Tuesday, March 13, 2018

in october of ‘74, the dead retired from performing after a five-night stand at winterland. the following january, they met at bobby ace weir’s mill valley recording studio to start laying down the tracks for what would become blues for allah. outtakes from these sessions have been available on the archive for some time. last year, a new studio reel emerged of remarkable quality and historical significance. labeled “the first day,” the recording contains what audio engineer/archivist allen bershaw believes to be the first 1975 grateful dead studio session.

in a late-seventies interview with jerry garcia, he shared: "we kind of made a ground rule for that record: ‘let's make a record where we get together every day and we don't bring anything in.’ …the whole idea was to get back to that band thing, where the band makes the main contribution to the evolution of the material. so we'd go into the studio and jam for a while, and then if something nice turned up we'd say, ‘well let's preserve this little hunk and work with it, see if we can't do something with it.’ and that's how we did most of the album."

this session documents the fertile period of exploration the band was engaged in during their “retirement.” in a larger sense, the dead’s choice of material for the album indicates that they were busily carving a unique path that no one expected. do yourself a favor and spend a bit of time with “the first day.” i’m fairly certain you’ll be more than pleased that you did.

https://archive.org/details/gd1975-01-00.137598.studio.thefirstday.bershaw.flac16

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