• Rose Palace - March 21, 1969
    also: Paul Butterfield Blues Band; Jethro Tull

setlist

Official Photos

Ticket Stubs

Concert Photos

5 comments
sort by
Recent
Reset
Items displayed
  • nappyrags
    4 years 4 months ago
    Helluva weekend

    Butterfield was in between LP's, In My Own Dream & Keep On Moving so between songs from those two and a bit of Pigboy it was awespme...Tull as opener was amazing...Anderson was all over the place waving his flute like a baton...and of course the Dead...nothing else needs to be said...

  • Default Avatar
    mdirosario
    4 years 4 months ago
    Rose Palace March 20, 1969 My very first ever concert... wow!

    This was my first concert ever and very first date! Overwhelming and beautiful at age 16... to the other commenter... I loved Poobah's Record Store (first location, walk down from street level in old town Pasadena.

  • Default Avatar
    Cryptical70
    11 years 3 months ago
    I think this was the only run
    I think this was the only run where the Dead were teamed up with Jethro Tull!!! Too bad they didn't have a working relationship. I'm sure Jerry could have used Ian Anderson's flute in a couple of the Dead's songs. I wish the Dead could have covered Tull classics such as "Aqualung" or "Locomotive Breath" or "Minstrel In The Gallery."
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 8 months
also: Paul Butterfield Blues Band; Jethro Tull
show date
Venue

dead comment

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

I was fourteen and a half. I was a little Anglophile back then too, and had bought Jethro Tull's album as an import from Poobah, so I was pretty amped to see them as well. I was just learning how to play guitar and idolized Garcia. Spent hours with my head stuck in my lousy mono records player listing to Anthem of the Sun, floating on his crystalline arpeggios. Seeing him live did not disappoint. I don't remember much about the show other than they started off with a rowdy Good Morning Little School and slipped into space jam and then were out. Short set, or so it seemed.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years
Permalink

I think this was the only run where the Dead were teamed up with Jethro Tull!!! Too bad they didn't have a working relationship. I'm sure Jerry could have used Ian Anderson's flute in a couple of the Dead's songs. I wish the Dead could have covered Tull classics such as "Aqualung" or "Locomotive Breath" or "Minstrel In The Gallery."
user picture

Member for

11 years 9 months
Permalink

Butterfield was in between LP's, In My Own Dream & Keep On Moving so between songs from those two and a bit of Pigboy it was awespme...Tull as opener was amazing...Anderson was all over the place waving his flute like a baton...and of course the Dead...nothing else needs to be said...