• https://www.dead.net/features/gd-radio-hour/grateful-dead-hour-no-1122
    Grateful Dead Hour no. 1122

    Week of March 22, 2010

    Wrapping up our multi-installment broadcast of the complete unreleased Grateful Dead concert of September 27, 1976. The Hour is rounded out with an excerpt from Furthur's Valentine's Day 2010 show at Barton Hall in Ithaca.

    Enjoy!

    Grateful Dead 9/27/76 War Memorial, Rochester NY
    SLIPKNOT!->
    FRANKLIN'S TOWER->
    AROUND AND AROUND
    US BLUES

    Furthur 2/14/10 Barton Hall, Ithaca NY
    UNCLE JOHN'S BAND->
    PEACEFUL VALLEY

    Every Wednesday, we post a program from the Grateful Dead Hour archives for your enjoyment and enlightenment. You can browse or search the playlists at gdhour.com or on the GD Hour Search page, and let me know what program(s) you'd like to hear by emailing me at gdhour@dead.net.

    Thank you for listening!
    - David Gans

    Listen Now

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    Golden West
    14 years 5 months ago
    You are welcome
    My first show was eight days later. Like your comment concerning the Wide and the Deep. As maybe a P.S. to my previous post it occurred to me- not only did they get to all these places but maybe there's some objectivity to the observation that they liked playing the Empire State about as much as we liked having them there. That being the number of official releases hailing from NY: There's the famous Binghampton show; two Rochester War Memorial shows were represented in the DP series (one from '77 and one from '80); a U of R Palestra show ('71) was an early download release; there was a Syracuse DP from '76; a Buffalo ('89) Fourth of July CD and video; where the Vault series is concerned there were Albany ('90) and Portchester ('71) performances featured, and of course MSG and Fillmore East performances were included in the DP series. And none of this is to forget the Legendary Status of the '77 Cornell and Colgate performances. Again, just sayin'....
  • SaintSteveg
    14 years 5 months ago
    Thanks Golden West for your
    Thanks Golden West for your observation. There are probably other parts of the land that can recollect plenty of cherished shows by our favorite band, but I myself got on board the bus in upstate NY when I was in college, so it sure is special for me as well. My first show was March 23, 1973 in Utica. Yes, my friends, it was intense and the blotter was clear. I had tickets for Watkins Glen, but it's a long story on why I never got there, but I had a place in several other venues around the Empire State back in the day. The Dead brought some needed wide and deep perspective to that province for sure. ~ I'll meet you some morning in the sweet by and by
  • woodyinthebasement
    14 years 5 months ago
    Sweet!!!
    Sweet!!!!!Love the Furthur tracks.... Man the boys are sure playing well these days. Can't wait to see them again in Eugene and Red Rocks!!!!! Woody www.myspace.com/woodyinthebasement
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17 years 7 months

Week of March 22, 2010

Wrapping up our multi-installment broadcast of the complete unreleased Grateful Dead concert of September 27, 1976. The Hour is rounded out with an excerpt from Furthur's Valentine's Day 2010 show at Barton Hall in Ithaca.

Enjoy!

Grateful Dead 9/27/76 War Memorial, Rochester NY
SLIPKNOT!->
FRANKLIN'S TOWER->
AROUND AND AROUND
US BLUES

Furthur 2/14/10 Barton Hall, Ithaca NY
UNCLE JOHN'S BAND->
PEACEFUL VALLEY

Every Wednesday, we post a program from the Grateful Dead Hour archives for your enjoyment and enlightenment. You can browse or search the playlists at gdhour.com or on the GD Hour Search page, and let me know what program(s) you'd like to hear by emailing me at gdhour@dead.net.

Thank you for listening!
- David Gans

Listen Now

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Thanks David, both for featuring this show on the GDH and then for choosing to archive it on this site. I was there in Rochester that night (on the floor) so of course I'm very partial, but this was an exemplary performance for '76. How the previous concert and the next one (Syracuse) got paired and enshrined together as a Dicks Pick -with this one left out- will always be a mystery to me.As a born-and-raised upstate New Yorker, when I Iook back, it seems surprising the Dead got around to the extent they did. Consider all the places they performed, many venues off the beaten Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse-Albany-NYC Interstate path: Lake Placid (for crying out loud, what was that all about!), Alfred (the night before the legendary 5.2.70 performance in Binghamton), Cortland, Stony Brook (! 1970 fans unite), Colgate (Hamilton, NY), Ithaca (Cornell), Saratoga, Glens Falls, Niagra Falls (why does this have me thinking of The Three Stooges?), Troy, Utica (! '73 baby), Watkins Glen, on and on. I'm just sayin'...... I'm such a big Dead fan it's always made me proud of how it seemed like they just loved playing upstate NY.
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They used to tear it up from Buffalo to Albany and all points in between, like the Carrier Dome at Syracuse U.. I loved the minor league hockey rink at Glens Falls and don't ever forget Binghampton. There really were a lot of places in upstate that hosted the Grateful Dead.
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Sweet!!!!!Love the Furthur tracks.... Man the boys are sure playing well these days. Can't wait to see them again in Eugene and Red Rocks!!!!! Woody www.myspace.com/woodyinthebasement
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Thanks Golden West for your observation. There are probably other parts of the land that can recollect plenty of cherished shows by our favorite band, but I myself got on board the bus in upstate NY when I was in college, so it sure is special for me as well. My first show was March 23, 1973 in Utica. Yes, my friends, it was intense and the blotter was clear. I had tickets for Watkins Glen, but it's a long story on why I never got there, but I had a place in several other venues around the Empire State back in the day. The Dead brought some needed wide and deep perspective to that province for sure. ~ I'll meet you some morning in the sweet by and by
user picture
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Member for

17 years 4 months
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My first show was eight days later. Like your comment concerning the Wide and the Deep. As maybe a P.S. to my previous post it occurred to me- not only did they get to all these places but maybe there's some objectivity to the observation that they liked playing the Empire State about as much as we liked having them there. That being the number of official releases hailing from NY: There's the famous Binghampton show; two Rochester War Memorial shows were represented in the DP series (one from '77 and one from '80); a U of R Palestra show ('71) was an early download release; there was a Syracuse DP from '76; a Buffalo ('89) Fourth of July CD and video; where the Vault series is concerned there were Albany ('90) and Portchester ('71) performances featured, and of course MSG and Fillmore East performances were included in the DP series. And none of this is to forget the Legendary Status of the '77 Cornell and Colgate performances. Again, just sayin'....