Grateful Dead Concert

California Hall (San Francisco, CA) Jan 8, 1966

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Grateful Dead concert at California Hall on Jan 8, 1966

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  • Date:
    01.08.1966
  • Tracks:
    6
  • Total Time:
    34:00
  • Catalog:

Concert Summary

As 1966 began, San Francisco was rapidly becoming the epicenter of a cultural and musical shift that would impact the world. Dance hall promoters like Bill Graham and Chet Helms were in the early stages of opening venues where local bands could perform for the throngs of young people looking to dance socialize and listen to live music. Local writer Ken Kesey and his friends (known as The Merry Pranksters) were doing the same on a smaller scale, but adding high quality LSD to the mix, which was then still legal and readily available. As Kesey's parties, or "Acid Tests" as they were called,…entire summary

Related Concerts

Performer City Date
  • g500d | Friday, January 27, 2012 | 12:03 pm

    I can only imagine what it was like in SF at the time. Groovy man.

  • Anonymous | Thursday, January 05, 2012 | 3:54 pm

    GOD...Never heard this concert till now!!!!!

  • Smitty | Tuesday, October 04, 2011 | 12:15 pm

    just for the faster version of I'M a Hog for you Baby alone primo Pigpen this is the excaliber of this show in my humble oppinion 1971 version on Skull and Roses sounds sedated but still good.Thank You Mr.Ron PigPen McKernan Larry E.smith

  • 1straydog2 | Monday, June 13, 2011 | 4:52 pm

    why?

  • ajr1230 | Monday, February 28, 2011 | 11:40 pm

    this should be free, jerry wouldnt approve

  • meldi3 | Thursday, January 27, 2011 | 5:29 am

    Encore un des fondements de la musique rock...

  • BRIAN032352 | Monday, December 27, 2010 | 8:54 pm

    I love the raw sound of this recording.Remember this was recorded at the time of the garage band boom.This is what this music really is...great live garage band music!!!

  • Dorseyland | Saturday, November 13, 2010 | 2:31 am

    That's "Cassady HOWEVER will remain at his post". You hear very little from Neal on this recording, mostly a few slurred lines at the end, just before the "Star-spangled Banger" is sung. I agree with the comment a few pages back that Kesey is probably not here and the main Prankster voice is Babbs'. I base this on the floppy-vinyl Acid Test recording that Hank Harrison included in "The Dead Book" in 1973, on which Cassady has a lot more to say.

  • gmgw | Friday, November 12, 2010 | 11:12 pm

    How do we know that's Kesey speaking? I met Kesey only once, about 30-odd years ago, but I remember his voice as being deeper than whoever's ranting over the band (could the tape have been mastered a little too fast?). It could instead be Ken Babbs, or much more likely Neal Cassady, that great master of verbal free association. I've heard tapes of Cassady and it does sound like him. Plus, on "Hog" the voice says "Cassady harbor(?) will remain at his post up here in the projection booth..." or some such, which kinda narrows it down. Anyway, interesting cultural document, but kind of a washout musically...

  • Alfiejr | Friday, November 12, 2010 | 5:57 pm

    Caution obviously owes a lot to Them and Mystic Eyes ... as did much of the early Dead's sound. but that and the R&B feeling faded with Pig Pen's passing ...

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