The Paul Butterfield Blues Band Concert

Winterland (San Francisco, CA) Sep 30, 1966

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Play The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
The Paul Butterfield Blues Band concert at Winterland on Sep 30, 1966

Concert Details

  • Date:
    09.30.1966
  • Tracks:
    8
  • Total Time:
    46:20
  • Catalog:
  • Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Back in the days when Clapton, Beck and Page were still playing relatively primitive three-chord blues-rock, and the Grateful Dead were just beginning to electrify their jug band cover material, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band was performing and composing electric blues based music that was perhaps the most complex and adventurous in the country. Bill Graham invited the band to play the Fillmore Auditorium numerous…entire summary

  • blaudrogist | Sunday, May 22, 2011 | 6:28 am

    This is pretty good and it is obvious why Paul Rothchild was keen on a live debut album.

  • willhart76 | Tuesday, November 30, 2010 | 1:01 am

    wow

  • ClassicAntique | Sunday, November 07, 2010 | 9:06 pm

    I thought I'd heard everything to be heard by this edition of the Butterfield band and by the nonpareil Mike Bloomfield. Boy was I wrong. Wonder if Mr. Graham's people could be convinced to release this on CD . . .

  • Pastor Chris | Friday, July 02, 2010 | 3:00 pm

    I have loved this band ever since 1966 when I purchased the EAST-WEST album. That album included the studio version of "The Work Song." This particular live recording does not pick up Naftalin very well and so when his solo comes in I thought at first that Arnold was given a bass solo. This is oddly a blessing in that it show cases that Jerome is doing some great work keeping theses guys flying. The recording is also interesting in that we get more of how good Davenport was. Sam Lay was a great blues and rock drummer but Davenport had that jazz sense that made this song swing.

    Elvin's solo is better here than the one on the album. (Though I love his album work also.) His rough, bluesy, country style was a perfect foil for the sensitive, melodic and clear pristine sounds that Michael produced. Butter was great as usual. The sadness is that they went their differing ways. I realize people will debate that with me but this was one great band and though Butter wanted horns he was much better with these guys.

    (Mark, if you are reading this may I say thank you for all of us who loved the work you did.)

    The trading of fourths in the end is hurt because of the unequal sound quality of especially Naftalin. If you haven't heard the studio version go hear it because Naftalin's part of wonderful on it.

    Thank you for having this available for us old guys and gals. I saw Butterfield with the horns twice but I never saw this great line up. I don't care what anyone says this was the great band from the 60's. Their weakness of song writing but playing with what a band is really about.

  • Rueben Sano | Tuesday, May 18, 2010 | 4:57 pm

    In 1966 when I was listening to the studio "Work Song" I was only able to imagine what it must have sounded like at Winterland. Rock reviewer Extraordinaire Ralph Gleason had written about this band's performance and I could only wish, and now really wish they would have released this then. But I am happy to fill in the gap of 40 years. Rueban Sano

  • chbartle | Wednesday, February 24, 2010 | 9:42 pm

    holy moly! this is even better than the Fillmore gig in October 1966! ballsy, masterful, incendiary, soulful, in the pocket, jumpin', searing - rack up the superlatives. nobody could touch their power/artistry/intensity as a band then, tho' some individual performers sure could, i guess, sort of. i'm thinking of elmore james, howlin' wolf, dylan, hendrix, elvis, some split seconds of bill monroe, hank - not many others are close - and nobody as a live group then. eventually, i guess the stones. but comparisons are dumb. this stuff has so much clean fire in butterfield's harp and Bloomfield and Bishop's guitars that it reaches across all the years and tells us that everything is possible when you go full throttle, that we're lucky when great talent attacks great art forms. that people will learn from that, and that life is worth living if you can be a witness to it

  • enzo2916 | Thursday, February 11, 2010 | 3:46 am

    At last I arrived this sources

    Now I am listenin Willow Tree

    And then Mikes Voice

    Thats my Takaramono

  • BklynKid | Saturday, January 30, 2010 | 1:36 am

    Sorry Anonymous but Ken Kesey passed away recently. Wavy Gravy is still with us tho!

  • manonadune | Friday, January 29, 2010 | 5:30 pm

    This perfomance of 'Work Song' is one of the greatest live perfomances by any band,ever.

  • Anonymous | Friday, January 29, 2010 | 1:19 pm

    Sure seems a doggone shame that this magnificent, ahead of their time band receives no mention for hall of fame honors.Will be honored to play In My Own Dream when I leave for that great jam in the sky. modoc 1947

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