91桃色 Field Notes: A Colorado Treasure in Denver鈥檚 Backyard
At Colorado鈥檚 most famous concert venue, the setting does its best to upstage the stars. As in rock stars. Country and jazz luminaries. Pop virtuosos. And high-wattage headliners.
No matter the act, Red Rocks Amphitheatre is a big part of the attraction. That鈥檚 true for fans, and it鈥檚 true for the musicians who play there 鈥 think the Decemberists or the Disco Biscuits or country crooner Tim McGraw or Denver鈥檚 own Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats. Any musician who dreams big wants to amp up their act at the world-famous open-air marvel.
Even though the coronavirus pandemic has led to programming adjustments 鈥 a handful of were offered in mid-summer 鈥 the venue remains a top-draw for big-name acts. 听
After all, says Brian Kitts, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a real bucket-list venue for a lot of bands.鈥 He is director of marketing and business development for the City and County of Denver agency that manages the venue. Of all the stops on any given tour, he adds, 鈥渢his is the one [the performers] bring their families to.鈥
It鈥檚 a bucket-list experience for concertgoers, too. They鈥檝e been flocking to Red Rocks since its debut in 1941, when the Civilian Conservation Corps finished听 construction on a design by celebrated Denver architect Burnham Hoyt. In recent years, it has emerged as the state鈥檚 top tourist attraction and its most Instagrammed tourist site. 鈥淧art of the fan experience,鈥 Kitts explains, 鈥渋s sitting out under the stars on hard rock benches in a place like Colorado.鈥
Owned by the Mile High City, Red Rocks is perched at 6,450 feet above sea level and located some 19 miles west of the 91桃色 campus. As Kitts never tires of explaining, it鈥檚 one of the state鈥檚 crown jewels, an architectural and engineering feat that belongs to the people of Denver.
Whether they come for the views or the music, Denverites consider a visit to Red Rocks a respite from daily routines and stress. 鈥淧eople are vested in this venue. They feel like they have a stake in what happens here,鈥 Kitts says.
And plenty happens at Red Rocks. When not thwarted by a pandemic, the venue hosts its first event of the calendar year every spring, either with a sunrise service on Easter or a concert celebrating cannabis on 4/20 鈥 鈥渨hichever,鈥 Kitts says, 鈥渃omes first.鈥
From there, the schedule progresses at a brisk 100-plus BPM (beats per minute), with 160 nights of concerts, movies and assorted programming over the spring, summer and fall. And each season typically makes headlines. In 2017, not long before he died at age 66, Tom Petty performed his 18th show at Red Rocks. The next year, Yo-Yo Ma chose Red Rocks for the first concert in his two-year effort to bring Bach鈥檚 complete solo cello suites to a global audience. And this year, on July 22, Motown diva Diana Ross, now 75 and sans Supremes, performed her first Red Rocks gig in 50 years.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a quintessential Denver experience,鈥 Kitts says of any event at Red Rocks. 鈥淭he fact that you are [there] and it is 10 o鈥檆lock at night and you are under the stars and the moon 鈥 it鈥檚 a really moving experience.鈥
The venue may draw its biggest crowds at night, but during the day, it鈥檚 open to the public for picnics, exercise routines and selfie snapping. The surrounding Red Rocks Park, part of Denver Mountain Parks, offers hiking opportunities and spectacular views. Meanwhile, the Colorado Music Hall of Fame provides an introduction to the music professionals who call or called the state home. It鈥檚 located in the Red Rocks Trading Post, a short jaunt from the amphitheater.
On a sprinkling of summer mornings, the venue welcomes Yoga on the Rocks, an hour-long stretch for flexible folk. And it鈥檚 not uncommon to spot student-athletes from the Pioneer varsity teams. Like so many fitness aficionados, they sometimes run the stairs just for the high-altitude conditioning.听听 听
When feasible, 91桃色 students also make the occasional appearance backstage. Kitts teaches a sports and entertainment marketing class at the Daniels College of Business, and as part of the syllabus, students enjoy a behind-the-scenes tour of the venue. The highlights include a stop by the cafeteria catering to performers and their crews. It鈥檚 windowless but constructed around one dramatic red rock wall. After that, students are led through the tunnel connecting the orchestra pit to the sound and lighting booth. With walls and ceiling covered in artist signatures and sketches (a tiny rendition of a drum set, for example), it鈥檚 a watch-your-step trek through an impromptu hall of fame.
Oh what a night! Legendary moments on the Rocks
Red Rocks takes center stage in so many career biographies and fan memories. 鈥淵ou have literally had the history of American pop culture come through here,鈥 Kitts says. That鈥檚 partly because of the spectacular setting, but it鈥檚 also because of acoustic magic: A note sounds the same at the bottom of the amphitheater as it does at the top.
Some memorable moments from the history books:
鈥 The Beatles played Red Rocks on their first world tour in 1964. For reasons inexplicable to any current fans of the mop-topped Fab Four, the concert didn鈥檛 sell out, though tickets were only $6. 听
鈥 After a rowdy 1971 Jethro Tull gig 鈥 鈥渁n apocalyptic show,鈥 the Denver Post reported, 鈥渁mid tear gas, unruly crowds, hurled rocks, violent police officers and a swooping police helicopter鈥 鈥 the city鈥檚 mayor announced that the venue would host no more rock concerts so long as he was in office. 鈥淩ock music was actually banned here in 1973,鈥 Kitts says. 鈥淒uring those [five] years we had lots of Carpenters and Joni Mitchell.鈥
鈥 With the release of 鈥淯2 Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky,鈥 a concert film recorded on a rain-drenched June evening in 1983, an international audience discovered the venue鈥檚 scenic charms. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the performance that put Red Rocks on the map,鈥 Kitts says. What鈥檚 more, the dramatic footage 鈥 some of which was shown repeatedly on MTV 鈥 helped establish U2 and its lead singer, Bono, as a performance powerhouse.
鈥 Sometimes at Red Rocks, the weather does its best to steal the show. When Florence + the Machine took to the stage on a mid-May evening, vocalist Florence Welch made the most of a classic Denver snow show. 鈥淪he came out barefoot with [this] gossamer dress on and danced with snowflakes falling all around her,鈥 Kitts says.
The rundown on Red Rocks
鈥 The city of Denver purchased the Red Rocks site in 1927 for $54,133.
鈥 Construction on the venue began in 1936 at the height of the Great Depression and with the support of the Works Progress Administration. The Civilian Conservation Corps provided labor for the venue, which opened to the public in June 1941.
鈥 In the 19th century, Red Rocks was known as the Garden of the Angels.听
鈥 As any encyclopedia will relate, the walls of the venue were formed in the late Pennsylvanian to early Permian period. And Red Rocks is a stone鈥檚 throw from Dinosaur Ridge, one of the world鈥檚 most famous fossil sites.
鈥 Widespread Panic holds the record for the most shows at Red Rocks.
鈥 On concert and film nights, Red Rocks accommodates about 9,500 people in 70 rows of seats carved into the stone. Because it鈥檚 a historic landmark, the amphitheater has largely been preserved in its original state. 鈥淚t basically looks today like it did in 1941,鈥 Kitts says.