I had modified my post (above) BEFORE I was aware that you replied. Please review again. Sorry
.. The fact is is not all cancellations and shows are available online. Jerry Garcia often stayed at a house in Bergenfield to unwind while in the area. I know, bcause I had a beer (actually three Molsen Ales) with him, the band, and the folks who rented that house. You will not find that online. Just as not all tour dates are published in archives. I can tell you who played at Leon's in the 1940-50s that are super famous but you will never see that online. I was not there but my dentist was Dr. Birchard B Goodall, Jazz Musician Historian and Main Street Dentist. John Entwistle of the Who had come to a house in Hackensack because he liked a Sicilian lasagna and a certain selection of bass guitars. Jack Bruce autographed his prototype bass in Hackensack, but there is nothing online about that., as well. The Free South Africa concerts for the ANC (African National Congress) were conceived in Hackensack starting in 1984 and the files were picked up by Sully Simlane (ANC) in Hackensack (2nd to Nelson Mandela, in charge of ANC United Nations Mission, while Mandela was incarcerated) and Sully had tea in Hackensack. Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis were instrumental in applying behind the scenes pressure to help fell Aparthied. There are letters someplace. And why? Because I recall it. I also recall the marquis "Jimi Hendrix Experience" just as I recall Jethro Tull, and Black Sabbath, but the only concerts I recall; actually going; to was Mountain and Cactus. Not everything is written in record, and that is the problem with history... anyway I'll try and post some pics and proofs, but it's hardly important. I did not see him play. I did not ask my school mates. I did see the marquis and of this I am sure. I can tell you about a number of more recent troubling items, news items that were published but cannot be found on the internet. Oh yes, and the late Jaco Pastorius gave his first bassn to a Hackensack resident, perhaps the most famous bass player in the world, as did Bill Wyman. Geoprge Benson, who cannot tell a lie also gave a Hackensack resident the six string Fender Bass on his album "Breezin." You wont find that online. Oh.. there was also a non-profit organization stationed in Hackensack that notarized the most famous bass players in the world as having their archives and memorabilia in Hackensack, including many basses. You will not find any of that online, because Hackensdack Politics made is a requisite to bury those horos as if they had never happened. And Rudy Van Gelder wants nothing to do with Hackensack, and does not want his name associated with it. I cannot say that I blame him.