Showing posts with label 1971. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1971. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2024

Grateful Dead in New England 1970-72 (New England I)

 

The Boston Garden, home to the Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins, was also the premier popular music venue in the city. In the early 1970s, the Grateful Dead were still a long way from the Garden.

In the 1990s, when the Grateful Dead could choose their venues at will, they would play the Boston Garden for several nights in a row. The Dead were just as much of an event in Boston as they were in New York, New Jersey or Philadelphia. Indeed, the only thing that kept them from playing Boston more often was the NBA season, since the Boston Celtics had dibs on the Garden once they tipped off (and the NHL Boston Bruins did also). Even so, the Dead also played some very high profile outdoor shows in Foxboro (in 1990) and in Vermont (at Highgate in 1994 and '95), drawing fans from all over the region. Greater New England was prime Deadhead territory by '94.

But it wasn't always that way, not at all. In the Northeast, the first Grateful Dead stronghold was Manhattan, ably supported by Brooklynites. Deadhead territory rapidly expanded to include Central and Upstate New York as well as New Jersey. Careful cultivation of Pennsylvania colleges made the Dead a guaranteed attraction in Philadelphia, too. Yet during the early 70s, the Grateful Dead just barely played New England, only a few random shows here and there. The Grateful Dead didn't make real gains in New England until the mid-1970s, a late start compared to New York State, Jersey or Philly.

It's easy to say that it was inevitable that the Grateful Dead would be huge in New England in the 1990s, because they were huge anywhere they played. It's important to remember, however, that by the 90s, the Grateful Dead traveling circus went where it had been before. The cities and promoters that liked Deadheads got them back, and where it hadn't worked out, the Dead no longer appeared. The Grateful Dead had made determined efforts to make a splash in Texas and the Southwest, for example, starting around 1970. Yet by 1988 there were greener pastures elsewhere, and the Dead never played there again. Now, Texas is a huge state, with a boom economy, and Texans love music, so it should have been a perfect fit--but it wasn't. So New England's comfort with the Grateful Dead was not guaranteed.

This post will look back at the Grateful Dead's initial forays into New England, focusing on the period from 1970 to 1972. It may surprise you to find out how little they played, and how few opportunities there were for aspiring Deadheads to actually see the band live anywhere near them without traveling. 

The Grateful Dead played The Boston Tea Party, formerly The Ark, at 15 Landsdowne St, on October 2-3-4, 1969 (Doc Watson replaced the Bonzo Dog Band on the bill)

Backdrop: The Grateful Dead in Boston, 1967-69

Boston, MA was a crucial city for popular music in the 1960s, going all the way back to the Great Folk Scare at the beginning of the decade. Cambridge, part of the Boston Metro area (where Harvard and MIT were located) was an essential part of the folk scene, along with Greenwich Village. Of course, all the colleges ensured that there was a huge market for music. When the British Invasion came, it hit New England hard (just like the time before), and rock was huge in Boston and the surrounding areas.

As far as the psychedelic sixties went, Boston was a magnet. The Boston Tea Party was one of the legendary 60s ballrooms, particularly for touring English bands (I have attempted to capture the Boston psychedelic story elsewhere). There were many unique things about the latter sixties in Boston, and one of them was how little the Grateful Dead had to do with it. In many cities, the Dead had been one of the first touring bands to show up, playing free in the park, carrying on, and bringing the spirit of San Francisco to unconquered territory. Boston, however,  had already gotten a taste of LSD (Tim Leary had been at Harvard in '62), had a booming folk/blues/rock market and plenty of action. There was never any animosity in Boston towards the Dead, but they were just another band from out of town without a hit record.

The Grateful Dead had played an obscure Boston venue called the Psychedelic Supermarket in December of 1967, while also finding time for an unfortunate gig at Clark University in Worcester, MA, an hour West. The band would not return until April 1969, playing yet another obscure venue, The Ark (April 21-23, 1969), while also returning to Clark (April 20). The Tea Party would then move to the larger Ark in July, and the Dead would play two more weekends there. One was New Year's Eve weekend, 1969 (with SNL's Jane Curtin opening the show!), but for all the good live music they had played, the Dead had little impact on the Boston scene. Save for Worcester, the Grateful Dead never even played elsewhere in New England in the 60s.

In retrospect, the significance of the two 1969 weekends at the Tea Party (October 2-4 and December 29-31) was the venue's manager, Don Law Jr. The post-Touch Of Grey Dead could tour anywhere and sell out, since their fans would travel. So the places they played largely depended on local promoters that they were comfortable with, which were almost always the ones they had worked with since back in the day. Don Law Jr was the dominant promoter in Boston and New England in the 80s and 90s, so it's no surprise that the Dead played for him, since they went back to 1969 together. The strange part was that the Grateful Dead did not work for Don Law again until 1974--and Jerry Garcia played some shows for him in 1975--and the New England connection drifted. So the Grateful Dead's relationship with New England could have gone the way of Texas, unlikely as it may seem. 

This post will begin a review of the long, circuitous path that the Grateful Dead took through Boston and New England in the 1970s, with a close look at 1970 through 1972.

The Grateful Dead at Foss Hill, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT May 3 '70

May 3, 1970 Foss Hill, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Wednesday)
For their May, 1970 tour, the Grateful Dead had introduced a new concept, "An Evening With The Grateful Dead." At the time, most rock concerts had multiple acts. Sam Cutler's concept was that the Dead provided the entire evening's entertainment, thus capturing the fees for the opening acts as well as being the headliner. For this initial tour, many of the shows were booked at East Coast colleges, a few of which were in New England. In those days, colleges had entertainment budgets, particularly those colleges far from big cities, so ticket sales did not have to cover the entire cost. Also, unlike promoters, colleges did not suddenly go out of business, so they were reliable bookings. The Dead opened their May tour in New York at SUNY Alfred (May 1) and SUNY Binghamton (May 2), and then played Wesleyan University on May 3.

Wesleyan University had been founded in Middletown, CT, in 1831. Middletown is--appropriately--midway between New York City and Boston. Founded in 1784, it was initially a thriving river port. In 1970, the population of Middletown was 36,924. Wesleyan probably had a student body of about 3,000. There are numerous distinguished alumni, including John Perry Barlow. Ironically, however, Barlow had already graduated (just barely, apparently) in 1969. 

Intriguingly, the show did not take place at the Gym, as you might expect, but was a free outdoor concert on campus at a place called Foss Hill. Sam Cutler understood that while the Grateful Dead were underground legends, few students had actually heard them. There's every reason to think, incidentally, that the Grateful Dead were actually paid for this free concert, because otherwise they wouldn't have played Wesleyan. Since campus concerts weren't designed to make money, per se, Cutler could talk the school into paying for a free concert. Free concerts were a strategy for the Dead in New England, as we will see.


May 6, 1970 Kresge Plaza, MIT, Cambridge, MA: Grateful Dead (Wednesday)
The Grateful Dead's definitive appearance in New England was their free concert at Kresge Plaza at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. The Dead played at an afternoon rally protesting the National Guard killing of 4 students at an antiwar protest at Kent State University in Ohio just two days earlier. There's a couple of ways to look at the Dead's appearance, both of them largely true, if contradictory.

The Dead considered themselves "not political," but the Kent State killings were seen as trans-political, an issue of what we would now call "Social Justice." Of course, the Dead were always willing to play for free, and saw it as good business, but I have no doubt that the individual band members were as appalled as other Americans that the Ohio Guard had fired on protesting college students.  Playing a free concert at a protest rally at an elite University in Boston assured that the Dead were always seen as being "on the right side of history." In the ensuing years, the Dead's ongoing credibility stemmed from events like the MIT rally. 

Of course, the Grateful Dead also pioneered the strategy of rolling into a town and playing a high profile free concert. Their infamy ensured a lot of attention, and numerous future Deadheads would get "On The Bus" right on the spot. Usually, they held free concerts where they were playing a paying gig that same weekend. They did this over and over, in Vancouver, Greenwich Village, Denver, Miami and numerous other cities. It was a strategy, not an accident.

As it happened, the band had a paying show at MIT's DuPont Gym the next night (May 7), so you can just as well see it as the Dead drumming up business. Whether you see the concert as calculating or sincere, however, keep in mind that plenty of other bands were on tour that week, and there were protests at Universities all over the country. How many bands with record contracts played those protest rallies? Few, if any. The Grateful Dead did play a Kent State protest, for free, and their underground status continued to set them apart from their peers.


May 7, 1970 Dupont Gym, MIT, Cambridge, MA: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Thursday)
The Boston concert market was unique in the late '60s in that the best paying shows were at local colleges. Since the biggest schools (Harvard, MIT and Boston University) were right in downtown Boston or Cambridge (just across the St. Charles River), those concerts could draw students and civilians. Yet the universities would directly or indirectly support the concerts, so any bookings were both well-paid and guaranteed. Dupont Gym, at 120 Massachusetts Avenue, had originally been built as the State Armory, but was acquired by MIT in 1959 and adapted for use as a gym.

Remember that in May of 1970, the Dead were just sort of underground legends. Live/Dead was probably getting a little late night airplay on WBCN-fm, Boston's top rock station, but Workingman's Dead had not been released yet, so "regular" rock fans had mostly never heard the Dead. Yet in the post Kent State turmoil, after the Dead had played the plaza for free, seeing them in concert would have gone from "fun" to "righteous," probably guaranteeing a good turnout. "Cryptical Envelopment> Drums> The Other One> Cryptical Envelopment> Cosmic Charlie" probably took care of the rest of it.

May 9, 1970 [outdoor venue], Boston, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Saturday)
Very recent sleuthing by fellow scholar Jesse Jarnow uncovered a little-remembered free concert by the New Riders of The Purple Sage somewhere in downtown Boston on Saturday afternoon. At this time, the New Riders were completely unknown, with no recordings, nothing to play on FM radio, and not even a promotional photo. The New Riders played three free outdoor concerts by themselves at this tour (in Central Park, Boston and St. Louis). Since the event was so obscure, it can't have had a big effect on the Dead's popularity, but it does show the outline of Cutler's plan to play free shows in new territory.

May 9, 1970 Harrington Auditorium, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, MA: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Saturday)
Worcester, MA is about an hour West of Boston, and the Grateful Dead had played at Clark University there in 1967 and '69. The band returned to Worcester in 1970, but this time at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. The band played Harrington Auditorium (at 100 Institute Road), built in 1968 and home to the school's basketball teams. The venue held about 3,000. The connection between the Dead and Worcester probably mainly had to do with a booking agency relationship, rather than some specific thing about the town itself. It is a strange fact, however, how up through Spring '70, Worcester was the only town other than Boston that the Dead had played in Massachusetts. 

May 17, 1970 Alumni Field, Fairfield University, Fairfield, CT: Grateful Dead/Butterfield Blues Band/Chicago/local bands (Sunday) canceled
The Grateful Dead were booked to headline a concert at Fairfield University in Connecticut, just across Long Island Sound, near Bridgeport. The show was in the football stadium, Alumni Field, but it only has a capacity of 4000 (Fairfield was not a football school). Also booked were the Butterfield Blues Band,  Chicago Transit Authority and some local bands. A few days before the concert, however, the show was canceled. The likely reason was poor ticket sales. This would have been one of those shows that would have been remembered fondly by both Fairfield students and local townies, but it didn't happen.

July 13, 1970 Harvard Stadium, Harvard University, Allston, MA: Grateful Dead/John Hammond (Monday) part of Schaefer Beer Festival-canceled
Schaefer Beer sponsored Summer-long series of rock concerts in Central Park in Manhattan in the late 60s, and they are fondly remembered. They all required paid admission, but tickets were usually discounted. Every touring band played them, and Central Park was easy to get to for anyone in the region. In 1970, Schaefer Beer sponsored a similar series of concerts at Harvard Stadium. The Grateful Dead were booked, but did not play the show. I don't know if it was only the Dead who canceled, or other shows were canceled as well. I know that the final concert in the series was held, as it was Janis Joplin's final live performance (on August 12). 

Harvard Stadium, at 95 N. Harvard St in the Allston neighborhood, had a capacity of around 30,000 at the time. So it was a big stadium, but not gigantic. Workingman's Dead had just been released in June of 1970, and playing Harvard Stadium could have drawn a huge crowd to hear the Grateful Dead in their prime. In any case, similar to Fairfield, it would have been fondly remembered, but it didn't happen. The Grateful Dead had tried to hit New England in the Summer of 1970, but they didn't actually succeed.

Boston University ca 1970 and ca 2017

November 21, 1970 Sargent Gym, Boston University, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage/
chimpanzee act (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead would never actually appear in New England when Workingman's Dead was their current album. By the time they played another concert in Boston, American Beauty had already come out. The Dead were playing colleges and junior colleges in Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey, yet New England was left bare. FM rock radio stations were popping up everywhere, playing "Casey Jones" and "Uncle John's Band," so the Dead were happening in every college dorm. Yet in the biggest college town in the country, and the whole surrounding region, the Dead weren't being booked.

The Dead were finally booked in November at Boston University, right across the Charles River from Harvard and MIT, and not too far from the Boston Tea Party. The band would have been booked around September, but by the time the show came around, American Beauty had been out for three weeks, so the Dead would have been bigger than ever amongst college students.

Boston University was a private research institution, founded in 1839. In 1920, the school had purchased 15 acres along the Charles River. After World War 2, BU expanded dramatically. In 1951, Harold C. Case became the school's fifth president and under his direction the character of the campus changed significantly, as he sought to change the school into a national research university. The campus tripled in size to 45 acres, and added 68 new buildings before Case retired in 1967. 

Boston University campus buildings ran along the Charles from Commonwealth Avenue and Kenmore Square all the way to the Allston district. While BU surely had fewer than the 34,000 students that it does today, it was still a large school. It was also right across the river from Harvard and MIT, so its section of Boston was a nexus for live music, theater and the arts that were appealing to college students. BU was not a basketball school, and did not have a huge sports tradition--save for Ice Hockey, a unique Boston thing--so Sargent had a capacity typical of such facilities, just around 1800 in concert configuration. (BU's current gym was built in 1972, so I assume Sargent has been torn down).

The indispensable Deadsources blog gives us some insight into the unique circumstances of a large school booking a concert in downtown Boston, so different than other cities. From the Boston Record-American the week before the show (November 13, 1970):

Boston University's student union isn't having any problem presenting rock artists. On Nov. 22, the union's Social Council will have the The Grateful Dead performing in Sargent gym for a sell-out audience of 2000. And since the Dead won't agree to appear for less than five hours - and sometimes go for as long as 10 - the council has made the performance an affair for BU students only, so that the city's closing-hour ordinance won't apply.

The Grateful Dead were popular now. This led to some unexpected consequences, most significantly a substantial number of counterfeit tickets. You can't help but think that such an organized crime had some connection, to, well, organized crime. There were thousands of college students on Commonwealth Avenue on any Saturday night, so pickings were ripe. The Record-American, November 22:

Campus police said trouble erupted when thousands of rock lovers couldn't get into the auditorium because someone had sold counterfeit tickets.
With so many tickets - real and bogus - sold, the gymnasium was filled to capacity with the overflow crowd backing up into Commonwealth Ave. 

Yet the ruckus probably added to the Grateful Dead mystique, even if the net result was that the band hardly played the region at all. Writer Charles Guiliano, from the Boston Herald (November 29):

The Grateful Dead are not just a rock band. They represent a gestalt of everything that is at once insane yet creative about the youth cultural explosion that broke out like a rash in San Francisco's Height Ashbury in the rockin' mid-sixties.
Grateful Dead fans will not be denied. Even the knowledge that the concert at BU last week was sold out within three hours failed to discourage the hopes of non-ticket holders.
Every ploy was used to gain entry. Pushing and shoving, gate crashing, counterfeit tickets, tall tales, and phony press credentials were all part of the game for harried BU marshals and their security allies.

Ned Lagin playing electric piano with the Grateful Dead at Boston U on November 21, 1970 (photo: Jeff Albertson via Nedbase)

As to the Grateful Dead show itself, Sargent Gym was the first time that band friend Ned Lagin sat in for an entire concert. Lagin had played on some songs during the band's Port Chester run earlier in the month, but at Boston, he played the entire show. Lagin had gone to MIT, and had met the band when they played the school back in May. During the Summer, Lagin had flown out West to jam and hang out with the band. For this concert, Lagin played a borrowed Wurlitzer electric piano (for further details, check out the exceptional Nedbase blog). 

Vaudeville-type chimpanzee act opening for the Grateful Dead, Sargent's Gym, Boston U, November 21, 1970 (photo: Jeff Albertson) You'd think this would be the last time chimps opened for the Dead (but you'd be wrong)

One of the opening acts for the show was, as you would expect, the New Riders of The Purple Sage. Disconcertingly, however, the first performers were a chimpanzee act. Much as I dislike trained animal acts in any case, the unfortunate primates were treated to rowdy Dead fans hurling firecrackers at the stage. It did not go well.

November 21, 1970 WBCN-fm, Boston, MA: Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Duane Allman (Saturday night/Sunday morning)
While the Grateful Dead were playing at Sargent Gym, the Allman Brothers were finishing up a weekend at the Boston Tea Party. The bands had met in Atlanta in 1969, and Duane Allman had already jammed with the Dead at Fillmore East, back in February of 1970. After the shows were over, Duane, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Pigpen dropped by the dj booth at WBCN, Boston's leading rock radio station. The dj invited them to play some songs, which sounded like a great idea. There was only one problem: there were only two guitars. So Garcia and Weir played five songs as a duo, and then Duane Allman took over Jerry's guitar for two more with Weir. Pigpen neither spoke nor played. There was some banter with the dj, too, but all-in-all it was some tired musicians idly picking late at night. Historic, yes, but not actually memorable.

March 5-6, 1971 New Haven Arena, New Haven, CT: Grateful Dead (Friday-Saturday) canceled
Members of the Yale Class of 1971 attempted to book the Grateful Dead for their Prom. The first night would have been a public concert, and in theory the profits would allow the second night (Saturday March 6) to have tickets for Prom-goers only for $2. It's not clear whether it was the band that backed out or if the University got cold feet, but the Class of '71 tried as hard as they could to make it happen. In the end, the Grateful Dead would not tour the East until the next month (April). In any case, the failed effort shows that there was plenty of interest in seeing the Grateful Dead in New England, even if the Dead almost never played there.

Incidentally, campus events like the Yale Prom were common bookings from rock bands in the '60s and early '70s. The Grateful Dead had played the Temple University Homecoming concert in 1968 (held at an auditorium at U Penn). The most legendary of such events, of course, was the May 17, 1969 Ohio University Junior Prom, featuring Jose Feliciano, with Led Zeppelin as the opening act. So the Grateful Dead at the 1971 Yale Prom is not as far-fetched as it might sound today.

April 7-8, 1971 Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday-Thursday)
In the Spring of 1971, the Grateful Dead made their mark in the Northeast. Sam Cutler had rationalized the band's touring schedule. The Dead made short hops between cities, so the equipment truck had easy transit (the band members mostly flew). Thus the band was rested and the rig was well set up, so the Dead played great every night. The shows were booked through agent Ron Rainey of the International Famous Agency (IFA), but Cutler worked closely with Rainey to ensure that the Dead's schedule could be profitable. The Dead played colleges and small auditoriums throughout the Northeast, and made Deadheads for life, in Pennsylvania, in Princeton, in Manhattan and in New York State. This time out, the band even made some forays to New England.

The Boston Music Hall, at 268 Tremont Street, had been built in 1925 as the Metropolitan Theater. It had been renamed the Boston Music Hall in 1962. Boston Music Hall had a capacity (at the time) of 4225, large for the era (now, as The Wang Theater, the capacity is around 3500). Performers included the Ballet and Symphony as well as music acts. In the 60s, rock bands had played a place called The Back Bay Theater, but it had been torn down in 1968. After that, big rock acts played Boston Music Hall. The theater was not the province of a single promoter, however, and was just a hall for rent. The Grateful Dead would go on to play the Music Hall numerous times in the 1970s.

This April, 1971 foray into the hall was promoted by New York impresario Howard Stein. The Dead had played for Stein at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, and on this tour they had played for Stein a few days earlier at Manhattan Center (April 4-6). This week was oddly booked--the Dead played Boston on Wednesday and Thursday, had no gig on Friday, a Pennsylvania College on Saturday (April 11 at Franklin and Marshall) and then Pittsburgh Civic Center on Monday (April 12). It's important to remember, however, that Good Friday was April 11. Thus many of the college students in Boston would have been out of town or in transit, with many colleges closed.

April 21, 1971 Rhode Island Auditorium, Providence, RI: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday)
Ron Rainey booked two more Grateful Dead shows in New England, somewhat unnoticed at the time, but they were the initial forays into the territory. The Dead had numerous shows in April all around the Northeast, in Pennsylvania, New York and Princeton, plus a stadium show in Durham, North Carolina. Sam Cutler understood touring economics, and filled in some weeknights with gigs, since empty nights on the road still cost money for lodging.

Music Productions of Boston, whoever they were, promoted the Wednesday show in Providence and the next night in Maine. The Rhode Island Auditorium was at 1111 North Main St. The 5,300-capacity arena had opened in 1926 (it was torn down in 1989). It was the home of the Rhode Island Reds minor league hockey team from 1926 until 1972, until the team moved to the newly-opened Providence Civic Center. The Grateful Dead would also move on to the much larger Providence Civic Center (now the Dunkin' Donuts Center) as well.


April 22, 1971 Bangor Auditorium, Bangor, ME: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Thursday)
Music Productions of Boston also produced the Thursday night show in Bangor, ME. It was produced "In Association With Phonic Productions." This suggests that a Boston outfit financed the show, and the more local Phonic Productions probably handled the local publicity and in-house services. Bangor is the last significant city on Interstate 95, which traverses the East coast all the way up from Florida. Bangor is two hours north of Portland, ME, which in turn is two hours north of Boston. Beyond Bangor there is very little, save the small town of Orono a few miles north, the home of the University of Maine.  Historically, Bangor was a center of logging, and the logs were turned to lumber that helped build Boston, New York and the whole East Coast. Bangor is at the confluence of some rivers, so the lumber went by boat, and Bangor was thus populated by loggers and sailors for a few hundred years. Bangor has had a population of about 30,000 since the 1960s.

It's two hours North from Bangor to the Canadian border on I-95, but if you take the parallel Route 9 instead, you can cross at St. Stephen, New Brunswick

The University of Maine was founded in 1862, in the town of Orono (pop. 8500), at a time when Bangor was the leading commercial city. The University of Maine is a well-regarded school, but it will come as no surprise that the biggest sport at the University is ice hockey, as the Maine Black Bears are a perpetual NCAA hockey power. In many ways Bangor appears to function as the "city" for the University, although the 10,000+ student body is bigger than Orono, and when the two are combined, they are not far smaller than Bangor itself.

The Bangor Municipal Auditorium was a 5948-capacity auditorium built in 1955 (and torn down in 2013). On Thursday, April 22, 1971, the Grateful Dead and the New Riders of The Purple Sage played a four hour show on a Thursday, in between bookings in Providence and Durham, NC.   I wrote about this show at some length in another post. The Dead's performance in Bangor was very much an outlier, both literally and figuratively. Boston was a major American city, and places like Providence were part of the heavily populated part of New England.

Bangor, however, was far from anywhere, and the Dead would never play that far North (in the States) again. The Grateful Dead did not play upper New England again until 1978, and they did not play Maine again until 1979. When they returned to Maine, they played in Portland. In the late 19th century, the city of Portland, two hours warmer, with a correspondingly less icy port, became the nexus of several New England railroads and grew in importance. Portland, with a population of 60,000 or so, surpassed Bangor 100 years ago, and remains the commercial center of Maine.

July 31, 1971 Yale Bowl, New Haven, CT: Grateful Dead (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead were booked at the huge, 70,000-capacity Yale Bowl. I don't know if the booking had anything to do with the scuttled Yale Prom back in March, but it does mean that Sam Cutler and Ron Rainey would have had some contact with the University. Based on the poster, the show was sponsored by a local bank. According to what I can piece together, there were supposed to be a number of shows at Yale Bowl this Summer. The Dead show was the second of four scheduled shows (Grand Funk Railroad would play Yale Bowl July 24).

According to various commenters on the Archive, numerous fans showed up, including many from Long Island, a sign that Dead fans were starting to travel. The stadium wasn't full, but there was a good crowd. I suspect that many fans knew about the legends of the Dead playing for free, and expected not to pay. On the archive, Commenter rollandfin laments

Historical note, this show featured a mad clash between police and would-be concert goers who stormed the fence and broke them down. You don't see any more shows at Yale Bowl after July 31, 1971, the Dead or anyone else. 

Comments like this are echoed by others. Whatever exactly happened, things got out of hand. In the early 70s, a lot of city parks or college facilities--such as an amphitheater or quad--got overwhelmed by rock fans. Not only were rock bands more popular than ever, but many young fans felt "concerts should be free." This phenomenon was not at all exclusive to the Grateful Dead, but the nature of the Dead's pirate-ship reputation made them susceptible to these assumptions. 

Universities were particularly unsympathetic to large, out-of-control rock concert events. Schools recognized that they had liability, with deep pockets that made them ripe for lawsuits, yet no real use for the revenue created by rock concerts. It was a lot easier to refuse to schedule shows on campus than take any risks that had no tangible rewards. University facilities and city parks became more and more unavailable to the Grateful Dead in the early 70s.  In that respect, the Yale Bowl show was part of a trend, not particularly related to New England itself.


A recent book, The Economic History Of The Grateful Dead, by scholar David Davis, sheds significant light on the Yale show. Davis added immeasurably to Grateful Dead history by reviewing every surviving concert contract for the band, and his analysis greatly expands our understanding of the group's successes and challenges. In the case of the Yale show, the Grateful Dead sold 13,000 tickets and received a fee of $37,800. This was the band's biggest payday so far in their concert history. Tickets averaged $6, so the gate was apparently over $75,000. Yet the evidence noted above suggests that far more than 13,000 showed up, even if not all of them got into the show. 

The August 3, 1971 Hartford Courant explained why the Who and Chicago concerts at the Yale Bowl were canceled after the "melee" at the July 31, 1971 Grateful Dead concert

 The August 3, 1971 Hartford Courant explained:

Last Concerts Canceled After Yale Bowl Melee (NEW HAVEN [AP])
The two remaining "Pops Concerts" at The Yale Bowl were canceled Monday, the result of a fracas during the Saturday night concert of "The Grateful Dead" rock group. 
Police said 89 persons were arrested as a group estimated at 1,000 people tried to storm the gate.

Another article the day before (August 2) suggested that there were at least 2000 "gatecrashers" at the Dead show. It also alluded to problems at the Yale Bowl concert the week before (Grand Funk Railroad had played July 24). Apparently there were a smaller number of gatecrashers, but they had managed to enter the show, due to a lack of security guards. Yale was more prepared this time, but not for the volume of enthusiastic Deadheads.

The Yale shows were successful, and a nice profit could have been made. But Yale was wealthy, and didn't really need the money. Riots were unattractive, and Yale, with its deep pockets, was an inviting target for a lawsuit, so they simply canceled upcoming rock shows. The Grateful Dead were plenty popular in New England, but as it happened, they were too popular. The band would not return to Yale.

December 1-2, 1971 Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead (Wednesday-Thursday)
The Grateful Dead played another mid-week pair at the Boston Music Hall, as a warmup to shows at the Felt Forum (December 4-7) and then St. Louis (December 9-10). At this writing, it remains unclear who promoted this show. Numerous promoters rented the Boston Music Hall, and the Dead had not settled on any exclusive New England promoter. Clearly the band had a following in Boston--hardly surprising--but they were not in a position yet to fully exploit it. The Harvard Crimson published a detailed review by writer Jim Krauss, so the event had some impact, but the Dead still treated Boston and New England as an afterthought.


January 26, 1972 Symphony Hall, Boston, MA: Howard Wales and Jerry Garcia Performing "Hooteroll?"/Mahavishnu Orchestra with John McLaughlin (Wednesday)
Oddly enough, Jerry Garcia's first tour outside of the confines of the Grateful Dead/New Riders axis was with Howard Wales. Douglas Records had released Wales' and Garcia's album Hooteroll? in late 1971, and Columbia (the parent of Douglas) promoted a brief tour in support. Also on the tour was another Columbia act with connections to Douglas Records, namely John McLaughlin and The Mahavishnu Orchestra. They had recently released their debut album Inner Mounting Flame on Columbia (McLaughlin had recorded a solo album earlier on Douglas, Devotion, released back in 1970). 

The Wales/Garcia tour was six January, 1972 dates in the Northeast. Garcia sat in with Wales' regular band, which featured Jim Vincent on guitar, Roger "Jellroll" Troy on bass and some vocals, and Jerry Love on drums. There was the occasional blues, sung by Troy, and some way out jamming. There wasn't much that was rehearsed, but Wales and Garcia weren't about rehearsal anyway. After shows in Manhattan, Syracuse and suburban Philadelphia, the pair played Boston. Symphony Hall was at 301 Massachusetts Avenue, and had opened in 1900. It was the home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and seated 2625 people. Remarkably, the Wales/Garcia gig was broadcast on WBCN, which means that Columbia paid up for the air time. It's an irony that Garcia's presence attracted attention to Mahavishnu Orchestra, a remarkable band (who actually rehearsed) whose moment in the sun was just arriving. Per the ad, the show was presented by one Robert "Skip" Chernov.

There is an interesting subplot to the Boston Symphony Hall show. According to a David Gans interview with legendary Grateful Dead engineer Bob Matthews (on July 29, 1992), Garcia had a surprise backstage guest at this show: no less than ex- (but forever) Beatle George Harrison. Matthews had gone on tour with Stoneground in 1970, instead of the Grateful Dead, because Alembic Sound had been committed to Tom Donahue's Medicine Ball Caravan movie. At the end of the tour, Matthews had ended up recording Stoneground in a London studio. George Harrison had been working upstairs, and they had met, and Matthews had sent him all the Dead albums, including Live/Dead. According to Matthews, he had encouraged George to include the "Apple Jam" lp on All Things Must Pass.

Per the interview, George came backstage at Symphony Hall in Boston, and told Garcia that he was visiting because he knew Bob Matthews, which Matthews said was the best thing he had ever heard in his life. It's pretty remarkable to think about Jerry Garcia coming on right after John McLaughlin, and even more startling to think that George Harrison was just offstage, taking it all in.

January 28, 1972 Palace Theater, Providence, RI: Jerry Garcia and Howard Wales/Mahavishnu Orchestra (Friday)
The next date on the brief Hooteroll? tour was at Loew's Theater in Providence. Loew's Theater had been built in 1928 with a capacity of about 3,100. It was at 220 Wyebosset Street in downtown Providence. Shortly after this, Loew's changed its name to The Palace Theater, where it became better known as a rock venue throughout the 1970s. Today, it is known as the Providence Performing Arts Center.

Once again, Mahavishnu Orchestra opened the show. Two tracks of the Garcia set were included in a cd re-release of Hooteroll? One of them, surprisingly, was the George Jones 1962 country weeper "She Once Lived Here," sung by Garcia. While this was out of character for Wales, he in fact had played every kind of music and he sounded great, staying inside the chords (for once). 

Boston Globe Movie Listings, April 26, 1972
April 26, 1972 Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Tranquility (Wednesday)
In April of 1972, the New Riders of The Purple Sage were on tour supporting their second album, Powerglide. It was the band's first tour without Jerry Garcia on board. Sam Cutler had not yet formed Out Of Town tours, but Ron Rainey booked the New Riders, so Cutler was surely heavily involved.. On one hand, Cutler was following the playbook that had worked so well for the Grateful Dead in 1970 and '71, playing colleges and building a fan base, one show at a time. On the other hand, Cutler was also developing relationships with promoters and learning about different venues.

At this time, the Boston Music Hall was mainly a movie theater. During this week, per the Boston Globe (above), the feature was a "Blacksploitation" crime flick called Cool Breeze. It does not sound very good. In this case, the 8:00 showing was replaced by the New Riders. Tranquility (an English band on Columbia) listed this show in their Billboard ad, so presumably they opened the show.  Keep in mind, even if the New Riders did not sell out the hall--I'm sure they didn't, on a weeknight--they still got more money than they would have if they had just been doing nothing.

April 28, 1972 Meehan Auditorium, Brown U, Providence, RI: Mahavishnu Orchestra/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday) 
Sam Cutler was the Grateful Dead's road manager, and would become their booking agent in August, making the phone calls out of the band's headquarters at Fifth and Lincoln in San Rafael. Cutler would also take over booking the New Riders, in conjunction with his right-hand man, Chesley Millikin. Although Ron Rainey, by this time at Agency For The Performing Arts, was booking both the Dead and The New Riders (as well as Jefferson Airplane and The Byrds), Cutler was working to take it over. Booking shows was about relationships, made over the phone, so that meant that Cutler was regularly calling promoters on behalf of the Riders as well as the Dead. In this case, Cutler and Rainey were booking a show for the New Riders at a venue that probably wouldn't have booked the Dead. Nonetheless, it means he would have made numerous phone calls to numerous parties, so it increased the Dead's connections to promoters in the Northeast.

Brown University was founded in 1764, and it is located in downtown Providence. Indeed, I think it precedes downtown itself. Meehan Auditorium is the 3000-capacity hockey facility, and the largest indoor facility at the school. It opened in 1961 at Hope Street and Lloyd Avenue. As a lesson in 1970s rock economics, the Mahavishnu Orchestra had opened for Jerry Garcia a few months earlier, and now as their album became hotter, the New Riders were opening for them. Howard Wales, Mahavishnu and the New Riders were all on Columbia, so record company support was easier to come by when the label could share promotional costs. 

The seemingly strange pairing of the New Riders and Mahavishnu makes more sense if you consider that the University was probably striving to get a cross-section of undergraduates. Note the descriptions from that day's Brown Daily Record (from David Kramer-Smyth's stellar research):

John Mclaughlin & the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Fri. 8 p.m. Meehan. Intense synthesis of jazz, rock, classical, blues and Eastern music, lead with spiritual conviction by dynamic guitarist McLaughlin, who sees his music as "an offering to the supreme being."

NEW RIDERS of the Purple Sage. Fri.. 8 p.m.. Meehan. A light, peppy. Poco-like brand of country-rock-western, guaranteed to have you bouncing in your seat.

A contemporary photo of the restored Palace Theater at 100 E. Main St in Waterbury, CT

May 1, 1972 Palace Theatre Waterbury CT New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Monday)
A company called Web LT had booked the New Riders at a "Folk Festival" in Virginia on April 8, and now they booked the band at a Monday night at a now-legendary venue called the Palace Theater in Waterbury, CT. Waterbury is between Hartford (33 miles to the Northeast) and New York City (77 miles to the Southwest). It had (and has) a population of around 110,000. In the first half of the 20th century, it was a thriving industrial city. From the 1960s onward, however, Waterbury underwent a severe economic decline. As a rock peculiarity, however, Waterbury had a large movie theater from its glory days, and easy freeway access from larger areas. The Palace Theater, at 100 E. Main Street in downtown, had been built in 1922. By the early 1970s, it wasn't apparently in great shape, but it had a capacity of a few thousand and fantastic acoustics. It went from being an oversized movie house to a destination rock concert venue.

In the early 1970s, bands figured out that in order to make touring profitable, they had to play as many nights as possible with reasonably short trips in between. If a band on a road had, for example, a lucrative weekend booking in Manhattan, and another the next weekend in Boston, they had to do something in between that paid. A night or two at a place like Waterbury was perfect. It was just far enough from major cities that it didn't tread on the major bookings, and attracted fans who wouldn't (or couldn't) go to a big-city show. FM radio was everywhere, anyway, and there were plenty of kids in the suburbs who wanted to see the bands that played Manhattan or Boston. Whoever owned the aging Palace Theater would have been happy to rent it out profitably, unconcerned if some hippies might do a little damage. All the good touring bands of the 1970s played the Palace in Waterbury, some of them many times.

I doubt the New Riders sold that many tickets on a Monday night, but on the road it may not have mattered. If they covered their expenses, then it was better than just spending the night in a hotel. Ron Rainey was probably the one who knew about the Palace Theater, and booked the show. But Sam Cutler, would have learned about the Palace, and the Dead would play there in September.


July 16, 1972 Dillon Stadium, Hartford, CT: Grateful Dead (Sunday)
On the Sunday afternoon of July 16, 1972, the Grateful Dead played Dillon Stadium, an old, local football stadium in Hartford, CT. Dillon Stadium, at 250 Huyshope Avenue, had been built in 1935, and was home to a minor league football team, with a football capacity of 9,600. About 14,000 were in attendance for the concert. The show is famous amongst Deadheads for the surprise guest appearance of Dickie Betts, Berry Oakley and Jaimoe from the Allman Brothers, who joined in for a medley at the end of the show ("Not Fade Away">"Goin' Down The Road">"Hey Bo Diddley"). Duane (and even Gregg) Allman had jammed with the Dead at Fillmore East, but both groups were much more famous by 1972. 

A more important connection was established in Hartford that day, although the Dead themselves probably didn't realize it until later. The show was presented by Cable Music, a then-new firm run by partners Shelly Finkel and Jimmy Koplik. Koplik would go on to become the major concert promoter in New England, outside of Boston, all the way through the 1990s. The Grateful Dead were not only a popular touring band throughout that time, but they were also the most profitable band to promote durng those decades. Koplik's relationship with the Dead was critical to his success, and in turn Koplik's promotions were critical to the band's rise to prominence in the ensuing years.

There had been an early wave of hippie concert promoters in the 1960s, and like all pioneers, some thrived and some did not. Rock music and live rock concerts really became big business in the 1970s, and there was room for new, younger promoters because there were no "old-time" rock promoters. The business was fairly territorial--bands would only book shows with a certain promoter in certain areas. You can decide for yourself if that was a violation of anti-trust laws. Concert promotion was a dirty business that depended on trust, and bands like the Grateful Dead tended to trust promoters they had worked with for a long time.

From the 1970s through the 1990s, the key promoters in the Northeast were John Scher (Metropolitan Entertaiment), who was down in New Jersey, along with Larry Magid (Electric Factory) over in Philadelphia, Don Law Jr in Boston and Jim Koplik in Connecticut and the other parts of New England, including Upstate New York. Key promoters in the West, for the Grateful Dead at least, included Bill Graham in San Francisco, Sepp Donahower (Pacific Presentations) in Southern California and Barry Fey (Feyline) in Denver. Some promoters, like Howard Stein (New York), Pacific Presentations and others also worked with promoters in smaller regions througout the country. The business ties that the Grateful Dead formed in the early 1970s remained intact until 1995. Most of those promoters sold out to SFX (later Clear Channel, now LiveNation), and Jerry Garcia's death likely played a big part in those promoters' decisions to sell.

Jim Koplik had gotten his start as a promoter in college, putting on a Steppenwolf concert in 1968 at Ohio State when he was a student. Around 1972 he teamed up with Shelly Finkel to form Cable Music. Finkel was a bit older, while Koplik was the "house hippie," a common enough arrangement in concert promotion at the time. Entrepreneurs in their 30s who knew the business side were not necessarily able to navigate who was cool and who was not, so they needed a younger partner.

Shelly Finkel (b.1944) wasn't some neophyte in the concert business. In 1967, Finkel (then running a dating service) managed to parlay a job passing out flyers into managing the Action House in Long Island. The Action House was the premier rock club in the region, breaking local bands like Vanilla Fudge and the Vagrants, and also putting on shows by touring bands like the Doors, Cream and the Grateful Dead (on November 9-10, 1970). 

The owner of the Action House was an infamous Long Island club owner named Phil Basile. Over the years, he was involved in numerous other Long Island clubs and discos, including Speaks (the re-named Action House), My Father's Place,  Channel 80 and Industry. In the late 60s, however, thanks to the Action House, Basile had recognized how much money there was in live rock music. Basile formed the promotion company Concerts East, who put on most of the Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin shows in the East in the 68-70 period (the Grateful Dead opened for Hendrix at a Concerts East production at the Temple Stadium in Philadelphia on May 16, 1970). So while Finkel was just Basile's house manager at the Action House, he would have had plenty of intersection with the larger business of rock promotion.

Phil Basile is an interesting character, alluded to often but still hard to get a handle on. For such a high profile promoter of legendary acts, there is very little real information about him. You can Google Phil Basile yourself, and you'll see that names like Henry Hill (the real-life inspiration for Goodfellas) and Paul Vario (Hill's boss) keep turning up, as does the term "crime family." Draw your own conclusions. 

The Grateful Dead concert at Dillon Stadium was one of the first promotions by Cable Music, but they would go on to promote many shows by the Dead and others over the next several years. The most famous concert was at Watkins Glen Grand Prix Racecourse on July 28, 1973, when 600,000 or so fans showed up to see the Allman Brothers, the Grateful Dead and the Band. In the mid-70s, Shelly Finkel stepped out of the rock business and became a very successful boxing promoter, leaving the rock business to Koplik. Koplik, through his firm Cross Country Concerts, would promote the Dead many times. Finkel would return to the rock business later in the 70s, and ended up working for John Scher at Monarch Entertainment later in the 1980s.



September 15-16, 1972 Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead (Friday-Saturday)
In August 1972, Sam Cutler created Out Of Town Tours, the Grateful Dead's in-house booking agency. Booking agents are like real estate agents, in that they share fees and work together in different regions, and I'm pretty certain that Cutler was still working closely with Ron Rainey. Nonetheless Cutler was now formally making bookings for the Dead and  the New Riders on his own behalf.

The Dead ended up opening their Fall 1972 concert at the Boston Music Hall, promoted by Cable Music. The logic suggests that the Dead had already booked two shows on the tour with Cable (Waterbury and Springfield, below). The Dead had booked concerts at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center that had gotten canceled (September 15-16), so they looked to add some shows on that weekend. Koplik and Finkel only promoted shows intermittently in Boston, but for whatever reason it seemed to be "open territory." The principal promoter in Boston was Don Law, and the Dead had played for him back in '69 at the Boston Tea Party. As noted above, they would go on to play for Law in Boston almost exclusively from 1974 onwards. However, although Law was active in Boston and at The Music Hall during this period, the Dead did not play for him. In the territorial world of 70s concert promotion, this is curious indeed.

September 23-24, 1972 Palace Theater, Waterbury, CT: Grateful Dead (Saturday-Sunday)
The Grateful Dead played again for Cable Music for two nights at the Palace Theater in Waterbury. Since the New Riders had played there in May (see above), the venue would have passed  muster. Two nights of the Dead at the Palace was a good booking, since fans could come from many directions. 

For this tour, the Grateful Dead had a screwy schedule. After the initial weekend in Boston, they had played Sunday night (September 17) in Baltimore, then Tuesday (September 19) in Jersey City (at Roosevelt Stadium) and Thursday (September 21) at the Spectrum in Philadelphia. Friday night, Jerry Garcia was playing a benefit in Berkeley, so he had to fly home, jam out with Merl Saunders and fly back. Meanwhile, the equipment truck would have made a leisurely 200-mile trip from Philly to Waterbury in time for a Saturday-and-Sunday booking.

Springfield Civic Center, at 1277 Main St, sometime in the 1970s

October 2, 1972 Civic Center, Springfield, MA: Grateful Dead
(Monday)
The Grateful Dead ended the Northeastern leg of their Fall '72 tour on a Monday night with their first concert at Springfield Civic Center. Once again they were playing for Cable Music. The Springfield Civic Center, at 1277 Main Street, had a capacity of around 8,000 (possibly up to 10,000) for concerts. From 1972-1994, it was the home of the Springfield Indians of the American Hockey League. The building is still active, now known as the MassMutual Center, and the current home of the Springfield Thunderbirds (the St. Louis Blues AHL franchise).

Springfield had a population of about 155,000. Like Waterbury, had been a thriving industrial area in the first part of the 20th century, but it had started to decline economically at the end of the 1960s. This decline would continue throughout the '90s. The Springfield Civic Center had just opened, on September 5, 1972, and the Cable Concert Grateful Dead show would have been one of the first rock concerts at the venue. According to eyewitness Dennis McNally (this show was his first Dead concert), the 1972 show was not anywhere close to full. This isn't surprising--it was a Monday night, in an area where the Grateful Dead hadn't played. Still, the band would return in March of the next year, so ticket sales must have met expectations.

The Monday night booking is a little peculiar. The band had three nights in Jersey City (September 26-28), and then a Saturday show (September 30) at American University at Washington, DC. The DC show was actually a free concert, but since it rained the show is hardly remembered. I am fairly certain, however, that although the concert was free, the Grateful Dead got paid by the University. Nonetheless, most weeknight shows were between weekend gigs, and the Dead booked a Monday night show in Springfield as their last show on the tour. The payday must have been worth it, and in any case, the band returned numerous times.

As another footnote, the night before the Dead concert (October 1), Roberta Flack was the headline act. Flack, a conservatory-trained pianist, had scored a huge hit with "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face." For the Flack show, the sound was provided by an old Grateful Dead pal, former Fleetwood Mac soundman Stuart "Dinky" Dawson. In his memoir Life On The Road (with Carter Alan, Billboard Books 1998), Dawson describes in detail how he was visited at the board by Jerry Garcia and Owsley Stanley. The pair were checking out Dawson's sound system in preparation for building the Wall Of Sound (I wrote about the encounter at some length).

Springfield is just 30 miles north of Hartford, and they shared the same radio market. The dominant FM station at the time was WHCN out of Hartford, a "sister station" to WBCN in Boston. Broadly speaking, the two shows in Springfield were the first indoor shows for the Grateful Dead in the Hartford/Springfield market, since they had played outdoors at Dillon Stadium. The Dead would play the Springfield Civic Center 10 times (through 1985), but its more accurate to include Hartford and Springfield as the same market. The Dead or Jerry Garcia played the much larger Hartford Civic Center (capacity 16,000) 21 times, so for anyone in the region the 1972 Springfield show was the first of 31 indoor dates.

December 3, 1972 [venue], University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Sunday)
The Grateful Dead would not play New England again until spring 1973. However, there's still another footnote to the saga. In December, 1972, the New Riders of The Purple Sage had released their third album on Columbia, Gypsy Cowboy. They were touring the East Coast in support, and Sam Cutler had organized Out Of Town tours and was now booking the band. Cutler had figured out in 1970 and '71 that East Coast colleges had entertainment budgets and students anxious to attend, so he booked the New Riders at numerous colleges. The strategy ultimately worked pretty well. Just as importantly, the Riders effectively flew the Grateful Dead flag at some smaller places, and Cutler kept up all his connections with Eastern concert promoters.

December 5, 1972 Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Eric Andersen (Tuesday)
Cable Music booked the New Riders to headline the Boston Music Hall on Tuesday, December 5, so the relationship forged between Koplik and the Dead in the Fall were continued. The New Riders got an enthusiastic review in the Boston Globe (December 6).

Opening act Eric Andersen, also on Columbia, would have been touring behind his album Blue River. Andersen was also a Marin resident, and in fact was Bob Weir's next-door neighbor, which is how he came to help Weir by writing the lyrics to "Weather Report, Part I."

December 7, 1972 [venue] Quinniapiac College, Hamden, CT: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Thursday)
December 8, 1972 Green Hall, Smith College, Northhampton, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage 
(Friday)

State Of Play: The Grateful Dead In New England, 1972
The Grateful Dead were unquestionably popular in Boston and New England in 1972, but they hardly played shows in the region. They had played for Don Law back in 1969, and Law was one of the key rock promoters in Boston. Yet they hadn't played for him since. At the very end of 1972, they had booked three shows (plus a New Riders gig) with Jim Koplik, and that would turn out to be a critical relationship for their future career. At the time, however, the Dead were focusing on New Jersey, New York State and greater Philadelphia. New England was just an afterthought. In the subsequent post, reviewing shows from 1973 to '76, we will see how the Dead cemented the relationships with Law and Koplik that would define their future performing history in the region.

Appendix: The Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Live in New England, 1990-95
In the 1990s, the Grateful Dead and the Jerry Garcia Band played many substantial shows in New England. 

March 18-19, 1990 Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT: Grateful Dead (Sunday-Monday) CCC/Metropolitan Presents

July 14, 1990 Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA: Grateful Dead/Edie Brickell and The New Bohemians (Saturday) Frank J Russo Presents

September 20-22, 24-26, 1991 Boston Garden, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead
(Friday-Sunday, Tuesday-Thursday) Don Law Presents

November 13, 1991 The Centrum, Worcester, MA: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)

November 17, 1991 Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday) Frank J Russo Presents

November 19, 1991 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI: Jerry Garcia Band (Tuesday)

September 25-27, September 28-October 1, 1992 Boston Garden, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead
(Friday-Sunday, Tuesday-Thursday) CANCELED

September 24-26, 28-30 1993 Boston Garden, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead (Friday-Sunday, Tuesday-Thursday) Don Law Presents

November 8, 1993 Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT: Jerry Garcia Band (Monday) Metropolitan Presents

November 9, 1993 Cumberland County Civic Center, Portland, ME: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)  

November 11, 1993 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI: Jerry Garcia Band (Friday)

November 15, 1993 The Centrum, Worcester, MA: Jerry Garcia Band (Monday)

July 13, 1994 Franklin County Field, Highgate, VT: Grateful Dead/Yousso N' Dour (Wednesday) Metropolitan/Jim Koplik Presents

September 27-29, October 1-3, 1994 Boston Garden, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead (Tuesday-Thursday, Saturday-Monday) Don Law Presents

June 15, 1995 Franklin County Field, Highgate, VT: Grateful Dead/Bob Dylan (Thursday) Metropolitan Presents


Sunday, May 24, 2020

The Grateful Dead in Upstate and Central New York 1969-79 ('Til Your Night Job Pays)


The New York Central and Hudson River Railroad predicts the Grateful Dead's touring schedule half a century afterwards. Coincidence? No. 
The Grateful Dead were a San Francisco band who managed to stake their first claim in Manhattan, followed shortly by Brooklyn. In ensuing decades, the band went on to sweep the East and West Coasts, as well as New England, the Southeast, the Mountain West and even London. What ultimately became a vast edifice of Grateful Dead fan strongholds, however, was built slowly and haphazardly, and tends to get lost in more glamorous strains of Dead history. One overlooked region in Grateful Dead history is the early and perpetual popularity of the band in Upstate and Central New York, in cities like Albany, Rochester, Syracuse and Buffalo.

Manhattan shines a bright light on anything it finds popular, so bright that it darkens whatever is nearby. People from outside New York City do not think much about the geography and importance of the other cities in New York State, and those in Manhattan and the other boroughs think about the other cities even less. People who have never lived or worked in Manhattan vaguely refer to those other cities as "upstate New York" without thought (a Brooklynite recently told me "anything above Columbus Circle is upstate"), but in fact the cities both North and West of Manhattan have their own dynamics. Without all those cities in New York State, the Grateful Dead would have a far more difficult time touring successfully in places like Boston, Manhattan, New Jersey and Philadelphia. This post will look at the importance of Upstate and Central New York in the touring history of the Grateful Dead.

Summary: Making It Pay
In early 1970, at the dawn of the Sam Cutler era, the only logical way forward for the Grateful Dead was to make a living from touring. Thanks to huge studio costs from Aoxomoxoa, they were hugely in debt to their record company. So even if they had some kind of hit album, they wouldn't be seeing royalties for quite a while. Thanks to Lenny Hart's management practices and general perfidy, once he stole something like $155,000 from them--$155K in 1970 dollars--they had no cash, either. So although the Grateful Dead were genuine 60s rock stars, by any accounting, and true underground legends, financially they were in the same place as some bar band with a Friday night residency. If they couldn't make enough coin from live performances, they weren't going to make it.

Things weren't entirely bleak, however. While the Dead had been able to play paying gigs in San Francisco from their earliest days, their underground cred and word-of-mouth had made the band popular elsewhere. Manhattan fell first, then Boston. They were popular in colleges, since 60s and 70s teenagers away from home for the first time wanted to see a band that played the Fillmores. As the 70s wore on, New Jersey and Pennsylvania were another source of paying gigs.

But if a band is going to make money on the road, any band, it has to stay on the road. So Sam Cutler and the Dead had to find gigs to play that fit in with the good ones in the big Northeastern cities. Central and Upstate New York provided the perfect solution. There were cities upstate, not as big as Boston or New York, but cities nonetheless, and they had young people who wanted to rock. Initially, the Dead played New York State because they could. Syracuse or Rochester were near enough to New York, Boston or Pennsylvania that some paying nights could be added to keep the wheels turning.

Two things happened. One partially expected, or at least hoped for, and another quite out of the ordinary. First of all, the Dead played cities in Upstate and Central New York often enough that they started to build a fan base around those cities. That's how rock music was supposed to work.

The unexpected factor was this: the very fact of geography that made Central and Upstate New York an easy transit for the band made for easy traveling by their fans. Once Deadheads in Brooklyn, Cambridge and New Jersey realized that they could just drive a few hours and catch more Dead shows in Syracuse or some college gym, the viability of Dead shows in New York state rose considerably. Deadheads traveled to see the band--if it was easy for the band to get there, so it was for the fans. When the Grateful Dead enterprise morphed into its own self-supporting ecosystem in the early 1980s, Central and Upstate New York were absolutely central to the organism.

Herein lies the tale.

What Is "Upstate" New York?
New York state residents, even ones who never get above 110th Street, know that there is a big difference between "Upstate" and "Central" New York. New York was founded because Manhattan was an excellent port of entry, allowing goods to flow down the Hudson River to Europe and points South. The cities and towns that are directly North of Manhattan are all linked to the Hudson River or related tributaries. These include important cities like Albany, the State Capital, and also resort cities like Woodstock and Saratoga. They are all "up the Hudson" from Manhattan, and thus "Upstate New York."

Central New York is West and mostly North of the Hudson, running from Lake Ontario all the way down to the Pennsylvania border. The major cities are all tied to different bodies of water, which is how they were founded back in the 18th century. Buffalo is on Lake Erie, Syracuse is near Lake Ontario and Rochester is near Lake Oneida, all in the Northern part of the Empire State. Binghamton is on the Susquehanna River, in the Southern part of the New York, near the Pennsylvania border. As to "Western New York," New Yorkers, in my experience, only refer vaguely to it, usually as an uncivilized area West of where you happen to be at any time. There remains a distinct difference between Upstate and Central New York, however, with Upstate retaining a connection to Manhattan, while the Central area stands on its own. For simplicity, for this post I will just refer to the totality of Upstate, Central and Western New York state as "Upstate," with the recognition that it is a complicated misnomer for people who have lived and worked there.

"Low Bridge, Everybody Down:" Central New York Economic History
The economic history of New York State is simple: the Erie Canal made Manhattan the dominant focus of American commerce, and New York City has never relinquished that position. In the early 19th century, the hardest problem to solve in the vastness of America was moving goods to market. There was land, there were resources, and there were people to work the land and extract those resources. But who would buy them? Canal technology went back to the Ancient Romans, of course, but it had been exploited by the Industrial Revolution in the latter 18th century (the James River Canal in Richmond, for example, had been started in 1785). The most important canal in American history, however, was the Erie Canal, which was completed in 1825.

Originally, the Erie Canal ran about 363 miles from Albany, on the Hudson River, to Buffalo, at Lake Erie. It was built to create a navigable water route from New York City and the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes. The effect of the Erie Canal on transportation, and hence New York's economy, was nothing short of revolutionary.
It was faster than carts pulled by draft animals, and cut transport costs by about 95%.[8] The canal fostered a population surge in western New York and opened regions farther west to settlement. It was enlarged between 1834 and 1862. The canal's peak year was 1855, when 33,000 commercial shipments took place.
There was an additional network of lesser canals, built throughout the 19th century, that linked to the Eric Canal and the Hudson River. Thus farmers and manufacturers in much of New York State could reach Europe and the American South through the Hudson River and Manhattan. At the same time, Toronto and the Great Lakes were accessible via Rochester and Lake Ontario, while Buffalo could reach Cleveland via Lake Erie, and by extension (and the Detroit River), Detroit and Chicago. Chicago itself was only founded in 1833. The goods and resources of the entire Upper Midwest flowed through the main Erie Canal cities on their way to Manhattan. Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse all became important centers of manufacturing in Commerce by the middle of the 19th century.

The age of canals was rapidly superseded by the age of railroads. In New York, however, the railroads simply built on the landscape defined by the canals. The most powerful Eastern railroad of the late 19th and early 20th century was the New York Central Railroad. The New York Central went from Chicago to Manhattan, terminating at Grand Central Station, a place so well known that Americans say "it's as busy as Grand Central Station" without actually ever having set foot at 42nd Street and Park Avenue. The New York Central (mapped up top) touched all the major stops in Central New York, expanding the links defined by the Erie Canal back in 1825. Central New York was a fully integrated part of the American economy until the mid-1950s. For various reasons outside the scope of this blog, Central New York began to decline in economic importance in the 1960s, so the cities stopped growing. Nonetheless, places like Syracuse, Rochester and Buffalo still had young people, and those young people wanted to part of the rock explosion that they had read about in Rolling Stone magazine. Enter the Grateful Dead.




August 16, 1969 Woodstock Music And Arts Fair, Max Yasgur's Farm, Bethel, NY (Saturday)
It is paradigmatic that the Grateful Dead began their assault on Upstate New York at the Woodstock Festival in 1969. This was probably true of many, if not most of the bands at the festival. The hippie rock explosion was still a big city thing, extending to a few college campuses, but even those were the kind of places that prided themselves on being ahead of the curve. College students in the 1960s really, really wanted to see the bands that played the Fillmores, but they didn't always get that chance. One of many reasons that Woodstock was so well attended was that there were many young people in Central and Upstate New York who just wanted to see the bands they had been reading about. One of those bands was the Grateful Dead.

In 1969 the Grateful Dead were underground legends, with their name far better known than any of their music. There were few, if any, FM rock stations outside of New York City at the time, so radio play of any of the Dead's albums would have been all but nonexistent. Nonetheless, the Dead kept turning up, playing for free when something was happening, whether in San Francisco or Columbia University, or finding themselves in the midst of controversy or trouble. Anyway, back in the day "Grateful Dead" was spooky in its own right, just as "Sex Pistols" would be a decade later. Indeed, the Sex Pistols are a good comparison to the Dead, unlikely as it may seem, as that band's infamy far exceeded airplay for "God Save The Queen."

The Grateful Dead were at Woodstock, along with most of the other active touring rock bands. The Dead actually came onstage at Woodstock at about two in the morning, in between Mountain and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Of course, it was a big one, and the Dead blew it. How bad did the Brown Acid have to be for the band to need a guest--Country Joe McDonald--to speak coherently to the crowd on their behalf? In general, the Dead's Upstate New York debut was a debacle  (John Fogerty tells the story of coming on after the Dead in the middle of the night).



A listing from the March 17, 1970 Buffalo News, showing that night's Philarmonic Rock Marathon with the Grateful Dead at Buffalo's Kleinhans Music Hall. Also an imported laser beam light show.
March 17, 1970 Kleinhans Music Hall, Buffalo, NY: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra/Grateful Dead/The Road (Tuesday)
The Grateful Dead's second show in Upstate New York was as odd as Woodstock, in its own way. It was in Buffalo, which is either in Central or Western New York, depending on who you ask, and where you are when you are asking. The Dead had a little tour booked, with shows at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, in metro NYC, and then a couple in Florida, at an amusement park and then a rock festival. Then they went to Cincinnati. So to start the tour off, the band played a Tuesday night show in Buffalo, three full days before the first show in Port Chester (Mar 20). The strange scheduling was the last legacy of Lenny Hart's peculiar management practices.

Even stranger, the show featured not only the Dead and a local band, but the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. The Orchestra "jammed" with the Grateful Dead. The story sounds quite weird, just right for 1970 Grateful Dead. How did it happen? Who knows? Someone invited the Grateful Dead, and they showed up. I don't think it was the kind of show that turned symphony fans, or hippies for that matter, into Deadheads for life.

West Gym at Harpur College, SUNY Binghamton, where the Grateful Dead played on May 2, 1970
Early 1970s: Filling Up The Itinerary
Sam Cutler stripped down the Grateful Dead operation and put the boys on the road, and they toured hard. The goal was to get paid, as many nights as possible. Whenever the band had a few good dates, Cutler's goal was to find some places in between to get a payday. If a band is on the road, they are staying in a hotel somewhere, so even a smaller show that makes a little money is worthwhile, because it's better than getting nothing. So the Dead played various random shows in Upstate New York in the early 70s, because it fit their schedule.

SUNY Alfred Homecoming, May 1, 1970. The Dead started at 8:00, and another band kicked off a dance in another building at 10:00 pm.
May 1, 1970 SUNY Alfred, Alfred, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage
Debut of  "An Evening With The Grateful Dead." (Friday)
In May 1970, the Grateful Dead debuted their new format, "An Evening With The Grateful Dead." Rock concerts at the time typically had three (or more) acts. For the Spring '70 tour, however, the Dead would play an acoustic set, then the completely unknown New Riders of The Purple Sage would play a set, and then the electric Grateful Dead would do a full performance. The business concept was that the Dead could get the money the promoter would spend for three bands, provide a full evening's show and do it with fewer band members and road crew than was required for three actual bands.

The first concert of the tour was at SUNY Alfred, in Alfred, NY. Alfred, NY is about 90 miles Southeast of Buffalo, approximately between Buffalo and Binghamton. The show was the "homecoming" (alumni reunion) for both SUNY Alfred and nearby Alfred University. As such, it was a guaranteed payday, not dependent on attendance or promotion. That was a good thing, since only a few hundred people actually saw the show (JGMF has uncovered the entire remarkable story of the show). The Dead got paid, but the Alfred show didn't have much of an impact on their history.

May 2, 1970 West Gym, Harpur College, SUNY Binghamton, Binghamton, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead had another paying college gig on Saturday, May 2, and this one was another legendary show. The band was playing at the State University of New York at Binghamton, in Binghamton, NY. Up until 1965, the school had been known as Harpur College, until it was absorbed by the SUNY system. The school currently has 17,000+ students. While it surely had fewer students in 1970, it wasn't tiny.

Binghamton, NY doesn't resonate with most people, but IBM got started nearby, and General Electric and Alcoa had big operations there. Binghamton is near the Pennsylvania border, at the confluence of the Susquehanna and Chenango Rivers. Binghamton had been a main stop on the Chenango Canal (now NY Highway 12). The Chenango Canal connected the Susquehanna River to the Erie Canal, which made the city into a manufacturing hub. The canal was replaced by the Erie Railroad (later the Erie Lackawanna, which was the parent of NJ Transit's Morristown Line), but the town retained its importance. GE, IBM and others continued to make the area economically prosperous from the 1950s through the 80s.

As we all know, what was remarkable about the Binghamton show was that the entire 7-hour extravaganza was recorded and broadcast on the Pacifica Radio network (including KPFA in Berkeley and WBAI in New York). Although the show was not simulcast, to my knowledge, but rather broadcast sometime in June (probably June 21), nonetheless much of the country got several hours of the real, live 1970 Grateful Dead. No wonder the show was bootlegged and taped so widely. From a Grateful Dead touring point of view, however, it was just another gig that paid, if a good one.

May 8, 1970 Farrell Hall, SUNY Delhi, Delhi, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Friday)
After Binghamton, the Dead had some college shows in New England: Sunday, May 3 at Middletown, CT (Wesleyan),  Thursday May 7 at Cambridge (MIT) and Saturday May 9 at Worcester, MA (Polytech). There were two free concerts as well during this time, but they don't pay, and working bands gotta work. So the Dead were able to book another college gig on Friday, at SUNY Delhi in Delhi, NY.

Delhi is a tiny village between Binghamton and Albany, population around 5,000. SUNY Delhi was founded in 1913, but had only started to expand in the 1960s. Even now it only has 3,000+ students. Back in the day, however, even small schools had entertainment budgets. Delhi was near enough to New England that the band could make a quick trip back and forth and get paid. We have an eyewitness account, from the archive. It sounds like a lot of fun:
This was my first dead concert (can't count expo 67) you lose site of the fact that the Kent state shootings were on everyone's mind. talk of starting to shut down campuses etc. the concert started with NRPS but they blew out the electric circuits one at a time so that the first 2 hours was just a big sound check ( which was ok because you had to step outside to smoke, there were a lot less than 200 people there ) We came down from Oneonta for the show and once they guit blowing fuses & started to play the music was a lot better than these tapes sound, they played until 2-3 and apologized that they had to travel the next day. worth the trip.
After an inexplicable trip to Kirkwood, MO (May 14), likely a Lenny Hart legacy, the Dead finished up at Fillmore East (May 15) and Philadelphia (May 16--Fairfield on May 17 was canceled). Tiny Upstate New York college gigs had helped keep the band on the road, even if two of those were thinly attended.

An AP wire service report from November 16, 1970 describes how the Grateful Dead did not perform at the Albany Armory after the building was cleared due to a bomb threat (published in the Edwardsville, IL Intelligencer)
November 15, 1970 The Armory, Albany, NY Grateful Dead/Buddy Miles Express/Pacific Gas and Electric (Sunday)
On the next Eastern swing, in October and November 1970, the Dead had a different schedule. There were a few jaunts to the Midwest, but mostly the band stuck to the Eastern Seaboard, with gigs in Long Island, Port Chester, Philadelphia, Brooklyn and New Jersey. Still, as the tour wound down, there were nights to fill, and they got filled Upstate.

On Thursday, November 15, between 4 nights in Brooklyn (Nov 11-14) and Monday at Fillmore East (Nov 16), the Dead were booked to headline a Sunday night show at the relatively small Armory in Albany. Albany, approximately 150 miles due North from Manhattan, was and is the Capital of New York State. Albany is straight up the Hudson, and the epitome of "Upstate." Although the city only has a population of about 100,000, the suburbs have become much larger. By virtue of being the state Capital, the importance of the city far outstrips its size.

The Dead had replaced Delaney And Bonnie And Friends as headliners, over the Buddy Miles Express and the SF band P, G &E. The gig was a debacle. There was a bomb threat, the theater was emptied, and the Dead did not return, so they didn't play. Read the news article above (Rock Group Skips Concert After Bomb Threat Sunday) and the Comment Thread for some intriguing suggestions of who phoned in the threat. Whatever the reason, the Grateful Dead would not return to Albany for nearly twenty years.

A recent photo of The Palestra at the University of Rochester. Palestra (correctly translated Palaestra) means "Wrestling Ground" in Ancient Greek.
November 20, 1970 The Palestra, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Friday)
With a big show at Boston on Saturday night (Nov 21), plus another one Sunday (Nov 22) at a New Jersey Junior College, the Dead needed a Friday night payday. They got one at The Palestra,  the gym at the University of Rochester.  "Palestra" (properly transliterated as "Palaestra") means "Wrestling Ground" in Ancient Greek, which is why it has been used as an Arena name by various schools.

Rochester is on the southern shore of Lake Ontario, East of Buffalo. It was a boom city going back to the 19th century--the Erie Canal came to Rochester in 1823-- and well into the 20th. The city was the birthplace of giant companies like Kodak, Xerox and Western Union. The city's population peaked in 1930 at 328,000. By 1970, it still had 296,000. Keep in mind, however, that the US population boomed after WW2, so while Rochester was a thriving city in 1970, its footprint was shrinking (in the 2010 census Rochester's population was just 210,000). In 1970, though, there were still plenty of young people there, and they wanted rock and roll, too.

Jorma Kaukonen, in town because the Airplane were playing across town at the War Memorial Auditoium, showed up to jam. A fan recalls
My first Dead show. And what a doozy and scene it was (for pre-med, egghead, army brat, 21 yo me), considering it was upstate NY university. Hopped on that bus! Lots and lots of good stories from that concert! My recollection is that it was a (Lesh-Jerry-Mickey) NRPS set, then an acoustic Dead, then 3 electric Dead sets, at least the last one of which had Jorma. I sooo wish I also had that Jerry NRPS set-- psychedelic pedal steel ("get off the wah-wah pedal, son" is the punchline to one of the stories). I remember Lesh trying to coax Jack on stage, e.g. playing the "White Rabbit" riff at him, but I don't recall Jack actually getting on stage. Whew, Jorma stinging guitar is my memory. 
The Grateful Dead began a long and fruitful relationship with the city of Rochester on this Friday night, in a modest college gym. They returned to the Palestra the next year, and then moved up to the War Memorial and even larger venues in subsequent years. Rochester's footprint would get smaller, but the city would become a critical stop on the Grateful Dead's touring schedule.

April 18, 1971 Lusk Field House, SUNY Cortland, Cortland, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Sunday)
By early 1971, the Dead actually had two kinda-hit-albums, getting regularl airplay on newly founded FM radio stations throughout the country. The band's legendary East Coast tour that Spring made Deadheads for life at every stop. College students and young hippies up and down the East Coast heard the band and jumped on the bus with both feet. They're still on board.

Even so, the Dead still had to fill a date or two on the gig sheet. The Dead were in between the infamous Saturday night show in Princeton (Apr 17) and an ultimately canceled show at Hofstra in Long Island (Apr 19). Cortland is an 18,000ish town midway between Syracuse and Binghamton. Like many places in Central New York, it was prosperous in the 19th century, but steadily declined in the 20th (although it did produce singer Ronnie James Dio, incidentally). Nonetheless, there was a SUNY outpost in Cortland, and an entertainment budget. SUNY Cortland had been established in 1868 as the Cortland Normal (Teachers) School, and in 1948 it joined the SUNY system. It now has 7100 students, but I don't know how many it had in 1971. Whatever--the Grateful Dead apparently remain the biggest thing ever to hit Cortland. From the Archive:
 Hi...I was the person behind the appearance of the Grateful Dead at SUNY Cortland. This show was indeed fantastic. It lasted approximately 7 hours in total (someone thought it was a short show, it was not...I completed the clean up around 6 a.m. when the sun was rising!). It was an epic performance and still holds the record at 7,200 people for the largest indoor assembly ever held in the City of Cortland. There is an epic story behind how the whole production took place which I can't possibly go into here! My voice can be heard in some of the "tuning" segments! (JACKLEISUREPRO)
However much the band got paid at Cortland, it was worth it to keep the wheels turning. And I bet those SUNY Cortland students, and any locals, are still on board with us.
A poster for Grateful Dead concerts in Rochester (Oct 26 '71) and Syracuse (Oct 27)

Fall 1971: All Aboard
The Fall 71 tour behind "Skull And Roses," which Warner Brothers supported with a $100K worth of FM broadcasts in almost every city, was the tour that locked in the Grateful Dead's future success. It may not have entirely seemed that way at the time. True, the Dead had released two albums that had gotten good airplay on FM radio. But FM radio was going nationwide by Fall '71, and more and more kids were listening in stereo. So the 14 broadcasts touched a huge portion of the country. No other band was playing 4 hours for free on the radio, and it set the Dead apart. The broadcasts also laid in a future store of FM dubs for the taper community, although no one knew it at the time.

October 26, 1971 The Palestra, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Tuesday) WCMF-FM broadcast
October 27, 1971 Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders Of The Purple Sage (Wednesday) WAER-FM broadcast
The Dead started their Fall 71 tour in the Midwest. The debuted in Minnesota (Oct 19), then a weekend in Chicago (Thurs/Fri Oct 21/22) and Detroit (Sat/Sun 23/24). The next weekend was Cleveland (Fri Oct 29) and Cincinnati (Sat/Sun Oct 30/31). There were FM broadcasts in each of the cities. In between, the Dead played Rochester on Tuesday (Oct 26) and Syracuse on Wednesday (Oct 27).

The band had played Rochester the previous year, but the October 27 show was the band's first time in Syracuse.The Syracuse show was at the Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium, the first of 5 shows the band would play there.  Syracuse was only 90 miles from Rochester, and only 165 from Buffalo, but traveling long distance to Dead shows was an unknown phenomenon outside of Brooklyn. To make it work, the Dead were going to have to draw from the Syracuse area itself. The Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium held about 8,000 in concert configuration, and had been opened in 1949.

Both the Rochester and Syracuse shows were booked by Pacific Presentations. Pacific Presentations was actually based in Los Angeles, and partner Sepp Donahower had been part of the Pinnacle Dance Concerts company that had put on shows by the Grateful Dead and others back in 1967 and '68 at the Shrine Auditorium. Pacific went national in the early 70s, and they promoted many Grateful Dead shows in disparate places like Texas and New York State. It appears that for the Dead--and no doubt many of their Fillmore peers--they would much rather work with a familiar face rather than unknown locals. Big cities like New York and Chicago had major promoters, but touring FM rock bands were a new thing out in the territories.

I assume the Palestra was packed, even on a Tuesday, because it was so small. I am curious how many tickets the band sold for a Wednesday night in an 8000-capacity hall in a new town. In the end, however, it didn't matter. Both shows were broadcast live on the local FM stations. I'm not sure of the call sign of the Rochester station, but The band played on WCMF-fm in Rochester, and WAER-fm in Syracuse. The Dead were broadcast live for four hours in Rochester and Syracuse on consecutive nights, and they have owned that part of the state ever since. I have to think however many tickets were or were not sold, a lot of suburban teenagers listened to those broadcasts in their bedrooms and thought "if that bus comes by again, I am getting on it."

An aerail shot of the crowd of the concert at Watkins Glen Grand Prix Racecourse on July 28, 1973. It was the largest rock concert ever held, up unitl this time
Feed That Jones
A parallel story to the rise of the Grateful Dead in Upstate New York was the part the region played in facilitating East Coast tours by Jerry Garcia and other band members over the years. By the time the Dead had become a guaranteed draw, Garcia was just starting to tour around on his own. Once the Dead took their "break" in 1974, the other band members toured around as well. Upstate New York cities would play the same role they had done for the Dead a few years earlier, filling in the gig sheet with paydays, however modest. The regular reappearance of Garcia and others had to have helped keep the Skull and Roses flag flying high when the Dead wasn't in town.

The first, and most obscure, Jerry Garcia tour outside of Northern California, was in support of Howard Wales' Hooteroll? album. Garcia sat in with Wales' quartet for seven dates. They hadn't rehearsed, but Howard and Jerry had never rehearsed anyway.

The Howard Wales mini-tour was seven shows in nine days, opening with a Friday night in Manhattan (Jan 21/Academy of Music), with a show in Boston on Wednesday (Jan 26/Symphony Hall). Among the other five dates was a Saturday night (Jan 22) at a tiny school in Syracuse and a Saturday night return to Buffalo (Jan 29). Since Hooteroll? had been on a Columbia label (Douglas Records), they were supported by a Columbia act for the last four dates. So, incredibly, John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra (with Jan Hammer, Jerry Goodman, Rick Laird and Billy Cobham) supported Garcia and Wales for four dates, including Buffalo.

The two shows in Syracuse and Buffalo probably did not generate a huge outbreak of Deadheads. The music (which we know from tapes of other nights) was pretty out there, and I don't even know of any eyewitnesses. Still, the two bookings helped keep Garcia on the road, which was the initial attraction of the bookings. Syracuse and Buffalo were easy traveling for the band, and that was the crucial geographical advantage of Upstate and Central New York.

A poster for the Howard Wales/Jerry Garcia Hooteroll: tour show at Setnor Auditorium in Syracuse, NY on Saturday, January 22, 1972
January 22, 1972 Setnor Auditorium, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Hooteroll? Howard Wales with Jerry Garcia (Saturday)
JGMF uncovered this long lost show, complete with a poster, which says "Hooteroll?" The show is billed at "Crouse Auditorium", but there isn't actually a Crouse Auditorium.  JerrysBrokendownPalaces was on the case, however, and determined that the venue was Setnor Auditorium, at Crouse College, part of Syracuse University, capacity 700. The show appears to be presented by Syracuse University, so no doubt a college entertainment insured that a possibly small gate did not affect the band getting paid.

An ad for Jerry Garcia, Howard Wales and Mahavishnu Orchestra in Buffalo, NY on Jan 29, 1972 (h/t GDSets)
January 29, 1972 Century Theater, Buffalo, NY: Howard Wales with Jerry Garcia/Mahavishnu Orchestra presented by University of Buffalo (Saturday)
This show was at the Century Theater at 511 Main Street, later the New Century Theater, capacity 3,076. It had been the Shea's Theater, but  not the same Shea's Theater that the Dead would play later in the decade. That Shea's Theater was across the street (at 646 Main Street). The show was promoted by a University of Buffalo Student Association, so once again a college entertainment budget insured a Garcia payday.

In the later 1970s, the New Century Theater was a regular venue for local promoter Harvey Weinstein (see Mar 31 '73 below), now better known as a famous film producer and convicted rapist. Weinstein was a student at SUNY Buffalo, so there's good reason to think he has some involvement in booking this show. Given the penchant of Garcia and the Dead to work with promoters for whom they had already worked, it would make sense that Weinstein met Garcia on this tour, and was able to leverage that into booking the Dead 15 months later, when the full band returned to Buffalo.


March 21-22, 1973 Memorial Auditorium, Utica, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday-Thursday)
Utica, New York is 240 miles Northwest of Manhattan. At the foot of the Adirondack Mountains, the village was first settled in 1734, and incorporated in 1798. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Utica and the nearby city of Rome were important layover cities for the Erie and Chenango Canals, and later the New York Central Railroad. Utica and Rome became important manufacturing centers, particularly of textiles. The population of Utica peaked at around 100,000 in 1960.

For the Grateful Dead's big Spring 1973 tour,  the band had three dates at Nassau Coliseum in Long Island (Thurs/Fri/Monday Mar 15/16/19) and one at the Spectrum (Saturday Mar 24), all major league arenas. To get through the week, they had to at least cover expenses, and that meant playing a minor league facility, although it had to be one with a concrete floor. The Utica Memorial Auditorium was a typical multi-purpose Civic Auditorium of the era, completed in 1960. For floor events, it had a capacity of 5,700. Mostly it was used for minor league ice hockey, and the AHL Utica Comets (affiliated with Vancouver) still call it home.

The increasing size of the Grateful Dead's sound system in 1973 made one-nighters harder to justify. So the citizens of Utica were lucky enough to get two nights of 1973 Grateful Dead. Thanks to the tapes, we know that the Dead absolutely killed it in Utica--as they did most nights in 1973--and anyone from Oneida County who got to see them there was lucky indeed.

By 1973, Utica was already in decline, whether or not the locals realized it yet. The population was down to about 90,000 in the 1970 Census, at a time when the US population was increasing. From the Dead's point of view, a couple of modest paydays in a place with easy transit from Long Island and to Philadelphia made good sense. A few fond memories on the Archive and on Dead.net suggest that a very good time was had, and it wasn't that crowded.

To put this in context, can you imagine Dead and Company playing two nights in a 5,700-capacity hockey arena 200+ miles from a big city? In order to make the big paydays in the Northeast, however, the Dead needed places to keep the fires burning, and Upstate New York fit that schedule.

March 30, 1973 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)
The Grateful Dead had one more big show left on their Spring '73 Eastern swing, a show at the Boston Garden. The Garden was big-league in a big city, home of the NBA Boston Celtics and NHL Boston Bruins. Oddly, the Boston Garden date was on a Monday (April 2). So the band still had to fill the weekend.

By now, however, the Dead's Upstate history was starting to pay off for them. Up until now, the Dead had only played the tiny Palestra at Rochester University. But they had toured steadily, and had even broadcast the last Palestra show on local FM radio. Now, with a Friday night open, the band could move up the ladder in Rochester.

The Community War Memorial Auditorium in Rochester had opened in 1955, and had a capacity of over 11,000 for concert (now the Blue Cross Arena). It's not at all clear how many tickets the Dead sold this night, but since they kept coming back to Rochester, I have a feeling it must have been a lot. Another revealing detail is that there is only one very poor-quality audience tape circulating for this show, to my knowledge. What this tells me is that the Brooklyn types who were fairly sophisticated about about taping Dead shows were not making the journey yet to distant Rochester. I'm sure a few people made the trip, but road tripping to see the Dead was still a niche activity, not a culture yet.

The Grateful Dead and The New Riders played the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium on March 31, 1973, promoted by Harvey N Corky Productions. "Harvey" was future film producer and convicted rapist Harvery Weintstein
March 31, 1973  Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Saturday)
To fill the Saturday night on their open calendar, the Dead finally made true landfall in Buffalo. Sure, they had played that symphony gig in 1970--so Buffalo got immortalized into "Truckin'"--and Garcia had played there with Howard Wales, but since the band had become a hit act they hadn't played the city. They did now. The Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (not War Memorial) was a big old concrete block, built in 1940 with a concert capacity of around 18,000.

It's doubtful that the Dead sold out an 18,000 seater in Buffalo in 1973, even on a Saturday night. But they probably didn't have to. The economics of the show were probably that the promoter could break even on a half-filled arena, and the band and promoter split the overage. Why was there such a big venue in Buffalo? Buffalo, in its way, is a symbol of the history of the Erie Canal and New York State. When the Erie Canal took hold in the 1830s, Buffalo was the gateway to Lake Erie and thus the city was a critical transportation hub linking Canada, the Atlantic Ocean (via the St. Lawrence Seaway) and Manhattan, all via canals and later railways, feeding the Central and Upstate manufacturers. In 1940, Buffalo had a population of 575,901.

By 1970, however, the world had changed and Buffalo was declining significantly, with a population of only 462,768. It was shrinking during the Baby Boom. Still, there were still a lot of people in Buffalo, many of them young, and they wanted to rock and roll like everyone else. The biggest local promoters were "Harvey 'N' Corky." The independent production company was run by Corky Burger and two brothers, Harvey and Bob Weinstein. After some years as successful concert promoters, the Weinstein brothers moved into the movie business. Miramax pictures was extremely successful in ensuing decades. Harvey Weinstein is also widely known as a convicted rapist.

It's pretty likely that Harvey Weinstein, a former SUNY Buffalo student, had had some engagement with the Howard Wales/Jerry Garcia concert in Buffalo in 1972, so that probably provided a level of confidence for the band to book with an untried promotion company. Things must have gone well, since the Dead played for Harvey 'N' Corky Productions again later in the year, and in 1977.

July 27-28, 1973 Watkins Glen Grand Prix Racecourse, Watkins Glen, NY: Allman Brothers Band/The Band/Grateful Dead (Friday-Saturday)
So much has been written about Watkins Glen that I don't have much to add. Suffice to say:
With respect to this story, however, young people from New York City, New England, New Jersey, Pennyslvania and all of New York State came to this show. Any high school or college students who didn't already know about the Grateful Dead did by the time school started, since all their classmates would have told their tales of Watkins Glen.

September 17, 1973: Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY Grateful Dead/Doug Sahm Band (Tuesday-Wednesday)
The Grateful Dead came back for a fall '73 tour, this time with a horn section in tow, amazingly enough. The tour was anchored by a weekend at Nassau Colisuem (Fri/Sat Sep 7/8), a weekend in New England (Providence Sep 14/15) and a Friday night at the Spectrum in Philadelphia (Sep 21). In between, two gigs got squeezed in at William And Mary College in Virginia (Sep 11/12, where a young Bruce Hornsby saw the second show), and there were also two shows in Syracuse the next week.

The Dead's sound system required them to play two nights in one place rather than multiple one-nighters. It's notable that the two shows in Syracuse were played, while the two shows in Providence were reduced to a single show. Now, granted, Providence Civic Center (now Dunkin Donuts Center) had a capacity of 14,000 and War Memorial in Syracuse was just 8,000, but this tells us that Syracuse was a better market than Providence. [update: a Commenter pointed out that I was incorrect, and the second night in Syracuse was canceled, just as in Providence, so the markets would have been parallel.] It also tells us Deadheads weren't really traveling far in big numbers yet, since Boston fans weren't packing Providence. In any case, whether it had been by accident or design--probably mostly the former--the Dead had managed to build a good fan base in Upstate New York, and they could fill in the nights on the tour there.


The Dead's fall 1973 tour ended on a Wednesday nght in Buffalo, on September 26, 1973, when they played the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium. The opening act ("& Friends") was the Doug Sahm Band.
September 26, 1973 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead/Doug Sahm Band (Wednesday)
The last date of the Dead's Fall '73 tour was a Wednesday night in Buffalo, playing again for Harvey N Corky. The significant thing about this show was that the band did not have another show the next weekend, so the Wednesday booking wasn't just a routing gig. The show in Buffalo had to have been profitable enough for the band to extend the tour a few days, and they had to have enough confidence in the promoters to feel they were actually going to get paid. Once again, the efforts that the Dead had made to play Upstate New York had really paid off, since they now had real audiences in not only Syracuse and Rochester but Buffalo as well.
The Palace Theater, at 19 Clinton Avenue in Albany, NY, was built in 1928 and seats about 2,800. Jerry Garcia and other Grateful Dead members played this hall many times

Fall 1974: The Interregnum
The Grateful Dead's cultivation of an audience in Upstate New York paid an unexpected dividend after the Fall of 1974. After the October 1974 Winterland shows, the Grateful Dead went on "hiatus," and stopped touring. Pretty much all of their fans assumed that the Dead were done for. Many, maybe most, of the great 60s bands had broken up by this time, and it seemed like the Dead were just following the path carved by the likes of The Beatles or Jefferson Airplane.

The demise of the Dead, however, meant that Jerry Garcia had to tour, and without benefit of any realistic record company support. Since the Dead were self-financing their own record company, there wasn't the flood of publicity and tour support for the ensuing solo albums. Any touring had to be cash-and-carry, profitable on its own axis. New Jersey promoter John Scher took on the role of tour director for Jerry Garcia, calculating how to maximize his presence in a region where he was a legend, but had rarely played under his own name, and had no record company buttressing him.

November 10, 1974: The Palace Theater, Albany, NY Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders (Sunday)
Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders had played a few shows in the NYC Metro area prior to this, but now they were touring for real. Upstate New York served the same purpose it had for the Garcia/Saunders ensemble as it had for the Dead. Jerry and Merl had a big four days of bookings in the NYC Metro area from Wednesday through Saturday (Nov 5-9), and used Albany to fill in the leftover date.

The Palace Theater, at 19 Clinton Avenue in Albany, opened in 1931 as an RKO movie palace. It seats about 2,800. It had closed in 1969, but it was purchased by the city of Albany and re-opened soon after. The 1970 Grateful Dead show in Albany had been a debacle, of course (see Nov 15 '70 above), but time had passed. Albany was not a large city, but it was the state Capitol, with extensive suburbs, so there was a nascent Grateful Dead audience in the region, which would be cultivated later. The 1974 Garcia show was just a sort of opening salvo.

November 17, 1974: Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders (Sunday)
For the next leg, Garcia/Saunders had four shows in Boston Metro (Nov 12-15), and a big double show at the Tower Theater in Philadelphia (Nov 16), long established as prime Grateful Dead territory. For the final night, the band played at the Auditorium Theater in Rochester on Sunday night. Now, strictly speaking, as it was the end of the tour, they could have just flown home, but they were in town, it was near and it paid, so they played. Upstate New York was near to both New England and NYC Metro, so that made it uniquely useful. Although places like Rochester were far (ish) from New England, since the trucks didn't have to fight through New York or Boston Metro traffic, the actual transit was easy.

The Auditorium Theater in Rochester, at 855 E. Main Street, was opened in 1930 as a Masonic Temple. It seats about 3,000. Though smaller than the War Memorial, the Auditorium Theater was larger than the Palaesta. The time the Dead had spent building a Deadhead audience in Rochster had paid off.

The Auditorium Theater currently mostly hosts touring Broadway shows. One interesting fact from the History Tab:
One of the most puzzling secrets of the building centers on a fascination with squirrels. During construction of the building, the ornamental plasterer apparently felt the need to add a bit of whimsy by including several images of squirrels and acorns throughout. Squirrels appear above the building’s front door, while bird, grapevine and acorn motifs can be found in the plaster work on the walls in some meeting rooms. But look closely — the most striking example is on the ceiling of the Auditorium. The plasterer has skillfully incorporated 64 squirrels into the symmetry of the massive ceiling.
If squirrels are your area, Go To...

October 25, 1975: Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY Jerry Garcia Band with Nicky Hopkins (Sunday)
By late 1975, the Grateful Dead organization was hemorrhaging cash for The Movie, with no touring income and lackluster returns on record sales. When Jerry Garcia toured in the Fall, he needed to make sure it was lucrative. It is easy to forget now that Nicky Hopkins, first-call piano man for the Rolling Stones and all the Beatles, was a genuine rock star himself. He had toured with the Stones, and now he was touring with Garcia. The Jerry Garcia Band was actually an incorporated group with four equal partners (JG, John Kahn, Hopkins, Ron Tutt), but the name Jerry Garcia Band was chosen for commercial appeal. Garcia even included a few of his own songs in the set ("Deal", "Sugaree" and "Friend Of The Devil"). The new Jerry Garcia Band was a commercial proposition indeed.

John Scher had the band touring hard. In most cities, the Jerry Garcia Band played early and late shows, so the paydays were good. And make no mistake, Hopkins was a tremendous pianist, and his ability to flow in and out of Garcia's guitar lines was beautiful indeed. This was no busman's holiday, but a real band on the road.

Upstate New York dates kept the band working hard. The JGB started out in New England (Oct 22 and 23), with Boston on Saturday night (Oct 24). The next week, they played New York Metro area from Wednesday and Friday (Oct 28&30), Halloween Saturday night at the Tower in Philly and then two more shows(Capitol in Passaic Nov 1 and DC Nov 2). By inserting three nights into Upstate New York on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, John Scher made sure that the Fall JGB tour was solidly in the black.

Scher and the Jerry Garcia Band returned to the Auditorium Theater in Rochester. 3000 seats was about right for Jerry on a Sunday night upstate. Since they couldn't really sell two shows, Garcia and Hopkins played two sets anyway for the lucky crowd. Regardless of how well this show sold, it was worth it for the band.

Thanks to GDSets.comhttps://gdsets.com/garcia.htm#1975, a ticket stub from the Oct 26 '75 JGB show in Buffalo

October 26, 1975: New Century Theater, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY Jerry Garcia Band with Nicky Hopkins (Monday)
The Jerry Garcia Band returned to the Century Theater in Buffalo, where Garcia and Howard Wales had played in January 29, 1972 (above). The promoters were Harvey And Corky, showing how Garcia and the Dead remained loyal to promoters they had worked with successfully in the past. New Century had a capacity of 3,076, so for a Monday night it was just booked for a single show.

October 27, 1975: Bailey Hall, Cornell U, Ithaca, NY Jerry Garcia Band with Nicky Hopkins (Tuesday)
There is a vast literature about the Grateful Dead at Cornell University, most of which I have not read. I do not know if anyone has noticed that Garcia first made landfall in Cornell in 1975 with the Garcia Band. They played Bailey Hall, constructed in 1912 and seating just 1324.

Cornell University is in tiny Ithaca, NY in the scenic "Finger Lakes" region. It is about 220 miles Northwest of Manhattan, truly in the center of New York State. Buffalo is Northwest of Ithaca, Syracuse and Rochester to the North, and Binghamton to the South. Cornell, founded 1865, is an esteemed Ivy League school, but there isn't much else in Ithaca. Cornell is a wealthy school, however, so they could pay out-of-town acts good money (guaranteed) to make the journey to the shores of Cayuga Lake.

A Fall Tuesday night in the middle of New York State, a tiny auditorium built in 1912, two sets of primo Jerry Garcia, his bass player, the Stones' pianoman and Elvis' drummer. Two sets. If you weren't on the bus after that, Barton Hall wasn't going to matter.

November 6, 1975: Elting Gym, SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, NY: Kingfish/Keith And Donna (Thursday)
Kingfish and Keith and Donna toured the East Coast in November. In the Bay Area, with Jerry Garcia a regular in nightclubs since 1970, Deadheads were very casual about the opportunity to see Grateful Dead spinoffs. In the East, however, the chance to see 4 members of The Dead (Weir, Kreutzmann, Keith and Donna) plus an ex-New Rider (Dave Torbert) in the same night was somewhat of a big deal. The Kingfish/Keith and Donna bill played medium sized theaters that neither band could have played at home. I have to presume that the bands also only used one crew and one set of gear, another efficiency.

While I don't think shows by Kingfish and Keith And Donna created legions of Deadheads, I can attest that they were both great live bands, and seeing them made for a fun night out. Long before the internet or anything else, tours like this helped keep the Grateful Dead fires burning in far away places.

New Paltz was about 80 miles north of Manhattan, in between Manhattan and Albany. In the 1970s, a lot of good bands played Elting Gym at SUNY New Paltz. There must have been a sharp booking agent and a good entertainment budget at the University. For whatever reasons, a lot of board tapes seemed to have leaked out of there. The Kingfish/K&D tour opened in New Paltz on a Thursday, before higher profile shows at the Beacon (Friday Nov 7) and SUNY Stony Brook (Saturday Nov 8).

November 12, 1975 New Century Theater, Buffalo, NY Kingfish/Keith and Donna
The Keith and Donna tour followed the Garcia Band into Buffalo on a Wednesday night. Thanks to commenter David for tracking this down. Also, he found excellent photos of the show.

November 21, 1975: Loews Theater, Syracuse, NY Kingfish/Keith And Donna (Friday)
The tour played Friday night in Syracuse, setting up a Saturday (Nov 22) show in Scranton (Nov 23) and then Sunday in Boston (Nov 23). I know a former Scranton teenager who went to the Scranton show, by the way, and he said it was a very big deal in Scranton. While he's no Deadhead, he's been fond of the band ever since.

The bands played Loews Theater (now the Landmark), at 362 S. Salina St . The theater had opened in 1928 and had a capacity of 2,908

November 24, 1975: Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Kingfish/Keith And Donna (Monday)
While Monday is an odd night for a rock show, this was Thanksgiving week, so a lot of students would have been home from college. Following their pattern, the bands played the same theater in Albany where Garcia/Saunders had played the year before (Nov 17 '74 above).

September 18, 1976: Ben Light Gymnasium, Ithaca College, Ithaca, NY Jerry Garcia Band (Saturday)
On Saturday, September 18, 1976, the Jerry Garcia Band played a gig at Ithaca College. Ithica College was founded in 1892 as a Music Conservatory, and has a sterling reputation as a school for the performing arts. Rod Serling, who created "The Twilight Zone" was a famous alumni.  The school has about 6,000 students, and is just 2 miles from Cornell. The Ben Light Gymnasium was built in 1964, and has a capacity of 2,600. While places like Ithaca have rather mobile college students, and its hard to build up an audience (compared to regular cities like Syracuse or Rochester), there isn't much to do out in the countryside, so it's easy to draw an audience. A Saturday night in Ithica was probably a good payday for the Garcia Band.

In fact, this little tour was fairly odd, and possibly worth a post in itself. Rock band touring in the 70s and 80s was basically iterative, in that the expense of going on the road only paid off if the band stayed out there and sold tickets for a couple of weeks in a row. When there were exceptions to this premise, it usually had to do with record company promotions.

None of that applies with this September '76 JGB one week mini-tour. For now, my conclusion is that the first date, a Hells Angels "Boat Party" on the SS Duchess, was so lucrative that the entire trip was worth it. After the Wednesday night boat trip on the Hudson River (you can see the video here),  the JGB played three out-of-the-way college shows and one oddball booking. The band played CW Post college in Greenvale (Long Island) on Thursday (Oct 16), then Seton Hall in New Jersey on Friday (South Oragne, Oct 17), and then Ithaca College. All three of these dates were probably modest but relatively guaranteed paydays, given that college entertainment budgets were providing a subvention to ticket sales. The last show was in Reading, PA on a Sunday night (Sep 20). John Scher would not have booked these gigs if the numbers didn't make sense, but it's hard not to think that the Hells Angels show was the big payday.

Fall 1976-When Your Night Job Pays
September 27, 1976 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Monday)
September 28, 1976 Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)
The Grateful Dead returned to touring in the Summer of 1976. As always, they needed money. When they hit the road in the fall, Rochester and Syracuse shows made nice paydays on what would otherwise have been empty weeknights. The band had a Saturday night show at the Capitol Center in DC (Sep 25), and then Columbus, OH (Thurs Sep 30), Market Sq Arena, Indianapolis (Friday Oct 1), Cincinnati (Sat Oct 2) and then Cobo Hall in Detroit (Sun Oct 3). Rochester and Syracuse took care of Monday and Tuesday on the way from DC to Ohio. Easy travel, good money.

May 8, 1977 Barton Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)
Much has been written about the Barton Hall show in Cornell on May 8, 1977, so I have little to say. The Dead had laid the groundwork, in that Garcia had played Cornell (Oct 27 75) and nearby Ithaca College (Sep 18 76), and the New Riders had played Cornell in 1974 and Halloween '76 (see below). Still, tiny Northeastern college towns are a little different than some communities, since college students come and go. Barton Hall, opened in 1915, held 4,800 so it was a smaller Dead show for the era.

The key point for my perspective was that Cornell was in between a big Saturday payday at Boston Garden (May 7) and weekend shows in Chicago (May 12-13). Cornell was sort of new territory for the Grateful Dead, up to a point, but the geography favored touring. Big Northeastern cities like Washington, DC, Philadelphia, New York and Boston are near to each other in terms of road miles, but the driving is always difficult. No matter the time of year or the route, all those cities have crowded highways between them. But going from any of those cities to places like Ithica or Rochester was a breeze. Empty roads by the standards of I-95, pretty scenery and an easy drive benefited the crew. Later, it would benefit Deadheads when they started to travel in big numbers.

As we all know, the '77 Cornell show was one of the first truly high-quality Grateful Dead tapes not sourced from FM radio to circulate widely. I recall getting mine around 1979, although perhaps I am imagining that. In any case, one factor of the wide circulation of the Cornell tape was an implicit promise to the rest of the Northeast--it would be worth driving a few hours to catch a show like that. I can't help but think a lot of Deadheads looked at a map, whether they were in Boston, New York or Philadelphia, and said "hey, that's not too hard a drive, and it would be fun." And so it began.

May 9, 1977 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead (Monday)
Right after Cornell, the Dead returned to Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, once again promoted by Harvey 'N'  Corky. Buffalo Memorial was huge (18,000), and it was a Monday night, so the place was probably only half full. No doubt Harvey Weintstein, a shrewd promoter (and convicted rapist), had calculated that well in advance. The Dead made some money and played a show that was absolutely epic.

A ticket to see the Grateful Dead in the Reid Athletic Center at Colgate U. on Friday, November 2, 1977. The gym is now named Cottterell Court, but I believe that to be a later name.
November 4, 1977 Reid Athletic Center, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)
The Dead had a show in Toronto on a Wednesday (Nov 2), and a good booking in Rochester on Saturday night (Nov 5). To fill in the Friday, they played the gym at tiny Colgate University, in tiny Hamilton, NY. Hamilton is nearly in the exact center of New York State. It's not near anything. Many years ago, I visited Hamilton College, which (paradoxically) is in Clinton, NY. Pretty as it was, I though Clinton was way out in the country. Yet the Hamilton students assured me that Colgate, 20 miles to the South, made Clinton seem like Greenwich Village.

Colgate is a well-regarded, well-funded University. It was founded in 1819, and has about 3000 students. Places like Colgate have entertainment budgets to bring in touring acts. This Friday night, they bought the Dead. Reid Athletic Center, built in 1959, seats 1,750 for basketball, and probably a bit more for a concert. Most Colgate students were probably there. We know the show burned. No, it don't happen like that no more.

Some pictures from the next day's newspaper show us that a Dead show was a Very Big Deal in Rochester by 1977 (h/t @GratefulSeconds)
November 5, 1977 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)
By 1977, Rochester was a good gig for the Grateful Dead. All those odd weeknights had paid off. On this tour, they played the War Memorial and it was a big event. Where once Rochester had just been a geographical convenience,  hard touring had turned it into a great gig for the band.

November 6, 1977 Broome County Arena, Binghamton, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)
The Grateful Dead returned to Binghamton in 1977.The Broome County Arena, built in 1973, had a capacity of 5,000. It's important to remember that all those Harpur College students who had seen the band in 1970 were long gone. Generally speaking, the Upstate SUNYs are often excellent schools, but the students don't plan to stay in the area when they graduate. The fact that the Dead could play a 5,000 seater in Binghamton, however, meant that there were enough Deadheads in the Southern part of the state to make it worthwhile.

November 20, 1977 Broome County Forum Theatre, Binghamton, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)
Two weeks after the Dead's return to Binghamton, the Jerry Garcia Band played the city again. The Broome County Forum Theatre had 1,500 seats. It was originally built as movie and vaudeville house, and opened 1919 as The Binghamton Theatre, closing in 1931. It opened and closed various times under various names throughout the 1970s. Finally, it was refurbished and reopened in 1975 as The Forum Theatre.

November 29, 1977 Elting Gym, SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Tuesday)
The Jerry Garcia Band did some hard touring in the Northeast in November and December, and Upstate New York filled in the missing days, just as it had for the Grateful Dead over the years. The Garcia Band played New Paltz on a Tuesday because they had a lucrative weekend (Philly Friday, Passaic Saturday, Manhattan Sunday, Long Island Monday).

November 30, 1977 New Gym, Buffalo Stage College, Buffalo, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)
The JGB train rolled on to Buffalo the night after New Paltz. Note that Harvey 'N' Corky were not the promoters. I don't know the exact chronology, but I think Harvey Weinstein had exited the concert business.

December 3, 1977 Binder Gymnasium, Hartwick College, Oneonta, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Saturday)
Oneonta was mid-state, in between Binghamton and Albany, in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains. Binder Gym was the old facility, which seems to no longer exist. It would not have been a large arena. John Scher was handling the Jerry Garcia Band touring arrangements East of the Mississippi River, as he did for the Dead. One of Scher's strategies was to fill in a lot of nights with shows at colleges. The money was not huge but reliable, and there was always a guaranteed core of restless undergraduates who would see any touring band. By the same token, since undergraduates moved on, the JGB rarely played the same colleges year after year.

December 8, 1977 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)
The JGB returned again to the Palace in Albany for a mid-week show.This was a routing gig for shows in Long Island (Stony Brook Dec 9), DC (Friday Dec 10) and Penn State (Saturday Dec 11).

March 10, 1978 Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Friday)
The Spring '78 JGB tour only included one show in Upstate New York. By 1978, however, Garcia was playing the 3,000 seat Auditorium Theater in Rochester on a Saturday night. Now, Garcia/Saunders had played there before (see Nov 17 '74 above), so in a way it wasn't an upward move. Compared to his contemporaries from the 60s, however, Garcia was holding on to his audience, and that was more than most of them were doing.

May 4, 1978 Bailey Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY: Robert Palmer/Robert Hunter and Comfort (Thursday)
Robert Hunter toured the Northeast a few times with his band Comfort. On the second and last go-round, a Commenter reported that Comfort opened for Robert Palmer ("Sneaking Sally Through The Alley" etc) at Cornell ( Confirmed by an interesting link to Cornell rock events). There is a chance that this show replaced New Paltz (below), and may have been May 8.

May 7, 1978  [outdoors], SUNY Albany, Albany, NY Bonnie Raitt/ Robert Hunter and Comfort (Sunday afternoon show)
A Commenter (the former Comfort soundman) recalls that this was an outdoor show at SUNY Albany. 

May 7, 1978 Field House, Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)
The Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy was founded in 1824. Troy is in the same county as Albany, just up the Hudson from Manhatta. The RPI Field House (now the Houston Field House)was built in 1949, and held about 5,000. Troy filled the gap between a Saturday night show in Burlington, VT (May 6) and Tuesday (May 9) in Syracuse.

May 8, 1978 [venue], SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, NY: Robert Hunter and Comfort (Monday)
Robert Hunter's periodic appearances certainly helped make the Grateful Dead an ongoing presence in Central New York, although in this case he was probably overshadowed by an actual Dead tour. This show may have been replaced by Cornell (listed as May 4 '78 above).

May 9, 1978 Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)
A show at Syracuse's War Memorial filled a traditional slot, a weeknight. This time, the Dead were both coming from and returning to New England. Easy driving from New England to Central New York made it an easy choice.

July 15, 1978 TG's East, Greenwood Lake, NY: Robert Hunter (Saturday)
After Comfort broke up, Hunter toured with just bassist Larry Klein. This was possibly Hunter's best configuration, benefiting from his ability to play anything he could remember while still being anchored by Klein.

September 22, 1978 Fillmore Room, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY: Robert Hunter (Friday)
What was the "Fillmore Room?" Buffalonians, please fill us in [update: Buffalo scholar Gary reports that the Fillmore Room was in the student union on the old campus on Main St].

September 25, 1978 The Jabberwocky, Syracuse, NY: Robert Hunter (Monday)
The Jabberwocky was a long-standing folk and rock club in Syracuse.

November 21, 1978 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)
For this tour, a Tuesday night in Rochester helped bridge the gap from Chicago (Friday/Saturday Nov 17-18) and Capitol Center (Thursday Nov 23).

January 14, 1979 Memorial Coliseum, Utica, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)
The Dead had to cancel some November and December 1978 shows due to Garcia's illness. They returned to Utica, which was not really a garden spot in the Winter.

January 20, 1979 Sheas Buffalo Theater, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead began to wind up the Keith and Donna era with a Saturday night show at Shea's Buffalo Theater, at 646 Main Street. The 3,000 lucky patrons who saw the band were treated to the last "Dark Star" of the Keith years.

May 5, 1979 JB Scott's, Albany, NY: Robert Hunter (Saturday)

May 9, 1979 Broome County Arena, Binghamton, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday)
Brent Mydland's debut in Upstate New York was a Wednesday night in Binghamton, between Penn State (Tuesday May 8) and a weekend in New England.

August 31, 1979 Glens Falls Civic Center, Glenns Falls, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)
Glens Falls is above Saratoga, the town farthest north on the Hudson River, straight up I-87. The Grateful Dead had a big Saturday night show in Rochester, followed by Madison Square Garden. Glens Falls filled in the Friday date. My suspicion, unproven, is that Deadheads were starting to travel to shows in New York State in some number from Manhattan and New England.

Unlike many aging arenas that the band had played, the Glens Falls Civic Center, capacity 4774, was a new building that had just opened in 1979.

September 1, 1979 Holleder Stadium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead/Greg Kihn Band/Good Rats (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead had used Rochester as a tour fill-in for nearly a decade, but by 1979 they had a genuine audience in the region. Holleder Memorial Stadium was an aging football stadium. Built in 1949, it seated 20,000 for football, so it's concert capacity was probably somewhat higher. The opening acts were minor (although Long Island's Good Rats could be counted on to play tasty), so this was just an all-day Grateful Dead show. Rochester was in the rotation now for the Dead, not just a weeknight stop-off.

November 9, 1979 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)
Buffalo had upgraded, too. Instead of a Monday night booking, here was the Dead playing a Friday night. A lot more people probably filled out the 18,000-capacity arena than would have on a weeknight. 

An ad for the Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan with Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers at Rich Stadium in Buffalo on July 4, 1986
Reaping The Harvest: Upstate and Central New York Touring 1980-95
The Grateful Dead and the Jerry Garcia Band toured hard from 1980 through 1995. New York State played a big economic role in the Dead's extraordinarily successful touring venture. While cities like Syracuse and Rochester still filed in nights between huge bookings in places like Manhattan and Bosotn, the region became a substantial market in its own right. The rise of the Upstate and Central New York markets was all the more remarkable for the fact the 80s and 90s were essentially a period of decline after the 1980. The economy improved in the 90s, but that improvement was focused on the Sun Belt. No matter--the Dead sold out some very big houses in New York State.

I have written out all of the Dead, Garcia and related performances (known to me) below, and you can track the history and reflect upon it for yourself. Two interlocking trends are important to understanding how the market evolved in New York State:
  • Deadheads started to travel in bigger numbers in the late 1970s. There had always been a few Heads who traveled, many from Brooklyn. By the late 70s, the numbers of people who had driven outside their own area for a Dead show had increased enormously. I know of only one effort to capture this phenomenon, but it is just one person's story (Grateful Seconds map of his own touring history). There's a lot of great demography yet to be done on this. Once Deadheads started to travel, however, it mattered less whether the band was in,  say, Syracuse or Rochester, since people from both cities would go to either.
  • Starting in mid-1983 (I don't recall exactly when), the Dead started offering tickets to just about all shows on a mail order basis. Suddently, you didn't need to have a friend in another city to stand in line, or hope you could snag one in the lot. Everyone knew weeks in advance what tickets they had, and could now plan accordingly. If you decided you liked the Grateful Dead, you could go full Traveler at your own discretion. This greatly magnified regional audiences. Someone in Boston, for example, might have gone to Hartford without a ticket, but not Rochester. Now, it was wheels up, and it was way more relaxing to road trip to New York state than Manhattan.
As a result of these two factors, the shows in the Grateful Dead's main outposts got larger and larger, and ultimately shrank down to two venues in Buffalo and Albany. In the early 80s, there were still weeknight shows in places Niagara Falls or Lake Placid, but there were fewer of those as the band got bigger.

The Carrier Dome at Syracuse University, built in 1980. It had a capacity of up to 49,000 for football, and almost as much for basketball.
Syracuse
The Grateful Dead played three shows at Onondaga War Memorial in Syracuse in 1981 and 1982. In the fall of 1982, the band upgraded to the huge Carrier Dome at Syracuse University. The Carrier Dome (Carrier Air Conditioning was a major regional manufacturer) was domed stadium used for both football and basketball. The Carrier had opened in 1980, and the football capacity was 49,000. Whatever the exact attendance was for each of these shows, it was way beyond Onandage War Memorial. This booking only makes sense if you realize that people were coming to see the Dead from all over the region.

September 24, 1982 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)

October 22, 1983 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

October 20, 1984 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)
The Carrier Dome was huge, centrally located, had plenty of parking and had climate protection. Why didn't the Dead keep playing there? One unique factor to consider was that the Carrier Dome was on a college campus, and was home to both the football and basketball teams at Syracuse. The multi-sport home dates blocked out a lot of weekend dates, and colleges generally do not like to have big outside events on weeknights during much of the school year. Also, I don't know if the Carrier Dome was really designed to be used in the Summer.

After 1984, the Dead didn't play Syracuse anymore. They did still play Rochester, and they played Buffalo up until the end, so all the Syracuse fans still got to see the band plenty--just not in Syracuse. Syracuse helped the Dead survive the 70s, and helped build the audience, but it lacked the venue to fit how huge the group became.

November 14, 1993 Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)
As a fitting coda, however, the Jerry Garcia Band had played all around Syracuse throughout the 1980s, keeping his band on the road between the big gigs. By 1993, the Jerry Garcia Band was so big that they played the Onandoga War Memorial Auditorium themselves on a Sunday.

An old postcard featuring Silver Stadium, home of AAA Rochester Red Wings. The stadium was built in 1929, and torn down in 1996. The Grateful Dead played there twice, in 1987 and '88. In 1988, the band drew 31,000 fans, the largest ever attendance at Silver Stadium (baseball capacity 15,0000>
Rochester
Rochester is a smaller city than Syracuse, so paradoxically it played a longer role in the  Grateful Dead's touring history. From 1980 through 1985, the Dead played Rochester War Memorial Auditorium six times. Four of those six dates were on school nights. The Dead had made themselves a big deal in Rochester after all these years, and unlike a college campus the audience didn't move away. When the Dead had first played War Memorial, the 11,000 capacity might have seemed like a heavy lift, but once Deadheads started to travel, I figure a lot of tickets got sold to Deadheads on the move.

July 2, 1987 Silver Stadium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

June 30, 1988 Silver Stadium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)
By 1987, once the Dead hit their first peak, even 11,000 wasn't going to be enough. As we all recall,  in 1987 the Dead did a stadium tour with Bob Dylan, just as "Touch Of Grey" was starting to hit. So the Dead needed bookings for their huge rig between a weekend at Alpine Valley (June 26-28) and a July 4 show with Bob Dylan in Foxboro Stadium. Silver Stadium was an old minor league baseball stadium built in 1929, with a baseball capacity of 15,000. The Dead played there on a Thursday night in 1987 and had 30,100.

The band came back in 1988, bigger than ever. On June 28 the Dead had a huge show at SPAC (see below), and they had a doubleheader coming up at Oxford Plains Speedway in Maine (July 2-3). Silver Stadium got another Thursday night, and this time the band broke every Silver Stadium record with 31,000 attendance. But that was it for Rochester. There wasn't a big enough venue, and Deadheads all roamed about anyway.

November 20, 1991 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)
November 4, 1993 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Thursday)
Just as with Syracuse, Rochester had helped keep the Jerry Garcia Band on the road all those years, but by the 90s the Garcia Band was big enough to play the Community War Memorial.


A symphony performance at Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC), in Saratoga Springs, NY. Note that almost none of the audience on the lawn can see the stage. The venue was built for symphony picnics, not rock band shows.
Up The Hudson: Saratoga Springs and Albany
Up until the Spring of '83, the Dead's home in the Southern part of New York State had been Binghamton. Certainly they had played some epic shows there. But there weren't really any big venues there, and the region wasn't thriving in the 1980s anyway. Starting in the Summer of 1983, the Grateful Dead had some huge shows at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, known by everyone as "SPAC." SPAC is located upstate in Saratoga Springs. Saratoga Springs is due North of Manhattan, and just 34 miles above Albany. The facility opened in 1966, and it is the Summer home of both the New York City Ballet and the Philadelphia Symphony. The amphitheater has 5000 seats and room on the lawn for 20,000, and in that sense it is the forerunner of "sheds" like Shoreline Amphitheater. SPAC, however, has the flat, grassy lawn above the bowl, with no sightline to the stage.

By 1983, the Grateful Dead were a big draw in upstate New York. So just as they had chosen to play the larger Carrier Dome in Syracuse the previous fall, to cover the Central part of the state, for Upstate the band was booked at SPAC to accommodate the greater number of Dead fans in the region. Whatever the expectations might have been, the show was a roaring success. The Dead returned to SPAC in 1984, '85 and '88. Even more remarkably, the Dead packed out SPAC on weeknights. I believe the band set some sort of attendance record for the venue in 1988, but did not return. The oddity at SPAC was that most of the audience could not see the stage. From 1990 onwards, the Dead played The Knickerbocker Arena in Albany, and that roughly covered the same region.

A lawn ticket for SPAC on June 24, 1983. The Dead weren't visible on stage from the lawn (I was in seats in the bowl)
June 18, 1983 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

June 24, 1984 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead  (Sunday)

June 27, 1985 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

June 28, 1988 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)
A unique detail about the 1983 SPAC show was that it was the only East Coast Grateful Dead show that I attended. I was visiting Manhattan and drove up with some friends. At the time, my only real experience with outdoor Dead shows was Berkeley's Greek Theater, where I had seen all of the 1980s shows up to that time (9 shows). I had a general idea that Grateful Dead audiences had a lot in common, and as we waited for the band to start, while SPAC was far larger than the Greek, the cheerful fans seemed pretty similar to those in Berkeley.

Once the Dead came on stage and opened up with "Bertha, " however, the crowd absolutely lost their mind and went completely crazy, cheering at the top of their lungs. I turned to my Manhattan friend and said "everybody is completely nuts!" He waved his hand at me, and said calmly, "oh, this is nothing, you should see Philadelphia." The East Coast and the West Coast Dead crowds were very different animals at this time.

The Knickerbocker Arena in Albany, NY, opened in 1990. The Grateful Dead played the venue thirteen times.
Albany
Albany is the capital of New York State, just over two hours (135 miles) due North up the Hudson from Manhattan. The Knickerbocker Arena opened in early 1990, and the Dead moved in almost immediately to take it over. The band played 13 concerts there in six years, and the Jerry Garcia Band played there in 1991 and '93. The Knick had a capacity of 15,000, but it was a good venue for a multi-night run. From the point of view of the venue, the Dead were often booked on weeknights, so they hardly interfered with other events. It did mean, ironically, that Albany was taking over the role held by Rochester and Syracuse in the past, profitable routing gigs to keep the wheels turning.

Given Deadheads propensity to road trip by the 1990s, Albany was a reasonable drive from Brooklyn, Syracuse, New England or Philadelphia, particularly if you were planning to stay three nights. Albany became the headquarters for Upstate Grateful Dead shows, just as Buffalo became the locus for Central New York.

March 24-26, 1990 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Sat>Sun>Mon)

March 23-25, 1991 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Sat>Sun>Mon)

November 16, 1991 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band  (Sat)

June 11-12, 1992 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Thurs>Fri)

March 27-29, 1993 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Sat>Sun>Mon)

November 3, 1993 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band  (Wed)

June 21-22, 1995 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Wed>Thur)

Truckin' Up To Buffalo
Rochester, Syracuse and Buffalo were the most important cities in Central New York for building the Grateful Dead audience. In the 70s, gigs in those cities kept the Dead on the road, so they get those big paydays in New York, Boston, Philly and DC. Come the early 80s, however, Syracuse and Rochester became much more important than Buffalo. Much of that was just demography. In 1970, Buffalo had had a population of 462,768, but by 1990 it was just 328, 123. For contrast, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Raleigh--all in the Sun Belt--all doubled in population during the same period. Yet the biggest gis in the history of the Grateful Dead in Central New York were in Buffalo, long after the band had sized out of Syracuse and Rochester.

The Carrier Dome seemed to offer a good Central State home for the Dead, but conflicts with the sports schedule and the college calendar caused problems. By the late 1980s, however, Deadheads traveled in large numbers, and none more that Northeasterners who had started the road tripping tradition decades earlier. Deadheads were going to go to the show. All that mattered were available tickets and parking.

Rich Stadium, home of the Buffalo Bills, opened in 1973 in Orchard Park, a nearby suburb of Buffalo. It had a football capacity of 80,000, and more importantly, as an NFL stadium it was empty during the Summer. As a result, from 1974 to 2001, the era of stadium shows, a lot of big shows played Rich Stadium. For the Dead, it worked great. It was in easy striking distance of Syracuse and Rochester, for one thing. I also think, without any direct evidence, that Canadian fans from Toronto and Ontario came to Buffalo in great numbers. There would have been plenty of parking.

The Grateful Dead's first show in Buffalo was in 1970, in a concert hall, booked with the Buffalo Symphony. Their last show in Buffalo was 23 years later, playing a packed football stadium, headlining over a popular singer with numerous hits. Pretty much, that's the story of the Grateful Dead in Upstate and Central New York.

July 4, 1986 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Bob Dylan with Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers/Grateful Dead (Friday) 
July 4, 1989 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/10,000 Maniacs (Tuesday) 
July 16, 1990 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Crosby, Stills and Nash (Monday) 
June 6, 1992 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Steve Miller Band (Saturday) 
June 13, 1993 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Sting (Sunday) 
November 5, 1993 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Friday)

Glens Falls Civic Center, in Glens Falls, NY, opened in 1979 (capacity 4,774)
Roll Call: Grateful Dead Appearances in Upstate and Central New York, 1980-1995
In this post, I have attempted to list every performance by the Grateful Dead and its members that was North or West of New York City (Westchester, Suffolk and Long Island are worthy of posts on their own, of course). Since I took an overview above, the balance of the post is a llist of the rest of the shows. I have put a few comments on certain events or venues, but I didn't want to repeat the same comment over and over.

If you have additions, corrections, insights or uninformed speculation about any of these shows, please add them in the Comments. I'm not only interested in missing dates, but accurate venue names (of college gyms for example) and openng acts. 



February 13, 1980 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band/Rachel Sweet (Wednesday)

February 17, 1980 Laker Hall, SUNY Oswego, Oswego, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)
Oswego is on Lake Ontario, roughly between Rochester and Syracuse, and not far from Utica. Although the show would have been primarily aimed at students at SUNY Oswego, dedicated Garcia fans from those surrounding cities would have insured that the show was well attended. As the Grateful Dead became a larger attraction in Central New York, Garcia and Weir tended to be booked in smaller cities or college towns around the major cities.

February 19, 1980 Landmark Theater, Syracuse, NY: Jerry Garcia Band/Robert Hunter (Tuesday)
By this time, bassist Larry Klein was no longer touring with Hunter. From this point onward, Hunter's East Coast appearances were all solo.

May 7, 1980 Barton Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday)

May 8, 1980 Glens Falls Civic Center, Glens Falls, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

July  27, 1980 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Friday)

September 2, 1980 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)

March 13, 1981 Utica Memorial Auditorium, Utica, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)

May 5, 1981 Glens Falls Civic Center, Glens Falls, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)

May 16, 1981 Barton Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead made their third and final appearance at Barton Hall. Remember, even if you were a freshman in May 1977, if you were making normative time you would have graduated by Spring semester '81.

May 17, 1981 Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)

September 26, 1981 Buffalo Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

November 1, 1981 Tuttle North Gym, SUNY Brockport, Brockport, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)
Brockport is just East of Rochester, and near Lake Ontario. When the Garcia Band played colleges in these areas, they were both encouraging new young converts while still providing a fix for the fans in the region. The Grateful Dead were no longer hip in 1981, by any accounting, but even established Deadheads were still not that old, so playing colleges was still a viable commercial strategy.

November 4, 1981 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)

February 11, 1982 Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Bobby And The Midnites/Joan Jett and The Blackhearts (Thursday)
It's fashionable these days to make fun of Bobby And The Midnites. The fact is, they were a great live band. Also, to the extent that there was a "Deadhead community," it was pretty undeveloped outside of places like Brooklyn and Berkeley. So seeing an actual member of the Dead at your local auditorium was a chance to connect with other like-minded souls.

April 8, 1982  Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

April 9, 1982 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)

April 14, 1982 Glens Falls Civic Center, Glens Falls, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday)

June 16, 1982 Music Mountain, South Fallsburg, NY: Jerry Garcia Band/Bobby And The Midnites (Wednesday)
The Garcia Band took one stab pairing themselves on tour with Bobby And The Midnites. It's my impression that this was a fairly substantial show. South Fallsburg is genuinely "upstate," pretty far up NY-17 (NW off I-87), and not near any big cities. Garcia opened the show and let Weir close, his common practice in the Bay Area. As it happened, it poured with rain during the Bobby And The Midnites set.

June 30, 1982 Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia and John Kahn (Wednesday)

September 24, 1982 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)

October 12, 1982 Red Creek Inn, Rochester, NY: Robert Hunter (Tuesday)
Throughout the mid-80s, Hunter played some clubs in the bigger cities in Central New York. Despite, or perhaps because, the gatherings were so intimate, I think Hunter's periodic presence did a lot to keep the flag flying. Hunter would periodically play songs that had been completely unheard live by almost all Deadheads, like "Easy Wind" or "Mason's Children," and it set him apart from the other Dead spinoff groups.

October 24, 1982 Clark Gym, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY: Robert Hunter (Sunday)
Was Hunter billed with another act for this show?

October 26, 1982 The Landmark, Kingston, NY: Robert Hunter (Tuesday)
Kingston is upstate on I-87, on the Hudson River, between Poughkeepsie and the Catskills.

March 10, 1983 The Chance, Poughkeepsie, NY: Robert Hunter (Thursday)
Poughkeepsie is about 85 miles due North of Manhattan, straight up the Hudson River.

April 12, 1983 Broome County Arena, Binghamton, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)
The Grateful Dead make their last appearance in Binghamton.

April 15, 1983 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Friday)

May 25, 1983 Shea's Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)

May 26, 1983 Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia and John Kahn (Thursday)
Some pretty good bands played The Chance in Poughkeepsie in June 1983. Still, it was a pretty small place fot the JGB to play, even with double shows on a Saturday night.
June 4, 1983 Chance Theater, Poughkeepsie, NY: Jerry Garcia Band/Rick Danko (Saturday early and late shows)

June 8, 1983 Chance Theater, Poughkeepsie, NY: Bobby And The Midnites (Wednesday)

June 18, 1983 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

August 20, 1983 J. Bee's Rock III, Middletown, NY: Robert Hunter (Saturday)
Middletown is on I-84, near the New Jersey border.

October 17, 1983 Olympic Arena, Lake Placid, NY: Grateful Dead (Monday)
Lake Placid had been the site of the 1980 Winter Olympics. It was pretty far North and East, near to both Montreal and Vermont. The venue would have been within easy driving distance of Rochester, Syracuse, Albany and New England. The Olympic Arena was a 7,700-capacity multi-use arena, built for the Olympics. The Monday night show was in between a weekend in Hartford (Oct 14-15) and a two-night booking in Worcester (Oct 20-21). In between, the band played Monday (Oct 17) at Lake Placid and Tuesday (Oct 18) in Portland, ME. Since October 17 was a Monday, the show was aimed at getting fans from the surrounding area, rather than locally, since relatively speaking, not many people lived in Lake Placid. Since the Grateful Dead had just initiated obtaining tickets by mail, it was finally easy for East Coast fans to get tickets without special connections.

October 22, 1983 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

October 23, 1983 Ben Light Gymnasium, Ithaca College, Ithaca, NY: Bobby And The Midnites (Sunday)

October 25, 1983 Shea's Theater, Buffalo, NY: Bobby And The Midnites (Tuesday)
Hot Tuna was booked as well, but canceled because Jorma was ill.

November 26, 1983 Broome County Forum Theatre, Binghamton, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Saturday)

December 11, 1983 Laker Hall, SUNY Oswego, Oswego, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)

March 31, 1984 Coleman's, Rome, NY: Robert Hunter (Saturday)

April 1, 1984 Paradise Saloon, Syracuse, NY: Robert Hunter (Sunday)

April 16, 1984 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)

April 17, 1984 Niagara Falls Convention Center, Niagara Falls, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday)
Niagara Falls was West of Rochester and North of Buffalo. It was also in relatively easy range of Toronto and Ontario. Once again, the Dead served local fans while remaining in easy driving distance of any established fans. The band had played two nights in Hampton (Apr 13-14) and were heading to The Spectrum in Philadelphia for three shows (April 19-21). In between, the Dead played and Rochester on Monday (Apr 16) and Niagara Falls on Tuesday (Apr 17).

June 24, 1984 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Sunday)

July 22, 1984 Red Creek Inn, Rochester, NY: Robert Hunter (Sunday)

August 15, 1984 Orange County Community College, Middletown, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)
Middletown is a city in Orange County, New York, United States. It lies in New York's Hudson Valley region, near the Wallkill River and the foothills of the Shawangunk Mountains. Middletown is situated between Port Jervis and Newburgh, New York, near the Hudson River. Middletown is on the Port Jervis Line to Hoboken, so at least hypothetically commutable to Manhattan, if you took PATH. Realistically, however, it's upstate.

August 24,1984 Festival Tent, Monroe County Fairgrounds, Henrietta, NY: Bobby And The Midnites (Friday)
Henrietta is just 20 minutes South of Rochester, so while in a way this was a new city, it drew from the same pool of Rochester Deadheads who had probably seen the band on multiple occasions.

October 20, 1984 Carrier Dome, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday)

November 27, 1984 Auditorium Theater, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia and John Kahn/Robert Hunter (Tuesday)

June 27, 1985 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

August 6, 1985 The Casablanca, Rochester, NY: Kokomo (Tuesday)
Kokomo featured Brent Mydland and Bill Kreutzmann. I am the only person to try and tell the Kokomo story, such as it is. By the next year, the band had evolved into Go Ahead.

November 7-8, 1985 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday-Friday)

July 4, 1986 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Bob Dylan with Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers/Grateful Dead (Friday)

October 8, 1986 USA Sam's, North Syracuse, NY: Go Ahead (Wednesday)
Go Ahead featured Brent Mydland and Bill Kreutzmann. They toured pretty steadily in late Summer and Fall '86, when everyone was worried about Garcia's recovery from his coma. Go Ahead was a pretty good band, and they are extremely fondly remembered, as the Comment Thread on my history will tell you.

October 10, 1986 Trafalmadore Cafe, Buffalo, NY: Go Ahead (Friday)

October 11, 1986 The Warehouse, Rochester, NY: Go Ahead (Saturday)

October 26, 1986 Trafalmadore Cafe, Buffalo, NY: Robert Hunter (Sunday)

July 2, 1987 Silver Stadium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

June 28, 1988 Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY: Grateful Dead (Tuesday)

June 30, 1988 Silver Stadium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday)

July 4, 1989 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/10,000 Maniacs (Tuesday)

March 24-26, 1990 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday/Sunday/Monday)

July 16, 1990 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Crosby, Stills and Nash (Monday)

March 23-25, 1991 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday/Sunday/Monday)

Jul 13, 1991 Darien Lake Performing Arts Center, Darien Lake, NY: Hot Tuna/Bob Weir And Rob Wasserman (Saturday)
The Darien Lakes Performing Arts Center is part of an amusement park. Darien Lake is 40 mi East of Buffalo, and stands as farthest west any member of the Grateful Dead has played in New York State save for Buffalo proper.

September 29, 1991 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman (Sunday)

November 16, 1991 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Saturday)

November 20, 1991 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)

June 6, 1992 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Steve Miller Band (Saturday)

June 11-12, 1992 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Thursday/Friday)

July 22, 1992 Empire Court, Syracuse, NY: Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman (Wednesday)

March 27-29, 1993 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Saturday/Sunday/Monday)

June 13, 1993 Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, NY: Grateful Dead/Sting (Sunday)

November 3, 1993 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Wednesday)

November 4, 1993 Community War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Thursday)

November 5, 1993 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Friday)

November 14, 1993 Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: Jerry Garcia Band (Sunday)

June 21-22, 1995 Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY: Grateful Dead (Wednesday/Thursday)

The New Riders played SUNY Brockport on April 5, 1974 (thanks to Grateful Seconds for the ad from The Stylus)
Appendix: New Riders Of The Purple Sage Upstate New York Performances, 1972-74
I know no one thinks I try and keep these posts from getting out of hand, but really I do. The New Riders of The Purple Sage were managed by Jon McIntire up through 1973, and booked by Sam Cutler's Out Of Town Tours until early 1974. So the New Riders were both beneficiaries and participants in the Dead's booking strategy in Upstate New York. The symbiotic connection between the Dead and the Riders meant that NRPS appearances also represented a gathering of the tribe, if a somewhat smaller one. Without writing another 4000 more words, here are the known NRPS dates from 1972-74. If anyone has additions or corrections, please add them in the Comments.

April 12, 1972 Clark Gym, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen  2 shows 8 & 11:30
April 13, 1972 Field House, LeMoyne College, Syracuse, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
April 14, 1972 Proctor's Theater, Schenectady, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
November 29, 1972 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Eric Andersen
December 2, 1972 [venue], SUNY Binghamton, Binghamton, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
December 12, 1972, [Elting Gym], SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
September 6, 1973 Palace Theater, Albany, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
October 12, 1973 The Palestra, U. of Rochester, Rochester, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
November 17, 1973 Reid Athletic Center, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
Note that the New Riders had tried out playing at Colgate, under the aegis of Sam Cutler, four years before the November 4, 1977 show (above). So the Dead weren't entirely leaping into the unknown when they booked that date.

November 26, 1973 Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Eric Andersen
April 5, 1974 Gym, SUNY Brockport, Brockport, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
April 6, 1974 Bailey Hall, Cornell U, Ithaca, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
The NRPS Archive site lists Barton Hall, but I find it more likely that the Riders played the much smaller Bailey Hall (built 1912, capacity 1328).
April 19, 1974 [venue], Buffalo, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage
April 21, 1974 [venue], SUNY Fredonia, Fredonia, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen
September 14, 1974 [venue], SUNY Morrisville, Morrisville, NY: New Riders of The Purlpe Sage
November 23, 1974 Fieldhouse, Rockland Community College, Ramapo, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Waylon Jennings