
Des Moines, IA - June 16, 1974
Louisville, KY - June 18, 1974
Road Trips 1.1
Road Trips 1.2
Road Trips 1.3
Road Trips 1.4
Road Trips 2.1
Road Trips 2.2
June 1974: Wall of Sound
Can it really be more than 35 years since the Grateful Dead unveiled one of their most audacious (and successful!) experiments—the legendary Wall of Sound? Why, it seems like only yesterday that I was cowering in fear worrying that one of Phil’s bass bombs was going to topple the impressive array of speaker towers that sprawled across the Dead’s enormous stage and rose to a height of more than two stories! What a sight—no one had ever seen anything remotely like it before (or since). What a sound—there had never been a cleaner and or more powerful system. At its peak, it was comprised of nearly 650 loudspeakers powered by 50 giant McIntosh amplifiers, and unlike traditional left-right P.A. systems, this behemoth gave each instrument its own vertical array, and vocals emanated mostly from a center honeycomb cluster above the band. Wow! It was an amazing thing to behold (and a mutha to transport and set up)!
And it just happened to coincide with one of the band’s most fertile musical periods ever, which is why we’ve dipped into the Wall of Sound era for our latest Road Trips release. Talk about your “strangest of places”: These back to back shows from the State Fairgrounds in Des Moines, Iowa (6/16/74), and Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky (6/18/74), have long been cherished by Dead Heads for their inventiveness, expansiveness and brilliance of execution. The Des Moines material includes a classic ’74-style “China Cat-Rider,” a spectacular “Eyes of the World” and a marvelously exploratory “Playing in the Band” that clocks in at a mind-bending, never-a-dull-moment 29 minutes! Disc Two comes from the Kentucky show, and it’s another prime batch, from beautiful readings of the poignant Garcia ballads “China Doll” and “Stella Blue,” to Weir’s multi-dimensional “Weather Report Suite”—a highlight of so many shows in this period—and a freewheeling “Other One,” and a jam around the blues tune “It’s A Sin,” a sequence considered by many to be among the finest and most highly-regarded jams in the band's entire career. Check it out and you’ll hear why!
The ultra-clean soundboard master tapes were “crispy” reels (that’s good), and they sound even better now that mastering ace Jeffrey Norman has sprinkled his electronic fairy dust on them and brought them up to HDCD specs. The colorful booklet insert features a cool essay about the Wall of Sound by Grateful Dead historian Dennis McNally and lots of great photos of the band dwarfed by the majestic edifice!
By the end of 1974, the band had begun its 20-month hiatus, and the Wall of Sound—so magnificent, but so impractical on so many levels—was never re-assembled. But it was glorious while it lasted and the incredible music that came blasting out of those hundreds of speakers is the reason why.
For more details about what’s on Road Trips Vol. 2, No. 3: The Wall of Sound, and to order your copy, click here. You won’t regret it!
—Blair Jackson
Disc 1
Recorded live at State Fairgrounds, Des Moines, IA, 6/16/74
Disc 2
Recorded live at Freedom Hall, Louisville, KY, 6/18/74
Comments
The best bits are all you need
Someone was kind enough to send me the complete SBDs of both shows several years ago when they were in circulation so I'm one of the lucky ones I guess. However, I still went ahead and paid for this Road Trips. To be honest, I think I only listened to the complete shows from start to finish maybe once or twice. The sections that got played the most are pretty much on this official release which boasts superb sound. Disc 2 is hardly a sin - it is the Dead at their best.
Releasing the best bits is nothing new for the Dead. I mean "Anthem Of The Sun" and "Live/Dead" are patched together from the different shows. I don't think the guys have ever short changed their fans. They paid their dues a thousand times over. Rhino have handled their legacy just fine as far as I'm concerned.
Ru
spoiled complainers! you have been completely blessed! recognize
the 6/14 Loiseville portion of this release is probably the best music the dead, or any other band,ever played so get a clue, complainers.
if youre going to complain about this, you'd complain about garcia playing a show in your living room.
so what if it's not a 'whole show'. that way of thinking is so close~minded it's rediculous.
get over it! you assume the whole show is in the vault. you assume the entire show is worthy of release. you assume other people have this "whole show" hang up that you have.
i have been dreaming of this release, in this very form, since i first was lucky enough to get a tape of the portion of this show from disc two,6/14 Louiseville. the eyes
and the jam after it are the hottest version of the song ever played. bar none.it is sublimely jazzy.
Jerry never sounded better(his darting runs are deadly),nor Phil,(check out his opening bouncing lead to eyes), nor billy(his drumming on this is AMAZING), or the band as a whole entity. the previous Des Moines eyes on disc one is excellent, but the jam after lacks the absolute virtuosity and incredible focus and power of the treat played a couple nights later, on disc two,
the meltdown jam after the other one, (also on disc 2), is some of the most out~there skull~fuckery ever played by the Dead or ANYONE. this stuff is the reason this band is legendary. if i hear one more dip~sh*t complain about this release i'll puke.
to these slefish, blind, close minded complainer~whiners i say "Go to Heaven!"
Balls to the Wall
There is no doubt that 1974 was a peak year for the Dead and certainly it was their best year for that Jazz sound Jerry was fleshing out, especially when he had the freedom of JGB.
Having the highlights of two very good shows ain't a bad thing, though it is not the best of all possible things.
The wall of sound is something that the "ultimate garage band" just had to do and thank god they had the energy to do it and the qwipment crew to move it & plug it in so that it worked most of the time!
Weir, for one, was very weary of having to play with this roaring over his head going on. It must have been coolio at first and then felt like a big, fat albatross around their necks.
"Can't get around it, can't run away
I need a miracle every day!"
morning dew
i dont want to be an ass here but that morning dew from 6/18/74 was the BEST ever and i can no longer hear it on archive and if it were on the cd id be fine but its not a lot of very poignant and magical dead moments are being cut out by putting only what you consider to be good on the cd take the time to fix up whole shows and give us those youll make many deadheads happy