October 9, 1969 Inn Of The Beginning, Cotati, CA New Riders Of The Purple Sage
In the previous post I discussed the New Riders appearance at the tiny Inn Of The Beginning, at 8201 Old Redwood Highway in the college town of Cotati, on Thursday, September 18, 1969. That show was known from a surviving tape, and I confirmed it with a listing in Ralph Gleason's SF Chronicle column. I speculated that there were likely to be more New Riders shows at the Inn Of The Beginning, and I found one for Thursday, October 9 (the admittedly hard-to-read listing is from Gleason's Chronicle column of Wednesday, October 8).
From what I have been able to determine, during late 1969 The Inn Of The Beginning had relatively well-known club bands on Friday and Saturday nights (on the order of, say, Dan Hicks And The Hot Licks or The Bronze Hog). I have to assume they had lesser known local bands or solo performers on other nights. Thus it makes sense that Garcia and company could quietly book a Thursday night, probably with relatively little notice, because they weren't disrupting the club or changing another band's plans.
October 14-16, 1969 Mandrake's, Berkeley New Riders Of The Purple Sage
I discussed the band's 3-night stand at this little Berkeley pool hall (at 1048 University) in the previous post.
October 17, 1969 Student Union Ballroom, San Jose State College, San Jose New Riders Of The Purple Sage/The Fourth Way
In the previous post I speculated on the idea that this vague date represented a New Riders performance rather than a Grateful Dead show. This listing from Gleason's column on Friday, October 17 confirms it. I had assumed that where Gleason says "Student Union Ballroom" he is referring to the Loma Prieta Room, where the Grateful Dead would perform exactly two weeks later. However, Michael Parrish explained that the Student Union Ballroom (now called the Ron Barrett Ballroom) was a larger configuration of the room that included the Loma Prieta Room. The Student Union Ballroom had a capacity of only 728 (officially), so it means the New Riders actually played a larger venue (or a larger configuration of the venue) than the Dead would just two weeks later (Loma Prieta Room officially holds 588).
Another interesting note here is the opening act, The Fourth Way. The Fourth Way were an electric jazz rock band, originally formed to back John Handy. When Handy was unable to work with them, the band chose to continue on their own. The group were regulars at The New Orleans House in Berkeley, and ultimately released three albums on Capitol. The band consisted of New Zealander (via Boston) Mike Nock on electric piano, Ron McClure on bass, Eddie Marshall on drums and Micheal White on electric violin. In another post I had posited that White had joined the Dead for a few numbers at the Family Dog on August 3, 1969. The Fourth Way's presence at this San Jose show a few months later proves exactly nothing, but its the kind of tenuous link I find intriguing nonetheless.
October 22, 1969 Family Dog on the Great Highway, San Francisco "Ecological Ball" with Lazarus/Garden Of Delights/Heavy Water/New Riders Of The Purple Sage and films
This show had been known from an obscure flyer, but this listing in the Wednesday, October 22 Chronicle sheds slightly more light on the event. Only the Riders and Lazarus were rock bands, as Garden Of Delights and Heavy Water were light shows. The evening sounds like what today would be called a "multi-media" event. The Riders probably played one set.
Lazarus was a popular Berkeley band, although they were not well known outside of the East Bay.
The Loma Prieta Room is a subdivision of the Ron Barrett Ballroom, which used to be just called the Student Union Ballroom. When opened up to full capacity, the ballroom has a capacity of 728 - tiny for a Dead show, but plenty big for a 1969 NRPS/4th Way gig.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. This means that "Student Union Ballroom' is really the correct venue. Even more interesting, the Dead played the smaller configuration (the Loma Prieta Room) two weeks later.
ReplyDeleteI have to think that the Halloween show was pre-scheduled, albeit without a band, and the Dead were then hired as the featured act. There must have been College money paying part of the fee, or else the economics make no sense.
I am convinced there were a lot more shows like this than we realize, where the Dead played a High School, Junior College or College gym for the students, with little or no publicity outside of the school.
If SJSU has a university archive, it may be possible to learn more. The university that I know best has archives from the Campus Activities Board that includes some things of interest to LLD-types.
ReplyDeleteAccording to crack researchers, the San Jose State Student Union Ballroom only opened on October 13, 1969, so the NRPS show on October 17 may have been the first big event. Apparently, in the early days the terms "Loma Prieta Ballroom" and "Student Union Ballroom" were used interchangeably, and represented the same configuration.
ReplyDeleteThe Spartan Daily has been digitized and has a nice search interface. No show review for 10/17, alas, but the materials bill "Riders of the Purple Sage" in the ballroom, 3rd floor of the new College Union on 9th Street. So, what is our verdict in terms of correct name and capacity for this space as the Riders played it on 10/17/69?
ReplyDeleteA former Administrator of San Jose State told me that all these venues were the same place--the Student Union Ballroom, the Loma Prieta Room, the Ron Barrett Ballroom, and so on. In some cases they may have used a different configuration, but there was only one venue.
DeleteThe room has since been remodeled and apparently bears little resemblance.