During their tenure as a band, the Grateful Dead worked on
New Year’s Eve 22 times. I attended 17 of those shows and listened to two more
remotely. What started out as a year-end celebration for most of the top-line
San Francisco bands of the 1960s evolved into an annual tradition for the band
and promoter Bill Graham. These marathons were hit-and-miss musically, but
always were memorable spectacles that marked the transition from one year into
the next in high style.
I was too young to participate in the first several NYE
shows. It is conceivable that the Dead played somewhere on NYE 1965, but no
information I have come across supports a gig on that date.1966, at Graham’s
Fillmore Auditorium, featured the Dead, Airplane, and Quicksilver. The band was
back east in late December, 1967, and played Boston’s Psychedelic Supermarket
the two nights before NYE, but sat out the 31st. Back in San
Francisco, Graham held a celebration at Winterland with the Airplane, Big
Brother, Quicksilver, and Freedom Highway. At the end of 1968, the Dead played
the first of their six New Year’s shows at Winterland, along with Quicksilver,
Santana, and It’s a Beautiful Day. This show is documented at length in a
wonderful Lost Live Dead essay. 1969 found the band on the road again, playing
their first out-of-town New Year’s Show at the relatively tiny Boston Tea
Party. A splendid soundboard recording exists of this show, and recordings of
all of the band’s subsequent New Year’s shows are easily found online or as
official audio and/or video releases.
My first glimpse of the Dead at New Year’s came from the
1970-71 marathon. I did not attend, but decided to experience the event in what
was planned as a dazzling multi-media extravaganza, featuring a video feed
courtesy of KQED and a quadrophonic audio feed involving broadcasts from two FM
stations, KSAN and KQED-FM. The early parts of this show remain a mystery, as
the broadcasts did not start until early in the support set from Hot Tuna.
Advertised as further support were the Acoustic Dead, Stoneground, and the New
Riders of the Purple Sage, but I do not know which of these bands actually
played. It seems certain that the Dead did not play an acoustic set, as they
had basically abandoned that format in their shows after the early November
Capitol Theater run. I would imagine the New Riders and Stoneground may have
played brief sets before the broadcast started. If anyone reading this attended
this show and remembers who played, please chime in. The Tuna set was beset by sound problems. At
that point in time, FM simulcasts depended on dedicated telephone lines from
the venue to the stations, and both KSAN and KQED started having audio
difficulties at the start of the broadcast, although they were generally ironed
out for the bulk of the Tuna set, which found the band playing as an electric
quartet comprising guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, bassist Jack Casady, drummer Sammy
Piazza and harmonica player Will Scarlet. Building on the repertoire that Jorma
and Jack had introduced on the initial eponymous (and acoustic) Hot Tuna album,
the group debuted new material like Kaukonen’s “Ode to Billy Dean” which
memorialized one of Kaukonen’s musical comrades from his south bay folk club days,
and “Third Week in the Chelsea” a plaintive tune that foreshadowed the
implosion of Jorma and Jack’s other band, the Jefferson Airplane.
After a decent break, the Dead came out and embarked on one
of their extended tuning sessions before plowing into a strong version of
“Truckin’” one of the most popular tunes off of their recently released
American Beauty. Almost immediately, things started to go south, with one and
then both radio signals cutting out, although the TV signal persisted
throughout the Dead’s generous set. Some onstage sound issues led the band to
play a rare electric version of “Monkey and The Engineer” while the crew dealt
with the technical glitches. The rest of the set was pretty pro-forma for late
1970, ending with a neat medley of “Good Lovin’” and “Uncle John’s Band.” It
was a frustrating evening for me, trying to get a good sound signal on one or
the other of the two FM stations, both of which bailed after the seventh song,
“Dire Wolf.” I then tried to record off of the TV using some cheap condenser
mics, but my brother’s tape recorder’s drive belt was failing, producing speed
fluctuations that rendered the tape unlistenable. Today one can find a hybrid
version of the show online, incorporating audience recordings, part of the
funky FM signals, and some soundboard bits. In the early 2000s, an additional
tape from that evening surfaced featuring a jam between Hot Tuna and Bob Weir
that transpired in the wee hours after the Dead ended their set.
The first NYE show I attended was 12/31/71. I remember
procuring hard tickets at the box office in the Sharon Heights shopping center.
Tickets were $5 in advance. I went with my friend Tim P., who shared a number
of Dead shows with me during our college years.
We snagged balcony seats on the east side of the ballroom, providing a
clear view of the proceedings without the crowds and chaos on the floor. As was
the case the previous year, the entire show was broadcast on KSAN, and my
parents were kind enough to record the show during their NYE at home.
First up (and unbilled in the advance ads for the show) were
the Sons of Champlin, who were still operating under the moniker Yogi Phlegm –
a name they adopted for some arcane reason during most of 1971 into the early
part of 1972. I should note that the Yogi Phlegm set from 3/5/72, which started
with a jam between YP members Bill Champlin, Geoff Palmer, and Bill Vitt and
Garcia and Lesh, often mistakenly circulates as this evening’s performance.
Their actual set, with the broadcast plagued by some audio issues, consisted of
the following:
Yogi Phlegm 12/31/71
Papa Can Play
Who
Whatcha Gonna Do?
All and Everything
Let Your Daddy Know
Right On
Welcome To the Dance Suite (Silence>Sound/Turn
Around/Healthy Woman)
?Wasted
Without Love
Cold Sweat.
As was the case during the band’s Yogi Phlegm days, the set
was very open-ended, with lots of jamming, and consisted mostly of material
from their most recent and subsequent 1970s albums.
The New Riders had toured steadily with the Dead throughout
1971, but this was their first local show with Buddy Cage rather than Garcia on
pedal steel. They played a generous and energetic set, comprising most of the
material from their first two albums:
New Riders of the Purple Sage 12/31/71
Six Days On The Road
I Don't Know You
Sing Me a Rainbow
Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud, Loud Music)
Sailin'
Henry
Portland Woman
Truck Drivin' Man
Garden Of Eden
Hello Mary Lou
Runnin' Back To You
I Don't Need No Doctor
Last Lonely Eagle
Louisiana Lady
Willie And The Hand Jive.
In addition to Cage replacing Garcia, the biggest change was
the introduction of lead vocals by David Nelson (“Dim Lights”) and Dave Torbert
(“Willie and the Hand Jive”, “I Don’t Need no Doctor”).
As Midnight approached, the anticipation mounted for the transition
into 1972, and for the Dead’s performance. For what became a tradition moving
forwards, Bill Graham shuffled onto the stage dressed as father time, crawling
into a clock. At the witching hour, balloons dropped, fake explosions occurred,
and two BGP folks in diapers emerged from the clock and started running around
the stage as the Dead launched into “Dancing in the Streets,” with Weir
changing the second line to “It’s New Year’s Eve so I do Believe, there’ll be
dancing in the streets.” This was the only version of “Dancin’” that the Dead
performed in 1971 and the last they would play until the dreaded Disco revival
of the song in 1976, and it’s a good, powerful rendition, punctuated on the
radio broadcast by whoops and hollers from the naked new year’s babies. After Dancin’ Weir surveyed the damage and
commented “ I hope to tell you, this stage is a fXXXing mess.” Undaunted, the
band tuned up and launched into “Mr. Charlie” the first of an abundance of
Pigpen tunes performed that night, including the debut of his new rocker “Chinatown
Shuffle” midway through the first set. This was Pig’s first bay area appearance
since his illness, and he came through in fine form, as he had during the
earlier December tour. The opening set also included most of the new
Hunter-Garcia tunes unveiled that year, along with Weir’s newish “Playing in
the Band” and the set-closing “One More Saturday Night,” which featured the
debut of Donna Godchaux’s signature wails with the band.
The second set featured the pairing of “Truckin’” and “The
Other One” (here a sandwich enclosing “Me and My Uncle)” that was by far the
most-played of the band’s long-form excursions that year. Late in the second
set, well into the wee hours of the morning, Weir and Garcia traded verses on
the first live version of “Big River” Pig delivered another rarity, an eerie version
of “The Same Thing,” which was the only version of that tune sung by him since
1967 and featured some outstanding slide guitar from Garcia. After closing the
second set with a strong version of Not Fade Away>Goin’ Down the Road>Not
Fade Away medley that closed most of their shows in 1971 and on into 1972, the
band encored with a fun but sloppy version of “Casey Jones.”
Dancing In The Streets
Mr. Charlie
Brown Eyed Women
Beat It On Down The Line
You Win Again
Jack Straw
Sugaree
El Paso
Chinatown Shuffle
Tennessee Jed
Mexicali Blues
China Cat Sunflower
I Know You Rider
Next Time You See Me
Playing In The Band
Loser
One More Saturday Night*
Trucking'>
Drums>
The Other One >
Me And My Uncle>
The Other One > Black Peter
Big River
The Same Thing
Ramble On Rose
Sugar Magnolia
Not Fade Away>
Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>
Not Fade Away
Casey Jones
* Donna Jean Godchaux's onstage debut with the Dead
The next year, New Year’s tickets went on sale around Thanksgiving
(before those for the December 10-12 Winterland run) and they were still
relatively easy to procure. I drove up to Winterland with a few friends from
high school and college, and we settled into the balcony about mid-hall on
stage left for what we knew would be a long evening.
For 1972, the New Year’s lineup was identical to that in
1971, with the minor exception that Yogi Phlegm had wisely reverted to calling
themselves the Sons of Champlin in early 1972.
Their short set consisted mostly of material from their Welcome to the
Dance album, which came out the following year. I’m not sure why their set was
so short, but it did pave the way for the very long set from the New Riders
that followed.
Sons 12/31/72:
The Swim
Welcome To The Dance suite(Silence>Sound/Turn
Around/Healthy Woman)
For Joy
Lightnin’
Without Love
By the end of 1972, the New Riders of the Purple Sage were a
mature, confident headlining act with three Columbia albums under their belt,
and had fully integrated material sung by both David Nelson and Dave Torbert. They
played an expansive set, nearly two hours in length, including originals from
all three albums along with extended versions of “I Don’t Need A Doctor” and
“Willie and the Hand Jive” among the several covers. Harmonica player Matthew
Kelly (who had played with Torbert in a band called Horses before he joined the
New Riders and would co-found a new band, Kingfish, with him in 1974) guested
on harmonica on several tunes.
New Riders 12/31/72
I Don't Know You
Lochnivar
Hello Mary Lou
Henry
California Day
She's No Angel
Superman
Whiskey
Groupie*
Portland Woman
Rainbow
Truck Drivin' Man
All I Ever Wanted
I Don't Need No
Doctor*
Long Black Veil
Louisiana Lady
School Days
Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud, Loud Music)
Take A Letter Maria
Last Lonely Eagle
Willie & The Hand Jive*
Encore: Glendale Train
(*w/ Matthew Kelly on Harmonica)
As midnight approached, the Grateful Dead took the stage
resplendent in the Nudie tailored suits they first wore at their previous Bay
Area gig, also at Winterland, on 12/12/72. Following a more conventional
year-end countdown than that of the previous year, the Dead launched into Chuck
Berry’s Around and Around, which they had started playing sporadically in late
1970 and moved into a more regular rotation in the fall of 1972. Highlights of
the first set included an early “Box of Rain” and “Don’t Ease Me In,” the jug
band tune that was the band’s first single and that similarly had been added to
regular rotation in the fall. Following
a long, exploratory “Playing in the Band,” the Dead wrapped up the first set
with “Casey Jones.”
The second set opened with another Chuck Berry tune, “Promised
Land, followed by an early version of “Half Step Mississippi Uptown Toodeloo,”
the first of a new batch of songs they were prepping for their next studio
album, Wake of The Flood. The high point of the second set was the
extended version of “The Other One, which lasted a good 40 minutes including a
drums and bass interlude, and was augmented by David Crosby joining in midway
on electric 12 string. As was fairly typical in that era, the structure of “The
Other One” was completely abandoned for a long interval following the drums,
but eventually returned to familiar territory, leading into a gorgeous version
of “Morning Dew” with Crosby still on board. After pausing to tune up, the set
continued with “Sugar Magnolia”, dedicated to Bill Graham, and a soulful “Sing
Me Back Home.” Near the end of that song, dust and detritus started raining
down on the stage, and it slowly became apparent that an adventurous soul had
somehow climbed through an opening in the roof of Winterland to land on the
extremely fragile looking lighting rig. The band hastily exited the stage,
while Bill Graham coached the fellow to hang on while a rope was lowered
allowing him to climb down to safety without injuring himself or anyone on
stage. Graham’s handling of this potentially deadly situation was masterful. However,
the momentum of the Dead’s performance had been disrupted by the human drama,
and they wound up the main set with their third Berry tune of the evening, “Johnny
B. Goode,” returning for two encores: Uncle John’s Band and “One More Saturday
Night.
Sometime before or during the second set, an announcement
was made that a jam session would follow the Dead’s set, including Joni
Mitchell and others. As a result, my friends and I stuck around for a good half
hour after the Dead’s set concluded, but no more music transpired, at least
onstage. This was to be the last Grateful Dead New Year’s performance until 1976,
which is where I will pick this up in a subsequent post.
Grateful Dead 12/31/72 (well, really 1/1/73):
Around & Around
Deal
Mexicali Blues
Brown Eyed Women
Box Of Rain
Jack Straw
Don't Ease Me In
Beat It On Down The Line
Candyman
El Paso
Tennessee Jed
Playin' In The Band
Casey Jones
Promised Land
Mississippi Half Step
Big River
Sugaree
Truckin'>
The Other One>
Drums>
The Other One*>
Morning Dew*
Sugar Magnolia
Sing Me Back Home
(guy on light rig drama)
Johnny B. Goode
E: Uncle John's Band
E: One More Saturday Night
7 comments:
Good stuff Michael. Love hearing about the kid dropping in through the roof.
Just a note from a Sons fan, by the time of the Dec 31 72 show Yogi Phlegm drummer Bill Vitt had been replaced by James Preston who then held the chair for many years. I am in fact hoping to locate a copy of the Yogi Phlegm set from 1971 which was broadcast on KSAN.
Thanks NYGuy. I should have mentioned the change in drummers between the two NYE shows, so I appreciate the reminder. Preston was with the Sons until they broke up in the late '70s, and was also the drummer in the reformed sons from the 90s until shortly before his death in 2014.
I don't know why or how the New Years Eve Show '69/'70 is described as it is, but I was there and it's exactly as posted on the Sons of Champlin archive.
<< Wednesday, December 31, 1969: '1969 New Years Eve 1970', Winterland 2000 Post Street at Steiner Street, San Francisco, California
The band was billed only as 'The Sons' on the poster printed for this show. Also on the bill: Quicksilver Messenger Service, Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna. Lights by Brotherhood of Light. This show, from 8:00pm to 8:00am, was promoted by Bill Graham Presents In San Francisco."
http://brunoceriotti.weebly.com/the-sons-of-champlin.html
So, who would have been the members of Yogi Phlegm on 12/31/71 and 3/5/72?
Thank you for this wonderful first hand account.
I don't think I've ever thought about it, but Mississippi Half Step really should be titled "Half Step Mississippi."
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