tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18366371.post1890849198663007436..comments2024-03-15T18:58:45.318-06:00Comments on Jerry Garcia's Middle Finger: Just PlayFate Musichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05648291938690043423noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18366371.post-81987661279287469742015-04-11T17:10:22.697-06:002015-04-11T17:10:22.697-06:00Interesting. Trivia: the order of appearance was A...Interesting. Trivia: the order of appearance was Acoustic GD, NRPS ("an offshoot of the Grateful Dead", per the stage announcer, whose voice I do not recognize), Southern Comfort, then the GD.Fate Musichttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05648291938690043423noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18366371.post-28076800110790067592015-04-11T16:22:52.373-06:002015-04-11T16:22:52.373-06:00I have a theory, which can probably never be prove...I have a theory, which can probably never be proven, that June 4 1970 at Fillmore West was the first time John Kahn saw the Grateful Dead. The opening act was a band called Southern Comfort, who had a recently released album on Columbia, produced by Nick Gravenites and John Kahn. According to the band's drummer, the late Bob Jones, Gravenites let Kahn do all the producing. Kahn and Jones were very good friends, and had hung out and been in bands together in the late 60s. Southern Comfort had been around since 1969, and also functioned as Nick Gravenites house rhythm section, along with guys like John Kahn and Bill Vitt. It was Kahn and Jones who played on the Brewer and Shipley hit "One Toke Over The Line," produced by Gravenites.<br /><br />So I have to think that if Columbia got Southern Comfort on the FW bill to promote their album, their producer would be there. On top of that, Kahn had been playing with Garcia and Howard Wales at the Matrix since early April. It's possible that Kahn had seen the Dead before, and it's possible that Kahn had seen the Dead at FW in April, if only to catch Miles Davis. Even if he had, however, the June shows would have been the first time Kahn had seen the Dead when he was a Jerry Garcia co-conspirator.<br /><br />Kahn, Garcia and Bob Jones are all no longer with us, and no one else likely recalls who was backstage.So we will probably never know. I'm not aware of Kahn ever being asked when he first saw the Grateful Dead, or how often he actually saw them.Corry342https://www.blogger.com/profile/08049035074121231425noreply@blogger.com