Dead of the Day: 01-31-1970

The Warehouse

New Orleans, Louisiana

On this day back in 1970, the Dead headlined a three-band bill, just like the night before, opening up the legendary New Orleans rock and roll venue, The Warehouse. Of course, a great deal had transpired between the previous night’s show and this one. TC had parted ways with the band, leaving Pigpen as, once again, the only organist in the Dead. But probably of more historic import, the band had been “busted, down on Bourbon Street” when they returned to their hotel after the gig the night before. Today’s show had its own bit of surprises for the band, when a broken amp – they had been getting shocked by the sound system during Mama Tried – finally forced them to finish the second half of the show with an extensive acoustic set.

Recording info
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Identifier:
gd1970-01-31.sbd.cotsman.fixed.24028.sbeok.shnf
Source:
SBD>MR>C>D>CD>EAC>SHN
Notes:
Phil’s amp fails, forcing an unscheduled acoustic set to close the show with. Jerry plays electric guitar for some of the acoustic set. This is also the day that the Dead were busted by the New Orleans police before the show, prompting some appropriate stage banter. The recording was normalized with Sound Forge, which was also used to remove a few small pops. thanks to Paul Hartman edits/encoding by J. Cotsman Shntool was used to fix sector boundary errors and seek tables were appended.
Description:
Disc 1 electric set 1. Cold Rain & Snow 2. Mama Tried 3. Stage Banter 4. Dire Wolf 5. Big Boss Man 6. Morning Dew 7. Mason’s Children% 8. Me & My Uncle 9. Hard To Handle Disc 2 acoustic set 1. Stage Banter 2. Long Black Limousine 3. Seasons Of My Heart 4. Saw Mill 5. Bound In Memories 6. The Race Is On 7. Black Peter 8. Little Sadie 9. I’ve Been All Around This World 10. Katie Mae 11. Cumberland Blues
Lineage:
Transferrer:
Jeff Cotsman
Play
Pause
Back
Forw.
Volume
00:00
1
Cold Rain & Snow
06:07
2
Mama Tried
02:47
3
Stage Banter
01:50
4
Dire Wolf
04:33
5
Big Boss Man
05:08
6
Morning Dew
10:35
7
Mason’s Children%
06:23
8
Me & My Uncle
03:25
9
Hard To Handle
06:46
10
Stage Banter
00:50
11
Long Black Limousine
05:46
12
Seasons Of My Heart
05:04
13
Saw Mill
03:53
14
Bound In Memories
03:56
15
The Race Is On
03:24
16
Black Peter
07:13
17
Little Sadie
03:25
18
I’ve Been All Around This World
03:54
19
Katie Mae
07:03
20
Cumberland Blues
03:42
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The playing on the electric portion is fairly standard 1970 fare, which is to say, quite tasty. The two Pig tunes – Big Boss Man and, especially, Hard To Handle – are the standouts, but everything in there is more than worth a listen. The acoustic section, though, is where the real gems are, starting with a far too uncommon Long Black Limousine. The rest of the way, the rarities are legion, and, often, the choicest. For instance, Bobby offers up some beautifully resonant vocals on Seasons, as he does on Bound In Memories. But, really, everything here is fabulous; just listen to the pacing on The Race Is On, Pig send Katie Mae with Jerry’s sparse blues licks, or the lovely playing on Been All Around The World.

The Dead had been experimenting with acoustic numbers at least as far back as the debut of Mountains Of The Moon on December 20, 1968, at the Shrine in LA. Through the summer of ’69 the boys occasionally opened with an acoustic song or two, and, in December, they had played two full acoustic sets – a four-song set on the 19th and a chunkier, seven-tune one on the 26th. So, the acoustic set on this day was far from unprecedented. With only one acoustic guitar between them, the instrumentation is simple, even when Jerry accompanies Bobby on electric on a few of the numbers. Of course, just two weeks later, on February 13th at the Fillmore East, the Dead would come out with their first complete, fully planned acoustic set, something that would become a staple through a good deal of 1970.

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Comments

One response to “01-31-1970”

  1. Mary Wellman Avatar
    Mary Wellman

    My child’s conception date.

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