1970-08-14 - 7th and Marshall Street Parking Deck, Richmond, VA 01 Dancing In The Street 02 Come On (the World Is Crying For Freedom) 03 KT-88 04 The War Is Over 05 Why'd You Do That 06 Sherlock Goes Holmes 07 Goin' Back To Georgia 08 Resurrection 09 Guilty 10 We'll All Man The Guns 11 Run Shaker Life - Twenty More Miles 12 Good Lovin' Woman Bruce Springsteen (guitars & vocals) Danny Federici (keyboards) Steve Van Zandt (bass) Vini Lopez (drums) I have no source information for this, but I presume it must be a matrix of the second audience recording and the soundboard mentioned below, since it contains all 12 tracks. From brucebase: One show, triple bill, with blues band Marlo Mays & The Stingers opening, Mercy Flight performing second and Steel Mill headlining and closing. Held under the stars on the upper deck of the parking complex. The general concept for this show was modeled after The Beatles memorable rooftop performance in the film "Let It Be" (which was in theatres at the time). This is one the most famous of all Steel Mill’s gigs and it’s now firmly a part of Richmond folklore. Promoter Russell Clem provides the immortal MC introduction. This was Steel Mill’s first gig in about a month and their performance actually starts off somewhat ragged as a result, something both Bruce and Vini Lopez apologize for this during the show. The above-mentioned 12 song setlist is culled from audio from this show that circulates in several variations. An audience tape of only fair quality has been in circulation for many years. Fortunately a substantially better (very good) quality and more complete specimen of this audience recording has emerged in the collector market over the past couple of years,and is absolutely worth obtaining. In addition to the new audience source, some soundboard audio has also emerged from this show. The soundboard audio is missing two tracks ("The War Is Over" and "Guilty") found on the audience recording and the soundboard quality isn't nearly as good as the better of the two audience sources. Importantly though, the soundboard audio includes the show's encore "Good Lovin' Woman", which is not found on the audience audio. None of the above-mentioned audio has ever been released on any mainstream bootleg. The 12 song, 110 minute setlist is not the complete show. It would appear that the audience audio is complete up to and including “We’ll All Man The Guns”. There is then a 2-4 song segment of the show that has never circulated from any source. One of the songs definitely performed during this “missing” segment was “The Wind And The Rain”. Both "I Am The Doctor" and "Sweet Melinda" have cropped up in attendee recollections and may have also filled this gap in this show. From an historical standpoint the two most important tracks are "We'll All Man The Guns" (Bruce introduces it as just written) and Bruce's 1969 song "Good Lovin' Woman" (Bruce introduces it as "an old song"). Neither of these two songs are available elsewhere. A day or so after this show Springsteen met privately with Mercy Flight's lead singer Robbin Thompson and offered him a position in Steel Mill. After a few days of deliberation Thompson accepted the offer, resigning from Mercy Flight on August 23 and relocating to New Jersey to join Steel Mill the following week.