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Grateful Dead Concert

Winterland (San Francisco, CA)

Grateful Dead

04.15.1970
Tracks: 17 / Total Time: 1:35:49
Catalog: Bill Graham

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

This is the final set of a marathon show, with the Dead sharing the bill with Quicksilver and Jefferson Airplane. Legendary LSD chemist and Dead soundman (and their resident recording fanatic), Owsley “Bear” Stanley, had serious legal issues to deal with around this time, so many shows went unrecorded off the soundboard in 1970. There are large gaps in the Dead vault's 1970 inventory, which makes the shows that do exist in professionally recorded form all the
more significant. This one captures the group at a pivotal time between the heavy exploratory late ‘60s psychedelic sound and
entire summary

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  • frisbeetom | Friday, September 05, 2008 | 10:34 pm

    wow

  • Rolf | Friday, August 29, 2008 | 4:49 pm

    Living in Australia at the time and bands would not include us in the tour, to have this available now is just heaven sent, excuse the pun. Rolf, Melbourne

  • corry342 | Thursday, August 21, 2008 | 1:33 pm

    hmm...Airto and Howard Wales sitting in...I kinda like those guesses. Airto would have been in town for the Miles shows and could have stayed. The Garcia/Wales shows at the Matrix began in May of 70, since the Dead toured so much of April. Very plausible.

  • acs3005 | Thursday, August 21, 2008 | 8:51 am

    Coming off the back of a challenging four night run the previous weekend at the Fillmore W which saw Miles Davis open (!) for them, this is one loose-limbed and sinuous set which covers all the stylistic bases - pop-tinged, r&b, country, folk-influenced and psychedelic jamming. Miles' Bitches Brew crew must have opened a few technical and inspirational windows and given them the confidence that they could cut it with the very best at that time ... This selection from the set sounds extremely relaxed and the band members are clearly listening to each other. Garcia particularly is endlessly inventive. Caveats: puzzling and frustrating fades - particularly on H2H and into Lovelight. Deadbase suggests PA problems for some missing elements of the set. Suggestions: the jam out of drums (8, here) clearly features a different rhythm player, conga player and organist; no idea as to the guitarist but where were Airto Moreira and Howard Wales that night? Unlikely, but anyone got any better ideas? Sbd and subsequent editing have produced a marvellous sound - for '70 or indeed any year. Is it Lemieux? Whatever, a must have!

  • corry342 | Friday, August 15, 2008 | 1:00 pm

    I listened carefully to the esceptional "Instrumental Jam" (track 9) and there is definitely an organ, an additional guitar and probably a conga player as well. Pigpen played a little organ and a little congas during this period, but he laid out of the serious jamming, and it can't be him in that wild jam. Nonetheless those instruments would have been onstage for friends to sit in. It does beg the question of who sat in, however. The only serious keyboard player on the bill would have been Nicky Hopkins from Quicksilver. I can't recall him ever playing organ on stage, although he did on record, but perhaps he sat in on the only keyboard available? An intriguing thought, if somewhat of a stretch.

  • MrPaulCaruso | Tuesday, August 12, 2008 | 12:29 pm

    Our apologies for listing Tom - we'll fix this with our next site posting. Cheers - Mr. PC

  • Anonymous | Monday, August 11, 2008 | 6:24 pm

    Tom did leave the band at the end of January, 1970. As also noted earlier, I wish to hell they would get rid of THOSE annoying spacers between songs, especially the ones between songs that are all part of a medley. It's even worse when they're placed in the middle of one song. Yes, Wolfgang, in case you didn't know it, Thats It for The Other One, Drums, The Other One, Thats It for the Other One (reprise) are all part of the same song. Somebody needs to be taken out and shot. The show itself? Great!

  • Elsie | Monday, August 11, 2008 | 1:48 pm

    Deadbase lists China-'Rider [instead of Mama Tried\Man's World] between Cold Rain and Candyman... http://www.dharmarose.com/deadbase/dbquery110.php3?id=548; whatev, its a great listen

  • corry342 | Monday, August 11, 2008 | 12:04 pm

    Isn't this a bit late for Tom Constanten to be playing organ? Weren't his last shows in Hawaii in late January of 1970?

  • Anonymous | Sunday, August 10, 2008 | 1:42 pm

    Stellar Cumberland Blues. Garcia attacks The Other One as if he is really angry. Slashing attack with far more passion than many other shows. Agree with Kenny G, this is the period you want to be listening to for the Dead.

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