Black Flag Date: 1982-12-02 Venue: (Bill Cuevas) @Calderon Ballroom, Phoenix, AZ Sets: 49min+ Media: CDR Number: 1 Source: sbd. cassette > traded cdr > wav > flac Quality: A- Notes: This recording has circulated with the dates 1982-07-16 & 1982-08-13. The below article suggests it's actually from December 1982, which makes more sense because they weren't playing Black Coffee, My War or Slip It In at the September 1982 shows and the earliest previously known performances of those songs was Ukrainian Hall 1982-12-10. Dementlieu site dates this show as 1982-12-02. http://www.dementlieu.com/users/obik/arc/blackflag/1982.html (49:25) 01 What Can You Believe? 02 Black Coffee 03 My War / I've Heard It Before 04 Depression 05 Beat My Head Aganst The Wall 06 Slip It In 07 Modern Man 08 No More 09 Nervous Breakdown 10 My Rules 11 I Love You 12 Nothing Left Inside (incomplete) http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/music/it-came-from-youtube-black-flag-s-1982-phoenix-gig-6611934 It Came From YouTube: Black Flag’s 1982 Phoenix Gig Thursday, October 9, 2008 at 5 p.m. By Benjamin Leatherman I was fortunate enough to attend Henry Rollins’ incredible spoken word gig last night at the Marquee Theatre in Tempe. As staff writer Niki D’Andrea detailed in her review of the show, the punk icon was in rare form, spending two-and-a-half hours on the microphone, humorously ripping the shit out of George W. Bush, John McCain, and Sarah Palin, as well as describing his jaunts around the world. Afterwards, he graciously took time to conversate with many audience members out in the Marquee’s parking lot. It was a fun experience, but nowhere near as memorable as the time Hank assaulted the ears of Phoenix punk fans with his vocal vitriol back in December 1982. As you'll hear in the YouTube clips embedded below, Rollins and the other members of Black Flag visited the Valley about a year after he joined the band and the singer had plenty to say on the mic that night. The concert went down at the way old-school Calderon Ballroom located at 16th Street and Buckeye Road, and also featured legendary local punkers the Sun City Girls in an opening slot. The clips were created by YouTube user named “fROMIOWA,” who utilized bootleg recordings from the show that have been bouncing around the Internet for years. (On a side note, you can find MP3s of the show on this site ( http://www.shavedneck.com/ ), which chronicles the southwest’s harcore punk scene in the early 80s. It’s a voluminous treasure trove of vintage fliers and photographs from gigs in Phoenix and Tucson by such renowned punk bands as the Social Distortion and The Vandals. For instance, the above photo came from a May 1983 Black Flag gig in Tucson). Rollins was his usually caustic self that night, with plenty of hilariously offensive between-song patter, like when he told an audience member "I don't want to fuck you! My momma told me to never stick my dick into a boy's asshole ever” as Greg Ginn and the other members of Black Flag launched into “Modern Man.”