By March of 1971, it had been a good seven months since I had seen the
Grateful Dead, and several months since I had been to any large concerts. A mid-week trip to Discount Records produced a handbill that showed the Dead
playing at Winterland that evening, along with a mysterious crew including
Yogi Baijan, the Sufi Choir, and the Whirling Dervish Dancers. Although it was the middle of a school week, and I had never driven to San
Francisco by myself, I entreated my parents to let me go, and they
assented, provided I could find someone to go with me. I asked a school
friend, Tom, who had never seen the Dead, if he wanted to go, and he
miraculously got permission from his parents to go with me, and by 8 PM or so,
we were off on 101 towards Winterland.
Walking into the already darkened hall, it became immediately evident that
this would not be a typical concert. On the stage were a number of robed,
bearded gentlemen chanting around a roaring fire that sent flames high into
the air inside what was famously a huge wooden firetrap.
Decades later, taking Yoga
classes in Chicago, I learned what a major cultural force Yogi Bhajan and his
Kundalini Yoga movement had become. I can’t identify Bhajan in the photos I took, and another bespectacled
gentleman led the chanting, so it is possible that he was not even there.
Regardless, the spectacle certainly made a strong impression at the time.
One can guess that the fire marshalls were not in attendance at that point. We
found seats in the balcony and listened to the ceremony which, being mostly in
Sanskrit, didn’t mean much to me at the time.
Ceremonial Fire 3.24.71 Photo: M. Parrish
Once the chanting was finished, the fires were quenched (whew!) and the stage
cleared for the Sufi Choir. This
group, conducted by William Allaudin Mathieu, came together as a group of
followers of spiritual mystic Samuel Lewis, whose followers called him Mursid.
The group was a true choir, that persisted under Mathieu’s direction from 1969
until 1983. After performing
several beautiful pieces on their own, the choir was joined by Dead members
Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, and Bill Kreutzmann for their last two
pieces. The Dead members provided delicate droning chords below the choir’s
angelic harmonies, with Garcia’s leads dancing around the choir’s melodies – a
magical, all to
Dead and Sufi Choir 3.24.71 Photo: M. Parrish |
Winterland was pretty full, especially for a Wednesday night for a show with
limited advance promotion, but most of the floor was cleared for the next
performance, by a group of Whirling Dervish Dancers, who spun very quickly in
large arcs, forming intricate patterns. I believe the accompaniment was just
recorded music, but can’t say for sure.
Dervish Dancers 3.24.71 Photo: M. Parrish |
Grateful Dead 3.24.71 Photo: M. Parrish |
It was quite late, close to 11, when the Dead finally came onstage for their
regular set. (Contrary to Deadbase, the New Riders did not appear at this
show). I was surprised and
saddened by the absence of Mickey Hart, which had not been reported in the
local press, despite his having been on hiatus from the band since
February. At this juncture, the band’s music was markedly less
psychedelic than it has been just a few months earlier, with a raft of shorter
songs, including several new originals, having taken the place of some of the
longer pieces, although a nice Truckin’>Other One emerged late in the first
set.
Other than the early Fillmore West shows that included both an early and late
set by each band on the
Grateful Dead 3.24.71 Photo: M. Parrish |
The drive home was interesting, given that I had been through a full day of
school before taking off on this evening adventure. It had been a splendid
evening, full of surprises, and a great introduction to the leaner, more
rock oriented Grateful Dead of 1971.