![]() The rock day was more unfocused with acts like the Pretenders and Quarterflash and Berlin rubbing shoulders with U2, Stevie Nicks and Joe Walsh. Van Halen top off the metal day with some serious kicking of ass Featuring Quiet Riot, Motley Crue, Judas Priest, Ozzy Osbourne, Triumph, Scorpions and Van Halen, it was a stellar line-up and Van Halen were in peak form. Over 600,000 people turned up across the four shows but it was day two, heavy metal Sunday that pulled in 375,000 alone. dude, whose on stage? Err.where's the stage, man? Not that the Clash were punks or new wave by then, anyway. These were unprecedented fees and off the scale for 1983, in fact, they'd be off the scale now.Īfter pointing out that they'd sold a lot less records than the other two headliners and fed up with The Clash bitching and moaning, the promoters put images of their contract on the jumbo screens to show the fans how much they were getting for an hour's work, presumably in an attempt to humiliate them. The Clash headlined the new wave day but were fed up that they were receiving a decidedly un-punky $500,000 when the other day's headliners - David Bowie and Van Halen, were trousering a cool and frankly ludicrous $1.5million. A fourth day of country was held a week later. Held again in San Bernardino, day one was new wave, day two heavy metal and the third day rock. It was to be a similar format to the previous one, with a day dedicated to different music genres across each of the 3 days. ![]() Indeed, his thirst to lose even more money was apparently unquenchable. ![]() You'd have thought, after losing upwards of $5million on the previous year's US Festival, Steve Wosniak would have had enough being a festival promoter, but far from it. ![]()
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