When I was in a band in Boston, we used to play in NYC all the time. As an ex Boston cabbie, I loved driving in NY! We had a 24' truck, so we had to get into Manhattan on the 125th St. bridge and drive down the avenues, usually all the way down town to the Wetland during rush hour, going 60 mph! However, having commercial plates on a truck in a lot of ways makes things easier, parking is easier and people get the hell out of the way. My advice is to get someone else to bring the gear (and NY studios tend to have most of what you need) and take the train. A lot less headache.
Still, I sort of miss driving in the city. The 5AM trip out of the city was fun, too. We'd hit up some all night joint on the way out and have the streets to ourselves as the sun came up.
Driving in Colorado in some ways is much worse. People out here drive like they ski: unpredictably. Usually someone in the left lane is driving 15 mph below the speed limit, oblivious to everyone else. Then you've got the hotdoggers weaving their way through everyone else. And then there are the maniacs like the guy this week who was three sheets to the wind, driving his SUV down Colfax, first smashing into a police car (injuring the prisoner in the back seat) and then going on a 10 block rampage, minus a wheel, smashing into cars until he ended up on top of another vehicle putting them and him into the hospital. Lots of crazy stuff happens in NY, but the driving is very consistent.