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📰 Electric Factory Concerts – Gig Guide – Apr. 1974

  • Writer: Mott The Hoople
    Mott The Hoople
  • Apr 28, 1974
  • 3 min read

A striking block advert from late April 1974 captures the pulse of Philadelphia’s live‑music scene, with Electric Factory Concerts promoting a run of spring shows across the Shubert Theatre and the Academy of Music. The page radiates the energy of a city alive with touring acts — and prominently features Mott the Hoople with Queen as a marquee double‑bill.


📰 Quotes from the Article

(Use only if you want a separate quote block.)


“Tickets on sale May 6.”

“8 & 11 PM — Mott the Hoople / Queen.”


📰 What the Clipping Shows

The clipping is a vertically stacked concert advert titled “Electric Factory Concerts”, divided into two venue sections: The Shubert Theatre and The Academy of Music. Each listing includes artist names, dates, times, and ticket prices, framed by decorative borders and bold 1970s typography. The Mott the Hoople / Queen double‑bill is given prominent placement, listed as a two‑show event on May 31.


This clipping matters because it documents a key moment in Queen’s early U.S. touring history, paired with Mott the Hoople during their influential mid‑’70s run.


🎟️ Electric Factory Concerts — Full Artist & Date List (Apr–Jun 1974)

From: The Philadelphia Inquirer, 28 April 1974 — Page 186


📍 Shubert Theatre

TONIGHT — 7:30 & 10:30 PM

Procol Harum

Maggie Bell


Friday, May 10 — 8 PM

Eagles


Saturday, May 11 — 8 PM

Blue Öyster Cult

Golden Earring


Friday, May 31 — 8 PM & 11 PM

Mott the Hoople

Queen


Sunday, June 2 — 7:30 PM

Robert Klein

Melissa Manchester

Tickets on sale May 6


📍 Academy of Music

Tuesday, May 21 — 8 PM

Jesse Colin Young

Leo Kottke


Wednesday, May 22 & Thursday, May 23 — 7:30 PM & 10 PM

An Evening with James Taylor📰 The Story Behind It

In April 1974, The Philadelphia Inquirer published this Electric Factory Concerts advert showcasing a dense lineup of spring performances. The listings reflect a vibrant regional circuit, with rock, folk, and progressive acts sharing space across two major venues.


“8 & 11 PM — Mott the Hoople / Queen.”


The advert highlights the growing stature of Mott the Hoople, who were touring heavily at the time, and Queen, who were still in the early stages of breaking into the American market. Their pairing in a two‑show format underscores the momentum both bands were building in 1974.


“Tickets on sale May 6.”


The broader advert captures the diversity of the era’s touring landscape — from Procol Harum and Maggie Bell to Blue Öyster Cult, Eagles, Jesse Colin Young, and James Taylor — but the Mott/Queen listing stands out as a snapshot of two rising forces sharing a bill before Queen’s rapid ascent later in the decade.


📰 Publication Details

Publication: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Date: 28 April 1974

Country: USA

Section / Page: Page 186

Format: Gig Guide / Concert Advert


📰 Related Material

• Belkin Productions Cleveland advert — Apr. 1974

• Mott the Hoople / Queen — Allen Theatre (Cleveland) — May 25, 1974

• Related Chronicle entry: Queen early U.S. touring history


Additional material connected to this entry is listed in the tag index at the foot of the page.


📰 Visual Archive

INSERT IMAGE HERE


Caption:

Electric Factory Concerts advert featuring Mott the Hoople with Queen, The Philadelphia Inquirer, 28 April 1974.


The advert includes ornate borders, stacked listings, and bold venue headers, with the Mott/Queen double‑bill positioned prominently among the spring concert schedule.


📰 Closing Notes

This clipping preserves a vivid moment in Philadelphia’s 1974 concert calendar, capturing the intersection of established acts and rising stars. The Mott the Hoople / Queen double‑bill stands as a key historical marker, reflecting Queen’s early U.S. exposure and Mott’s continued influence on the touring circuit. As an archival piece, it offers a snapshot of the era’s musical energy and the role of Electric Factory Concerts in shaping the region’s live‑music identity.



📝 Copyright Notice

All magazine scans, photographs, and original text excerpts referenced in this entry remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This Chronicle entry is a transformative, non‑commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference. No ownership of the original material is claimed or implied.


If you want, I can now produce a paired scrapbook entry for the Cleveland advert so both 1974 Mott/Queen listings sit together in your archive

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