The PNC Bank Arts Center
is a modern amphitheatre located in Holmdel Township, New Jersey, USA. About 17,500 people can occupy the amphitheater; there are 7,000 seats and the grass area can hold about 10,500 people. Concerts are from May through September featuring 35–45 different events of many types of musical styles. It is ranked among the top five most successful amphitheatres in the country. It is one of two major outdoor arenas in the New York City Metropolitan Area, along with Nikon at Jones Beach Theater.
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PNC BANK ARTS CENTER TICKETS
EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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The Beach Boys Tickets 6/1 | Jun 01, 2024 Sat, 7:00 PM | | John Fogerty, George Thorogood and The Destroyers & Hearty Har Tickets 6/15 | Jun 15, 2024 Sat, 6:30 PM | | Juneteenth Festival Tickets 6/16 | Jun 16, 2024 Sun, 1:00 PM | | Hardy, Kip Moore, Travis Denning & Ella Langley Tickets 6/20 | Jun 20, 2024 Thu, 6:45 PM | | Maroon 5 & Maren Morris Tickets 6/29 | Jun 29, 2024 Sat, 8:00 PM | |
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History
The amphitheatre was originally called the
Garden State Arts Center
. The 1954 legislation that created the
Garden State Parkway (at whose Exit 116 the Arts Center is located) also called for recreational facilities along the Parkway's route, and in 1964 Holmdel's Telegraph Hill was chosen as the site for "a cultural and recreational center ... that would be developed as a center for music and the performing arts." The amphitheatre was designed by noted modernist architect
Edward Durell Stone and featured open sides covered by a ,
saucer-like roof supported by eight large concrete pillars. It featured seating for 5,000 people with space for about 5,000 more on the lawn area outside the roof.
The Garden State Arts Center first opened on
June 12,
1968, with a program featuring pianist
Van Cliburn, conductor
Eugene Ormandy, and the
Philadelphia Orchestra. The Arts Center was operated in conjunction with the
New Jersey Highway Authority, which also ran the Parkway.
In the beginning, the Arts Center's programming featured a good deal of
classical as well as
popular music. In addition, a number of free daytime programs were provided for schoolchildren, senior citizens, and the disadvantaged and disabled. Beginning in 1971, the non-profit Foundation associated with the Arts Center also sponsored International Heritage Festivals before and after the regular season. Focusing on ethnicities such as
Scottish,
Slovak,
German,
African American, etc., these festivals remain to this day an unusual part of the venue's programming. Signs advertising these upcoming festivals, along with the regular upcoming concerts, became a familiar site to drivers approaching toll booths along the Parkway.
During off-season months the Arts Center is generally unused, except for a Holiday Light Spectacular show during the
Christmas season. A banquet hall is on premises that can be rented for private occasions. In 1995, the Arts Center grounds saw the addition of the
New Jersey Vietnam Veterans' Memorial.
During the 1990s the philosophy of the Arts Center underwent a change. Classical music was almost completely phased out, and a need was felt to expand the venue to compete for the top popular music acts against other, larger amphitheatres on the summer outdoor concert circuit. Thus before the 1996 season, a substantial expansion of the facility was done, with 2,000 seats added (some now outside the roof, which was not altered) and the lawn capacity doubled in size, by way of taking out rows of trees and a surrounding walk and raising the bank around the facility much higher.
In 1998,
PNC Bank, a
Pittsburgh based
banking company, purchased
naming rights and the venue was renamed to the
PNC Bank Arts Center
. (The company also has naming rights to
Pittsburgh Pirates Baseball venue
PNC Park.)
A variety of corporations provide services to the PNC Bank Arts Center including:
Live Nation,
New Jersey State Police, MONOC EMS, USI Event Security, Control,
Aramark, and more.
Holiday Light Spectacular
PNC Bank Arts Center features one of the most extravagant drive through light displays in the tri - state area. The spectacular is a drive through a forest of lights. Over 5 million lights were used over 225 displays. The Light Spectacular usually runs from the end of November through
January 2. It is open 5:00pm - 9:00pm 7 days a week. The display is set up in the parking lot around the Arts Center and on a specially prepared road for the display. In the premises of the light spectacular, there is a radio station that plays Christmas Carols. Also, there is a Winter Village at the end of the display. It features a snack bar, ice rink, and a Christmas decoration shop which sells smaller replicas of the displays in the light spectacular. Some large displays which are not visible from the parking lot or the amphitheater itself are left at their respective spots permanently. The manufacturing location of all the lights and displays is left confidential. The Holiday Light Spectacular has been sponsored by TOYOTA since the tradition started. In 2007, many new displays have been added making the display now long. It takes around 2 months to put the display up.
Performers and performances
Portions of
Jackson Browne's landmark 1977 live album
Running on Empty
were recorded there. Perhaps the most popular performer over the years at the Arts Center has been
James Taylor, who appears there almost every year and who has been one of the few acts to be booked there three nights in a row. Ironically,
Bruce Springsteen, New Jersey's most famous musician during these years and a person that lived in nearby towns during most of this time, never appeared at the Arts Center (save for a 1989 walk-on during a
Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band show) until two performances in 2006 during the
Bruce Springsteen with The Seeger Sessions Band Tour.
Sinéad O'Connor controversy
On
August 24,
1990,
Sinéad O'Connor was scheduled to perform at what was then called the Garden State Arts Center. The practice of the venue was, and still is, to play a recording of the
American national anthem before the show began. O'Connor, who said she was unaware of this practice until shortly before the show was to begin, refused to go on if the anthem was played. Venue officials acquiesced to her demand and omitted the anthem, and so O'Connor performed, but they later permanently banned her. O'Connor said that she had a policy of not having the national anthem of any country played before her concerts and meant "no disrespect" but that she "will not go on stage after the national anthem of a country which imposes
censorship on artists. It's hypocritical and racist." The incident made
tabloid headlines and O'Connor came in for heavy criticism and her songs were banned from a number of radio stations.
Frank Sinatra, who performed at the Center the next night, said he wished he could "kick her in the ass." O'Connor replied, "I wouldn't be the first woman he has threatened to hit," and her father said that Sinatra was too old to lift his leg to kick her.
Phish controversy
On
June 28 and 29, 2000, over 70 people were arrested in connection with two concerts by the jamband
Phish. It is believed that the band was not invited back to the venue, as they did not perform there again before the band's breakup in 2004. Phish's guitarist
Trey Anastasio, however, did headline shows at PNC several times in the 2000s, most recently in 2006 with "G.R.A.B." (Gordon.Russo.Anastasio.Benevento.) which included former Phish bassist
Mike Gordon, as well as
Marco Benevento and
Joe Russo of the
Benevento/Russo Duo.
2007 OzzFest Incident
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At the 2007 show on
August 16, Controversy was generated as 83 attendees were arrested at the show, most of them underage, and most of them arrested prior to the 8:00 hour, reasons cited for
underage drinking and distribution, and
"aggressive dancing"; In addition, two men died, one after ingesting significant amounts of alcohol, marijuana and cocaine.
Underage drinking
On
May 18,
2007,
Gwen Stefani performed the opening show for the 2007 season at the venue. The show gained a lot of local media publicity due to the large amount of underage drinking that took place in the parking lot before the show and lack of police to maintain it. At least 27 people, mainly minors, were taken to two area hospitals. The venue announced a zero-tolerance policy to underage drinking, and it was also announced that for the next concert held at the arena,
Fall Out Boy on
June 6, between 60 and 80
state troopers would be on hand, up from the usual 10-15 and mostly undercover and plain clothed, to detain underage drinkers. Residents of the area say that underage drinking has always been a problem at the venue, but gets worse every year.
In response to issues with underage drinking and in the wake of a number of alcohol-related injuries and deaths, drinking in the parking lots has been banned at the PNC Bank Arts Center as of
August 17,
2007.
[1]
For the upcoming summer concerts, a list will be published by PNC authorities stating which concerts will allow tailgating and which will not. Shows drawing a younger audience such as Fall Out Boy will have no tailgating while shows such as
Kenny Chesney will allow it.
[2]
See also
- List of contemporary amphitheatres
References
- Herget, Alison and Biese, Alex. "Officials ban booze in arts-center lots", ''Home News Tribune''. August 18, 2007. Accessed August 18, 2007. "Assemblywoman Amy Handlin, R-Monmouth, who brought the issue to the public's attention earlier this year, said a zero-tolerance policy is the only way to go."
- [1], ''NJ.com''. March 21, 2008. Accessed May 18, 2008