Exploring the Life of The Man Who Gave Us Jimi Hendrix, the Rolling Stones, Other Rock Greats

Exploring the Life of The Man Who Gave Us Jimi Hendrix, the Rolling Stones, Other Rock Greats

By Will Levith
Bill Graham Exhibit
(Courtesy of the National Museum of American Jewish History)

 

Say the name “Bill Graham,” and you might first think of the evangelical minister. And while you wouldn’t be wrong, the Bill Graham we’re referring to was a different like of evangelizer altogether. He spread the gospel of rock-and-roll.

Founder of the famed Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, which rose to prominence during the mid-’60s, Graham worked as both a promoter and manager for a who’s-who of rock greats, including the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Santana, Led Zeppelin, and the Rolling Stones. The Fillmore hosted the likes of The Byrds, Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Who, Pink Floyd, and countless other acts. (In ’68, he also launched the Fillmore East in New York City.) He was also later integral in the launching of cause-based festivals like 1985’s Live Aid. (Graham died in 1991.)

The National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia has taken Graham’s career and turned it into “Bill Graham and the Rock and Roll Revolution,” a major exhibit showcasing his lasting influence through rock memorabilia, photographs, ephemera, concert posters, and psychedelic art. The exhibit runs from September 16, 2016 to January 16, 2017. For more information on the exhibit, click here.

Below, find a sampling of the photographs and items featured in the exhibit. At the bottom, watch a rare interview from 1984, featuring Graham, along with The Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia and Jefferson Airplane’s Grace Slick.

Bob Dylan and Jerry Garcia perform at Day on the Green, presented by Bill Graham’s company, at Oakland Coliseum Stadium in Oakland, California, on July 24, 1987 (Ken Friedman)
Jimi Hendrix performing at Bill Graham’s Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, on February 1, 1968 (Iconic Images/Baron Wolman)
Fender Stratocaster fragment smashed by Jimi Hendrix at his Royal Albert Hall performance on February 24, 1969 (Fender Electric Instrument Co./Robert Wedemeyer)
A pair of The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards’ boots (Courtesy of the National Museum of American Jewish History)
Bill Graham and his son, David, in San Francisco, 1969 (Bonnie MacLean/Collection of David and Alex Graham)
A 1980s Yamaha SG200 played and signed by Carlos Santana (Collection of Carlos Santana/Robert Wedemeyer)
‘Father Time’ (a.k.a. Bill Graham) atop a magic mushroom, gliding over the crowd on New Year’s Eve at Oakland Auditorium in Oakland, California, on December 31, 1982 (Ken Friedman)
Janis Joplin’s velvet top, bell-bottoms, feather boa, and leather bag circa 1968 (Courtesy of EMP Museum, Seattle/Robert Wedemeyer)
Bill Graham enlightens The Beach Boys’ management that the band is late to a gig at Berkeley Coliseum Stadium in Berkeley, California, in June 1971 (Courtesy of Robert Altman)
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