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ELVIS PRESLEY Original 1976__CONCERT TICKET STUB__Dayton__NM-

$ 72.33

Availability: 44 in stock
  • Format: STUB
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Country of Manufacture: United States
  • Featured Refinements: Elvis Ticket
  • Condition: NM-
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    Here's an
    awesome
    ELVIS PRESLEY stub
    from
    October 26th
    , 1976,
    at the University of Dayton, Ohio.
    This stub is NM- condition, no noticeable wear or flaws.
    Purchase with con
    fidence,  I deal
    only
    in original vintage items guaranteed authentic.
    Elvis Presley Setlist at Riverfront Coliseum, Cincinnati, OH, USA
    Mar 21 1976
    Afternoon show (2:30pm)
    See See Rider (Ma Rainey cover)
    I've Got a Woman (Ray Charles cover)
    Amen
    Love Me (Willy and Ruth cover)
    Let Me Be There (Olivia Newton-John cover)
    You Gave Me a Mountain (Marty Robbins cover)
    Steamroller Blues (James Taylor cover)
    All Shook Up
    Teddy Bear
    Don't Be Cruel
    Love Me Tender
    Polk Salad Annie (Tony Joe White cover)
    What'd I Say (Ray Charles cover)
    School Day
    And I Love You So (Don McLean cover)
    Hurt (Roy Hamilton cover)
    Burning Love (Arthur Alexander cover)
    America The Beautiful
    Funny How Time Slips Away (Willie Nelson cover)
    Heartbreak Hotel
    Hound Dog (Big Mama Thornton cover)
    Can't Help Falling in Love
    Closing Vamp
    Fans 'All Shook Up' No doubt about it: Elvis is still King
    By Cliff Radel : The Cincinnati Enquirer : Concert Date : March 21, 1976 (2:30pm)
    Only Elvis Presley could elicit screams just by singing 'America, the Beautiful'. As he sang about 'amber waves of grain', at his Sunday afternoon
    Riverfront Coliseum, a chorus of girlish screams shot up from the sold-out audience of 17,540. The crowd's reaction to the next line was wilder. 'For purple mountains' majesty above the fruited plains', Presley sang. Upon reaching 'fruited' he momentarily let his gaze drop to the women seated in the first row. He quickly flashed them the patented Elvis sneer. The women jumped out of their seats. Shrieking, they reached out with one hand toward the stage and with the other hittheir heads in ecstasy. No performer, 20 years after attaining stardom, receives the response Presley does. If audience adulation was the determining factor, his title to the King of Rock 'n' Roll would be unquestioned.