Home Up Download Series Family Dog Dick's Picks 4 Bear's Choice Dick's Picks 8 Three From The Vault Ladies and Gentlemen Skull and Roses Road Trips Vol 1 No. 3 Dick's Picks Volume 35
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Set Lists
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Musicians |
Notes |
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| Three
from the Vault |
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| 2/19/71 |
| Capitol Theater, Port Chester,
N.Y. |
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Order: Three
from the Vault
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Three
From The Vault
Capitol Theater, Port Chester, N.Y. 2/19/71
The
release of Three From The Vault has historical importance on a number fronts. First,
it was considered for release prior to the Dick's Picks series,
which launched 36 live releases. Additionally, there were twelve
releases in the Download Series, as well as a number of multi-track
releases and DVD's. Three From The Vault is from a multi-track source and
does sounds superb.
Also
as background, it is the first performance without Mickey Hart until
October 20, 1974.
Additionally, it is a period where the band debuted a lot of
songs, between the evening before and 2/19/71, there were eight
new songs. Much of this new material would appear on solo releases such as
Garcia's self-titled release and Weir's Ace,
while a handful of them never made it to an album. Speaking of
Ace, most
of those songs are included on Weir's too overlooked Anthology, Weir
Here, that we highly recommend.
Since much of the material featured during this performance is fresh, the songs aren't as fully developed or
as good as they would morph into.
Again,
the recording is sonically very good. Bobby's
parts are clearly audible and demonstrate how important his
contributions are, even if Jerry and Phil generally get most of the props. Jerry's
voice sounds really good. The rhythm section is excellent as
usual. Phil comes
through loud clear and aggressive (should that be bold?). This is
Bill Kreutzmann's first performance as a solo drummer and he
demonstrates he's up to the task.
Of the material, The Pig Pen selections are among the best of both sets.
During set one, Jerry pulls
out his slide while they tackle Elmore James' "Hurts Me
Too," and Howlin' Wolf's "Smokestack Lightning." The
former is more to the point, while the latter they stretch out, both
the rap and instrumental. In the first set, in addition to these
gems a lot of the new material is performed, "Bertha" is
at a different tempo than it would develop to, and "Playing in the
Band" is still in the infancy stage. The rest of the set is
better with a strong beginning and end with familiar
favorites. Disc
two includes the second set the band starts out with some of their new material by Bobby
and Jerry. The renditions sound good and the separation of the musicians
is clear. Still, the newness of the songs hold back the jams and
explosiveness. Next,
Pig Pen leads the band through a rousing "Easy
Wind" earning the highlight to this point of the set. It
doesn't match the level of a 1971 "Hard to
Handle," not
much does. The always welcome That's It For The Other One," the whole
suite, is thunderous and offers the most exploration of the
show. Three
From The Vault is a nice sounding multi-track recording. While not a
essential release, a nice supplement. The four disc, Ladies
and Gentlemen is in our opinion the definitive release of
this time period of Grateful Dead music. Though, this is a complete
show and offers that flow and feel to it.
by Barry
Small
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| Track List |
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Disc One
(set 1)
Two Ditties: The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down, Spring Song
Truckin'
Loser
Cumberland Blues
It Hurts Me Too
Bertha
Playing In The Band
Dark Hollow
Smokestack Lightnin'
China Cat Sunflower
I Know You Rider
Disc Two (set 2)
Greatest Story Ever Told
Johnny B. Goode
Bird Song
Easy Wind
Deal
Cryptical Envelopment
Drums
The Other One
Wharf Rat
Good Lovin'
Casey Jones
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| Musicians: |
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Grateful
Dead
Jerry Garcia - lead guitar, vocals
Phil Lesh - bass, vocals
Pigpen (Ron McKernan) - keyboard, vocals, harmonica
Bob Weir - guitar, vocals
Bill Kreutzmann - percussion
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| Notes: |
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Release
date - June 26, 2007
Rhino
Grateful Dead Productions Inc.
Liner notes by Gary Lambert with technical commentary by Joe
Gastwirt.
Debuts
Features the live debut "Bird Song" and "Deal."
It includes the second live performances of: "Bertha," "Playing In
The Band,"
"Loser" "Greatest Story Every Told," and "Wharf Rat" all of
which were played for the first time on the previous night at the
same venue, Port Chester. The evening before, in addition to the
five noted songs, was the first "Johnny B. Goode."
Press Release
If you want to understand
why people obsess over live Grateful Dead recordings, the historic From
The Vault series of releases holds the answer. The story begins
in 1991 when the band quietly and unintentionally launched a musical
revolution with back-to-back live concert releases, One From the
Vault and Two from The Vault. These superior-quality
recordings of fan-favorite shows not only delighted Dead Heads
everywhere, but also inspired artists like Neil Young, Bob Dylan and
Pearl Jam to eventually follow suit with releases of their own
classic concerts.
Setting a gold standard by
which all other live Dead albums are judged, the From The Vault
releases heralded an astonishing 53 live albums that followed during
the ensuing years, which ranged in content from complete individual
concerts to compilations from specific tours to career-spanning
boxed sets. Representing the pinnacle of the band's renowned archive
of 2,400 live show recordings, the groundbreaking From The Vault
series' rare multi-track recordings thrilled hardcore fans and
novices alike before stalling in 1992 after only two volumes.
But now the legendary
series is set to return with the long-overdue third installment of From
The Vault. That the Dead would wait 15 years before putting out
the series' latest chapter should come as no surprise to anyone
familiar with the band's longstanding policy of gleefully
monkey-wrenching the space-time continuum whenever and wherever
possible. And so, with characteristically charming perversity,
Grateful Dead proudly present THREE FROM THE VAULT.
To celebrate the From
The Vault releases, Dead.net, the band's official Web site,
will unveil a major redesign of the site later this month. Echoing
the look and feel of the popular Grateful Dead Almanac, the
extensively overhauled Dead.net will reinforce the site's status as
the top online destination for Dead Heads. The Web site will be more
interactive and comprehensive than before and will completely
accommodate the Dead community offering new merchandise, message
boards as well as a fan forum.
Also on June 26, the
revamped site will also offer enhanced reissues of ONE FROM THE
VAULT ($24.98) and TWO FROM THE VAULT ($31.98), the latter
containing a disc of music not included on the original 1992
release, as well as a special-edition, seven-disc boxed set, THE
VAULT BOX ($69.98), containing all three From The Vault
releases. All dead.net preorders for THREE FROM THE VAULT or THE
VAULT BOX will include an exclusive copy of Dick's 'Dex,
special booklet containing a comprehensive Dick's Picks song index
and discography featuring a complete track listing for all 36
releases from the series.
Recorded February 19, 1971,
at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, NY, the long heralded
20-song performance on THREE FROM THE VAULT has traveled a long road
to release. Originally slated as a follow-up to the rapturously
received Two From The Vault, the Capitol Theatre tapes were
mixed, mastered...and then, for reasons somewhat obscured in the
smoky haze of time, the release got put on the back burner and
forgotten for a decade and a half.
Fortunately for Dead fans,
THREE FROM THE VAULT is worth the wait. Featuring Jerry Garcia, Bill
Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan and Bob Weir,
the concert sustains the creative momentum the band created
recording their breakthrough albums Workingman's Dead and American
Beauty the previous year. During more than two hours of music,
the Dead debuted no fewer than seven brand-new songs in the first
two nights of the run alone. They would all become beloved staples
of the live repertoire for the rest of the band's touring life.
Heard here are the second-ever performances of "Loser,"
"Bertha," "Playing In The Band," "Greatest
Story Ever Told" and "Wharf Rat," plus the world
premieres of "Bird Song" and "Deal." Some of the
new tunes had an intriguing work-in-progress feel to them. For
example, "Greatest Story" (still known at the time by its
working title, "Pump Song") had not yet received its
"Abraham and Isaac" bridge. And "Playing" and
"Bird Song" only hint at the magnificent vessels of sonic
exploration they would soon become.
The show was significant
for other reasons as well. With drummer Mickey Hart on hiatus, the
band began developing a leaner, more spacious sound. Bill
Kreutzmann, now the sole drummer, rose to the daunting challenge
magnificently, as did his bandmates. This was Grateful Dead music
stripped to its bare essence -- the dawning of what has been called
the band's "turn on a dime" period.
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