Road Trips Volume 2 Number 2

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2 Disc Set

In the winter of 1968, the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service embarked on their first major tour of the Pacific Northwest. Now, this wasn’t an era when bands traveled in plush custom tour buses and stayed in luxury hotels. Rather it was a caravan of funky cars and semi-dilapidated equipment trucks bombing up US 101 from the Bay Area to points north and hotels that probably weren’t going to make the AAA guide book. But the bands played like beasts in Washington and Oregon, spreading San Francisco magic in an assortment of small auditoriums and ballrooms. The Dead, in particular, were really spreading their creative wings, exploring and honing what were unquestionably the most ambitious original songs they’d written to date. Their old friend Robert Hunter had penned lyrics for unusual songs called “Alligator,” “China Cat Sunflower,” “Dark Star” and “The Eleven,” and there were also mind-boggling new tunes such as “That’s It for the Other One,” “New Potato Caboose” and “Born Cross-Eyed.” Say whaaaat?

Now, while the Dead were on the road blowing minds in places like Eureka, Seattle, Portland and Ashland, Oregon, a couple of their “people” back home were busy signing a lease that would give the Dead, Jefferson Airplane and other interested freaks, control over a fantastic new venue: San Francisco’s venerable Carousel Ballroom, a one-time Big Band dance hall that was little-used by the mid-’60s. In January, before the Northwest tour, the Dead and Quicksilver had put on a successful dance there (a “Ben Franklin’s Birthday” celebration, the poster said), but the Grand Opening of the ballroom was slated for Valentine’s Day, with the Dead and Country Joe & the Fish on the bill. One of the scene’s budding artists, Stanley Mouse, produced a poster for the event with a jug-eared, retro geek imploring his prospective romantic conquests to “Be Mine,” and a pair of local FM rock stations carried the show live on radio.

This magnificent show—long admired by Dead Heads (and the band—it’s a Phil Lesh favorite)—captures the Dead at a real turning point in their career: When they tossed out the rock rule book and truly found their own sound. They tried out nearly all their new songs that night, and everyone was amazed at how effortlessly—yet powerfully—one flowed into the next and how their sets ebbed and flowed and exploded and got quiet and covered such an incredible range of textures and emotions. This wasn’t just a good-time dance band. This was serious… and still a good time!

Because the Valentine’s Day dance was a hometown show, on the radio and also being recorded for possible use on the Dead’s then-in-progress second album, Anthem of the Sun, soundman Dan Healy captured the music on an 8-track tape machine, and this Road Trips set marks the first time that those 8-tracks have been completely, properly mixed down—by ol’ reliable, Jeffrey Norman, of course—and released (aside from a few short missing passages on the multitrack masters, which are included from another source). So forget any version you might have heard before—this is state-of-the-art ’68 Dead, and you’re gonna love it! This is also the complete show, another first for the Road Trips series. As always, the discs are mastered to the HDCD standard and the package includes an entertaining and informative historical essay.

The first set of 2/14/68 was relatively short, so we’ve also packed the last third of Disc One with a selection of tunes from the Northwest Tour that were just recently discovered in a collection of tapes that had been languishing in a long-defunct San Francisco recording studio. Alas, there were just isolated songs on reels (not full shows), and the sound is variable, but the performances are, as they say in Boston, wicked-awesome, from an almost punky “Beat It on Down the Line” to a truly hair-raising “Viola Lee Blues.” So, if it’s rarities you want, we’ve got ’em!

Could there be a better diversion from these—or any—stressful times than this scorching set of Primal Dead? We don't think so. Impress your lovers and friends! Blow your own mind! You can find out more about the songs lineup below, and you can place your order by clicking here.

Track List

Disc One:

MORNING DEW
GOOD MORNING LITTLE SCHOOLGIRL
DARK STAR>
CHINA CAT SUNFLOWER>
THE ELEVEN>
TURN ON YOUR LOVELIGHT

Bonus tracks from Early 1968

VIOLA LEE BLUES (1/20/68 Eureka)
BEAT IT ON DOWN THE LINE (1/23/68 Seattle)
HURTS ME TOO (1/23/68 Seattle)
DARK STAR (2/2/68 Portland)

Disc Two:

THAT'S IT FOR THE OTHER ONE>
NEW POTATO CABOOSE>
BORN CROSS-EYED>
SPANISH JAM
ALLIGATOR>
CAUTION (DO NOT STOP ON TRACKS)>
FEEDBACK
IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR


Comments

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Carousel 2/14/68

Quadlibet Kid
For the record: We here in Boston would actually say " wicked piss-uh! "
It's an idiosyncratic colloquialism!!

Postage

Look, I will order this as well as a download of DP22, and maybe even the PJ8 release, if you just put a sensible postage cost on it. Over US$21 is a joke; a bad one, but still a joke. I'll order it the SECOND you drop the postage to a reasonable cost. In light of other services (e.g. Amazon) the postage really shouldn't be any more than around $5. Even that is excessive - it's still a quarter of the cost.

It's a bit cruel when a US resident can order the RTV2N2 + PJ8 package and pay US$34.96, whereas I, an Australian resident, have to pay $56.77. As the exchange rates stands today, that's AUS$49.37 for US residents and AUS$80.12 for me. Ouch.

Maybe it's a bad dream.

2-14-68 et al

Gentlemen my heartfelt thanks please lots more of these incredible years when the DEAD were in a league all their own this is one VERY happy old deadhead fresh back from the opera tonight finding this gift in my e-mail more please LOTS more esp '70 and '71 thanks again

early 90's shows

I don't know which show it was, it was at shoreline. I'd see some early 90's shows

WOW

This is like, crown jewels stuff......heretofore kept locked under unbreakable glass in the Tower of Terrapin Station...... Can't wait to hear what Jeffrey has produced from the multi-track masters ~ I'm poised for the best-sounding 68 ever (or at least this side of Two From the Vault).

This "1-23-68" Seattle stuff is intriguing...since my (incomplete) tape is labeled 1-22 and my old Deadbase only has 1-22 & 1-26. If my "1-22" turns out to be this, then I've always been missing BIODTL, Hurts Me Too, Viola Lee, Lovelight). Or if this really is from a separate date 1-23 (and I'm thinking it might be), then even more stuff (another Dark Star -> ChinaCat - 11) that I've never heard! Likewise, my Eureka tape never included Viola Lee or Schoolgirl.

I love all these extras, because they make it a Road Trips even though you get a complete show, too!

As for someone thinking the Pure Jerry pick is less than optimal ~ no way, this is a tour yet undocumented by an official release, and very, very special in its solo acoustic + upright format. And make no mistake, Jerry had plenty of musically sublime moments in '85 & '86 ~ just listen to how good his voice sounds on Bird Song ~ or check out Richmond '85, DP 21 from just a few months earlier. Yes, he did have a (thankfully temporary) lazy eye and headed for trouble physically ~ but to discount this whole period is revisionist history, or guesswork from someone who didn't see him then and enjoy a fair share of thrills. Ok, I'm biased, it was the era I got on board...but I remember the feelings to this day.
As for this acoustic duo tour, I'll never forget me and my two best Dead friends driving to DC in Dec 85 to try and get in. To clarify ~ I was driving, the others were navigating as I got hopelessly caught in the circles of DC......we got within sight of Constitution Hall, but never had a single opportunity to even get out of the car. Sigh. My friend Anne went, so I heard they played Ripple.

overseas postage

The overseas shipping costs do sound outrageous...! But not to be unsympathetic, but......what can the Dead store possibly do about that? Nothing, I'd imagine (?)

oh, ok.......

......hence the download requests, disregard previous.

ANYONE!?!?!?

Anyone else notice that Nugs.net free stash seems to have many of the Dead's releases. I just find it really weird, its this one, post egypt, DP 35 or 36, possibly both!?

to antonjo

Dead store can just do same as Amazon. There shipping cost is less than 5 dollars.

I guess my points are that...

...
a. the postage costs appear to have tripled from a few weeks ago when I ordered Terrapin '77
b. why are the dead.net overseas postage always higher than other websites sending CDs overseas? and
c. I really, really want this release but cannot bring myself to pay the postage so will miss out. I'm peeved.

I think that the postage offered is a 5-9 day thing, hence the high cost. I'm happy to wait three/four weeks like usual and pay $5-7. An extra week or two isn't worth the extra money.

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