Identifying and illuminating live Grateful Dead shows (and shows by band members) that are unknown or poorly documented.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
August 1, 1969 Bear's Lair, UC Berkeley: Jerry Garcia backing Marmaduke
This concert at the Bear's Lair Coffee House on the UC Berkeley Campus (at Bancroft and Telegraph, in the basement of the ASUC building) was apparently the first 'true' concert of the New Riders of The Purple Sage. John "Marmaduke" Dawson, Jerry Garcia and David Nelson had played a Hofbrau in Menlo Park in May, and had done a few songs at various concerts around town. They attempted to perform two weeks earlier at a Grateful Dead appearance at a Hells Angels Party at Longshoreman's Hall, but equipment problems scuttled that performance.
The story goes that Garcia was asked the name of the band for this gig and replied, "The Murdering Punks!" True or not, it was after this that Robert Hunter was assigned to come up with a name for the band. The first actual appearance of the name "New Riders Of The Purple Sage" appears later in the month, at a concert at The Family Dog (unless you are confident that the Seattle poster with their name on it is original).
In a 2009 interview with Blair Jackson, David Nelson suggests that Grateful Dead Bob Matthews played bass with the New Riders for these gigs. If that is the case, then these would probably be his only performances with the band. Both Robert Hunter and Bob Matthews rehearsed with the New Riders, but Hunter never actually performed with them, and Hunter implied that Matthews did not either. In any case--besides the fact that an under-rehearsed Phil Lesh is better than most anyone else, anyway--Bob Matthews was the Grateful Dead's soundman, and could hardly have left his post to go play with the Riders, so any gigs had to be very intermittent.
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Corry, do you think the NRPS (whatever they might have been called) played at the 7/16 Hells Angels thing? Your quote from Blair in the original post implies that they did (if poorly), while here you say that equipment problems prevented them from playing. Thoughts?
ReplyDeleteAlso, reading that Nelson interview, it doesn't sound like Hunter was assigned the task of finding a name, as much as he just came up with one.
I think the New Riders played the 7/16/69 Hells Angels gig to the extent they came on stage and played some songs. Since my only knowledge of the gig was a comment (via Blair's website) that the gig was "shambolic" or words to that effect, I assume they played a few numbers, waited for a fix to some problems, and eventually gave up, or something like that. I've got to assume that with a bunch of rowdy Hells Angels, at a certain point the Dead needed to come onstage and let it rip. I have always assumed that the Bears Lair was the first "real" gig in the sense it didn't get interrupted.
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ReplyDeleteI think Bear's family is about to release a recording of this, they shared a snippet of a tune from this date.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness, that would be incredible.
ReplyDeleteTiger By The Tail
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Ironically, for all the "who was the New Riders bassist in 1969?" discussion, there doesn't seem to be anyone on bass in this performance - at least not that I heard in the preview clips.
ReplyDeleteI feel a 3000 word post coming on...
DeleteWith tapes from this night, the Family Dog in Aug '69, and Mandrake's in Oct '69, the upcoming box set ought to add a lot of knowledge about what early NRPS shows were like! And maybe some mysteries will be cleared up...like the pesky bass-player issues!
ReplyDeleteUntil the recent preview clip, I'd never heard Bob Weir sing Cathy's Clown with the Riders...
I'm still amazed that 8/1/69 Bear's Lair got recorded. With the Dead setting up in one venue, and Jerry playing an acoustic show in another city, Bear decided to drop the Dead and go tape Jerry? Wow.
Maybe Bear knew about the picket line that Jerry wouldn’t cross
DeleteAs they said with the first tease
ReplyDeleteThis one is going to shed light on some historical questions...
We actually have rehearsal tapes from three of the artists’ respective houses...
To pick up this thread - having spent many hours yesterday with all of this, I am more convinced than ever that Jerry had plenty of advance notice, probably as early as 7/26 and maybe before, to make himself scarce from the Dog on 8/1 by playing Berkeley. Corry's analysis, of Garcia finding a way to get what he wants without explicitly engaging in any conflict, is pretty powerful.
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