Friday, May 3, 2024

Grateful Dead 1970-05-03 Foss Hill, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT(20852)

Grateful Dead
Foss Hill, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT
05/03/70
 
AUD>MR>?>CD>EAC>SHN
 
Disc 1

New Riders:
01.  //Workin' Man Blues  (2:59)    
02.  I Don't Know You (5:29)
03.  Last Lonely Eagle (7:18)
04.  Truck Drivin' Man (4:31)
05.  Fair Chance To Know (4:26)
06.  Crowd banter > Stage Announcements > (5:13)

Grateful Dead:
07.  Me & My Uncle > Stage Announcements (4:12)
08.  New Speedway Boogie (10:57)
09.  Good Lovin' (14:40)

Disc 2

Grateful Dead (con't'd)
01. Dire Wolf (5:20)
02. Don't Ease Me In (4:59)
03  Turn On Your Lovelight > The Main Ten > (22:36)
04. Uncle John's Band (6:08)
05. Turn On Your Lovelight (6:59)
06. Speech After The Show Regarding Protests And Chanting (3:20)

digital editing by Jim Goldman, wavs provided by, minor editing and retracking SIRMick (The Sugarmegs Restoration Krewe)
sector boundaries confirmed with shntool

************************************************************************
notes:-

- a real snapshot of the Taper's section and the Psych Department discussion is heard more clearly than the music.  This is a record of an event, not just a concert Recording"


- information from posts to deadlists throws more light on the whole event: and the circumstances in which the show was recorded-

1. This will probably be of most interest to the oldtimers who can still enjoy
vintage audience recordings, those who collect 1970 recordings missing from
the Dead's vault or completists, not to mention the 1970 caretaker of
Deadlists.

I was recently given first generation reel to reel copies of The Dead and
NRPS at Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT on May 3, 1970 to transfer into  the digital realm. I've checked Deadlists, Deadbase and The Compendium and I think this is the first time the complete contents of the master reels are together, as none of those listings include all of this material. I can also shed light on who recorded it, the accurate song order and how it probably came into circulation (partially) years ago.

According to notes written on the first gen reels, the three original master
reels were recorded by a Wesleyen student named Warren White as part of an
assignment for a Professor Schenk (we think thats how its spelled. The
handwriting on the reel cases is difficult to read). There were originally
three master reels altogether, two half-hour reels and one hour-long reel,
all recorded at 1 7/8ips. Those master reels were borrowed from Schenk by
another student (in the late 1970¹s) and dubbed to 1st generation reels by my
wife's uncle - Alan Bershaw.  Without a deck that would run at 1 7/8ips, Alan
said he played the master reels back at 3 3/4 ips while recording them onto
reels at 7 1/2 ips, which allowed him to play back his first generation reels
at 3 3/4 ips - at the correct speed.
 
At that time, several 90 minute cassettes (of the last 90 minutes, including
all the Dead material) were given to friends of Alan's and to the guy who
borrowed the master reels from Schenk.  Currently circulating copies likely
originated from those 2nd generation cassette dubs, many probably way down
the line since this all happened in the late 70's.
 
If Deadlists/Deadbase/Compendium is correct on what circulates, this new copy includes all of this material possibly for the first time. While this is still far from a great recording and its still probably incomplete, its likely an improvement over all the currently circulating copies. There are also no butchered songs and no reel stops/starts between songs like most audience recordings of this time. The geneology on this new copy is Master Audience Reels@1 7/8 ips (played back @3 3/4 ips)-> Reels@7 1/2 ips > (then played back @3 3/4 ips to correct speed on Revox A-77)->DAT@44.1k

It should also be noted for context that this is the night before the Kent
State shootings, which is significant in light of the various announcements
on these recordings.

Stu Hanson (19 Sep 02)

 ***MASTER REEL #1 contents:
New Riders Of The Purple Sage
(with Jerry Garcia on pedal steel)

1.  Workingman's Blues (2:59)
2.  I Don¹t Know You (5:26)
3.  Last Lonely Eagle (7:17)
4.  Truck Drivin' Man (4:30)
5.  Fair Chance To Know (4:29)
6.  John Dawson says "Now for total complete utter Grateful Dead" (0:20)
7.  crowd noise & talking... (1:46)
8.  Announcement: Dancing In The Trees - (1:28)
9.  Announcement: Tear Gas Eye Drops- (1:36)

***MASTER REEL #2 contents:
(Electric) Grateful Dead (part one)
 
1.  Me And My Uncle (4:27)
2.  New Speedway Boogie (10:50)
3.  crowd response to roman candles firing off backstage/drums-> (0:31)
4   Good Lovin-> (1:59)
5.  drums-> (2:20)
6.  jam-> (7:38)
7.  Good Lovin (2:17)
 
***MASTER REEL #3 contents:
(Electric) Grateful Dead (part two)
 
1.  Dire Wolf (5:19)
2.  Don't Ease Me In (4:54)
3.  Turn On Your Lovelight-> (21:52)
4.  The Main Ten-> (1:01)
5.  Uncle John¹s Band-> (6:04)
6.  Turn On Your Lovelight  (6:55)
7.  Bring Down The Establishment!/Peaceful Demonstration! (2:10)
8.  Announcements and "Dead, Dead, Bring back the Dead" chanting (1:14)

2. During the May '70 tour, the band used campus equipment to save money whenever possible, and for whatever reason Wesleyan did not hook up a recorder at the board.

The Wesleyan show took place during a student strike to protest the war.

The recording deck was an old reel-to-reel Uher machine owned by sociology professor Charles Lemert. Anyway, at the show, the portable Uher was passed
around, which explains the hilarious banter among the crowd, and the
apparent inability to read a clock. It was conceived, according to Lemert, as a sociological document, not a concert recording.

The "sloping lawn behind the administration building" is actually called
"Foss Hill." At Wesleyan, it's not entirely clear where Foss Hill ends and
the baseball/football field smack-dab in the center of campus begins, but in
any case, just calling it "Foss Hill" would certainly be accurate enough.

pb (20 Sep 2002 )

P.S. For trivia buffs, Wesleyan is also the alma mater of John Perry Barlow,
who was class president in '69, and Bill Belichick '75.

Link

 

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