Grateful Dead Hour no. 385

By David Gans

Average: 3 (1 vote)
Grateful Dead Hour by David Gans

Week of February 5, 1996

Requested by Trent Henley, who shares my appreciation of the late-'79 Grateful Dead.

"I, Flagpole" is one of my "Mutilaudio" digital audio art pieces. Making fun of Capitol Hill bloviators will never go out of style, even if the content of their blather changes from year to year.

Also featured is a nice cover of "Liberty" produced by my friend and collaborator, Peter Simon, for a series of compilation records he's put out on his home island, Martha's Vineyard.

Enjoy!

Grateful Dead 12/28/79 Oakland Auditorium
ALABAMA GETAWAY->
GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD

Mutilaudio by David Gans
I, FLAGPOLE

Mischief, from The Vineyard Sound vol 2
LIBERTY

Grateful Dead 12/28/79 Oakland Auditorium
TERRAPIN->
PLAYING IN THE BAND

You can browse or search the Grateful Dead Hour program logs on the GD Hour web site. Let me know if there's a particular program you'd like to hear, and feel free to post requests and comments here or by email to gdhour@dead.net

Thanks for listening!
David Gans

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Comments

Core 4 + 2

Am enjoying listening to 10/13/08. Has some of that good old loose, flowing GD feel to it. Just wish it wasn't attached to overt, blatant political advocacy as it is. Wonder what Jerry would think about a political candidate giving a campaign speech to the 'heads right before and virtually as part of the show. I, for one, don't like it a bit. Time was, the GD was a celebration for EVERYBODY, which was one of the really beautiful and unique things about a GD show. This incarnation attaches a political litmus test to the event which inherently manifests divisiveness, polarization and conflict. Oh, of course not as long as you don't deviate from the program. Not what I'm accustomed to or am looking for from the GD experience. Everybody wants me to be just like them. The times they are-a-changin'...

GD Black Panther Benefit 3/5/1971

Jerry and the Grateful Dead played @ the Oakland Auditorium on 3/5/1971. It was a benefit for Bobby Seales, one of the leaders of the Black Panter Party, which was based in Oakland. they were political radicals that carried firearms openly in the streets, legally.

so go back home and chew on that before your next post about what went down...

minorities @ shows

>Time was, the GD was a celebration for EVERYBODY<

there were never many racial minorities at GD shows, 95% white audience.

It's true, non-white Heads stood out in the crowd.

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but that doesn't mean people of other complexions weren't welcome. If you bleed tie-dye it doesn't really matter what your skin looks like.

For that matter, in my observation Deadheads are Jewish in much larger numbers than the general population also. Various Jewish friends of mine have had theories as to why this might be so. Often contradictory.

GD and politics

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Listen to the 04/20/69 open-air show at Clark University where the Dead were playing during a student demonstration.
The show starts off with a speech by a student leader, and you can hear Jer's guitar making VERY impatient noises in the background, virtually forcing the guy to wrap it up quickly!

Now about the GD Hour herein...

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...the jewel of the show is 1st Set opener Sugaree. If you haven't heard this you don't know Sugaree. Sadly, the wad had been shot at this point, and the rest of the show, IMHO, was anti-climactic. But do check out "Sugar-Incendiaree" my peeps, and remember the music is the most important thing the rest is smoke & mirrors.