Welcome back to Stanford’s Frost Amphitheater

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Ah yes, the scene of many a jam is back, spruced up and ready to rock!

MAY 23, 2019

Welcome back to Stanford’s Frost Amphitheater

The iconic amphitheater reopens after extensive renovations and upgrades that make it one of the premiere music venues in the Bay Area and a place for university pomp and circumstance.

https://news.stanford.edu/2019/05/23/welcome-back-frost/

BY ROBIN WANDER

On May 18, Frost Amphitheater officially launched in a big way with Stanford Concert Network’s eighth annual Frost Music and Arts Festival featuring solo R&B co-headliners Kali Uchis and Jorja Smith with opener DJ Mia Carucci.

Video by Kurt Hickman

The newly renovated Frost Amphitheater is featuring a diverse lineup of concerts and events for a new generation inspired by the history of Frost and its legendary artists.

The rain on Saturday did not stop patrons from enjoying over four hours of music that began with two Stanford Battle of the Bands winners, Mammoth and VII. As the rain came down, Stanford Concert Network (SCN) and Stanford Live staff handed out free ponchos and the show went on without missing a beat. When things got chilly near the end of the night, Smith popped on a Stanford sweatshirt before returning to the stage with Uchi for a duo encore.

Dante Zakhidov, Stanford doctoral candidate in materials science and engineering, was a member of SCN when Frost Fest was last staged in the amphitheater before it closed for renovations in 2016, and he also worked on this latest festival. He can attest that the renovations improved every aspect of the venue while keeping the original ambiance of Frost Amphitheater intact. “Compared to the single concrete slab that was the former Frost, the addition of a fully riggable stage, tour-ready green rooms and the 18-wheeler loading bay really streamlined the logistics of the production this year,” Zakhidov said. “Furthermore, from the audience perspective, the installation of additional bathroom capacity, the new walk-through tunnel, water-refill stations and ADA-compliant pathways made the show a much more comfortable experience.”

The unseasonable weather didn’t discourage attendance at the Frost Music and Arts Festival marking the official opening of the newly renovated Frost Amphitheater.(Image credit: Harrison Truong)

Frost Amphitheater, located at 351 Lasuen Street in the university’s arts district, seats up to 8,000 guests and is one of the largest outdoor venues on campus. The extensive renovation project included the addition of a state-of-the-art stage and other front- and back-of-house amenities that improve conditions for performers and audience members. One of those audience-pleasing amenities is “The Grove,” a verdant, park-like food area on the Frost grounds. Food selections in The Grove for Frost Fest included small plates with meat and vegetarian options, bowls and salads made with fresh, local ingredients. In the future, a full bar with craft cocktails, local beers, ciders and wines will be open for most performances.

Frost Fest kicked off Stanford Live’s first season of events with its partners Goldenvoice and San Francisco Symphony. The lineup for 2019-20 will include rock, pop, classical music and more.

More than a concert venue

Since receiving its certificate of occupancy in April, Frost has been quietly hosting smaller Stanford Live and university events. Some of the first people to experience the renovations and amenities were the lucky ticket holders to Stanford Live’s “At the Illusionist’s Table,” an intimate sold-out dinner party series with magic, whiskey and wine that took place in Frost’s Green Room for two weeks beginning on April 23. Prospective freshmen were invited to Frost for a picnic lunch on April 26 during Admit Weekend, and the entire campus community was invited to Frost for the annual Multicultural Springfest on May 23 to celebrate the diversity and dedication of the university staff.

According to Elaine Enos, executive director of the Office of Special Events & Protocol (OSEP), Frost will be utilized during some of the university’s “Big 5” events such as New Student Orientation, Admit Weekend and Reunion Homecoming and particularly during Commencement Weekend for major ceremonies that have outgrown smaller spaces.

This year the Department of Computer Science will hold its diploma ceremony in Frost following Commencement in the stadium on June 16. Other groups are looking into using Frost during Commencement Weekend beginning in 2020.

“The capacity of Frost makes it very appealing for events that attract a large number of people,” said Enos. “OSEP looks forward to being able to utilize the space for major university gatherings that could include well-known visiting dignitaries, high-profile guest speakers and other special one-off events in partnership with university schools and departments.”

Summer at Frost

The list of Stanford Live’s co-presented concerts with Goldenvoice in Frost has been growing since the partnership was announced in February. Summer shows include French multi-instrumentalist and singer Vincent Fenton, aka French Kiwi Juice or FKJ (Aug. 6); Joe Russo’s Almost Dead playing mostly Grateful Dead jams (Aug. 17); multi-award-winning pop singer and songwriter Lionel Richie (Aug. 24); and American rock band The National (Sept. 1). Purchase tickets on the Stanford Live website.

The concerts co-presented with the San Francisco Symphony include Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas leading the orchestra in an all-Tchaikovsky program featuring Symphony No. 4 and Violin Concerto, performed by American violinist Gil Shaham (July 10); and New Zealand-born conductor Gemma New leading the orchestra in a program featuring Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 (two performances, July 13 and 14).

“After years of careful planning, it was wonderful to see Frost spring to life through the energy of so many live music fans on Saturday night” said Chris Lorway, executive director of Stanford Live. “The venue has already shown how it can be utilized for a broad range of creative and community activities. As we continue to announce new shows, we’re excited to see Frost return to its legendary status as the best space for outdoor music in the Bay Area.”

One more from a few years back on the history

 

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FEATURES

A Place in the Sun

Guitar gods, legends in the making and tales of the Dead: The raucous history of Frost's rock 'n' roll era.

MAY/JUNE 2011

https://stanfordmag.org/contents/a-place-in-the-sun

Laurence G. Kay

by

Ivan Maisel

Frost Amphitheater is a dowager now, a Depression baby who matured into a warm and lovely adulthood, a beauty who in middle age throbbed and hummed to the beat of a nation. The music has receded into memory, enshrined by ticket stubs taped in scrapbooks and photos scanned onto Facebook. From the late 1960s, when San Francisco music served as the soundtrack of a generation, well into the 1980s, when the Grateful Dead made an annual pilgrimage, Frost embraced rock 'n' roll.

"I guess I always think about these warm, sunny afternoons, this big, green bowl of people dancing around," says Michael Parrish, dean of the College of Sciences at San Jose State and a historian of Bay Area rock music.

"Frost," Brian Becker, '79, recalls, "was a magical place." Becker organized concerts for ASSU as an undergrad and has spent his adult career in live entertainment, promoting for some of the top companies in the industry. "We developed amphitheaters around the country. They all had great acoustics, layouts." But none, he says, had Frost's special qualities: "the bandshell, the nature; a beautiful, magical place."

The beauty came at birth. After their son John Laurence Frost, '35, died of polio only a few months after graduation, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Frost donated $90,000 ($1.45 million in today's dollars) to build a memorial. The Laurence Frost Amphitheater sits on 20 acres roughly halfway between the Main Quad and Stanford Stadium.

The 150 varieties of trees planted on site bathe it in shade and camouflage it from the hubbub of campus life that surrounds it. The latter job has been performed too well. Frost now sits quiet and mostly forgotten, flora transformed by time into fauna. The Amphitheater is a white elephant.

But oh, there was a time . . .

Before the rock era, Frost was known mostly as a venue for commencements and major speakers. Music leaned toward jazz and classical pops. Arthur Fiedler conducted the San Francisco Symphony in an annual summer fundraiser for the Children's Health Council. (Those fundraisers continue to this day.) Duke Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald played there, as did Louis Armstrong. With the rise of rock music in the Bay Area, however, brassy horns and sultry torch songs gave way to guitars and psychedelia. For more than a decade beginning in the late '60s, Frost played host to some of the most popular rock artists in the world.

Jefferson Airplane played there on May 7, 1967 just as the San Francisco group approached national stardom. The single "Somebody to Love," which rose to No. 5 on the Billboard chart, had been released a month earlier. The concert took place four months after the Human Be-In at Golden Gate Park, the gathering of some 30,000 where Timothy Leary famously urged people to tune in, turn on and drop out. It was a prelude to what became known as the Summer of Love, when young people from across the nation crowded into San Francisco and embraced a hippie counterculture. Jefferson Airplane, which headlined a star-studded lineup at the Monterey Pop Festival a month after appearing at Stanford, helped provide the musical backdrop during that seminal summer.

However, their Stanford performance left a student reviewer at the Dailyunderwhelmed. "This is the Jefferson Airplane," a caption beneath a photo of the band read. "They make music, sometimes. They also make commercials for white Levi's. They played at Frost Amphitheater on Sunday. They stank."

Jefferson Airplane went on to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The reviewer remains anonymous.

The first concert that Parrish, 57, attended at Frost was emblematic of how accessible and inexpensive live music was at the time. The headliners of that July 1968 show (tickets were $4) were The Chambers Brothers—whose hit "Time Has Come Today" became a classic from the era—and Quicksilver Messenger Service. Opening acts included two little-known groups, the Santana Blues Band (yes, that Santana) and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Santana had yet to record an album and CCR had released their first LP weeks earlier.

"Creedence was the second act that came on. They got just huge within a year or two, as did Santana, after their performance at Woodstock," Parrish recalls.

For children growing up near Stanford, Frost became a sacred playground. Danny Scher, '73, MBA '75, and his friends used to hang out there. "You could ride your bike down the sides," Scher says. "We used to ride them down the steps—bumpbumpbump. You'd end up where the stage is now. There was not a stage, so to speak, where the performers were. Then they eventually built kind of a concrete platform stage so you couldn't really ride your bike on the stage anymore."

As Scher grew older, he succumbed to Frost's other charms, including jazz concerts where he went backstage and got autographs. During his undergraduate years, he attended a few shows but missed Tower of Power, which appeared regularly, and the legendary Jimi Hendrix. Actually, everyone missed Hendrix. Though tickets were sold, the show was cancelled.

In July 1971, during a show featuring Elvin Bishop and a group called Cold Blood, a melee erupted among concertgoers, a motorcycle gang and police. Bottles were thrown. Patrons were bloodied. The University suspended rock concerts at Frost.

A subcommittee of the University Committee on Public Events studied the issue and concluded that rock concerts begat violence, drug abuse, robbery and other evils your parents warned you about. In the fall of 1972, after security faltered at a Frost concert featuring jazz icon Miles Davis and people streamed in without paying, the University banned all concerts, period.

"That was at the height of Vietnam," says Scher, a senior that fall. "There was a lot of anxiety on campus."

Scher saw an opportunity. A hustler from way back, he decided to pay his own way through the Graduate School of Business (tuition: $2,805). The ASSU asked him to promote concerts on a campus that had outlawed them. Scher met with President Richard Lyman, and encouraged him to relax restrictions if Scher promised to take care of the security problems. Lyman said he would give Scher one chance.

"I used to sneak into all these concerts when I was in high school," Scher says. "The first thing I did when I got the job was to seal all the holes under the fence. It was just a regular 5- or 6-foot high chain-link fence. All the kids knew where the holes were."

Scher steered away from hard rock: His first performer was folk star Joan Baez.

Hoping to avoid the altercations that had marred earlier Frost shows, Scher hired jugglers, tap dancers and street performers to entertain people while they stood in line and, once they settled into the amphitheater, before the show. He approached Tom Dallas, who with his wife, Mary, sold fruit for years in White Plaza, and asked them to sell fruit at the concert.

According to Scher, Dallas asked, "'How much you gonna charge me?' I thought, I couldn't really charge this guy." After agreeing to give it a try, Dallas made enough profit in that first concert to convince him to come again, and he soon became a fixture at Frost.

Baez sold 10,000 tickets at $2.50 per. More important, the concert came off without a punch or bottle thrown. The University allowed the ASSU to begin booking acts again.

Scher stayed on the "white wine" end of the spectrum, bringing in soft-rock acts that seemed most suitable for a Stanford audience. "I don't want to be disparaging," he says, laughter in his voice. "I mean, Stanford wasn't Berkeley in those days."

He booked Loggins and Messina, America, Baez again, and Seals & Crofts, who soon left the music world behind for their Baha'i faith. "As part of the contract, when the show ended, they would come back on stage and give a Baha'i talk," Scher recalls.

Scher did so well bringing acts to Frost (and Maples Pavilion and Mem Aud and Dinkelspiel) that he caught the eye of San Francisco rock impresario Bill Graham. Scher worked for Graham for 24 years.

"I love Stanford, in that they let me kind of do my thing and they let me do it until I showed them I couldn't do it," Scher says. "I think of Stanford as a very liberal institution that way."

Brian Becker ran concerts for ASSU in 1978-79 and recalls the beginning of the end for Frost as a rock venue. The ASSU began to turn toward jazz. The show Becker thinks of to this day is the one that got away: "George Benson performing in front of a symphony orchestra," he says. "You know how big Benson was. We had it booked, ready to go. At the last minute, the head of ASSU decided he did not want us doing business with Bill Graham Presents. The objection was a general feeling that Stanford should promote on its own. We shouldn't allow concert promoters on campus."

Perhaps the group remembered most, and most fondly, is The Grateful Dead, which performed more than a dozen times over a span of 20 years. The Dead, which had its roots in Palo Alto, first played on campus in 1966 on the back deck of Tresidder. A show at Maples in 1973 is remembered as the debut of "the wall of sound," produced by a massive number of speakers that framed the musicians. Later that spring, they were at Frost, and James Armstrong, a senior at the time, was there. "I saw them every time they played in the Bay Area, but the best place of all to see them was Frost," he says. "A lot of Dead songs would go into a long jam in the middle, wandering jazz-like for a long time. Then, all of a sudden, they would catch fire. We all got Orphic thrills and our hair stood on end. From the stage all the way up the slope of Frost, in the spring sun, there would be a unanimous, audible 'aaahh.'"

From 1982 through 1987, the Dead came to Frost every year. "Always a fun and wild scene," Russ Dugoni, an East Bay resident who grew up during the late '60s near Stanford, said via email. "Some kids would climb the trees inside Frost to watch the band. The venue was packed . . . always sold out for the Dead! I do recall when Jerry sang [Bob] Dylan's 'It's all Over Now, Baby Blue,' you could hear a pin drop."

A quarter-century later, you can still hear pins drop at Frost. With the exception of a rare summertime concert, the venue sits empty and silent. Security issues led to a fence being erected several years ago, and costs to mount a show have become prohibitive, officials say. The wiring is outdated. Everything that a modern concert needs must be brought to Frost on a truck.

There is talk among alumni of a certain age about raising money to revivify the old arena, maybe even creating an endowment that would generate an operating budget. The memory of dancing to live rock on a sun-kissed afternoon with nothing but blue sky above you exerts a powerful pull.

IVAN MAISEL, '81, is a senior writer for ESPN.

3 / 5 A MAGICAL PLACE': The grassy slope and leafy surroundings made Frost a prized outdoor arena. Courtesy Danny Scher

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Memory Album

It's an ok looking venue that won't make bad music better.

I'm not reading any of that.

You are right moron, it’s an amazing venue that makes amazing music almost impossibly even more amazing

 

I don’t have to guess that you weren’t there in the flesh  being part of some / dozens of the most amazing rock and jazz and blues performances of all time

its too bad, but life isn’t fair

blather on

FYI Danny Shure was a pretty damn good jazz drummer as well both at Jordan and Paly where he promoted concerts even then- Having Duke Ellington play at our high school in the beautiful little theater was pretty damn cool

"damn good" is giving him too much credit, but I'm certain he'd agree with you.

The Dixieland jazz band with Gordon Currier on Tuba /rest in peace -was pretty darn good

I’m pretty darn sure he would agree with that assessment

would I be going out on a limb and guess that there are one or two times when you guys butted heads?

bill ghram was a mensch.  PITA AND AWESOME

And we are all better off let’s raise a glass to Bill

I hope to see many Zoners there on 8/17!

We'll definitely be there on 8/17!