The Archive.


  Updated Aug 2005
6-29-68.


Pink Floyd ,Tyrannosaurus Rex , Roy Harper,
Jethro Tull.


"I think it was the nicest concert I've ever been to. "John Peel
 

  The first concert of its kind in the Park and for many the best. The way that John Peel describes this concert is very similar to the way I felt when I saw Traffic in the second concert a month later. It seems the early concerts were special in a way that could not be replicated when they became much bigger and tied in to the music industry moguls.

John Peel.

I always claim that the best outdoor event I've ever been to was the Pink Floyd concert in Hyde Park, when I hired a boat and rowed out and I lay in the bottom of the boat , in the middle of the Serpentine and just listened to the band play . I think their music then suited the open air perfectly . It was - it sounds ludicrous now, its the kind of thing that you can get away with saying at the time and which is now, in these harsher times , sounds a bit silly-but I mean it was like a religious experience , it was that marvellous. They played A Saucerful Of Secrets and things. They just seemed to fill the whole sky and everything . And to coincide perfectly with the lapping of the water and the trees and everything . It just seemed to be the perfect event . I think it was the nicest concert I've ever been to.

I was at this first free Hyde Park festival and talked to John on his boat, from mine!
 
Can't remember too much about it for the usual reasons, but I recall that this was actually the SECOND festival as the very first was not announced or publicised, it just happened, with a small flat bed truck parked on the walkway in the "cockpit" and with the amps and PA running from a flying lead plugged into one of the pathway lamps, which were not very high luckily!
 
We all knew of it by word of mouth and there were really only about a couple of hundred there, the Floyd one had thousands as the whole cockpit was pretty full.
 
I went to most of them and remember the Blind Faith one as the best, followed closely by the Pink Floyd one at Parliament Hill Fields, using the quadraphonic, (steered), four way sound system....

Colin Purves
 
PS: Best gig ever was The Cream at the Camden Roundhouse, very early on with the train turntable rails still in place, the train opening not filled in and water dripping down from a hole in the roof onto Eric!
PSS: Strangest gig ever was the very first use of the Roundhouse with the Pink Floyd playing off the back of a Hay Wain, and Soft Machine, (with Kevin Ayres "playing" a motor bike at one point!), oh - and various famous peeps trying not to look obvious dressed up as Arabs, (blame the free suger lumps).

I wasn't lucky enough to attend this show, so I can't add anything apart from Pink Floyd's

set list.

Let There Be More Light, Set The Controls For The Heart Of the Sun,  Saucerful Of Secrets, Interstellar Overdrive.

Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason remembers
The one in '68 was wonderful because it was much more a picnic in the park than a mini-Woodstock. A lovely day. It was important for us too because it reminded us of our, uh, roots -- whether spurious or not. They
*were* our roots -- not personally, but as an enterprise. We were the house band.

   Roy Harper remembers :

Bob: the atmosphere of the concerts in those days in the park, I'm just making direct comparisons with the two events, but there was a lovely freedom and wonderful sort of feeling about those places in those days

Roy: I remember that first one in the cockpit with, I think the first one was the best one, with the Pink Floyd, Me....Tyrannosaurus Rex and Jethro Tull

Bob: yeah

Roy: I think that was the best one, I don't think it ever got better than that one, I ended up playing Nick's drums at one point with him.... I was, I had the tympany sticks on the cymbals....that was a brilliant atmosphere. There was only about ten or fifteen thousand people turned up but it was a brilliant thing that

Bob: well nobody paid any money, there weren't sort of corporate balloons you know, above the place and stuff like this

Roy: yeah

Bob: which there were in the summer this year. I must say it felt completely different, the whole corporate influence has grown so much hasn't it?

Roy: it's out of order, Harvey Goldsmith still owes me fifteen hundred quid (laughs)

- from a radio interview with Bob Harris

Don Needham kindly sent me this snippet of info about the existence of film of this concert

"very brief b&w film clip of Jethro Tull's performance at the first Hyde Park free concert 29/6/68 appeared on a documentary about Tull called "Fish n' Sheep n' Rock n' Roll" made for Channel 4 on British TV back in 1987. It looks like it comes from a newsreel but suggests there is probably more footage of the event in existence."

Don has also provided some stills from the clip , one of which is shown on opposite.

To see the rest of the stills visit

Tull at Hyde Park

Hi
I was at this concert, it was certainly the best of all of the ones I went to - One thing I remember was that first on stage was a busker who normally played his saxaphone (?) on Charing Cross bridge - Anyone else remember him,
who he was?
Jim McDermid

  I don't know of any recordings of this concert , Pink Floyd would be the most likely to have been taped. If you have any info to add about recording availability, photos, reviews, etc
  e-mail me.

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 (These pages include large photogalleries of the concert, most especially King Crimson and Jack Bruce. )

Concert reviews and info -1974-76