The Rainbow Music Hall: Remembering a Legendary Denver Concert Venue

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Saw Motörhead with five other marines on a cold night. Saw Yhat Metallica had autographed the wall and had just become a fan of them. Wanted to saw it out and frame it. One of my buds dissapeared and I found him slumped over at the neighboring McDonalds barfing all over the counter. Good times!

Thanks for sharing that with us, Toddd. The employees at the McDonald's and King Soopers must have earned their angel wings for tolerating so many "enthusiastic" rock fans over the years!

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The seating was great...only if you were in the center. Side seats faced the side of the stage (on each side). There were also occasional columns that blocked some seats. The unique PA system hung from the ceiling.

Hi Yamin - Thanks for sharing your memories. You're spot on regarding the side seats which were almost uninhabitable. And that massive PA seemed overly large, but the sound was always great!

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My favorite memory of The Rainbow was when my buddy and I were in line outside to see The Fixx and a gentleman walked the line shaking all of our hands and thanking us for coming to the show. We thought it was someone that worked there so we didn't really think anything of it. It was when the show started that we realized it was Rupert Greenall, the keyboardist for The Fixx that shook our hands. Amazing. That never would have happened at a large venue. I sure miss that place.

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Grew up in Denver through the 60s and 70s truthfully there was no place like Denver in the 70s for music. Between Caribou ranch recording studio and Barry Fey in Denver music of all kinds was everywhere all the time. And for a couple bucks a kid could see major acts for little to nothing. I have ticket stubs from ebbets field for $2 up to McNichols Arena, Mile High Stadium and Red Rocks Amp for $5 - $7. My friends and I went to concerts all the time never considering the cost, everybody had at least a five in thier back pocket. Mountains and music who could ask for anything more.

Exactly!! I lived in Colorado Springs in the 80s and would drive up to Denver all the time for concerts with all my girlfriends. We were the Springs groupies and had to contend with the Denver groupies lol I had a lot of fun during that decade!!

Hi Jorge - Thanks for sharing your memories of the Denver music scene with us. And you're right about the tickets, too! A $5 ticket in 1983 is the equivalent of about $13 today...and I think we all know that you don't get to see too many name brand acts for $13 today!

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I saw Poison for the first time in 1986 at the Rainbow. Loudness was the opening act....oh, those were the days!!!