1973 San Diego guide to rock music
Ledbetters was a Monday night gas. By 8:30 when the band started, the place was packed and we were loaded. And it didn't let up all night. Ear-splitting rock and roll from Chuck Berry to the Stones kept the dance floor crowded. Most men and women seemed to regard Ledbetters as a place to dance with everyone as friends.
For non-smokers, the haze is a problem. The music is too loud; our ears rang the next day. Others tell us of waiting an hour outside just to get in.
Oct. 4, 1973
Instead of paying bands a set fee out of the bar proceeds — as is common in most local clubs — and charging a slight cover charge, Herrera gives each band a percentage of the door and charges customers more to get in — two to three dollars on weeknights and $3.50 to $4.50 on weekends. “When you hire bands that play only original music, it’s hard to pay them a set amount."
By Thomas K. Arnold, August 20, 1981

Jerry Raney: “Yeah, I was already 15 or 16 then, and that’s when I started playing guitar. This guy from El Cajon High named Jack Chan — you remember Jack — knew how to play, we’d go out and get the Beatles songbooks and go through ’em and he’d teach me the chords.
By Roger Anderson, March 16, 1989

Lester Bangs on Altamont the day the music died
We stopped at a gas station for a map, at a friend’s house to scrounge a joint, and off we went.
Lester had recently begun writing freelance for a fledgling but already influential newsprint rag called Rolling Stone. Right now, he was drunk as a skunk. “Hey, man, this is gonna be fucking great. Know what? Just a couple days ago I sent a review of Let It Bleed to my editor." Contrary to dollar-wise ’70s and ’80s practice, the Stones had released a new album not prior to but in the middle of their tour.
By Roger Anderson, , December 14, 1989

As the scene began to change, hardcore was spawned, which was often more violent and aggressive than its predecessor. This harder form of punk has always been big in San Diego, with the local band Battalion of Saints leading the pack in the early 1980s.
By Daniel Ridge, October 17, 2002

Meet El Cajon garage band Psychotic Waltz
There are four of them. Four members of the heavy metal band Psychotic Waltz. They are seated around a living room coffee table in the heart of El Cajon. The house is part residence, part delicatessen. The drummer’s parents own the building and run the deli. Leggio’s Market, but now live elsewhere, bestowing the house as a sort of band headquarters.
By Mani Mir, August 3, 1989
Psychotic Waltz re-visited five years later
By Josh Board, May 27, 2004
1973 San Diego guide to rock music
Ledbetters was a Monday night gas. By 8:30 when the band started, the place was packed and we were loaded. And it didn't let up all night. Ear-splitting rock and roll from Chuck Berry to the Stones kept the dance floor crowded. Most men and women seemed to regard Ledbetters as a place to dance with everyone as friends.
For non-smokers, the haze is a problem. The music is too loud; our ears rang the next day. Others tell us of waiting an hour outside just to get in.
Oct. 4, 1973
Instead of paying bands a set fee out of the bar proceeds — as is common in most local clubs — and charging a slight cover charge, Herrera gives each band a percentage of the door and charges customers more to get in — two to three dollars on weeknights and $3.50 to $4.50 on weekends. “When you hire bands that play only original music, it’s hard to pay them a set amount."
By Thomas K. Arnold, August 20, 1981

Jerry Raney: “Yeah, I was already 15 or 16 then, and that’s when I started playing guitar. This guy from El Cajon High named Jack Chan — you remember Jack — knew how to play, we’d go out and get the Beatles songbooks and go through ’em and he’d teach me the chords.
By Roger Anderson, March 16, 1989

Lester Bangs on Altamont the day the music died
We stopped at a gas station for a map, at a friend’s house to scrounge a joint, and off we went.
Lester had recently begun writing freelance for a fledgling but already influential newsprint rag called Rolling Stone. Right now, he was drunk as a skunk. “Hey, man, this is gonna be fucking great. Know what? Just a couple days ago I sent a review of Let It Bleed to my editor." Contrary to dollar-wise ’70s and ’80s practice, the Stones had released a new album not prior to but in the middle of their tour.
By Roger Anderson, , December 14, 1989

As the scene began to change, hardcore was spawned, which was often more violent and aggressive than its predecessor. This harder form of punk has always been big in San Diego, with the local band Battalion of Saints leading the pack in the early 1980s.
By Daniel Ridge, October 17, 2002

Meet El Cajon garage band Psychotic Waltz
There are four of them. Four members of the heavy metal band Psychotic Waltz. They are seated around a living room coffee table in the heart of El Cajon. The house is part residence, part delicatessen. The drummer’s parents own the building and run the deli. Leggio’s Market, but now live elsewhere, bestowing the house as a sort of band headquarters.
By Mani Mir, August 3, 1989
Psychotic Waltz re-visited five years later
By Josh Board, May 27, 2004