
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
I'm in for this ride...
Something to listen to on the road trip to all the festivals this summer!
~Honest to the point of recklessness~
~~~ Andie is Althea~~~
Is Blu-Ray in the future of the Grateful Dead Archives?
I hope that on down the road, we will be offered this music in Blu-Ray format. I have been listening to Neil Young's Archives in this format, it really is the paramount format of sound quality. Maybe in the future. I'm glad to be getting the next Road Trips. No complaining from me, only praise for what will soon be jamming at my house.
Coconut Phil, living Free.
FULL SHOWS PLEASE! And bloody store at it again...
I can only echo those other posting asking for complete shows. Clearly, no-one is listening.
Anyway, dumbass that I am I went to order it. Here we go again - since they moved to Rhino, I have had nothing but problems with ordering from the UK where I live. First time I was told that my address did not meet US postal standards. Well DOH eh?
Anyway, this time the store is rejecting my perfectly valid Visa card, which has about $10k credit and was used in the UK yesterday.
I REALLY wonder sometimes whether they want my money any more, as they certainly behave as if they don't.
SIGH
How about a nicely done large photograph of
the wall of sound circa '74 as well? That would be a great visual companion for these shows.
The Truth is realized in an instant, the act is practiced step by step.
Full Shows Please!
I saw Louisville 6/18/74 and was pumped, then realized this was another of those crappy chopped up "highlights" series. I realize the performance or the technical quality of every song in a complete show might not be up to par - so on paper it makes sense to at least release the good stuff you do have, but I would hope the folks at Rhino would start to figure out that fans like me would rather pay $30 for a full show than $20 for "highlights".
Big River
I agree , we need a complete summer 1974 show . My preference would have been Roosevelt Stadium though.
These 2 shows represent the best of that summer ..some of the most creative versions of the songs....I think BIG RIVER is the most powerful ever with a nice jazzy flow thanks to Kieth.....
Cant wait to hear them cleaned up and remixed in the "road trips" fashion.
..
my .02
I have to add that at least we are getting chunks of shows...
i'd rather see this then the Road Trips 1 Volume 1 format, with them making up a setlist from the tour...
i am very thankful that this band still puts out amazing releases...
i would like to see the next release feature some of the later songs in their career, from 94 or 95, w/ songs like So Many Roads, Lazy River Road, Liberty....i know that the playing was so much better in the early years, but towards the end, listening to Jerry sing his ballads, they are so full of soul.... really hasn't been documented much..
They are 'A Band Beyond Description!'
can't wait to hear this!!
No Interest in Buying Mix Tapes
C'Mon!
Wall of Sound Road Trips
If these shows are so spectacular and transcendant and sound so perfect, why the hell don't you release them in their entirety??????
It's bad enough that you release shows that we already all have and know so well, so if you are going to re-release them, why dismember them?
This is not an improvement, it is an injustice!
The stewardship of these shows is pathetic.
Another release that you will not see one penny of my money for.
"If the thunder don't get you, then the lightning will."
Guess I'll be the voice of dissent
Risking the wrath of--it would seem--every other poster on here so far, I think this is a better way to release these shows. Blasphemy I'm sure to many, but not every 1974 show in its entirety is worth forking over $80 or more. I bought the Winterland box set, and yes, most of it is brilliant. Know what else? A lot of it is repetitive. How many versions of Big River do you need from the same run of shows? Fact is, checking the track listings here, they provide THE best parts of these shows. The Eyes>Big River being just one example. I would personally rather pay $20 for the best of these and get a bonus disc as well than shell out 3 times as much and only end up listening to the best portions anyway, as I now do w/Winterland.
But hey, that's just me. All I really ask is that the sound is as top quality as can be so that we're getting better than we could get...well, you know the deal...this stuff IS out there if you really want it. But as a long time Deadhead who saw more than 70 shows I'm more than happy to pay a reasonable amount for an official release.