• https://www.dead.net/features/gd-radio-hour/grateful-dead-hour-no-1314
    Grateful Dead Hour no. 1314

    Week of November 25, 2013

    Bill Graham threw a huge benefit concert at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on March 23, 1975. It was called SNACK - Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks. Bob Dylan and Neil Young were there, as were the Jefferson Starship, the Doobie Brothers, Santana, Tower of Power, and many more. The concert was broadcast live on the radio, and it raised a lot of money for the enrichment of San Francisco public school students.

    The Grateful Dead had played their last live show five months earlier and were said to be retired. But they were working together in Bob Weir's studio, developing some very ambitious material that was released later that year on the album Blues for Allah. I was listening to the show on the radio at home and I was not at all prepared for this intense instrumental music.

    This performance featured the seven members of the Grateful Dead plus two more keyboardists, Merl Saunders and Ned Lagin. Big sound!

    After I produced this show and sent it out, I realized that the 3/23/75 set had been released, on a bonus discsent out to people who pre-ordered the Beyond Description boxed set.

    Grateful Dead 3/23/75 Kezar Stadium, San Francisco
    BLUES FOR ALLAH->
    KING SOLOMON'S MARBLES->
    DRUMS >
    KING SOLOMON'S MARBLES->
    BLUES FOR ALLAH
    JOHNNY B. GOODE

    Move Me Brightly: A Documentary Concert Film Celebrating Jerry Garcia's 70th Birthday
    EYES OF THE WORLD

    Grateful Dead, Family Dog at the Great Highway 4/18/70
    ROBERTA

    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
    Producer/host

    Listen Now

    362126
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    patrickmartin8…
    10 years 10 months ago
    the BFA bust-out | why played only a few times?
    Brilliant Blues for Allah, a treat for whoever was at Kezar that day. But why was it played so few times?
  • mark_mumper
    10 years 11 months ago
    1975 Kezar performance - I hear Van Morrison
    Thanks, David, for continuing here with the recent-programs streaming this week. It’s good to hear this performance again. (I have it on cassette from the K-101 broadcast, but both my cassette decks want repair and I haven’t listened to it in years.) Jerry’s occasional repeating alternating-semitone riffs in “King Solomon’s Marbles” eventually reminded me, this time around, of Van Morrison’s “Beside You,” on his Astral Weeks album (“You breathe in you breathe out, you breathe in you breathe out,…”). Even the key they’re playing in seems to match, as do many of Jerry’s melodic runs.
  • Default Avatar
    sherbear
    10 years 11 months ago
    ------------------(-----@
    Wow, right on! Greatness Abounds for my Sunday here in New York deep in an intense '75. Thank you for this and all David, xo! A Grateful Dead Hour is always a best hour! Merriest, "Merry" "Christmas" Wishes to you and all! Drop us one from SSSB here and there in the New Year! This has been sweet in the repeat. Each repeat I take turns riding with the individual players and then together and then apart then together, & I'm always better because of it; In some way or some how as this is what the music is. It happens without effort & by just participation... bopping and jamming heals in a plethora of ways. How blessed are WE! Happy 2013th Birthday Jesus! Happy 70th Birthday Jerry! Stop by...we're having cake, xo! Lovingkindness, Peace and Joy To All, xo!
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Week of November 25, 2013

Bill Graham threw a huge benefit concert at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on March 23, 1975. It was called SNACK - Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks. Bob Dylan and Neil Young were there, as were the Jefferson Starship, the Doobie Brothers, Santana, Tower of Power, and many more. The concert was broadcast live on the radio, and it raised a lot of money for the enrichment of San Francisco public school students.

The Grateful Dead had played their last live show five months earlier and were said to be retired. But they were working together in Bob Weir's studio, developing some very ambitious material that was released later that year on the album Blues for Allah. I was listening to the show on the radio at home and I was not at all prepared for this intense instrumental music.

This performance featured the seven members of the Grateful Dead plus two more keyboardists, Merl Saunders and Ned Lagin. Big sound!

After I produced this show and sent it out, I realized that the 3/23/75 set had been released, on a bonus discsent out to people who pre-ordered the Beyond Description boxed set.

Grateful Dead 3/23/75 Kezar Stadium, San Francisco
BLUES FOR ALLAH->
KING SOLOMON'S MARBLES->
DRUMS >
KING SOLOMON'S MARBLES->
BLUES FOR ALLAH
JOHNNY B. GOODE

Move Me Brightly: A Documentary Concert Film Celebrating Jerry Garcia's 70th Birthday
EYES OF THE WORLD

Grateful Dead, Family Dog at the Great Highway 4/18/70
ROBERTA

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
Producer/host

Listen Now

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Bill Graham threw a huge benefit concert at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on March 23, 1975. It was called SNACK - Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks.
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Original Air Date: November 25, 2013
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Bill Graham threw a huge benefit concert at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on March 23, 1975. It was called SNACK - Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks.
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Bill Graham threw a huge benefit concert at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on March 23, 1975. It was called SNACK - Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks.
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I love Blues For Allah but I wonder what it was like to be in the crowd that day. When you're all primed for a little Big River and Tennessee Jed, and if things got stretched out maybe Playing in the Band, and the Dead come out and lay this stuff on everybody.... Wow!
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Wow, right on! Greatness Abounds for my Sunday here in New York deep in an intense '75. Thank you for this and all David, xo! A Grateful Dead Hour is always a best hour! Merriest, "Merry" "Christmas" Wishes to you and all! Drop us one from SSSB here and there in the New Year! This has been sweet in the repeat. Each repeat I take turns riding with the individual players and then together and then apart then together, & I'm always better because of it; In some way or some how as this is what the music is. It happens without effort & by just participation... bopping and jamming heals in a plethora of ways. How blessed are WE! Happy 2013th Birthday Jesus! Happy 70th Birthday Jerry! Stop by...we're having cake, xo! Lovingkindness, Peace and Joy To All, xo!
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Thanks, David, for continuing here with the recent-programs streaming this week. It’s good to hear this performance again. (I have it on cassette from the K-101 broadcast, but both my cassette decks want repair and I haven’t listened to it in years.) Jerry’s occasional repeating alternating-semitone riffs in “King Solomon’s Marbles” eventually reminded me, this time around, of Van Morrison’s “Beside You,” on his Astral Weeks album (“You breathe in you breathe out, you breathe in you breathe out,…”). Even the key they’re playing in seems to match, as do many of Jerry’s melodic runs.