Today is the 51st Anniversary...

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...of my first Grateful Dead show.

I had grown up mostly in the Boston area. It was my freshman (and only) year at Reed College, but I was home for winter break. I was into the Beatles, Airplane, CSN, Country Joe, the Butterfield Band with Bloomfield, and a few other bands at the time, but I had never heard a note of GD music - even WBCN in Boston didn't play much Dead.

Just before I left Portland a friend told me I should listen to the Dead because Garcia played like Bloomfield. Well, he doesn't, obviously, as I found out, but they were two of the very few guitar players of the time to play in modes other then major, or minor/blues from time to time.

I didn't have time to take his suggestion before getting on the plane, but when I got to MA I discovered that the boys were playing at the new Boston Tea Party (previously the Ark) on 12/29. Actually, they were also playing 12/30 and 31 but those were already sold out.

I went down there to get in line and found myself near the front. It was quite cold and windy so I was glad to be wearing my long wool Air Force surplus coat and to be in the lee of the entrance zone. Burned a few fatties while waiting - think it was three bucks to get in. 

The venue was once some sort of parking garage or loading dock, with concrete ramps and floor. Capacity seemed to be about 300. The stage was only about a foot off the floor. Around the perimeter of the main room were a bunch of small alcoves, each with a different decor and lighting - furry, cushiony, hard, black light, strobe, light show, et cetera.

We filed in and sat on the floor in front of the stage. The band came on and fiddled about for a while. Then they started playing. I was intrigued and a bit confused by all the different musical styles they played in - rock, country, folk, blues, psychedelic, whatever. In retrospect it was a mediocre show - the first of three in a strange city ( they had played in Boston before but this was the only time the boys played a NY run at somewhere other than the Bay area) and at the end of a long hard year (Lenny Hart, Woodstock, Altamont).

In the middle of Good Lovin' - hey, I know that song! -  a huge bearded guy stood up a few rows ahead of me and started screaming at the band. Then he hopped up on stage and approached Bobby, who took off his guitar and prepared to defend himself. The dude then grabbed Weir's mic stand and threw it into the crowd. It landed about 10 feet in front of me. Then Parrish and another roadie  grabbed the dude and frog marched him out to the back door, where they chucked him out onto the RR tracks. Meanwhile the rest of the band played on as though nothing was amiss. At the end of the song Bob said he hoped nobody got hurt, but he guessed we could see it coming.

I walked out of the show scratching my head, wondering what it all meant. I wasn't a Deadhead yet - that didn't happen until I first heard Uncle John's Band on the radio a few months later.

Great story, thanks for sharing!   (tomorrow is the 42nd anniversary of my first Dead show... done posts about it before, think i'll take this year off) 

From Deadlists.com>>>>

40 seconds into the post-Drums Good Lovin' an audience member screams angrily into a mic "I'll get the fucking microphone" ; 5 seconds later, he is heard again, further from the mic as he is removed from stage, "Don't touch me... I'm coming, I'm coming"

Cold Rain And Snow
Mama Tried
Black Peter
Easy Wind
Me And My Uncle 
China Cat Sunflower
I Know You Rider
High Time 
Hard To Handle
Mason's Children 

Cumberland Blues
Casey Jones 
Good Lovin' 
Dancing In The Street
Saint Stephen 
Not Fade Away  **3rd time played***

5th Mason's Children

I walked out of my 1st show (3/31/73) firmly aware that these... are my people. Where's the next one?

I think there was a Dire Wolf between Dancin' and Stephen.

>>>Meanwhile the rest of the band played on as though nothing was amiss. 

Lol.....after years of hanging with Kesey and the Hell's Angels there probably weren't too many things that phased the guys

Thanks for your story...

Think i'll give it a listen; 

https://relisten.net/grateful-dead/1969/12/29/cold-rain-and-snow?source=...

(and a Good Lovin > Drums > Good Lovin, and yes, a Dire Wolf after Dancin)

I used to have an absolutely horrible quality bootleg of one those night that I played a lot. Was the Tea Party on Landsdown behind the Green Monster?

Yup, that's where it was.

Hippie anniversary!

Great story, Surf.  32 years for me, those Worster-tours.  I did love the Oxford speedway, Maine show.  Little Feat rocked it.

52 1/2 years on my "resume "

but no,I am not any deadier than the screaming toucheads

 

 

Good story surf

51 years on my  NYE "resume " tomorrow

LONG LIVE THE PIG