• https://www.dead.net/features/blair-jackson/blair-s-golden-road-blog-all-hail-tapers
    Blair’s Golden Road Blog - All Hail the Tapers!

    Spurred by a comment I read somewhere online, I decided to download the Dead’s January 10, 1979, concert at Nassau Coliseum. I have an old tape of it somewhere, but I never got it digitally, so it could have been 15 or 20 years since I’d heard it. I remembered that the second set contained both “Dark Star” and “St. Stephen” (the last time those appeared in the same show), but not much else. What a show! The “Dark Star” is my favorite of all the post-hiatus versions, and everything else the band played that night is full of energy and excitement.

    Why has this fantastic show not been released? Because it’s not in the Grateful Dead tape vault. The versions we all love so much and which have blown thousands of minds through the years are audience recordings. To be honest, I don’t whether I downloaded the Bob Wagner or the Keith Gatto version from Archive.org the other day; I wasn’t paying attention. But it sounded wonderful and really had that you-are-there quality that the best audience tapes have.

    And it got me thinking: Thank God Bob and Keith were on hand to capture that incredible Grateful Dead performance (and no doubt there were other surreptitious tapers on hand whose handiwork is not up on Archive), because otherwise it would be lost to the ages, recalled fondly and with increasing dimness only by those who were lucky enough to be there that night. Look at all the shows listed in Deadbase that we literally know nothing about, because there is no extant recording. We don’t know a single song that was played. It’s possible, likely even, that dozens of the greatest shows the band played in the late ’60s will never be heard.

    We’ve all been spoiled by the incredible bounty of soundboard tapes that have filtered out of the vault through various means over the years—one or two at a time, in giant batches like the Betty Boards, and in a flood after the death of Dick Latvala in 1999. Go onto Archive and you can hear nearly every show in the GD Vault in good quality. But there are holes in the vault collection that have been filled by audience tapes that have circulated and even been upgraded technically through the years—I’m thinking of the fall ’70 Capitol Theatre (Port Chester) shows, for example, and various others that for whatever reason are not in the vault (Greek ’81!).

    I remember a time when most of my tape collection consisted of audience-made recordings, and I treasured them as much as the best-sounding SBDs I owned. When I consider some of the best shows I attended—Winterland 3/18/77, Frost 10/10/82, Santa Fe 9/10/83, to name just three—it was the audience tapes that let me relive them most fully. When the soundboards for those shows came to me years later, I dug the improved fidelity and presence (Phil, in particular, always sounded better on SBDs), but I missed the crowd and the feeling of the space the show was played in, which the audience tapes and a little imagination provided.

    GD live mixer and taper’s friend Dan Healy
    (right) in front of the first taper’s section at BCT, 1984.
    Photo: David Gans © 2012

    During the years I put out The Golden Road magazine (’84-’93), I tried my damndest to hear every show the Dead played, and I relied completely on the work of tapers—most of whom I didn’t know—and a network of kind traders who kept me supplied. Sometimes the tapes sounded pretty bad—hey, beggars can’t be choosers! But more often than not they allowed me to instantly put myself in Saratoga or Chicago or Atlanta to hear what went down. Just this second, I flashed on the audience tape of 10/31/85 from Columbia, South Carolina—not great quality, but I still listened to it over and over that fall: “Werewolves,” “Shakedown,” “Playing” … good stuff. I’ve never heard the SBD version, and I see there’s a SBD-matrixed-with-AUD version on Archive. I’ll have to check that out. So many shows, so little time.

    I own recordings that were marred by folks in the audience talking too loud, whistling obnoxiously or singing along off-key, or the taper being in a bad spot in the venue. But I developed a very high tolerance for those sorts of distractions and learned how to listen through them to the partially obscured music. There are things that people shout on certain tapes that have become part of the show in my mind. “Hey, Jerry, don’t play ‘U.S. Blues’!” rings out before the encore on one. On another, there’s an intrusive discussion near the taper’s mikes about going to a bar mitzvah—in the middle of the heaviest part of “China Doll”! There are times when I’ve wanted to jump into the tape to strangle someone. But mostly I shrug and think, “Oh, yeah, that guy.”

    Beginning with the Berkeley Community Theatre shows in the fall of 1984, the tapers finally became legit, with their own section, usually behind the soundboard, at every concert, and both the number and quality of the audience tapes improved dramatically. The elaborate hijinks that had been part of the art of smuggling in recorders and microphones virtually disappeared overnight (though blatant recording with tape decks and elevated mikes had been tolerated, if not officially endorsed, for years before it was formalized). The new challenge: recording unobtrusively in the sweet spot between the stage and the front-of-house mixer.

    Veterans of the pre-tapers’ section era of audience recording all have a million war stories about the extreme measures they often had to take to secretly bring their equipment into venues, risking confiscation, ejection or both. Wires were snipped mid-show occasionally, cassettes crushed under roadies’ boots, pleas and begging ignored. It was tough and stressful, but the payoff was worth it, and they did it for all of us!

    What is rarely mentioned, too, is the fact that Dead tapers single-handedly invented the audience recording phenomenon and embraced the challenge of also recording hundreds of other acts, from the Allmans to Dylan to Clapton to Springsteen, and inspiring fans of other bands to do the same. There is scarcely a major concert that happens anywhere that is not taped illegally by someone. Of course, smartphones have put no-fuss audio/video recording capability into the hands of just about everyone (and I do appreciate being able to see a song or two—or maybe an entire show—on YouTube; odious and obnoxious as the sight of hands thrust into the air holding cell phones can be for those actually attending the concert). But it’s still hard to beat a beautifully made clandestine recording by a soulful audio pirate with good equipment.

    Any tales of taping you’d like to share with the group? Or care to weigh in about your own feelings about audience tapes and what they’ve meant to you or the scene?

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  • Deadicated
    11 years 11 months ago
    I'd like
    to hear what Mr. Norman could do with a show such as 8/06/71. An official taper's release would be cool. "Hard To Handle" is on The Phil Zone so the show would probably remain on the LMA. I dabbled in taping a show once; it was in '78, at Arrowhead Stadium. It was 96 in the shade and I use d a 120 cassette! I still become extra-crispy at the thought of that experience!
  • Default Avatar
    grateful prof
    11 years 11 months ago
    tapers...and bootleggers!
    No road stories today, but the world of tapers and their relationship to bootleggers is not always a happy one. I had about 800 live tapes stolen from an apartment. It was obviously a targeted theft, they did not take cameras, stereo, cash (!), just tapes. (this is almost 30 years ago now). Some time later a bootleg record of a famous dead show came out, and, it was our recording, we could tell because of the tape flip location. I also recall word going out from GD Headquarters, sometime around 1980, for tapers to supply them with tapes for shows they did not have in the vault, in exchange for a pristine SB of our choice (at the time still a somewhat hard commodity to get). The taping section was a mixed blessing. Great for all the obvious reasons, but suddenly EVERYONE was taping, and not everyone was respecting the space and needs of their fellow tapers. But... they were great and fun times, I spent a summer travelling across Europe with my NAK 550, 3 421s, a wack of batteries, a sleeping bag, and not much else, recording all sorts of great stuff, from Bach organ concerts in Churches in Amsterdam (of course we spent a lot of time in Amsterdam : ) ) to Don Cherry in a field outside of Brussels, to everything in between. Damm the bootleggers to hell!
  • fluffanutter
    11 years 11 months ago
    Famous show on vinyl
    The Hollywood Palladium show of 8/6/71 is pretty famous for the Too Hard To Handle. The rest of the show wasn't too shabby either. I never would have gotten to hear it as early as I did (1979) without the help of some bootleggers. Bootleggers were a different breed than tapers. They were out to profit from the recordings they made. This opposed to tapers who would trade. A key difference between the two was the professionalism of the recording. Nobody is going through the expense of pressing 10,000 units unless they have a salable product. Some times I wonder if this bootleg was an attempt by the band to circumvent their contract. How else could the bootleggers have gotten distribution through a major regional chain department store (which was where I bought it)? Regardless of who was behind it, it was my favorite recording for about 8 years and I treated it with TLC. The tapers were always a different breed. Some might say obnoxious. As with all generalizations, you couldn't make a blanket statement about them. They came in all sizes, shapes and flavors,. They were highly dedicated. They were all on a mission. I'm so glad they made it and now have their own showcase on the archive. I'm sure more than few of them had heart attacks when their vast collections became deflated in value. I remember one particular taper from my home town who had his collection insured and in fire protected file cabinets. In the end everybody had access to everything, the way it should be. I would like to express my gratitude and thanks to all those tapers over the years who were so fanatical in their devotion and those who remain so to this very day, like Charlie Miller, continuing to refine the best of both worlds (auds and sbds) and clean up dubious sources, In 2095 there will be people dancing to the GOGD with nobody alive who ever attended a show and the source will be audience recorded a good percentage of the time.
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Spurred by a comment I read somewhere online, I decided to download the Dead’s January 10, 1979, concert at Nassau Coliseum. I have an old tape of it somewhere, but I never got it digitally, so it could have been 15 or 20 years since I’d heard it. I remembered that the second set contained both “Dark Star” and “St. Stephen” (the last time those appeared in the same show), but not much else. What a show! The “Dark Star” is my favorite of all the post-hiatus versions, and everything else the band played that night is full of energy and excitement.

Why has this fantastic show not been released? Because it’s not in the Grateful Dead tape vault. The versions we all love so much and which have blown thousands of minds through the years are audience recordings. To be honest, I don’t whether I downloaded the Bob Wagner or the Keith Gatto version from Archive.org the other day; I wasn’t paying attention. But it sounded wonderful and really had that you-are-there quality that the best audience tapes have.

And it got me thinking: Thank God Bob and Keith were on hand to capture that incredible Grateful Dead performance (and no doubt there were other surreptitious tapers on hand whose handiwork is not up on Archive), because otherwise it would be lost to the ages, recalled fondly and with increasing dimness only by those who were lucky enough to be there that night. Look at all the shows listed in Deadbase that we literally know nothing about, because there is no extant recording. We don’t know a single song that was played. It’s possible, likely even, that dozens of the greatest shows the band played in the late ’60s will never be heard.

We’ve all been spoiled by the incredible bounty of soundboard tapes that have filtered out of the vault through various means over the years—one or two at a time, in giant batches like the Betty Boards, and in a flood after the death of Dick Latvala in 1999. Go onto Archive and you can hear nearly every show in the GD Vault in good quality. But there are holes in the vault collection that have been filled by audience tapes that have circulated and even been upgraded technically through the years—I’m thinking of the fall ’70 Capitol Theatre (Port Chester) shows, for example, and various others that for whatever reason are not in the vault (Greek ’81!).

I remember a time when most of my tape collection consisted of audience-made recordings, and I treasured them as much as the best-sounding SBDs I owned. When I consider some of the best shows I attended—Winterland 3/18/77, Frost 10/10/82, Santa Fe 9/10/83, to name just three—it was the audience tapes that let me relive them most fully. When the soundboards for those shows came to me years later, I dug the improved fidelity and presence (Phil, in particular, always sounded better on SBDs), but I missed the crowd and the feeling of the space the show was played in, which the audience tapes and a little imagination provided.

GD live mixer and taper’s friend Dan Healy
(right) in front of the first taper’s section at BCT, 1984.
Photo: David Gans © 2012

During the years I put out The Golden Road magazine (’84-’93), I tried my damndest to hear every show the Dead played, and I relied completely on the work of tapers—most of whom I didn’t know—and a network of kind traders who kept me supplied. Sometimes the tapes sounded pretty bad—hey, beggars can’t be choosers! But more often than not they allowed me to instantly put myself in Saratoga or Chicago or Atlanta to hear what went down. Just this second, I flashed on the audience tape of 10/31/85 from Columbia, South Carolina—not great quality, but I still listened to it over and over that fall: “Werewolves,” “Shakedown,” “Playing” … good stuff. I’ve never heard the SBD version, and I see there’s a SBD-matrixed-with-AUD version on Archive. I’ll have to check that out. So many shows, so little time.

I own recordings that were marred by folks in the audience talking too loud, whistling obnoxiously or singing along off-key, or the taper being in a bad spot in the venue. But I developed a very high tolerance for those sorts of distractions and learned how to listen through them to the partially obscured music. There are things that people shout on certain tapes that have become part of the show in my mind. “Hey, Jerry, don’t play ‘U.S. Blues’!” rings out before the encore on one. On another, there’s an intrusive discussion near the taper’s mikes about going to a bar mitzvah—in the middle of the heaviest part of “China Doll”! There are times when I’ve wanted to jump into the tape to strangle someone. But mostly I shrug and think, “Oh, yeah, that guy.”

Beginning with the Berkeley Community Theatre shows in the fall of 1984, the tapers finally became legit, with their own section, usually behind the soundboard, at every concert, and both the number and quality of the audience tapes improved dramatically. The elaborate hijinks that had been part of the art of smuggling in recorders and microphones virtually disappeared overnight (though blatant recording with tape decks and elevated mikes had been tolerated, if not officially endorsed, for years before it was formalized). The new challenge: recording unobtrusively in the sweet spot between the stage and the front-of-house mixer.

Veterans of the pre-tapers’ section era of audience recording all have a million war stories about the extreme measures they often had to take to secretly bring their equipment into venues, risking confiscation, ejection or both. Wires were snipped mid-show occasionally, cassettes crushed under roadies’ boots, pleas and begging ignored. It was tough and stressful, but the payoff was worth it, and they did it for all of us!

What is rarely mentioned, too, is the fact that Dead tapers single-handedly invented the audience recording phenomenon and embraced the challenge of also recording hundreds of other acts, from the Allmans to Dylan to Clapton to Springsteen, and inspiring fans of other bands to do the same. There is scarcely a major concert that happens anywhere that is not taped illegally by someone. Of course, smartphones have put no-fuss audio/video recording capability into the hands of just about everyone (and I do appreciate being able to see a song or two—or maybe an entire show—on YouTube; odious and obnoxious as the sight of hands thrust into the air holding cell phones can be for those actually attending the concert). But it’s still hard to beat a beautifully made clandestine recording by a soulful audio pirate with good equipment.

Any tales of taping you’d like to share with the group? Or care to weigh in about your own feelings about audience tapes and what they’ve meant to you or the scene?

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Spurred by a comment I read somewhere online, I decided to download the Dead’s January 10, 1979, concert at Nassau Coliseum. I have an old tape of it somewhere, but I never got it digitally, so it could have been 15 or 20 years since I’d heard it. I remembered that the second set contained both “Dark Star” and “St. Stephen” (the last time those appeared in the same show), but not much else. What a show! The “Dark Star” is my favorite of all the post-hiatus versions, and everything else the band played that night is full of energy and excitement.

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I was at some Dead show in 71 in the northeast, can't remember which, and after the show someone was selling vinyl albums outside the venue called 'Mammary Productions'. One of them had a Felix the Cat drawing, and some boobery was in evidence in other drawings. At that time, cassettes were still pretty new and not a lot of folks had them, and it wasn't easy to get copies of Dead concerts at all. To see an actual vinyl pressing of a Grateful Dead show was completely uniqe (who had vinly pressing machines to play with?) So, I bought the vinyl and was richly rewaded. On one side was an acoustic Dead set that sounds a lot like the famous Harper College show that later became part of Dick's Picks 8, and the other side was a NRPS set with Jerry on pedal steel, and Bobby singing Poor Boy with Marmaduke, and Dave Nelson on Mandolin for the closing gospel number Wide Jordan. It was very exciting to actually have part of a live Grateful Dead show back then. Me and my buddies tripped out to that many times ... :) I thought maybe some old timers might have had the vinyl too. My vinyl copy is long gone now, but at least the music is still around, via tape, CD, mp3, lossless, etc etc etc. choices choices choices. back then, there weren't may choices. Dov
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This was a great thing, I wonder if the Dead would ever consider putting out a release that was done by a taper. My favorite show that I went to, was in June of 76 @ the 4 night run in Philly at the Tower Theator, it finally showed up a few monthes ago, and a bud of mine recorded it on CDRs, the sound quality was really above decent. My wife and I had 3rd row seats, because We had mailings sent to us at the beginning of March and we requested the best seats possible for a Tower show, and we ended up in the 3rd row, center. It was an awesome night and now I have it on tape and CDR. Twas a great show. Miller was the Taper, He made a lot of the good 70s tapes.
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13 years 5 months
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I started taping in April '93 - It took me about 3 shows to get my method down. I wanted to go for a total 'your are there sound'. I therefore would tape on the first side of the first cassette without any pauses. I would then switch quickly to the A side of the second cassette. During the break I would advance all tapes to the beginning of side B and repeat this process. In most cases there was spare tape on the B side of tape 2 of the first which I would manually rewind to the end of the first set on side B1. This worked great for the majority of show. But there where a few times when I wish I had a third tape. I would then record a 1st gen with everything in place. This method definitely gave me the sound of being there.
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I was not a Taper, however I got involved with tapes and trading them through Relix Magazine. I can remember sending out blank Sony SA 90's and Maxell XL 2's through snailmail, and patiently awaiting for them to return. So many people, in so many far away places I had never met face to face...... not one screwed me.Some where even so kind as to include handmade inserts that were artistic masterpieces..... Some of myy earlier shows were the 4 Tower Theatre 1976 shows, Palladium NYC 1977 run, and my alltime fav.... Englishtown NJ 1977. What memories! Thank you ALL .... ESPECIALLY the Tapers!
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I attended my first concert on 4-12-83. If it were not for tapers, I would not have the joy of reliving this concert on tape for the last 27 years (A college friend, who lived with a taper made me the cassettes in 1985) among many others, especially the Summer and Fall 1985 Tours. I remember having some pretty terrible sounding tapes back in the day (mostly stuff from the 70's). I still treasure and prefer my cassettes over CDs as they are all high-quality AUD recordings. I may only have 15 to 20 cassettes that fit in this category and quite amazingly they still play well in my tape deck after hundreds of plays.Soundboards are 'dead and uninspiring' IMHO. Without the AUD and the ambience, the listening experience is diminished. The difference-maker for me was purchasing a BBE Audio Restoration System for my Cassette Deck. This piece of technology reproduces the "Full-Dynamic Range" of live cassette recordings and was specifically designed with 'Deadheads' in mind. If you have a component system with a deck, this is an essential piece of equipment. You will feel like you are at the concert! BTW, does anyone know if a comparable piece of audio restoration equipment exists for listening to Live Audience GD CDR's? For example, Audience CDR's burned from the Archive? Thanks again to all the tapers for all the great years of listening.
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I was at the local Goodwill the other day and came across a collection of Dead tapes. I really was taken by the lovingly annotated and decorated cases. There are over fifty of them in a wooden box from ca.1965 to 1995. Paying the clerk less than ten bucks for the lot and feeling like a thief, I brought them home and started my exploration.The quality for the most part is very good, and more importantly, the energy of the music therein is really incredible. There is nothing like hearing these live performances, the ambient atmospheres and crowd energy being mirrored by the band. I was very lucky to have found them. Now I am going to digitize them so I can organize and share them better. I discovered the Dead when I was young, and they were too; before Dead Heads and Tapers, but my appreciation of them and their music just keeps growing and gets richer and richer as we go. Thanks to Blair for this acknowledgement of such a wonderful aspect of the phenomena and community. Peace out
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not long ago I was reminiscing in another thread about my life-changing first Jerry show (1-23-81, Keystone Palo Alto), and Gr8fulTed, who lives in Kansas, though we did meet briefly in real life at the Jerry Giants game a couple years back, says he thinks he might have that one and will send it along. So the CD arrives the other day. The recording's from Dick Latvala's master audience recording on a tape belonging to Jeff Knudsen, both of whom I knew back in the day, but neither of whom I knew on that day, because hey, it was my first show. Ah, history. Ah, the memories. Thanks, Gr8fulTed!
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best ever...on my #1 favs incl (but not limited to):- comes a time 5/9/77 - morning dew 10/18/74 - mississippi 1/2 step 9/3/77 - scarlet begonias 6/26/76 - here comes sunshine 12/19/73 - Franklin's tower 5/9,6/9,10/11/1977! - estimated prophet 5/14/78 ...to tired now go add to list... bw