded four months later.[113]
  11. ^ Ray wrote "Holiday in Waikiki" during the tour[126] and composed "I'll Remember" on a harmonica in Seattle.[95][127] Both songs appeared on the band's 1966 album Face to Face.[128]
  12. ^ Another formal complaint may have been filed by a Denver radio station's programme director, who complained during a record-store autograph-session about the band's "vulgar, rude, [and] disgusting" behaviour.[133] He subsequently banned the band's songs from the station's airwaves.[133]
  13. ^ Most authors refer to the situation as a "ban", but band biographer Johnny Rogan writes that the withholding of permits is more readily described as a "universal blacklisting".[134] Academic Mark Doyle terms it a "blacklisting" as well.[135]
  14. ^ Among those who saw increased success after Monterey Pop was the English rock band the Who,[143][144] a group who consciously styled their early music after the Kinks.[145][146] The Kinks were later embarrassed when during their 1969 North American tour, they were forced to open for the Who.[147]
  15. ^ In a similar situation, the Kinks' refusal to go on-stage in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 28 September 1966 prompted the local union to ban them there as well.[150][151] The band did not return to Denmark until July 1969.[152]
  16. ^ Though its release received no mention in Billboard,[156] "A Well Respected Man" reached number 13 in February 1966.[157] "Sunny Afternoon" reached number 14 that October.[157]
  17. ^ Author Ian MacDonald further contends that after the ban was lifted, while Ray's lyrics retained an English bent, his music quickly reverted towards an American blues sound. He adds: "At this point, the group's era of classic songwriting ceased nearly overnight."[166]
  18. ^ Litigation continued between Ray and Kassner.[183] Ray's songwriting earnings from November 1965 on remained in escrow during the legal proceedings,[184] which persisted until the parties reached an out-of-court settlement in October 1970.[185]
  19. ^ Hinman writes that the Kinks had a day off in Chicago on 22 June,[41] but contemporary articles in the Decatur Herald indicate that the band held a concert that night at Kintner Gynasium in Decatur, Illinois.[39][51]

ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

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SourcesEdit

BooksEdit

Liner notesEdit

Newspaper, magazine and journal articlesEdit