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Iconic Halloween Rock Concerts

PrevPreviousPsychotropic Cinema: I Love You, Alice B. Toklas
  • Bill Kurzenberger
  • October 30, 2025
  • 4:20 pm

Iconic Halloween Rock Concerts

More than any other holiday, Halloween – along with Mexico’s concurrent Día de los Muertos – has a long tradition of drawing out the eldritch, creative costumes, and bizarre sights and sounds. For bands with a psychedelic bent, All Hallows’ Eve provides the musicians with a perfect excuse to express and embellish their own weirdness and preposterous proclivities in unusual ways, musically and visually.

These are some of the most iconic and noteworthy concerts that occurred on Halloweens past:

Billy Strings "Away From The Shire" 10/31/2022 by Jesse Faatz

(5) Billy Strings 10/29–31/2022 ExploreAsheville Arena, Asheville, North Carolina

Over three nights in North Carolina concluding October of 2022, jam-grass star Billy Strings treated fans to theatrically produced concerts dedicated to J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord Of The Rings trilogy. Dubbed “Away From The Shire,” the productions featured a re-telling with Strings as Frodo Baggins and his bandmates dressed as Gollum, Gandalf, Arwen, Legolas and characters from the Fellowship as they wove the storyline of Tolkien’s saga together with their music.

Musical highlights customized for the occasions included the opener “My Old Home Place,” “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire,” Dylan’s “All Along The Watchtower,” and Billy’s original songs like “Hellbender” and “Wargasm.” As the music grew darker while the troupe approached Mordor on Halloween night, Frodo Strings and the Fellowship powered through ominous versions of Black Sabbath’s “The Wizard,” Jimi Hendrix’s “Fire,” Led Zeppelin’s “The Battle of Evermore,” and “Ramble On” referencing Gollum and Mordor.

Following their notable 2022 Halloween run, Billy Strings and his group have made an annual habit of hosting elaborately produced concerts to mark the date, including last year’s “O Billy, Where Art Thou?” in Baltimore, Maryland. This year’s festivities find them back at the CFG Bank Arena in Baltimore on October 31st with Leftover Salmon for “Meet Me At The Crypt,” as Strings and his bandmates assume the identities of the Wolf Man, Frankenstein, Dracula, and other Universal monsters.

Billy Strings 10/29/2022 ExploreAsheville.com Arena – video (intro)

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Grateful Dead 10/31/1980 Radio City Music Hall

(4) The Grateful Dead 10/31/1980 Radio City Music Hall, New York City; and 10/31/1991 Oakland Coliseum, Oakland, California

On Halloween 1980, the Grateful Dead concluded their unique and limited October tour of mixed acoustic and electric shows with that year’s pinnacle performance at New York City’s Radio City Music Hall. After opening with “Heaven Help the Fool” for the only time and dusting off “Sage and Spirit” for the first time in five years, they delivered beautiful acousticized versions of “Little Sadie,” “The Monkey And The Engineer,” “It Must’ve Been the Roses,” “Cassidy,” “Birdsong” and “Ripple.”

Plugging in for two eclectic electric sets Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and the band rolled through A-quality and expansive renditions of mostly original songs like “Jack Straw,” “Ramble on Rose,” “Brown-Eyed Women,” “Deal,” “Lost Sailor” -> “Saint of Circumstance,” “Franklin’s Tower,” “Stella Blue,” the Rhythm Devils’ “Drumz” into “Fire on the Mountain,” “Uncle John’s Band” and more. Several of this night’s performances were included in their successive concert film Dead Ahead, the group’s acoustic live album Reckoning, and their electric live album Dead Set.

Grateful Dead 10/31/1980 Radio City Music Hall –  video | complete audio

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Grateful Dead with Ken Kesey & Gary Duncan 10/31/1991 Oakland Coliseum

Eleven years later in 1991, the Dead performed what would be their last Halloween concert, at Oakland Coliseum in their hometown San Francisco Bay area with pianist Bruce Hornsby accompanying their live lineup. The band opened the night with rare gem “Help on the Way -> Slipknot” which continued into a bouncy “Franklin’s Tower.” Following a bittersweet “Loser” and bluesy covers “Little Red Rooster” and Dylan’s “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues,” they concluded the first set with an adventurous “Let It Grow.”

Set two was memorable from the first note, starting with “Scarlet Begonias” -> “Fire on the Mountain” followed by “Truckin’” -> “Spoonful,” as the Dead brought up Quicksilver Messenger Service guitarist Gary Duncan for several songs. The show’s musical centerpiece was an expansive “Dark Star” that stretched over forty-two minutes, with “Drumz” and “Space” included within and a vocal rap by special guest Merry Prankster Ken Kesey who memorialized recently deceased concert promoter Bill Graham.

Following the Stones’ “The Last Time” and Jerry’s wistful ballad “Standing on the Moon,” Weir led the group through set closers “Throwing Stones” into “Not Fade Away.” Returning for the encore, they appropriately busted out Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London” for elated Deadheads for the final time.

Grateful Dead 10/31/1991 Oakland Coliseum – complete audio

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George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic mothership landing

(3) George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic 10/31/1976 Houston Summit Arena, Houston, Texas

“Houston, we have a problem…” the Lone Star State wants the funk! On Halloween night of 1976, the interplanetary mothership descended upon Houston, Texas, dubbed “Space City” as a nod to NASA’s nearby space center. The Godfather of Funk, George Clinton and the newly combined Parliament-Funkadelic band were in their prime in the mid-seventies, when the group’s lineup featured some of the galaxy’s funkiest players including Bootsy Collins, Bernie Worrell, Mike Hampton, Glenn Goins, Jerome Brailey, and Maceo Parker from James Brown’s band.

On this supernatural Halloween night in 1976, Clinton and P-Funk figuratively tore the roof off of the Summit Arena, home of the Houston Rockets. With infectious energy, the super-group delivered high-octane renditions of funk anthems from the newly-released Parliament album The Clones Of Dr. Funkenstein, and Funkadelic’s The Mothership Connection and Tales of Kidd Funkadelic. Highlights included show opener “Cosmic Slop” into “Dr. Funkenstein’s Supergroovalisticprosifunkstication Medley,” and “Mothership Connection (Star Child) / Swing Down Sweet Chariot” as the silver mothership descended from the rafters onto the stage. The show-stopping medley of “Give Up The Funk (Tear The Roof Off The Sucker) / Night Of The Thumpasorus Peoples” reached escape velocity to warp space and time for fifteen minutes of peak funk.

One of the most consequential funk concerts of the seventies, this night marking the start of their famed P-Funk Earth Tour was captured for the ages. A decade later, some performances from this show were released on George Clinton & Parliament-Funkadelic’s 1986 live album The Mothership Connection – Live from Houston. The complete video from their Halloween 1976 concert was later released in 1998 titled George Clinton: The Mothership Connection.

Parliament-Funkadelic 10/31/1976 Houston Summit – complete video

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Frank Zappa 10/31/1977 The Palladium, NYC

(2) Frank Zappa 10/28–31/1977 The Palladium, New York City, New York

As one of the most brilliantly eccentric musicians of our time, Frank Zappa was fittingly among the first to stake his claim with groundbreaking Halloween concerts. By 1977, Zappa was in his fifth consecutive year of performing on October 31st as annual spectacles, typically in the New York City area at venues like the Felt Forum and Capitol Theatre. Concluding October 1977, Frank and his band continued the tradition with six historic shows at The Palladium in the Big Apple, all of which were recorded and four of which were filmed on video.

At that time, Zappa was capably backed by an all-star band of Adrian Belew on guitar and vocals, Tommy Mars and Peter Wolf on keyboards, Terry Bozzio on drums, Ed Mann on percussion, and Patrick O’Hearn on bass, with original Mothers of Invention bassist Roy Estrada on hand as well. Frank and his group let their freak flags fly with six stellar Palladium performances leading up to and including the October 31st apex. On Halloween night, they delivered wonderfully weird renditions of “Peaches en Regalia,” “The Torture Never Stops,” “Bobby Brown,” “Läther,” “Wild Love,” “Big Leg Emma,” “Punky’s Whips,” “Muffin Man” and more.

Zappa’s Halloween ’77 Palladium run was immortalized for the ages in his 1979 self-financed concert film Baby Snakes. More recently in 2017, complete audio recordings from this multi-night run were officially released by the Zappa Family Trust, led by Frank’s son Ahmet.

Frank Zappa 10/31/1977 The Palladium, New York City – video

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Phish 10/31/1994 Glens Falls Civic Center, NY

(1) Phish 10/31/1994 Glens Falls Civic Center, Glens Falls, New York

On All Hallows’ Eve 1994, Phish permanently raised the bar for all Halloween concerts to follow, with a game-changing concert for the books in upstate New York.

Their first set was no slouch; the band was on-point from the fitting “Frankenstein” opener through original songs “Divided Sky,” “Julius,” “Reba,” and Phish’s ‘holy grail’ song “Harpua” complete with Trey Anastasio’s wide-varying improvisational narration. However, the real treat was yet to come.

Returning to the stage for set two, Phish proceeded to faithfully perform The Beatles’ The White Album in its entirety from start to end, from “Back In The U.S.S.R.” clear through to the sonic oddity “Revolution 9.” It was the Phabulous Phoursome’s first time recreating a complete album, henceforth known as their “musical costumes.” It was also the first known instance of any group performing the Beatles’ double-length White Album in its entirety in a live concert setting. Most bands would have been content to take a bow and call it a night after pulling off this stunning feat; however, Phish then reclaimed the stage for a third set that lasted well over another hour, featuring their early originals “David Bowie,” “Run Like an Antelope,” and encore “The Squirming Coil.”

No one including the band members could have predicted what they were getting themselves into, and the long tradition they initiated that night. In the years and decades that followed on October 31st, Phish went on to perform full-length renditions of seven more classic albums in their entirety: Quadrophenia, Remain In Light, Loaded, Exile On Main Street, Chilling Thrilling Sounds From The Haunted House, Waiting For Columbus, and Ziggy Stardust. On three separate Halloweens, the quirky quartet created and performed a whole album’s worth of new original material specifically for the occasion, twice inventing new personas and identities for themselves named Kasvot Växt, and time-travelers Sci-Fi Soldier from the distant future.

Phish’s October 31st, 1994 live concert re-creation of this vintage Beatles’ album – and successive “musical costume” classic album re-creations – raised expectations of jam-band concerts for decades especially on Halloween, and year-round as fans hope for occasional repeats. There are now numerous musical groups that exist for the sole purpose of re-creating beloved albums in a live concert setting, including The White Album and The Band’s The Last Waltz. Particularly in the jam genre, a significant number of bands have been largely inspired by Phish to include their own renditions of unexpected, extraordinary cover songs and even complete albums in their live performances, expand their musical horizons, and think outside the box in a genre that never had a defined box to begin with.

Phish 10/31/1994 Glens Falls Civic Center – Video  |  Audio

Avid concert-goers seeking a spooky show this October 31st can view this comprehensive list of Halloween 2025 concerts.

_______________________________________________________________

Bill Kurzenberger is a Columbus, Ohio-based musician, and an original contributor to Psychedelic Scene Magazine since its inception in 2021 as assistant editor and current editor-in-chief

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