LOS ANGELES – The Grateful Dead made Winterland its home for years until 1978, when the band closed Bill Graham’s legendary venue for good with a spectacular New Year’s Eve blow out. The friendly confines of the former ice-skating rink always seemed to bring out something special in the band. That’s certainly true of the group’s May 30, 1971 performance, which was the second night of a homestand during the era later immortalized on the 1971 live collection Skull and Roses.
For Record Store Day’s Black Friday event on November 23, Dead.net and Rhino will release a portion of that show (all that the band has in their vault) for the first time, offering it on 180-gram vinyl as a limited edition double-LP set of 7500 copies. WINTERLAND 5/30/71 will be available exclusively at select independent music retailers for a suggested price of $34.98. Visit www.recordstoreday.com for a list of participating stores.
Sourced from the original reels of ¼” tape, the music was mastered by Jeffrey Norman and the vinyl lacquers were cut by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering and then pressed at RTI. Grammy®-winning graphic artist Masaki Koike evokes the Skull and Roses album cover for this set’s gorgeous gatefold.
It’s over one hour of Dead classics that covers nearly the entire second set, which was packed with crowd pleasers like “Sugar Magnolia,” “Truckin’” and “Deal.” One entire LP side is dedicated exclusively to “Turn On Your Lovelight,” a 15-minute-plus romp led by singer/organist Ron “Pigpen” McKernan. For its encore, the band – Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, and McKernan – capped the evening off with raucous “Johnny B. Goode.”
Another West Coast band is the focus of a second Record Store Day Black Friday release. Rhino celebrates the 45-year anniversary of Love’s Forever Changes with a limited edition version of the band’s masterwork on 180-gram vinyl. The lacquers were cut from the original analog masters by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering and then pressed at RTI. As a bonus, the LP comes with a 7” that has the single-edit of “Alone Again Or” b/w “House Is Not A Motel.” The release is limited to 1500 copies and will be available exclusively at select independent music retailers for a suggested price of $24.98. Acclaim has only grown for the album since its debut in November 1967, following in the wake of the Summer of Love. Rolling Stone recently ranked Forever Changes at #40 on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
WINTERLAND 5/30/71
Side One
1. “Sugar Magnolia”
2. “Cumberland Blues”
3. “Big Boss Man”
Side Two
1. “Me And My Uncle”
2. “Deal”
3. “Truckin’”
Side Three
1. “Turn On Your Lovelight”
Side Four
1. “Uncle John’s Band”
2. “Casey Jones”
3. “Johnny B. Goode”
FOREVER CHANGES
Side One
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
Side Two
1. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
2. “Live And Let Live”
3. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
4. “Bummer In The Summer”
5. “You Set The Scene”
Bonus 7”
“Alone Again Or” – single edit b/w “A House Is Not A Motel”
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