Garcia said “We were great for seconds on end.” I was lucky to see Jerry play for about 1,000,000 seconds exactly. Thanks for your 1,000,000 views here . Dave Davis wrote this blog for 500 posts and 5 years from 2015 to 2019. Contact me at twitter @gratefulseconds
Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Row Your Boat to Shoreline September 29, 1989


Fuckin' Dead Don't Have No Fuckin Mercy on this land.
Thoughts to my pal Thoughts on the Dead  (https://www.thoughtsonthedead.com/
who I pray is going to live years because it's the funniest guy I know.


Right before heading to the Spaceship for the Warlocks show, the Dead played a few home town shows including this one which was shown on Shakedown Stream last night. This show was 18 days before a giant earthquake that hauled game one of the Bay Bridge World Series between the Oakland A's and the San Francisco Giants.




















Monday, October 21, 2019

California Earthquake: October 1989, Happy 30th Birthday


California Earthquake is the cover of a Rodney Crowell  song that the Dead played only twice, 30 years ago yesterday on October 20, 1989 at the Spectrum to close set one and then again on October 23, 1989 to open the show in Charlotte, NC.

Of course the California Earthquake was on October 17, 1989. I was in my office in Carmel, California waiting for the Bay Area BART World Series between the Oakland A's and San Francisco Giant's to start when it all went down.

Wish they would have played it again after the January 17, 1994 LA Northridge Quake in the December shows in the Sports Arena. Branford would have killed it!


From deaddisc:

Grateful Dead
info Beyond Description, Grateful Dead, 2004
info Built To Last, Grateful Dead, 2006 (bonus on exp. CD)














Wednesday, September 25, 2019

New Box Set Highlights July 9-10, 1989 Shows at Giants Stadium





For everyone who just grabbed the Giants Stadium Box Set, I'll provide a little flava.  Here are some noted from the 1989 shows July 9-10.  This was the biggest 2 night stand of the year with 115,000 fans spending $2.4 million for ticket sales, two nights after 75,000 filled JFK in Philly http://www.gratefulseconds.com/2018/01/jfk-july-7-1989-biggest-show-of-deads.html?m=0.

Enjoy






















Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Jerry and Bob Join Elvis Costello at the Sweetwater in Mill Valley, April 24, 1989



Here is a little jam from April 24, 1989 at The Sweetwater where Bobby and Jerry join Elvis Costello and Friends.  This is a week after the playing the giant Metro stadium in the Twin Cities, MN and four days before Irvine down in So Cal. 320 Tunes here


This blogspot has a great write-up on this show. here are some 320s for you from Eric from NJ.
http://bbchron.blogspot.com/2010/02/elvis-costello-1989-04-24-mill-valley.html  says
Elvis Costello (w/ guests Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir,and others) 
Solo set, then jam session with special guests & friends
Village Music (21st Birthday Party)
The Sweetwater, Mill Valley CA
April 24, 1989

Soundboard recording
mp3 @ 192 kbps

1988 marked the first year since 1977 that Elvis did not release a new album and/or tour extensively. Thus, no concerts available from 1988. His next album, Spike, was released in early 1989, and he started touring again in Spring 1989, continuing with predominantly solo shows, most often with Nick Lowe opening and joining Elvis for 2-3 songs. The shows were structured much like the 'Spinning Songbook' shows of 1987, with a solo set from Elvis, culminating with the duos with Lowe, then coming back out as his 'Napoleon Dynamite' alter-ego and doing an encore set of talk, requests, and various audience participation bits. The main difference obviously being the inclusion of several songs from Spike. The show presented here, however, was truly a one-of-a-kind event, in which, Elvis is joined onstage by none other than Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, and other West Coast rockers for a wild and spontaneous jam session. During his Spring US tour, he was asked to perform for the Village Music (a legendary music store) 21st Birthday celebration at The Sweetwater in Mill Valley, CA. So, after his initial solo set (culminating with the Lowe duo on 'Peace, Love and Understanding'), he then did a few songs with his back-up band, a modified version of the Confederates). After that, however, other rock luminaries in attendance were called up to the stage. First Charles Brown and Kim Wilson sang a few songs, then Jerry Garcia joins Elvis onstage for some country tunes (with Elvis on vocals). Then Elvis asks if anyone else wants sing, and up comes Commander Cody and Sammy Hagar(?). Bob Weir eventually also joins the group for couple more, finally ending with Elvis back on vocals for 'Let The Good Times Roll' and 'Lovable'. Strange assemblage of artists, but alot of fun. It is not clear if Elvis stayed onstage and played throughout during the Brown and Wilson songs (probably not), but he was definitely jamming with Garcia and Weir, and Garcia does play through til the end of the set. Elvis and Jerry talked about the spontaneity of this show in a later interview with Musician magazine (March 1991 Issue), as excerpted here:
"Elvis: Certainly a candidate for the world's greatest record store is Village Music, in Mill Valley. Every year John Goddard has a party for his friends and customers, and he always has a really good bill of people. So last year on the twenty-first anniversary, I did a show with Nick Lowe, and he invited James Burton and Jerry Scheff, who'd played with me on the road. I did my little set, Nick did his set and then it was a free-for-all; Charles Brown did a piece, and people were getting summoned to the stage. I was standing in the corridor when I suddenly heard, "Jerry Garcia to the stage!" And, emboldened by several margaritas, I decided to join him.
Jerry: Not only that, but it was one of those situations where I had the choice of playing either Elvis' guitar, which is low and it's stiff, and the strings are quite wide as well, and all this confusing script, or of playing Burton's guitar, which is strung with spider webs. I mean it's the absolutely lightest you can string a guitar and still get a sound out of it. I'd take Burton's and play a note on it and it goes "spack." So I opted to play Elvis' guitar as the lesser of two evils. [*laughter*] And I vowed I would never go to another one of those shows without my own.
Elvis: It was a whole Three Stooges routine -- "Here, you take my guitar," "No, I'll take your guitar." I think I had Burton's old Telecaster for half a song, and James had my old Martin acoustic which wasn't cranked up so he couldn't solo--and Jerry's struggling with my guitar. But once everybody got settled we managed to struggle through a couple of Hank Williams songs. Like any sort of jam thing it inevitably came to degenerate towards lots of blues. But we managed a few songs with changes.
Jerry: A pretty high level of jam-sessionry really, considering what it was. Really fun. And Elvis' solo set was phenomenal, I thought. That's one of those things that I can't do at all, just playing the guitar and singing. You're so solid with that, you don't miss a band. I always feel like I'm missing a band."

So, hope you enjoy this odd and unique show. I'll wrap up this 'Elvis in the Eighties' series with one more show from 1989 later this week.

Setlist
01. Accidents Will Happen (Elvis solo)
02. Brilliant Mistake (Elvis solo)
03. Deep Dark Truthful Mirror (Elvis solo)
04. Mystery Dance (Elvis solo)
05. Poisoned Rose (Elvis, Jerry Scheff & Austin de Lone)
06. God's Comic (Elvis solo)
07. (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes (Elvis solo)
08. New Lace Sleeves (Elvis solo)
09. Pads, Paws And Claws (Elvis solo)
10. Radio Sweetheart / Jackie Wilson Said (Elvis solo)
11. (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding? (Elvis & Nick Lowe)
- James Burton, Jerry Scheff, Austin de Lone & Scott Matthews join Elvis
12. The Big Light (Elvis vocal)
13. Pouring Water On A Drowning Man (Elvis vocal)
14. The Only Daddy That'll Walk The Line (Elvis vocal)
15. Leave My Kitten Alone (Elvis vocal)
- Kim Wilson, Charles Brown join group
16. I Stepped In Quicksand (Charles Brown vocal)
17. Drifting Blues (Charles Brown vocal)
18. All My Life (Charles Brown vocal)
19. One's Too Many (And A Hundred Ain't Enough) (Kim Wilson & Nick Lowe vocals)
20. Real Gone Lover (Kim Wilson vocal)
- Jerry Garcia & Pete Sears join group
21. You Win Again (Elvis vocal)
22. Tonight The Bottle Let Me Down (Elvis vocal)
23. Why Don't You Love Me (Like You Used To Do)? (Elvis vocal)
- Commander Cody, Sammy Hagar, Mitch Woods, and Annie Sampson join group
24. Riot In Cell Block #9 (Commander Cody vocal)
25. Going Down (Sammy Hagar vocal)
- Bob Weir joins group
26. C.C. Rider (Bob Weir vocal)
27. Turn On Your Lovelight (Bob Weir vocal)
28. Let The Good Times Roll (Elvis vocal)
29. Lovable (Elvis vocal)

Musicians:
Elvis Costello
James Burton
Jerry Scheff
Austin de Lone
Scott Matthews
Nick Lowe
Jerry Garcia
Pete Sears
Mitch Woods
Annie Sampson
Bob Weir
and with
Charles Brown, Kim Wilson, Commander Cody, and Sammy Hagar doing vocals on select songs

Friday, January 12, 2018

JFK July 7, 1989: Biggest Show of the Dead's Career to Date: Crazy Let It Grow>Blow Away in Front of 75,000 Friends




The Crimson White and Indigo show was the highest grosss Dead show of 1989

This was the biggest of the big Stadium shows in the first two weeks of July 1989 and the highest gross Dead convert in the first 25 years of the band. These may have been the first shows the Dead grossed $1 million since English town in 1977 (I'd researching the summer 1987 shows as we speak). Max Yasgur's Farm - August 16, 1969 being an exception. There are some great clippings this week and the music but don't miss the UNC Prof and the Ladies Restroom stories. Got to love Philly to three of four Spectrum crowds into one show

The Grateful Dead in these 7 dates sold 370,553 tickets out of a possible 400,000 or more than 91% of these huge stadiums seats for a total of $7.7 million in ticket sale gross. More than 50,000 fans a night and more $1.1 million per night.

Sullivan    MA    July 2     61,000 people   $21   $1,281,000  sellout
Rich          NY    July 4     46,597 people   $21    $  959,532  59,057 seats
JFK           PA     July 7     75,000 people   $21   $1,575,000   room for 90,000
Giants       NJ     July 9     57,872 people  $21   $1,207,280   sellout
Giants       NJ     July 10   57,872 people  $21   $1,207,280   sellout
RFK         DC    July 12    36,106 people  $21   $  738,759   41,000 capacity
RFK         DC    July 13    36,106 people  $21   $  738,759   41,000 capacity

I love the Blow Up at the End of Let It Grow. I first saw it on the Crimson Video DVD, and its powerful.  I also did the once-only Estimated Prophet>Standing On the Moon. It comes in the era of these once onlys:

1989-07-07              Philadelphia        Estimated>Standing on The Moon
1989-10-26              Miami                 Estimated>Blow Away
1990-03-16              Landover            Estimated>Ship Of Fools
1991-08-14              Cal Expo            Estimated>Supplication
1992-06-06              Buffalo               Estimated>The Same Thing
1992-06-28              Deer Creek         Estimated>Way To Go Home
1993-02-21              Oakland              Estimated>Samson & Delilah
1993-12-09              LA SportsArena Estimated>Wave To The Wind
12-19-93                  Oakland              Estimated>So Many Roads

see http://gratefulseconds.blogspot.com/2017/03/estimated-one-time-only.html





JFK is the highest gross Dead show of the 1960;s, the 1970's and the 1980's, and it started getting beat out with ticket prices of the 1990's.

The Golden Road review says: