• Hollywood Bowl - July 21, 1974
    Commander Cody; Maria Muldaur with John Kahn opened

setlist

  • Promised Land
    Tennessee Jed
    Me and My Uncle
    Sugaree
    Jack Straw
    Mississippi Half-Step
    It Must Have Been the Roses
    El Paso
    Scarlet Begonias
    Around and Around

    China Cat Sunflower
    I Know You Rider
    Big River
    Row Jimmy
    Playin' in the Band
    Wharf Rat
    Truckin'
    Nobody's Jam
    Playin' in the Band
    Ship of Fools
    Sugar Magnolia

    U.S. Blues

Official Photos

Ticket Stubs

Concert Photos

11 comments
sort by
Recent
Reset
Items displayed
  • JackStraw70
    1 year 11 months ago
    I was there. I could swear Little Feat showed up.

    My first Dead Show! My girlfriend like Commander Cody the best, but that's OK. She rocked.
    That was the first time of many that I danced in front of THE WALL OF SOUND.

  • Default Avatar
    arun6
    4 years 8 months ago
    This is given here full…

    This is given here full process where we can know about the more interesting facts https://computernamewindows10.com for the how to change user account name in windows 10.

  • Default Avatar
    TomBanjo54
    7 years ago
    DAYTIME/NIGHT TIME
    My second show. Sitting halfway up the bowl had a decent view of the band and great sound. Remember the nice view of the Hollywood Hills behind the band stand. There was a white cross above the hill just middle and protruding a few feet above the shell from where we were. Nothing terrible out of the ordinary about it. Show started in the daylight, probably about 5:30 or so. The very excellent first set put everybody in anticipation mode for the Second. Once the sun went down the Second Set started with the opening notes of China Cat. I remember feeling the window pane make a bit of a surge as Jerry bounced through the licks and into the jam. The 74 China Rider jams were like no other. They went different places in every one. Sometimes it was a very subtle lean into the transition, Other times it snapped you like a pointed towel. This night it was a combination of the two. It eased and caressed you to the Rider entrance then popped into it. Just as it got there, the cross lit up behind the stage with a bright white light. It startled me so sharply that I almost fell back into my seat. Now, I have no doubt that that cross goes on at the same time every night and I also would not be surprised if I was the only one that had that experience. I will tell you it was not the windowpane, though. The timing was exquisite and this band had me lock stock and barrel. Did they time it or did it "just happen?" We'll never know, but I know you've had an experience like this one at a different time and in a different space. Otherwise, you wouldn't be reading this..........
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years
Commander Cody; Maria Muldaur with John Kahn opened
setlist
Promised Land
Tennessee Jed
Me and My Uncle
Sugaree
Jack Straw
Mississippi Half-Step
It Must Have Been the Roses
El Paso
Scarlet Begonias
Around and Around

China Cat Sunflower
I Know You Rider
Big River
Row Jimmy
Playin' in the Band
Wharf Rat
Truckin'
Nobody's Jam
Playin' in the Band
Ship of Fools
Sugar Magnolia

U.S. Blues
show date

dead comment

user picture

Member for

16 years 9 months
Permalink

Who are these guys? I had seen Sabbath, Zeppelin, Tull, Floyd and Alice Cooper, but driven to check out this band from literature. Fell in love with "Box of Rain" when I first heard the song 9 years before (used some lyrics in my brother's wedding toast), but no Box.... Knew Mexicalli because I was in love with a girl who was just 14. No Mex. I did rcognize "truckin," barely...Wiped out alternating between joints of Red then Gold Columbian, some dipped in honey oil. Could hardly stay on my feet, top of the bowl, but the music made me feel like I was standing on the moon (where have I heard that?). "On the Road," Kerouac was assigned reading (religion class!!!). Led me to "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," the bible. Led me to Thomas Wolfe and the permanent recogintion that October 6, 1966 was a sorry event in the history of California. Leary was a federal fugitive at the time and it wasn't until 5 months and ten days after this show that I took my first dose and line of coke. Yeah Casey!!!! But I knew that I was on the bus from this day forward. Thank you, Forever Grateful
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 4 months
Permalink

Another lovely day in and with the sunshine. The Commander is always good, and Maria seemed delightfully ripped this day, leaning backwards to plant kisses on John Kahn (great Walkin' One And Only and Paul Butterfield dropped by to blow harp). That monster PA literally covered the mouth of the Bowl. The energy level was only part of a notch down from UCSB a couple months earlier, but, well, there was always something magical about that combo of clarity and tunes like Scarlet, Chinacat, and Truckin'. A very nice touch was the tables of free stickers and album cards (the UGLY RUMURZ sticker graced my Sunn bass amp for years). Lastly, the Bowl parking lot is small, so they always park the cars side-to-side and bumper-to-bumper. On this day, it was us that strolled to the front car and drove out, breaking the log jam. Our best post-gig departure time EVER!
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

Merry pranksters giving bumber stickers away that said, "Ugly Rumors" - one of the biggest bloopers in Chinese Communism every achieved. BUT, I got two stickers, after insisting to the dapper Prankster dude that, "YES, I had met an african last week,"keep your character, enjoy living, share your fortune, OXOX Merple Reddin
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years
Permalink

Hitchhiked up to this one with no money and played hide and seek with security.[hey c'mon we were little kids it was fun]
user picture

Member for

15 years 5 months
Permalink

My first show also.At the age of 12 !! Hooked ever since.Think I fell asleep some during Nobodys Jam.Started playing guitar right around this time also.Then about 77 ish I bought the Dead's Anthology songbook & learned every song in that book & then some.Just couldn't get enough of this band.STILL can't.This band should NEVER die !!! One way or another we MUST keep this bands music & ideals alive !! And,one way or another we MUST make these MORE MAINSTREAM !!!!!!!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 10 months
Permalink

Can any of you attendees please tell me about what time the show started and ended? Thank you in advance!
user picture

Member for

11 years 7 months
Permalink

Maria Muldaur 7/21/74 Hollywood Bowl, L.A., CA original notes: (opener for Grateful Dead) John Kahn - bass Paul Butterfield - guitar 01: chatter 02: Midnight At The Oasis 03: Any Old Time 04: Walking One And Only 05: Lover Man, Where Can You Be? 06: Intros 07: Tennessee Mountain Home 08: Take A Look At Yourself 09: Chauffeur Blues 10: I Can't Stand The Rain 11: Brickyard Blues 12: The Work Song 13: I'm A Woman 14: Nobody's Fault But Mine
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

Even though we were way at the back, way high up, the sound was coming through clean and clear. I remember hearing the signals for the reprise of Playin' and being amazed at how well defined the various instruments were.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years
Permalink

My second show. Sitting halfway up the bowl had a decent view of the band and great sound. Remember the nice view of the Hollywood Hills behind the band stand. There was a white cross above the hill just middle and protruding a few feet above the shell from where we were. Nothing terrible out of the ordinary about it. Show started in the daylight, probably about 5:30 or so. The very excellent first set put everybody in anticipation mode for the Second. Once the sun went down the Second Set started with the opening notes of China Cat. I remember feeling the window pane make a bit of a surge as Jerry bounced through the licks and into the jam. The 74 China Rider jams were like no other. They went different places in every one. Sometimes it was a very subtle lean into the transition, Other times it snapped you like a pointed towel. This night it was a combination of the two. It eased and caressed you to the Rider entrance then popped into it. Just as it got there, the cross lit up behind the stage with a bright white light. It startled me so sharply that I almost fell back into my seat. Now, I have no doubt that that cross goes on at the same time every night and I also would not be surprised if I was the only one that had that experience. I will tell you it was not the windowpane, though. The timing was exquisite and this band had me lock stock and barrel. Did they time it or did it "just happen?" We'll never know, but I know you've had an experience like this one at a different time and in a different space. Otherwise, you wouldn't be reading this..........