Showing posts with label Tour Itineraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tour Itineraries. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2025

New Riders of The Purple Sage Performance History October-December 1973 (NRPS VI)


New
 Riders Of The Purple Sage Tour History, October-December 1973 (NRPS VI)
The music of Jerry Garcia casts a large shadow, if a shadow that is bright rather than dark. It is so large, however, and so bright, that it outshines many things around it. In the 21st century, the New Riders of The Purple Sage are best known as the vehicle through which Jerry Garcia created an opportunity to play pedal steel guitar as a sideman in 1970 and '71. When the demands of playing full-time with both the Grateful Dead and the New Riders became too gargantuan a task, Garcia had stepped aside from the Riders. For most Deadheads, that's where the story ends.    

Yet the story of the New Riders of The Purple Sage was only beginning. For obvious reasons, the Riders are always compared to the Dead, and like almost every other 20th century rock band, the Dead outshone NRPS by many orders of magnitude. Compared to all the other bands struggling to make it in the early 1970s, however, the New Riders of The Purple Sage were hugely successful. After their debut album with Garcia in late 1971, they released four more albums with Buddy Cage on pedal steel in 1972 and '73. The albums sold well--Panama Red eventually was certified Gold--and the New Riders were a popular concert attraction. 

On top of the Riders' undeniable success, they were also still part of the Grateful Dead's business operation. Grateful Dead tours were booked by their in-house Agency, Out-Of-Town Tours, led by Sam Cutler. Cutler and Out-Of-Town also booked the New Riders. So a review of the New Riders touring history in 1972 and '73 shows both what lessons Cutler had learned from the Dead's rise to success in 1970 and '71, and also provided an avenue for Cutler to expand his relationships with promoters who worked with the Grateful Dead. Thus the New Riders touring schedule was both a do-over and a rehearsal, for what had come before and what would come later for the Grateful Dead. 

This post will continue the series on the tour history of the New Riders of The Purple Sage in 1972 and '73, with a particular emphasis on how their saga was similar to and different from that of the Grateful Dead. These posts would not have been possible without the stellar research of fellow scholar David Kramer-Smyth, whose contributions have been both deep and broad.  The posts covered:

The New Riders' performance history from January to April 1972
The New Riders' performance history from May to August 1972
The New Riders' performance history from September to December 1972
The New Riders' performance history from January to April 1973
The New Riders' performance history from May to September 1973
This post will focus on the New Riders performance history from October to December 1973. although we will extend on to January 1974 in order to complete the tale. Anyone with additions, corrections, insights or just interesting speculation, please include them in the Comments. Flashbacks welcome.

The Bridgewater (NJ) Courier-News, October 8, 1973 advised the students of Manville High (in Bridgewater) that in order to book the New Riders, they needed to contact Out Of Town Tours, Inc. at 1330 Lincoln Avenue, San Rafael, CA

Status Report: New Riders of The Purple Sage, October 1, 1973

The New Riders of the Purple Sage had toured heavily throughout 1973. The band had a genuine following in the Northeast, and seemed to be drawing well in the Midwest as well. While still in the inevitable shadow of the Grateful Dead, that was not a bad place to be. Country rock was on the rise, in parallel with the newly-arrived "Outlaw Country" longhairs.

When headlining, the New Riders would play a pair of hour-long sets, with a mixture of originals and covers, often including new, unrecorded songs as well. The band had just completed a new album with Nashville producer Norbert Putnam, and they must have known it was going to be good. Many of the songs from the forthcoming Panama Red album, including the title track, were already regular parts of their live repertoire. The New Riders were an excellent live band, with a promising fourth album coming out soon, and in tune with the popular music trends of the day. Things looked bright indeed for the band.

Up until the Fall of 1973, the New Riders still had been part of the Grateful Dead family, and not just socially. Grateful Dead manager Jon McIntire had shared the same duties for the New Riders, along with NRPS road manager Dale Franklin. McIntire was the principal go-between for the record companies, while Franklin dealt with the day-to-day. The Riders were booked by Sam Cutler and Out-Of-Town Tours, who also booked the Dead. By booking multiple bands, Cutler had more to negotiate and thus more leverage with promoters and agents throughout the country. The Riders didn't have to worry about being left out of the mix--Cutler's principal assistant was Sally Mann Dryden, the drummer's wife (whom Cutler referred to as "Mustang Sally," perhaps a reference to her 428ci Ford Mustang). Travel arrangements were made by the Grateful Dead's in-house agency, Fly-By-Night Travel.

The New Riders of The Purple Sage, October-December 1973
John Dawson-vocals, rhythm guitar
Buddy Cage-pedal steel guitar (ex-Great Speckled Bird and Anne Murray)
David Nelson-lead guitar, vocals (ex-New Delhi River Band)
Dave Torbert-bass, vocals (ex-New Delhi River Band, Horses)
Spencer Dryden-drums (ex-Jefferson Airplane)

Sometime in the Fall of 1973, probably around October, the New Riders stepped aside from the Grateful Dead's orbit. For management, they hired Joe Kerr, an old college pal of George (Commander Cody) Frayne. Kerr also managed Commander Cody, Asleep At The Wheel and Clover, so he had kind of a lock on Bay Area country rock bands. The New Riders also separated themselves from Sam Cutler's Out Of Town Tours booking agency, switching their agent to Ron Rainey. Rainey had worked with Sam Cutler and the Dead for a few years already, so they were familiar with them. Still, the management and agency changes meant that the New Riders were still friends with the Dead, but no longer junior partners. New Riders appearances with the Dead became fewer and fewer.

October 2, 1973 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders/Mike Bloomfield Band/New Riders of The Purple Sage/Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady (Tuesday) Legal Aid Benefit
Benefit concerts with major local artists were common in San Francisco at the time. This show was a little different in that the billing did not make clear whom the beneficiary might have been. The ads just said "Legal Aid Benefit." It turned out that it was a Benefit for someone (or several someones) in the Hells Angels. Bill Graham made it clear (via John Wasserman's Chronicle column) that he had been lied to by the bands, and he was very resentful. Details are obscure, but generally speaking Hells Angels do not need "Legal Aid" because they would have been arguing a free speech clause of the constitution, but rather for other alleged transgressions. In the end, Graham simply shared the money raised amongst the bands to do with as they saw fit.  

The oddity here was a very rare billing of "Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady" instead of Hot Tuna. It was probably because Jack and Jorma played as an acoustic duo, rather than plugged in with a drummer. Hot Tuna and Garcia/Saunders (and presumably Mike Bloomfield) played full sets. The New Riders, per the setlist, played about an hour. They featured a lot of songs from Panama Red, and were joined by Matt Kelly on harmonica for the last two songs.

October 6, 1973 Field House, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Roger McGuinn (Saturday)
The New Riders kicked off their Fall tour with a probably-lucrative college booking at Northern Illinois University. NIU is in DeKalb, IL, about 65 miles North of Chicago. The school had been established as a Teachers College (Normal School) in 1895. Starting in 1965, the school was reorganized into the larger Illinois University System. NIU currently has over 16,000 undergraduates. It probably had fewer than that in 1973, but it would still have been a substantial, growing school. DeKalb wasn't Chicago, with a million entertainment options--so the student body would have been ready to rock the gym on a Saturday night.

The Byrds had been Columbia's most substantial rock act in the 60s. Leader Roger McGuinn had broken up the existing version of the band (with Clarence White) in early '73 to reform the original quintet (with David Crosby, Chris Hillman, Gene Clark and Michael Clarke), but that album had flopped. Instead, McGuinn had launched a solo career. Columbia had released McGuinn's self-titled solo debut in June 1973. McGuinn became an early version of a 70s (and 80s) phenomenon, a genuine rock star revered by Rolling Stone who actually sold very few records. McGuinn had a fine touring band (John Guerin on drums, David Vaught on bass and Mike Woolford on organ), but the album didn't really connect with FM radio or the public. The New Riders had come to country-rock later than the Byrds, but now they had passed McGuinn in the pecking order.


An ad for the October 12, 1973 New Riders show at the Palestra at the University of Rochester, in the September 27 edition of the SUNY Brockport Stylus (thank you David Kramer-Smyth for the incredible sleuthing)

October 12, 1973 Palestra, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
When the Grateful Dead had started attaching a financial purpose to their touring, starting in early 1970, Sam Cutler strove to keep them on the road by filling in empty nights with bookings that didn't require major travel. Cities in Central and Upstate New York, like Buffalo, Syracuse and Rochester were perfect. They weren't too far from lucrative bookings in places like Manhattan and Philadelphia and there were plenty of colleges in the region. FM Radio had spread all over the country, so even in secondary markets young rock fans were hearing all the cool rock bands on the air. By strategic bookings, Cutler helped the Dead turn Central New York from weeknight filler to a major market for the band. In 1973, the outlines of a similar strategy was in play for the New Riders.

While the exact release date for The Adventures of Panama Red is uncertain, by early October it would have been played on FM and likely available in at least some stores. The New Riders had managed to build a substantial following along the Eastern Seaboard, in both cities and colleges. Playing the rest of New York State made good sense.  The Fall tour started in earnest with a Friday night at The Palestra,  the gym at the University of Rochester.  "Palestra" (properly transliterated as "Palaestra") means "Wrestling Ground" in Ancient Greek, which is why it has been used as an Arena name by various schools.

Rochester is on the southern shore of Lake Ontario, East of Buffalo. It was a boom city going back to the 19th century--the Erie Canal came to Rochester in 1823-- and well into the 20th. The city was the birthplace of giant companies like Kodak, Xerox and Western Union. The city's population peaked in 1930 at 328,000. By 1970, it still had 296,000. Keep in mind, however, that the US population boomed after WW2, so while Rochester was a thriving city in 1970, its footprint was shrinking (in the 2010 census Rochester's population was just 210,000). In 1970, though, there were still plenty of young people there, and they wanted rock and roll, too.

The New Riders had opened for the Grateful Dead at the Palestra on October 26, 1971, and their set had been broadcast on FM radio. By Spring of '73, the Dead were headlining the much larger War Memorial in Rochester on March 30, and the New Riders opened that show as well. Now the Riders had a new album, and they were headlining the Palestra themselves, trying to climb the same ladder as the Dead. 

October 13, 1973 Capitol Theater, Passaic, NJ: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Dan Hicks and The Hot Licks (Saturday) 7:30 & 11:00
The New Riders were booked for two shows at the Capitol Theater in Passaic on Saturday night. The New Riders had headlined at the Capitol back on March 23, and now they were returning with both an early and a late show. Clearly promoter John Scher expected to sell a lot of tickets.

The Capitol, at 326 Monroe Street, had been built in 1921 and had a capacity of 3,200. By late 1970, it was showing "adult" films. Scher, from West Orange, NJ, and his then-partner Al Hayward booked their first rock show at the Capitol on December 16, 1971 (J. Geils Band/Humble Pie). Scher would go on to dominate the New Jersey rock concert market for several decades. Scher had bet on the New Riders early, booking them as Capitol headliners as far back as April 22, 1972. In fact, Scher had booked the New Riders before he had ever booked the Grateful Dead. Given the importance of John Scher to Grateful Dead history, that's no small detail. 

Openers Dan Hicks and The Hot Licks were another San Francisco band. They didn't really sound like anyone else, playing a unique brand of acoustic swing music, characterized by Hicks' melodic, snarky songs, such as the immortal "How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away." By this time, the band had released their fourth album, Last Train To Hicksville. It would be the band's last of three albums on Blue Thumb, and they would break up by 1974.


Central New Jersey Home News (New Brunswick) October 12, 1973

October 14, 1973 [gym], Middlesex CC, Edison, NJ: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Fabulous Rhinestones (Sunday)
A feature of touring the Northeast was that there were numerous college bookings available. Almost all colleges and universities, including junior colleges, had entertainment budgets. Thus colleges could book shows and pay fair rates, without having to cover the entire cost of the event from ticket sales. For a rising band like the New Riders, they could fill out their week with college gigs. They wouldn't make as much as they would have made playing the Capitol in Passaic, but they made more than they would have if they had just stayed in their hotel. At the same time, college bookings helped grow the audience for the band.

Edison, NJ is roughly between Princeton and Newark, within commuting distance of Manhattan. Middlesex College had only been opened in 1964. Although the school serves 11,800 students today, it probably served considerably fewer in those days. The current configuration of Community Colleges tends to orient towards a lot of part-time and returning students, often taking classes in a variety of professional skills that are not always directly related to degree programs. In their initial formulation, however, junior colleges were still more focused on the full time student body that was making academic plans to continue onward with their education.  

This unassuming gym at Middlesex Community College in Edison, NJ hosted the Grateful Dead and the New Riders on November 22, 1970, and the Riders again on October 14, 1973 (photo 2012)

A twist to the college bookings was that any promoter like John Scher would not have contractually allowed the New Riders to advertise a show within 50 miles of the Capitol Theater prior to the concert. This was a standard clause for all promoters. A college show, however, would not have been advertised outside of the campus, and thus Scher would not have considered the Sunday Edison show as competition with the Saturday night Capitol show. Note that the clipping above is just a newspaper listing, not an ad. Scher also booked concerts for a lot of colleges, and my guess is that Scher actually had some hand in booking the Edison show, so he would have been fine with the New Riders playing the night after The Capitol, just 37 miles to the South. 

The December 2, 1970 Middlesex CC student paper (Quo Vadis) had a picture of the New Riders of The Purple Sage performing in the gym on November 22, 1970

Cutler knew this playbook. Three years earlier, on November 22, 1970, the Grateful Dead had played a Sunday night concert in the Edison Gym, squeezing it in after a show in Boston. Edison's proximity to Newark Airport made it easy transit for the band. The New Riders had opened the Edison show (see the picture above), so Cutler knew the venue. I rescued the Edison show from obscurity, and thanks to many Commenters, we now have numerous details. Like most college shows at the time, the audience was mainly students, but there were a few locals as well. One curious attendee in 1970 was Bruce Springsteen, then a struggling but ambitious musician in the band Steel Mill. Bruce admitted that he "didn't get it" in his autobiography.






October 17, 1973 The Playhouse, Hofstra U., Hempstead, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday) 7:30 & 10:30
On Wednesday night, the New Riders were booked at another college. Hofstra is a private college in Long Island that was founded in 1935. It currently has about 10,000 students, although I don't know if it had that many in 1973. Hofstra Playhouse was an 1105 seat theater. The New Riders had played the room before.


October 19, 1973 Township Auditorium, Columbia, SC: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
Not only was Sam Cutler following the Grateful Dead playbook for the New Riders in Upstate New York, he was trying to build both the Dead and the Riders in the Southeast. The Dead had followings in Atlanta and Miami, but had not played in between Georgia and Washington, DC. North Carolina and Virginia, however, were growing areas and well-located for touring. In the Fall of '73, shows were booked shows for the Dead in Virginia (Williamsburg September 11-12) and North Carolina (Duke University on December 8, and Charlotte on December 10). The road was long, and the strategy long outlasted Cutler's departure, but by the start of the 1980s, the "New South" of North Carolina and Virginia were profitable anchors to Northeastern tours every year

It's not clear, however, whether Cutler or Ron Rainey had booked the actual October dates, but in any case the strategy remained in force. Whoever planned the bookings, clearly the Riders were working on a similar strategy for the New Riders in the Southeast, indeed one that had been underway before the Grateful Dead's bookings had reached fruition. Back on November 17, 1972, the New Riders had headlined at Carmichael Arena at UNC-Chapel Hill (a decade before Michael Jordan), and in the Summer of '73 the Riders had played a few dates in Alabama (Auburn U. on July 24), Tennessee (Nashville on July 26) and Charlotte (a junior college on July 28). Now they were booked for a Friday night in Columbia, SC, which was both the state capitol and the home of the University of South Carolina. 

Columbia, like many State Capitols, had been chosen for the political expediency of its location, as it was at the center of the state. USC (as the locals call it) was a football power rather than a hotbed of revolution, but students there read Rolling Stone, too. The Township Auditorium, at 1703 Taylor Street, with a capacity of 3072, had been built in 1930. Back in the day, major touring rock bands did not play South Carolina much. Also, remember that there were no "jam bands" in those days--if you were a nascent hippie in South Carolina, Alabama or Georgia, seeing the New Riders was as close as you were going to get to any Deadhead scene. If you wanted to hang out with like-minded folks, and just possibly engage in some commerce, a New Riders show was your best bet. 

I wonder how well this concert drew? The Grateful Dead would only play South Carolina one time, an epic event on Halloween 1985. The New Riders recording arc was nothing like the Dead's, and they would never establish the kind of permanence in the Southeast that the Dead would create.

The New Riders/Cody show at Cameron Indoor Stadium at Duke was advertised the previous week (Friday Oct 12) in UNC's Daily Tar Heel

October 20, 1973 Cameron Indoor Stadium, Duke U., Durham, NC: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead and the New Riders had played the Wallace Wade Stadium at Duke University on April 24, 1971 (along with the Beach Boys), at a thinly-attended event. Since no one went, it didn't have much impact on the Dead's popularity in the Southeast. The Grateful Dead's return to Duke, however, at the Cameron Indoor Stadium basketball arena, on December 8, 1973, was the trigger of a long, successful history for the Dead in North Carolina. The Dead would return to Cameron three times more, and to North Carolina many times more.

In fact, however, it was probably Cutler who had booked the New Riders to headline at Cameron two months prior. Cameron had been opened way back in 1940, and had a capacity of 8,800. While substantial for the 1940s, the capacity (since increased to 9,300) isn't large for major college basketball these days. Even so, and even with the support of the Commander Cody band, I doubt the New Riders could fill the place. Probably the upper decks were closed off. Note that the Riders tickets are $4 for students and $5 for General Admission. Things must have gone well--the Grateful Dead would play there in December, with tickets at $5-$6.

Note also that the ad above is from the UNC Daily Tar Heel newspaper. Chapel Hill is just 8 miles from Durham. The famous "rivalry" between the basketball teams was largely invented by ESPN in the 1980s. Students from both schools often attended events at the other, and save for a few hard-core alums any sports rivalries were not prominent.

October 21, 1973 The Mosque, Richmond, VA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Sunday)
The Mosque, at 6 North Laurel Street in Richmond, was built in 1927 as a Shriner's Temple. Unlike the Avalon, another former Shriner's Temple, The Mosque had seats. However, the 3,565-capacity Mosque is fondly remembered as a rock venue. It is now known as The Altria Theater. I believe this show was associated with Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), a large state school in Richmond. Richmond had a thriving local scene as far as I know, but major touring bands didn't play there that much. If the show was affiliated with VCU, the show probably drew pretty well for a Sunday night. 

Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen had moved to Berkeley from Ann Arbor, MI in the Summer of 1969. Their swinging hippie honky-tonk fit in well with the New Riders, and the Airmen had played with the Dead and the Riders many times. The manager of the Airmen was Joe Kerr, who was also the manager of Asleep at The Wheel and Clover. As noted above, at some point in the Fall of 1973, Kerr became co-manager of the New Riders of the Purple Sage, sharing the duties with Dale Franklin. Franklin had been, and remained, road manager and dealt with the day-to-day issues of touring. She had shared management with Jon McIntyre, but McIntyre was really the manager of the Grateful Dead. So Kerr's presence gave the New Riders a manager focused on them. 

The exact timing of Kerr's ascension to co-manager of the New Riders isn't certain. In any case, the New Riders and the Airmen had been sharing bookings for many years, so the changeover to Kerr was probably more like an evolution than a jolt.

The New Riders had been advertised at a show on (Monday) October 22 at the State Fair Show Arena in Harrisburg, PA, along with Joe Walsh, but the show was canceled. 

The New Riders and Commander Cody were booked for a double show on (Thursday) October 25 at the Tower Theater in the Philadelphia suburb of Upper Darby. However, the Tower was closed for code violations and the shows were canceled. The Tower, at 69th  and Ludlow Streets, would re-open, however, and remains one of the region's premier theaters.

Don Law Presents, at various venues (Boston Globe Oct 7)

October 26, 1973 Aquarius Orpheum Theater, Boston, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Friday)
Don Law Jr, son of a famous Nashville producer, had been a Boston University college student when he started presenting local events. By mid-1968 he ran the Boston Tea Party, Boston's principal underground rock venue. The Tea Party was particularly legendary for booking touring English bands like Jethro Tull and Ten Years After. Law had also co-owned Boston's first full-time FM rock station, WBCN. WBCN began broadcasting on March 15, 1968, with dj's often spinning records from a studio on an upper floor of the venue itself (the all-night DJ, known as "The Woofuh Goofuh," was J Geils Band lead singer Peter Wolf).

The tiny Tea Party had moved in late 1969 to a larger joint, but that too had closed by the end of 1970. Law went on to book other venues, but initially he was just one of many promoters in the competitive Boston marketplace. By 1973, Don Law Jr's principal, though not only, venue was the 2700-seat Orpheum Theater, at 1 Hamilton Place. The New Riders had played for Law at the Orpheum earlier in the year (April 2 '73). That time, they had been paired with Hot Tuna, but here they were headlining over Cody and the Airmen.

For the second set, the Riders were joined by the fine guitarist Amos Garrett. Garrett had played with Buddy Cage and Ian & Sylvia Tyson in the Great Speckled Bird, and more recently with Paul Butterfield's Better Days.

October 27, 1973 Cole Field House, U of Maryland, College Park, MD: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Saturday)
Cole Field House, the 12,000-capacity basketball arena at the University of Maryland, had opened in 1955 (located at 4095 Union Lane, it is now the Jones-Hill House). It had been the home of the Maryland Terrapins basketball team. Although the New Riders had played the DC area in the prior year, they weren't anywhere near big enough to fill Cole, even with Commander Cody supporting them. I assume some upper sections of the arena were closed off. Still, the bands probably brought in a decent crowd.

October 29, 1973 Great Southeast Music Hall, Atlanta, GA: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Monday) 8pm & 10pm 
Atlanta was a growing city, and a growing rock market. The Grateful Dead had played in Atlanta, and the New Riders had opened for them there. In fact, Buddy Cage's debut on pedal steel for the band had been in Atlanta on November 11, 1971. Now, the Riders filled in an open night between DC and Texas with a Monday night in Atlanta.

The Great Southeast Music Hall, then in the Broadview Plaza Shopping Center (at 2581 Piedmont Rd NE), was the premier Atlanta club for touring acts. The club held about 500 people. Bands generally played double shows from Tuesday to Sunday, but Monday nights were open. Cutler slipped the New Riders in on a Monday night. According to a review in the local independent weekly paper (Great Speckled Bird), the band packed the house for both shows. Sitting in on banjo was John McEuen from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, who were booked for the following week.

November 1, 1973 Music Hall, Houston, TX: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Thursday)
Sam Cutler had been trying to build an audience for the Grateful Dead in Texas during this period, and Kerr tried to do the same for the New Riders. The Riders' long-haired pro-dope country rock sound was perfect for Texas hippies, and the band did very well there (as did Commander Cody). The Houston Music Hall was built in 1937, adjacent to the Sam Houston Coliseum. The Music Hall was the home of the Houston Symphony. It had wonderful acoustics, and a capacity of only 2,200.  

November 2, 1973 Laurie Auditorium, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
Trinity University is a prestigious private school in San Antonio. Laurie Auditorium, with a capacity of 2,709, could fit the entire undergraduate student population. I don't know if Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen also played on this Friday night bill.

November 3, 1973 Texas Hall, U of Texas-Arlington, Arlington, TX: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Saturday)
Arlington, TX is between Dallas and Fort Worth (some say that Arlington is the dash between the two cities). As the Dallas-Ft Worth area had expanded, so has Arlington. While the University was founded back in 1895, in 1965 it was merged into the University of Texas system as UT-Arlington. In 1973, the school had about 15,000 students (now it has 25,000). Texas Hall had been opened in 1965, and had a capacity of 2,625.

November 4, 1973 Armadillo World Headquarters, Austin, TX: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Sunday)
The Armadillo World Headquarters, a former Armory at 525 1/2 Barton Springs Road in Austin, had first opened as a rock venue on August 7, 1970. It was popular as a place in Austin that was sympathetic to hippies, where smoking pot was safe. Pot was a serious felony in Texas at the time, so this was no small thing.

By 1973, "Outlaw Country Music" was booming, and Austin and The 'Dillo (as it was known) were right at the center of it. Few people realize that the live music explosion in Austin around that time was driven by the Texas Legislature's decision to allow liquor to be sold by the drink, subject to municipal laws. That's right--prior to '71, there were no bars in Austin. So that's why you never hear of a classic Texas music bar from Austin from the '60s. There weren't any. The laws about beer and wine were slightly less restrictive, and some restaurants could serve them, but there weren't music venues with drinks prior to '72. When Austin was able to open the doors to bars in '72, there was an explosion of music bars, all legendary now. At the time, Austin was a college town, with benign weather--by Texas standards--so Austinites went out every night. The likes of Doug Sahm, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and many more played great country music, but they grew their hair and didn't limit their indulgences to liquor.

As for the Armadillo World Headquarters, they opened a Beer Garden where Lone Star Beer was the order of the day. The 'Dillo only had a capacity of about 1500, but they sold so much beer that it didn't really matter. Needless, to say, the New Riders of The Purple Sage killed it there. My assumption here is that Commander Cody did not share the bill with the New Riders here because the Airmen were already headliners. Commander Cody and his crew were the most Austin band ever that didn't actually live there.

The gatefold cover of Panama Red had an illustrated comic of the lyrics to the title track

The Adventures Of Panama Red

By 1973, the Riders' debut album (usually called NRPS) had established itself as a kind of archetype. With 10 great John Dawson songs and Jerry Garcia's melodic pedal steel, it had become a staple of every Deadhead's record collection. The following two Riders' albums (Powerglide and Gypsy Cowboy) had been enjoyable, too, but not universally acclaimed, even in Deadhead circles. They had sold modestly well, probably in the range of 100,000 copies or so. The Adventures Of Panama Red, however, released in October 1973, was the definitive musical statement of the post-Garcia New Riders. The title track, with it's snarky jokes about "brand name" weed was perfect for FM radio. Kids could sing it at home and their parents had no idea what it was about, every teenager's 1973 dream.  

Panama Red was pretty distinct from previous New Riders albums. Producer Norbert Putnam was a veteran Nashville producer, but his focus more on R&B than country, which was perfect for the New Riders' sound. Putnam was from Florence, AL (where he surely had worked with Donna Thatcher), and throughout the 70s he would work with Elvis Presley, Jimmy Buffett, Dan Fogleberg and many others. The album was recorded at Sausalito's Record Plant, but it doesn't have that hippie feel to it. The album has a smooth Muscle Shoals sound to it, coming out like a sort of Bakersfield-country album with a soul edge. Buddy Cage's slashing pedal steel is tasteful yet prominent, but there are discreet contributions from horns (the Memphis Horns), singers (Donna included) and some session players. The album is rocking and very radio-friendly.

The biggest distinction of Panama Red was the choice of songs. NRPS and to some extent the next two albums had featured John Dawson and his original material. Panama Red only has two original Dawson songs, and Marmaduke shares lead vocals somewhat equally throughout the album with Torbert and Nelson. Panama Red is the group's definitive statement as a band, with three fine singers and great harmonies. 

Peter Rowan "alias Panama Red" was booked at the Freight and Salvage on March 5, 1970

The classic title track, forever bringing down the house for the New Riders well into the 21st Century, stands as a microcosm of the band's legacy and status. Peter Rowan had written some excellent songs but had no recording contract in 1973. When Rowan hooked up with Jerry Garcia and David Grisman to form Old And In The Way, "Panama Red" was one of the staples of their repertoire, as was "Lonesome LA Cowboy." However, that band only played around the Bay Area--save a couple of shows on the East Coast--and did not release any recordings until 1975. So unless you were a lucky Bay Area fan who heard Old And In The Way live in person or on local FM radio, you'd never heard of those songs

"Panama Red" is probably the New Riders' best known song. It was written by Peter Rowan, and Rowan had been performing the song for some time. Rowan had certainly been performing "Panama Red" with Jerry Garcia and Old And In The Way since March of '73, but in fact Rowan had written the song in Spring 1969, after the California break up of his band Earth Opera. Rowan himself explained the genesis of the song in a personal email (via David Gans)

Panama Red was written in 1969 in Cambridge Mass, the summer after Earth Opera’s March breakup after our last gig in Long Beach at the Golden Bear.   Seatrain felt the song was too “funky-country” for the band’ pop-classical recording  direction.  We did perform it in the early days.  The subject was "taboo” in those days. You did jail time for pot.  So that might have scared commercial interests.  

But Garcia was a green light all the way! “ Oh sure” was his motto, both ironically and straight but always with a twinkle in his eye!  True to form when the Riders got a hit with Panama Red, the Seatrain management kept all the money! Oh sure!

Jerry suggested I bring the song to Marmaduke and Nelson!

Rowan had played gigs at the Freight and Salvage in February and March 1970 as "Panama Red," so the song has a longer history than we realize. 

Garcia must have known that Putnam and the New Riders were looking for songs, which was a very Nashville approach to a new album. According to legend, Rowan pitched his songs like he was in a building in Nashville, strumming away on his acoustic guitar and singing his proverbial heart out. Rowan's  pitch worked--the New Riders recorded great versions of "Panama Red" and "Lonesome LA Cowboy." When exactly Rowan sang his songs to the New Riders isn't clear, but I would guess March or April. Most likely, Rowan went to the New Riders rehearsal space at 20 Front St. The Dead also stored equipment there. Ultimately, the Dead would take over the entire Front Street space. My guess is that the real audience for Rowan wasn't the Riders, but producer Norbert Putnam.

Of course, the subplot, which Garcia probably knew, was the New Riders didn't really have much material. They'd used up Dawson's stock of songs from before the first album, and he would only have two songs on Panama Red ("You Should Have Seen Me Running" and "One Too Many Stories"). Torbert wrote three, Nelson wrote one and there were a bunch of covers. 

The Adventures Of Panama Red included two songs by Peter Rowan, one by Robert Hunter ("Kick In The Head," sung by Torbert), one by Waylon Jennings and one Red Allen classic. Nelson sang the title track. Garcia's legacy was embedded in “Panama Red,” even if it wasn't widely known. The song was seen as a New Riders song by the rest of the country, but in fact Garcia's band had done it first. Still, the Riders' version was perfect for FM, even if the high lonesome Old And In The Way resonated more with Deadheads in later years when it was released in 1975. 

Given that Torbert would leave the group by the end of 1973, The Adventures of Panama Red stands as the high-water mark for the New Riders of The Purple Sage, bound intimately with Jerry Garcia's legacy while standing tall without him. It was the only New Riders album certified as a gold record (in 1979).

November 16, 1973 Chapin Hall, Williams College, Williamstown, MA New Riders of The Purple Sage/John Herald and The Honkies (Friday)
The New Riders came back for the second go-round in the Northeast in the Fall of '73, starting with a week of college dates. Williams College is a prestigious Northeastern undergraduate institution, established in 1793. 1200-seat Chapin Hall had been built in 1910. John Herald had been in the Greenbriar Boys, formed in 1958, the first "Northern" group to succeed playing bluegrass. The Greenbriar Boys had been big influences on Jerry Garcia and David Nelson, sending the message that you didn't have to be born in Kentucky to play the music. Herald's new band was a bluegrass trio.

There is an interesting article describing the New Riders two shows from a backstage perspective, in the November 20 issue of the student newspaper (the Williams Records). It is somewhat impressionistic, but it's an interesting glimpse of a touring rock band playing outside of the bright lights of New York or San Francisco.

November 17, 1973 Reid Athletic Center, Colgate U., Colgate, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Saturday)
Tiny Colgate University is in tiny Hamilton, NY. Hamilton is nearly in the exact center of New York State. It's not near anything. Many years ago, I visited Hamilton College, which (paradoxically) is in Clinton, NY. Pretty as it was, I though Clinton was way out in the country. Yet the Hamilton students assured me that Colgate, 20 miles to the South, made Clinton seem like Greenwich Village.

Colgate is a well-regarded, well-funded University. It was founded in 1819, and has about 3000 students. Places like Colgate have entertainment budgets to bring in touring acts. This Saturday night, they brought in the New Riders. Reid Athletic Center, built in 1959, seats 1,750 for basketball, and probably a bit more for a concert. 4 years later (November 4, 1977), the Grateful Dead would fill out their tour by playing a Friday night at Colgate. I assure you, even if no undergraduates were left from '73, small schools have institutional memories, so things must have gone pretty well with the New Riders for the college to OK inviting the Grateful Dead later on.

Columbia seems to have made the decision to record a live album by the band, a common way to follow up a hit record at the time. The Colgate show was recorded, as were the next few.

November 18, 1973 [venue], University of Hartford, Hartford, CT: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Sunday)
The show at University of Hartford was also recorded by Columbia. I don't know which venue they played at the school.

The October 21, 1973 Philadelphia Inquirer advertised the numerous fine bands coming to Princeton that fall, including the New Riders on Tuesday November 20
November 20, 1973 McCarter Theater, Princeton U., Princeton, NJ: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Tuesday)
The McCarter Theater at Princeton only held about 1100, but the school was able to provide support for booking bands without depending entirely on ticket sales. The Fall '73 calendar (advertised above) lists some great bands. The New Riders could make good money on a Tuesday night, which beat not making any money at all. This show was also recorded.

November 23-24, 1973 Academy Of Music, New York, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (Friday-Saturday)
The Academy of Music, at 126 E.14th Street, had opened as a movie theater in 1922 (taking its name from the Opera House that had been across the street in the 19th century). The 3000-seat venue had been used intermittently for rock concerts in the 1960s, but had mostly been a movie theater. Promoter Howard Stein (1945-2007) had been putting on shows at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, just outside the City, in 1970 and '71. When the Fillmore East closed in June, 1971, Stein took over the The Academy of Music. Stein had been promoting rock shows in the New York area throughout the 1960s (the Academy of Music would change its name to The Palladium in 1976).

The New Riders had played the Academy in May of 1972, and had returned for two nights at Thanksgiving. Now they were back almost exactly a year later. There were early and late shows both nights. The New Riders were now an established draw in New York City. Columbia recorded these shows as well, and the New Riders cooked with gas. Producer Jerry Garcia used recordings from these four shows for the New Riders' 1974 live album Home, Home On The Road

Commander Cody (piano), Frank Wakefield (mandolin), Andy Stein (sax) and Pete "Dr Banjo" Wernick sat in on various numbers. In fact, I think Commander Cody regularly joined the New Riders throughout 1973 for various numbers, but we only have intermittent notice of it.



November 26, 1973 Onandaga War Memorial Auditorium, Syracuse, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Eric Andersen
(Monday) Eddie Claridge Presents
The Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium in Syracuse held about 8,000 in concert configuration, and had been opened in 1949. The Riders had opened for the Dead there back in '71 (and had been broadcast on the local FM station). The Dead had returned to the War Memorial in September '73, and now the New Riders were following them. On a Monday night, they weren't likely to draw a huge crowd, but it was surely worthwhile to play the gig.

Eric Andersen was another Columbia artist, and also Bob Weir's next-door neighbor (which is how he came to write some lyrics for Weir's "Weather Report Part I"). Andersen's most recent album, 1972's Blue River, had been produced by Norbert Putnam for Columbia, so there were plenty of connections. Andersen was often booked with the New Riders, and sometimes joined them for encores.

November 28, 1973 Auditorium Theater, Chicago, IL: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday)
The Auditorium Theatre (at 50 Ida B Wells St) had been built in 1889, with a capacity of 3,875. The Dead and the Riders had played two nights there in 1971 (October 21-22), and then the Riders had returned  in support of Mott the Hoople (Dec 16 '72). On August 4, 1973, the Riders returned to the theater as headliners. This was how the rock business was designed to work, and in the Upper Midwest, at least things were going according to plan. The New Riders returned to headline again November.

The New Riders appearance on November 30, 1973 got them a page in the 1973-74 Bethany College yearbook, The Bethanian (link is here--amazing research by David Kramer-Smyth)

November 30, 1973
[venue], Bethany College, Bethany, WV: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
Bethany, WV is a tiny town of 1,036 an hour Southwest of Pittsburgh. Bethany College, established in 1840, has just 650 students. Presumably the college subsidized the show, since ticket sales couldn't have covered the cost. This peculiar booking only makes sense if the New Riders were playing a good gig nearby on Saturday night. Pittsburgh would be a good guess, but we can't find anything.

December 4, 1973 Riverside Theater, Milwaukee, WI: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Tuesday)
The New Riders doubled back to the Midwest after their trip to West Virginia. The Riverside Theater, at 116 W Wisconsin Ave, had opened in 1928. It had a capacity of 2450 (it's still thriving). 

December 5, 1973 Dane County Coliseum, Madison, WI: Beach Boys/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday)
Not yet established in Wisconsin, the New Riders were opening for the Beach Boys. Per some reviews, the bands drew about 4000. Now, the Dane County Coliseum has a capacity of around 10,000 but two reviews in the local papers did not call the shows "empty." I suspect that for a weeknight show, a much smaller configuration of the arena was used. 

Billboard listed a few more dates, but David Kramer-Smyth could find no traces, and it seems like this leg of the tour was canceled (if anyone knows anything, please Comment)

December 7 1973 Eastern Montana University, Billings, MT (Friday)
December 8 1973 University of Montana, Missoula, MT (Saturday)
December 9 1973 Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA (Sunday)

Rock tours are booked a few months in advance, for obvious reasons, and there's some solid evidence that the New Riders Fall tour was booked by Sam Cutler and Out-Of-Town Tours. But by the Fall, promotional material for Out-Of-Town did not list the New Riders on the roster. Clearly there had been a falling out, a falling out that would presage Cutler's falling out with the Grateful Dead. The issue appears to have been money, as it usually is. When bands like the Dead and the Riders were climbing the ladder, 10% for booking seemed reasonable, but once the paydays got bigger, competitors offering smaller commissions moved in. 

By late 1973, Ron Rainey of Magma was the "official" booking agent for the New Riders. Rainey had been heavily involved with booking the Riders and the Dead for years, working with Cutler and Out-Of-Town, but now he was the primary agent. Rainey was an established pro, so the business was covered. But by the end of '73, with Jon McIntire and Sam Cutler replaced by Joe Kerr and Ron Rainey, the New Riders Of The Purple Sage relationship with the Grateful Dead became a social one rather than a professional one. 

Dave Torbert Departs
When the New Riders of The Purple Sage formed in 1969, they were a platform for John Dawson's songs and Jerry Garcia's pedal steel guitar playing. The NRPS album had captured that era perfectly. While it had taken a little time for the band to re-establish their identity, by the end of 1973 the band had found their footing. The Riders had three lead singers with different styles, and great harmonies. Buddy Cage was a remarkable soloist, able to play both sizzling rock leads and sweet country rides with ease. With three singers and four albums, the band was able to play two hour shows with a wide variety of original and cover material. Rock and country music were clearly merging, and the Riders were at the forefront. The Grateful Dead association was still a cool thing, and helped ensure a loyal audience that would see the band over and over. The future looked very bright indeed.

Bassist Dave Torbert had joined the New Riders in March, 1970. He had played with David Nelson in the New Delhi River Band for two years (1966-68), and then joined his pal Matt Kelly in various bands for a year (Horses and Shango). He had gone to Hawaii for several months in late 69/early '70, and was on his way to join Kelly's band in London (Gospel Oak) when he got the call from Nelson. With Kelly's assent, Torbert had joined the band just when they started touring with the Grateful Dead. Initially, he had just played bass and sang some harmony. By 1973, he was writing some of the band's best songs and singing many of their crowd-pleasing covers. Torbert's handsome hippie-surfer stage presence gave some distinct charisma to the New Riders, in contrast to the more cosmic Dawson and countrified Nelson. 

Matt Kelly had returned to the Bay Area by the Fall of 1972. He had played harmonica on Gypsy Cowboy and Panama Red, and had sat in with the New Riders many times. By the Fall of '73, Kelly was working on a blues harmonica instruction album. He used members of his own band, Lonesome Janet, and had various guests like Mike Bloomfield and Mark Naftalin. Kelly was planning to move away from the jazzy sound of Lonesome Janet and make them into a bluesier ensemble. Torbert had played on the sessions for the instruction album, and unexpectedly asked to join Kelly's new band. 

Kelly, in a (February 2022) phone call with me, told me that he actively tried to talk Torbert out of throwing in his lot with Kelly. Kelly's band was playing tiny joints in the Santa Cruz Moutains, and had no backing and no management. The New Riders were riding high on a hit album, they had three more under their belt, management, professional booking and an invaluable association with the Grateful Dead. Flattered as he was, Kelly strenuously argued to Torbert that he should stay where he was. Torbert was adamant, however--he was tired of the country music sound of the Riders and wanted to play something with a more R&B feel. Kelly was not only an old friend, but drummer Chris Herold had played with Torbert from 1966-69 (in the NDRB, Horses and Shango), so he was returning to old comrades. Thus Kelly finally accepted that his unknown little band was going to have a local rock star on bass and vocals. 

Skip Battin's 1972 album Skip, on Signpost Records


Skip Battin-Bass and Vocals
It's my recollection that Torbert's departure from the New Riders was not announced until January, 1974, but I am not certain of that. In any case, retroactively, the Riders seem to have been aware that Torbert's gigs with the band at Winterland on the weekend of December 14 and 15 would be his last stand. We know that because his replacement, Skip Battin, checked out the Riders that weekend with an eye toward joining the group. Battin already had a lengthy Hollywood music career, going back to 1961. Most recently he had been in The Byrds from late 1969 through early 1973, playing on three of their albums (Untitled, Byrdamaniax and Farther Along). In 1972, he had also released his first solo album, Skip, on Signpost Records (distributed by Atlantic). He had been on hiatus for much of 1973, after the Byrds had fallen apart. He had recorded a follow-up album, Topanga Skyline, but it had been shelved (it was finally released in 2010).

Battin was suggested for the New Riders by booking agent Ron Rainey. Rainey had been booking the Grateful Dead since at least 1971, so he would have been working closely with Sam Cutler and the Riders. The booking business was much like Real Estate, in that agents collaborated to serve their clients in different regions. Battin and the Riders did not know each other, but Rainey hooked them up. In a 1976 interview (by Barry Ballard), Battin said

Ron Rainey at Magna had booked the Byrds and he also booked the Riders. When David Torbert left he said he had just the right person and came to me and asked if I would be interested. Well it sounded good and I went up and saw them at Winterland and it was country rock and it was exciting. I was itching to get back on the road again because I had finished the house and been off long enough. Even my wife had noticed I was getting itchy to get back playing on stage in front of an audience once more. I continued to chant and things kept falling in the right way. The Riders had just released a live album, so there were a few months to go before we went into the studios. I just picked it right up in January and we did 'Brujo' in the Spring.


The New Riders at Winterland on (December 14-15 '73) was just one great booking of many for Bill Graham Presents in November and December)

December 14-15, 1973 Winterland, San Francisco, CA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Jesse Colin Young/Linda Ronstadt (Friday-Saturday)
The Panama Red lineup of the New Riders of The Purple Sage had a final weekend stand at Winterland. Torbert knew it was the end of the line, and the band knew he was planning to leave. They were looking strong--a hit album on Columbia, country-rock a rising thing, a good rocking live show and growing audiences in the Northeast and the Midwest. Note that at this time, both Jesse Colin Young and Linda Ronstadt were opening for the New Riders, a marker of how the Riders' relative status would change. Young had a locally popular solo album called Song For Juli, and Linda had just released her fourth album Don't Cry Now. After Linda's next album Heart Like A Wheel, she wouldn't be opening for anybody, much less third on the bill, but in late 1973, the New Riders were a big deal. 

On Saturday night, the New Riders were joined by some friends, a common enough happening for them in the Bay Area. Darlene DiDomenico sang "Whisky" with them, just like on the record. Old pal Sandy Rothman had just returned from five lucrative years in Ohio as a bluegrass banjo player (joke--not lucrative at all), and he had his banjo mic'd up for "Glendale Train," playing the part Jerry Garcia had played on the album. And no less than Jerry himself showed up, playing one of Nelson's Fender Telecasters on "Glendale Train," as well. This was captured on the in-house video, so you can see Jerry and Sandy rocking out the Torbert era, even if the crowd didn't know that the bell had tolled.
 
Sam Cutler Departs the Grateful Dead Organization
Since their inception in 1969, the New Riders of The Purple Sage had been an integral part of the Grateful Dead Family. While Jerry Garcia had left the band in late 1971, the New Riders had still been managed by Jon McIntire, who was also a key pillar of Dead management. In late 1972, Grateful Dead road manager had begun Out-Of-Town Tours, a booking agency that arranged tours for the Dead and the New Riders. Parallel to that, the Dead office had started Fly-By-Night Travel, so the Booking Agency and Travel Agency fees that had been paid to other firms would be funneled back into the Dead organization. 

Throughout the New Riders touring history in 1972 and '73, we can see how Cutler both capitalized on existing relationships for the New Riders and created new ones that benefited the Grateful Dead. The New Riders played for John Scher prior to the Dead did, for example, and Scher's role in Grateful Dead history was essential to their future success. 
 
In late 1973, Joe Kerr had taken over management duties from Jon McIntire. Kerr also managed Commander Cody, Asleep at The Wheel and Clover, all bands with similar audiences and status to the New Riders, in contrast to the uniquely positioned Grateful Dead. Cutler had been the primary booking agent for the New Riders, even though he worked through a network of other connections throughout the country, but when Kerr came in Out-Of-Town Tours were pushed out of the New Riders' orbit.  In January 1974, Cutler was pushed out of the Grateful Dead organization, for reasons that are hard to fathom from the outside. Out-Of-Town Tours (and Fly-By-Night Travel) were closed. Joe Kerr was now booking the New Riders through Ron Rainey, and the business ties between the Grateful Dead and the New Riders were officially separate. The New Riders' offices in San Rafael were still near the Dead's, and Nelson remained good friends with Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter throughout their lives, but the two bands were separate entities now.
 
January 29, 1974 Lion's Share, San Anselmo, CA: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Tuesday)
Skip Battin's debut with the New Riders was a casual appearance at the Lion's Share in San Anselmo. The Lion's Share, at 60 Red Hill Avenue in San Anselmo, about 10 minutes from downtown San Rafael, was   the musician's hangout in Marin County. It only had a capacity of about 250, and had been somewhat sized out for touring club acts, so it mostly featured local bands. But, of course, rock stars lived in Marin, so some of those local bands were not just no one. Tuesday night was one of the "audition nights" with local bands playing for no cover, hoping to get heard. The Riders could surely have called up the club and asked to play, and would have been cheerfully welcomed.
 


February 1-2, 1974 Keystone Berkeley, Berkeley, CA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Pablo Cruise (Friday-Saturday) 
The New Riders of The Purple Sage played the Keystone in Berkeley on February 1 and 2, 1974. Now, the Riders had a hit album and had just headlined a weekend at Winterland, so headlining a weekend at Keystone was actually somewhat "beneath" the band. Thanks to the likes of Jerry Garcia and Van Morrison, however, when a headline act played a nightclub in the Bay Area, it was seen as "cool" rather than "desperate," as it would have in Los Angeles. In this case, the band would have been breaking in their new bass player, and wouldn't have wanted as high profile a show. Opening the show was a newly-formed South Bay group called Pablo Cruise, which included a couple of guys who had been in Stoneground. 
 
In the previous month, while the New Riders would have been rehearsing Skip Battin, the band would also have been working on their new live album. Record company orthodoxy after a few records was to put out a live album, both to showcase the band and to give the band a break from the studio itself. Home, Home On The Road would be released in April, 1974. It had two new Dawson songs, three covers that hadn't been on an album ("Dead Flowers," "Truck Drivin' Man" and "School Days") and six great New Riders classics. It was a nice, if brief, capstone to the Torbert era.

As the New Riders cranked through their set with Skip Battin on Saturday night, few of the dancing crowd noticed Jerry Garcia walking through them towards the stage with his guitar. While the professional ties between the Dead and the New Riders had been officially severed, nonetheless Garcia had been hired to produce Home, Home On The Road, so he had spent much of the previous month listening to live New Riders tapes. That made it easy for him to step up on stage and wail along with the band for the last six numbers. Garcia would never appear on stage with the New Riders again, but at least he ended it appropriately, letting it rip on Saturday night in some joint for no other reason than that it was a fun thing to do. 

Aftermath

The Sam Cutler era of the New Riders of The Purple Sage in 1972 and 1973 was the high water mark for the band, even if they didn't quite realize it at the time. Skip Battin was a good bass player, but his contributions to the New Riders were nowhere close to those of Dave Torbert. John Dawson's written output remained thin, and the hippie/doper ethos of the New Riders was pushed aside for the Outlaw Country sound of Waylon and Willie. The New Riders remained a popular touring attraction in 1974, particularly in the Northeast, but after a while everyone had seen them a couple of times and they weren't that different. A bunch of flat albums and the demise of the hippie didn't put the New Riders in a position of strength. Nelson and Dawson soldiered on until 1981, when Nelson finally left the band. Dave Torbert passed away in 1982, thanks mainly to a pre-existing heart condition, and the Panama Red New Riders receded permanently into the past.


Friday, February 24, 2023

New Riders of The Purple Sage Tour History, January-April 1973 (NRPS IV)

The ad in the February 22, 1973 Village Voice mentions "Special Friends" on the bill, a reference no one would have missed. The Grateful Dead were booked in Long Island during this weekend.

New
 Riders Of The Purple Sage Tour History, January-April 1973 (NRPS IV)
The music of Jerry Garcia casts a large shadow, if a shadow that is bright rather than dark. It is so large, however, and so bright, that it outshines many things around it. In the 21st century, the New Riders of The Purple Sage are best known as the vehicle through which Jerry Garcia created an opportunity to play pedal steel guitar as a sideman in 1970 and '71. When the demands of playing full-time with both the Grateful Dead and the New Riders became too gargantuan a task, Garcia stepped aside from the Riders. For most Deadheads, that's where the story ends.

Yet the story of the New Riders of The Purple Sage was only beginning. For obvious reasons, the Riders are always compared to the Dead, and like almost every other 20th century rock band, the Dead outshone NRPS by many orders of magnitude. Compared to all the other bands struggling to make it in the early 1970s, however, the New Riders of The Purple Sage were hugely successful. After their debut album with Garcia in late 1971, they released four more albums with Buddy Cage on pedal steel in 1972 and 73. The albums sold well--Panama Red eventually was certified Gold--and the New Riders were a popular concert attraction. 

On top of the Riders' undeniable success, they were still part of the Grateful Dead's business operation. Grateful Dead tours were booked by their in-house Agency, Out-Of-Town Tours, led by Sam Cutler. Cutler and Out-Of-Town also booked the New Riders. So a review of the New Riders touring history in 1972 and '73 shows both what lessons Cutler had learned from the Dead's rise to success in 1970 and '71, and also provided an avenue for Cutler to expand his relationships with promoters who worked with the Grateful Dead. So the New Riders touring schedule was both a do-over for what had come before and a rehearsal for what would come later for the Grateful Dead. 

This post will continue the series on the tour history of the New Riders of The Purple Sage in 1972 and '73, with a particular emphasis on how their saga was both similar to and different from that of the Grateful Dead. These posts would not have been possible without the stellar research of fellow scholar David Kramer-Smyth, whose contributions have been both deep and broad. The first post focused on the New Riders' performance history from January to April, 1972. The next posts focused on the New Riders' performance history from May through August 1972, and then the New Riders' performance history from September through December 1972. This post will focus on the New Riders' performance history from January through April 1973. Anyone with additions, corrections, insights or just interesting speculation, please include them in the Comments. Flashbacks welcome.

The New Riders of The Purple Sage had released Gypsy Cowboy, their third album on Columbia, in December 1972

New Riders Status Report, New Year's Eve 1972

The New Riders of The Purple Sage had had an excellent 1972. They had released their second and third albums on Columbia, and established themselves as separate from Jerry Garcia. Heavy touring in the Northeast, particularly in colleges, was creating a solid fan base for them. The Grateful Dead were more popular than ever, and the Riders' association with them only helped. At the same time, there was an undeniable merger occurring between hippies and country music, with more "country-rock" bands and more country bands letting their hair grow a little bit. 

The New Riders were now a tight live band, playing two-hour shows that were a mix of old and new material, both originals and covers. John Dawson was still the focal point, but Dave Torbert's singing and writing made a nice contrast. David Nelson sang the occasional country cover, too, just to widen the band's scope. The record industry was booming, the concert industry was booming, and the New Riders were good and signed to a major record label. By any reasonable standard, the future looked very bright for the band at the end of 1972.

The New Riders were still part of the Grateful Dead family, and not just socially. Grateful Dead manager Jon McIntire shared the same duties for the New Riders with NRPS road manager Dale Franklin. McIntire was the principal go-between for the record companies. The Riders were booked by Sam Cutler and Out-Of-Town Tours, who also booked the Dead. By booking multiple bands, Cutler had more to negotiate and thus more leverage with promoters and agents throughout the country. The Riders didn't have to worry about being left out of the mix--Cutler's principal assistant was Sally Mann Dryden, the drummer's wife (whom Cutler refers to now as "Mustang Sally," perhaps a reference to her 428ci Ford Mustang). Travel arrangements were made by the Grateful Dead's in-house agency, Fly By Night Travel.

The New Riders of The Purple Sage, January-April 1973
John Dawson-vocals, rhythm guitar
Buddy Cage-pedal steel guitar (ex-Great Speckled Bird and Anne Murray)
David Nelson-lead guitar, vocals (ex-New Delhi River Band)
Dave Torbert-bass, vocals (ex-New Delhi River Band, Horses)
Spencer Dryden-drums (ex-Jefferson Airplane)

February 14-17, 1973 The Gallery, Aspen, CO: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday-Saturday)
The New Riders had worked very hard throughout 1972. In the back half of the year they had recorded a new album and that had a grueling, but seemingly very successful National tour. So it's no surprise that they seemed to take a break the first six weeks of 1973. Apparently, their first shows of the year were four nights at a tiny club called The Gallery, in Aspen, CO. We have not yet been able to confirm this booking, but it seems likely.

Now, we think of Aspen, CO as a wealthy resort town, just a playground of the elite. But of course it became such a playground because it was an appealing place to go. Besides the skiing, and the beautiful Rocky Mountains, a bunch of freaks had congregated around the area. The most famous of these freaks was Hunter S. Thompson, who lived in nearby Woody Creek. So Aspen was a ski resort where long hair and weed were welcome, when that wasn't always the case in comparable destinations.

The Gallery itself was apparently the main (possibly only) nightclub in Aspen. Most famously, when David Geffen constructed The Eagles out of some Hollywood rock veterans who hung out at the Troubadour in West Hollywood, he apparently sent them to The Gallery to be the house band for several weeks.  The new band played a couple of weeks in October of 1971, and then returned for a few more weeks in November. By the end, they were a real band. Glenn Frey would end up purchasing a house in Aspen, and became a long-time resident. The status of Aspen as a hip playground rose along with the career of Frey and the Eagles. Hunter Thompson remained based in Woody Creek until he traveled on in 2006.

In February of 1973, the New Riders would have been rusty after several weeks, the Aspen booking seems like a sort of paying rehearsal.

February 19, 1973 International Amphitheatre, Chicago, IL: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Monday)
The New Riders of The Purple Sage had built a strong market in the Northeast, but had less of a footprint elsewhere. The strategy for this leg of a tour seems to have been designed to use the Grateful Dead to introduce the Riders to a broader audience. The New Riders had played Chicago in December of '72, opening for Mott The Hoople (of all bands). I think this Monday was a Federal celebration of Washington's Birthday (which was actually February 22, 1732).


February 21-22, 1973 Assembly Hall, U. of Illinois, Champaign, IL: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Wednesday-Thursday)
The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, colloquially known as the University of Illinois, had been established in 1867. It is a huge school, currently enrolling 56,000 students. It is a few hours South of Chicago, in the flat plains of the agricultural Midwest. The size of the school, however, means it can support a huge rock market. Assembly Hall, at 1800 South 1st Street, was the school's basketball arena. It had opened in 1963, and had a basketball capacity of 15,000. It is surprising to see the Grateful Dead (or any band of the era) play two nights at a University instead of one, but the University of Illinois was  large, with many students from the greater Chicago area. I don't know what the attendance was like.

February 25, 1973 [venue], U. of Missouri, Columbia, MO: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Sunday)
While the Grateful Dead played the University of Iowa (February 24) and the University of Nebraska (February 26), the New Riders of the Purple Sage went West on Saturday night to play the University of Missouri, in Columbia, MO. The University of Missouri had been founded in 1839, and it, too was a large Midwestern school (currently 30,000 students). 

While Columbia, MO was a small college town at the time (population about 60,000), the University of Missouri was on I-70, midway between St. Louis and Kansas City. The New Riders had headlined in both cities, so they would have a ready-made audience at the University. I don't know what venue the band played.

February 28, 1973 Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, UT: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday)
The Dead and the New Riders closed out their tour by playing together at the Salt Palace. Salt Lake City was conveniently located between the Midwest and California, so a lot of bands made tour stops there. The Salt Palace, at 100 S. West Temple street, had opened in 1969. It had a basketball capacity of about 12,000. At this time, the Salt Palace was home to the Utah Stars of the American Basketball Association. The Stars would fold in early '75, ultimately replaced in 1979 by the Utah Jazz (who had relocated from New Orleans). 

The New Riders had not played in Utah or generally in the Mountain West, so opening a Dead show was a proven way to introduce them to their future audience. We have a setlist from this show (possibly incomplete). The New Riders followed the Grateful Dead path, making a point to play songs that were not on albums. This was appealing to fans who had seen them before (not likely an issue in Salt Lake), and also allowed the band to hone their arrangements before going into the studio. The Salt Palace set included a cover of Red Allen's "Teardrops In My Eyes" (sung by Nelson), Dawson's new song "One Too Many Stories" and Dave Torbert's homage to Sally Mann Dryden, "Groupie." All three would end up on The Adventures of Panama Red, not recorded until the Summer.

SF Examiner March 5, 1973

March 8, 1973 Berkeley Community Theater, Berkeley, CA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen/Ramblin' Jack Elliott
(Thursday) Jolly Blue Giant Presents
6'7" Bill Ehlert, known locally as "the Jolly Blue Giant" was a club operator and promoter in Berkeley. He had run Berkeley's Jabberwock until it had closed in 1967, and ran the Matrix for a while after that. In the 1970s, he promoted local concerts under the name Jolly Blue Giant. Berkeley Community Theater was both the local civic auditorium and the Berkeley High School auditorium. It seated about 3,500. It's unlikely that the New Riders and Commander Cody could sell it out on a Thursday night, but they probably drew a pretty good crowd. The New Riders were now a Bay Area concert headliner.

Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen had moved from Ann Arbor, MI to Berkeley in Summer 1969. Their hippie honky tonk was instantly popular. They regularly performed locally with the Dead and the New Riders, and were often booked with the Riders around the country. Their weren't a lot of long-haired pot smoking hippie bands playing rocking country music, so they made an excellent fit. George "Commander Cody" Frayne had even played on a few tracks of the NRPS debut album. 

Paramount Records had released Cody and the Airmen's own definitive debut, Lost In The Ozone in November, 1971. They scored a memorable regional hit with Cody's cover of "Hot Rod Lincoln." Their second album, Hot Licks, Cold Steel and Trucker's Favorites had been released in May, 1972. At this time, although the Austin, TX based "Outlaw Country" scene was just starting, "country rock" seemed like a sound whose time had come. The Riders and the Airmen seemed to be among the harbingers.

Legendary folksinger (and Bob Dylan influence) Ramblin' Jack Elliott lived in the North Bay. He, too, was booked by Sam Cutler's Out Of Town Tours. He would often open for the New Riders, and often joined in to sing backup on a song or two. On this evening, he joined the Riders to help sing the Rolling Stones' song "Connection."

The New Riders had other guests in Berkeley, both of whom would appear many times in 1973. Singer Darlene DiDomenico was from New York, where she had been part of a singing duo with Dan Healy in 1970 and '71. When Healy returned to the West Coast to sign on as the Grateful Dead's soundman, she went, too, although she split with Healy. DiDomenico sang with a local band (whose name I have lost), but she was also employed as part of the Grateful Dead/New Riders complex (possibly with Out Of Town Tours). Thus she regularly sang with the New Riders, both in the studio and on stage. For example, she had sang on the Gypsy Cowboy album. In Berkeley, she sang on "Whisky," just like on the record.

Harmonica player Matthew Kelly had been in various bands with Dave Torbert in 1968 and '69. Kelly had ended up in England, in an American band (Gospel Oak) that had needed a new player. He sent a plane ticket for Torbert, then in Hawaii, to join him in London. David Nelson's girlfriend "coincidentally" called Torbert when he had stopped at his parents' house in Redwood City, and the boys had invited him to join the New Riders. Torbert called Kelly, who graciously told him to take the gig with Jerry Garcia. So Kelly was in good with the New Riders, notwithstanding he had known Nelson and Dawson as long as he had known Torbert. In Berkeley, Kelly sat in on 5 songs, including Torbert's newly-written "It's Alright With Me," which would end up on Panama Red.


March 16, 1973 Nassau Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Friday)
The New Riders had expected to begin their Eastern tour on Saturday, March 17, at SUNY Stony Brook (see below). Meanwhile the Grateful Dead were playing three nights at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island. For some odd reason, the Dead were booked for Thursday (March 15), Friday (March 16) and Monday (March 19). Saturday, March 17, had not been available, as the New York Islanders had a home game (they beat the St. Louis Blues 6-4). Interestingly, these shows were produced by Bill Graham Presents, making a rare foray out of his Bay Area territory.

In any case, the opening act booked to open for all three Nassau shows were Marin's Sons Of Champlin. The re-organized Sons had just released a new album on Columbia Records, Welcome To The Dance. The Sons were also booked by Sam Cutler's Out Of Town Tours, so it seemed that the plan was to build an East Coast audience for the Sons by introducing them to the Northeastern Grateful Dead fanbase. The New Riders, meanwhile, having built such an audience, could largely tour on their own. 

The Sons opened the Dead show on Thursday, March 15. Tragically, however, the family of Sons bassist David Schallock was murdered in San Rafael by a disturbed young man with a shotgun. The Sons instantly abandoned their tour and returned home. The New Riders, already on the East Coast, filled in at Nassau on Friday and Monday. 

The Grateful Dead were getting to be very popular in the Northeast, but they were not yet the automatic sellout that they would become. By adding an opening act, the shows were a longer party, and thus more appealing, even if the openers themselves (the Sons or the New Riders) did not in themselves attract a different audience.

March 17, 1973 [venue], SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Ramblin' Jack Elliott (Saturday)
The Grateful Dead had started playing Long Island's SUNY Stony Brook as far back as 1967. The New Riders had opened for the Dead there in 1970. Now, as the Dead had grown too large to play the school, the New Riders had played again on April 20, 1972 and now in  '73. Granted, since college students graduate, almost no one in the school would have seen all the shows there. Still, there would have been undergraduate continuity and thus word of mouth.

The New Riders probably played Pritchard Gym, with a (basketball) capacity of about 2,000, where the Dead had played previously. Ramblin' Jack Elliott opened the show and joined the New Riders for the encore of "Honky Tonk Women." The entire concert was released as an archival CD in 2007.




March 18, 1973 Felt Forum, New York, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Ramblin' Jack Elliott
(Sunday) Ron Delsener Presents
Ron Delsener was a major Manhattan promoter who had taken on a bigger role in the rock market once Bill Graham had closed the Fillmore East. The Felt Forum was a theater in the basement of Madison Square Garden, first opened in 1968 (and now the Hulu Theater). The concert capacity appears to have been 4,332, although the theater could be configured at various sizes. The Grateful Dead and the New Riders had played four memorable nights at the Felt Forum on December 4-7, 1971. Now, the New Riders hd returned as the headliners.

The March 18, 1973, New Riders Of The Purple Sage show at The Felt Forum was broadcast in its entirety on WNEW-fm, New York City's leading rock station. Besides being a fine broadcast of the New Riders in their prime, the show featured numerous special guests. Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Donna Godchaux helped out on vocals on different songs, Jerry Garcia played electric guitar and banjo on a few numbers, Bob Weir sang a couple, and Keith Godchaux played grand piano for much of the show. The most memorable part of the performance, however, was when Garcia, Weir and Godchaux joined the New Riders and began the second set with a trio of gospel numbers: "Cold Jordan", "I Hear A Voice Calling" and "Swing Low". Garcia played banjo and Weir played acoustic guitar, the only instance of the two playing acoustic together on the East Coast between 1970 and 1980.

The Grateful Dead were playing three nights at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale in Long Island, but they had the Sunday night off to hang out with the New Riders. It's remarkable enough that the Dead guested on a radio broadcast, but thanks to the great Its All The Streets You Crossed blog, we can now see that the Grateful Dead were all but advertised in the Village Voice. The ad above is from the February 22, 1973 edition of the Voice, a full month before the show, and the ad says "New Riders Of The Purple Sage & Special Friends." The message would be unmistakable: in 70s rock talk, "Special Guests" would have meant 'opening act who hasn't been booked yet', but "Special Friends" would imply extra people on stage. It wouldn't take a genius to note the Dead's performance dates on Long Island and see that they had the night off.

There were plenty of live FM performances in the 1970s, but relatively few of them featured guests, as the record company was paying for the band to be on the air. The economics of 70s FM broadcasts depended on some entity, usually a record company, buying up the ad time that was "lost" during the time the band was playing live on the air without commercials. Generally speaking, if a record company paid for their band to be broadcast live on FM radio, they did not want their sponsored act upstaged by friends, however talented, when the purpose of the financial subvention was to promote the company's act. Columbia Records, the New Riders label, would have paid good money to make sure that the New Riders were broadcast live for some hours on the biggest New York rock station. As a practical matter, I suspect that Columbia agreed to purchase a substantial number of ads through the month of March, rather than laid out cash per se, but the net effect would have been the same.

In the case of the Dead, however, since they were bigger than the New Riders and had a unique relationship to them, Columbia would have been ecstatic to have the Dead join the New Riders on the FM broadcast throughout the entire Tri-State area. For the Dead, the significant factor here was that by Spring 1973 they had left Warner Brothers and were working for themselves, so they didn't have to concern themselves with whether their own record company "approved" of them appearing with their friends.  Since both the Dead and the New Riders were booked by Out Of Town Tours, Sam Cutler's agency,  coordination would have been easy.

In fact, as an indication of the clout of the Dead in this context, not only were the New Riders broadcast in their entirety, but the set of opening act Ramblin' Jack Elliott was broadcast as well. At the time, Elliott, though a legend, did not have a label and had not released an album in three years (his last album had been released in 1970 on Reprise). However, Elliott was also booked by Sam Cutler, and clearly the presence of Jerry Garcia was enough to induce Columbia to subsidize the broadcast of Ramblin' Jack's set as well as that of the Riders.

However, since the Dead were performing elsewhere, their contract with the Nassau promoter, old friend Bill Graham, would have prevented them from being mentioned by name. Also, since the name "Grateful Dead" was not formally invoked, the band members could show up and perform on whichever or whatever songs they felt like. Knowing what we know today, Garcia must have had his banjo with him because he was probably practicing constantly, trying to get up to speed for Old And In The Way, which had just begun to play in the Bay Area. It's a great touch that he used it to perform with the Riders--I think March 18, 1973 was almost the only time he played banjo on stage with them (Garcia did play banjo briefly at a unique show at The Matrix on July 7, 1970). Besides the mini-acoustic set, Garcia played banjo on "Henry" as well as electric guitar on "Glendale Train," obviously just having the kind of fun he couldn't have if the marquee had said "tonight: NRPS with Jerry Garcia."

Of all the unreleased New Riders tapes that circulate, the Felt Forum show is surely the most memorable. Hopefully it will be released in its entirety someday (I have discussed this concert at some length elsewhere).

March 19, 1973 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Monday)
On their return to Nassau, Ramblin' Jack joined the New Riders for their "Connection" encore. He did not open the show, however.

For the opening leg of their Northeastern tour, the New Riders performed on eight consecutive nights (from March 16 through 23). Bands on the road rarely played this often, typically playing a couple of nights in a row and then having a few nights off. One thing to note, however, about this stretch was how the New Riders' gigs clustered around New York City. The travel obligations were a lot smaller, mostly only going from Long Island to Manhattan and back.


March 20, 1973 Field House, U. of New Hampshire, Durham, NH: New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Tuesday) S.C.O.P.E Presents
The New Riders broke out of their New York Metro bookings to play two gigs in New England. The University of New Hampshire is in Durham, about 270 miles from Manhattan (and just 65 miles North of Boston). Given the consecutive dates, the New Riders probably flew from La Guardia to Manchester airport (likely on long-gone Northeast Airlines). Durham, NH, is on the border of Maine, near the ocean, and has a population of about 15,000. The English had made their presence known as far back as 1622. UNH was founded in 1866. The University currently has a student body of 14,000, although I doubt they had that many students in 1973.

While Durham is only an hour North of Boston, the school seems pretty isolated. So the students would have heard Boston FM radio, yet there probably weren't that many local concerts. Thus a lot of students might attend a show on campus, even if they had only barely heard of the band. Also, although Durham itself was isolated, the students were often from suburbs or big cities, so a band like the New Riders could build a regional audience by playing colleges. The Riders played at the Field House, which had built in 1938. Most likely they played Lundholm Gym (part of the Field House), which had a capacity of 3,000.

March 21, 1973 Palace Theater, Waterbury, CT: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Hot Tuna (Wednesday) Shelly Finkel and Jimmy Koplik Present
On Wednesday night, the New Riders played for promoters Shelly Finkel and Jim Koplik in Central Connecticut. Finkel and Koplik had been promoters in the New England area for about two years, initially using the name Cable Music. They had booked the New Riders in December, 1972 in Boston.

Jim Koplik had gotten his start as a promoter in college, putting on a Steppenwolf concert in 1968 at Ohio State when he was a student. Around 1972 he teamed up with Shelly Finkel to form Cable Music. Finkel was a bit older, and Koplik was the "house hippie," a common enough arrangement in concert promotion at the time. Entrepreneurs who knew the business side were not necessarily able to navigate who was cool and who was not, so they needed a younger partner.

Shelly Finkel (b.1944) wasn't some neophyte in the concert business. In 1967, Finkel (then running a dating service) managed to parlay a job passing out flyers into managing the Action House in Long Island. The Action House was the premier rock club in the region, breaking local bands like Vanilla Fudge and the Vagrants, and also putting on shows by touring bands like the Doors, Cream and the Grateful Dead (on November 9-10, 1970). 

The owner of the Action House was an infamous Long Island club owner named Phil Basile. Over the years, he was involved in numerous other Long Island clubs and discos, including Speaks (the re-named Action House), My Father's Place,  Channel 80 and Industry. In the late 60s, however, thanks to the Action House, Basile had recognized how much money there was in live rock music. Basile formed the promotion company Concerts East, who put on most of the Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin shows in the East in the 68-70 period (the Grateful Dead had opened for Hendrix at a Concerts East production at the Temple Stadium in Philadelphia on May 16, 1970). While Finkel had just been Basile's house manager at the Action House, he would have had plenty of intersection with the larger business of rock promotion. Finkel and Koplik played a critical role in the Grateful Dead's success in the early to mid-70s, and did so for the New Riders as well.

Finkel and Koplik booked the New Riders at a now-legendary venue called the Palace Theater in Waterbury, CT. Waterbury is between Hartford (33 miles to the Northeast) and New York City (77 miles to the Southwest). It had (and has) a population of around 110,000. In the first half of the 20th century, it was a thriving industrial city. From the 60s onward, however, Waterbury underwent a severe economic decline. As a rock peculiarity, however, Waterbury had a large movie theater from its glory days, and easy freeway access from larger areas. The Palace Theater, at 100 E. Main Street in downtown, had been built in 1922. By the early 1970s, it wasn't apparently in great shape, but it had a capacity of a few thousand and fantastic acoustics. It went from being an oversized movie house to a destination rock concert venue. 

The New Riders had played the Palace in May 1972 (for different promoters), and now they returned to play for Finkel and Koplik. By pairing them with Hot Tuna, the weeknight show was a more appealing draw, while still providing a payday for both bands. The show would not have had to sell out to be worthwhile financially for all concerned. This very same night, about 200 miles Northwest of Waterbury, Finkel and Koplik were presenting the Grateful Dead in Utica, NY.

March 22, 1973 46th Street Rock Palace, Brooklyn, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage/others (Thursday) (ABC In Concert Taping) broadcast May 11
In December, 1972 ABC debuted ABC In Concert, a bimonthly 90-minute rock show on Friday nights at 11:30pm. In Concert was instrumental in breaking open the late night market for TV networks, paving the way for Tom Snyder's Tomorrow and Saturday Night Live, because the show indicated that young people would stay up to watch interesting "non-family" TV. For suburban teenagers like me, ABC In Concert was like a portal to a New World. The shows were staged for TV, yes, but the bands were playing in real venues with their real equipment in front of a live audience. I was stuck in the suburbs, but at least I got a glimpse of all the bands touring the United States while I was in High School.

The New Riders appearance on ABC In Concert was filmed on a Thursday night in Brooklyn. The former Loew's Theater was called Banafish Gardens at the time. Back in 1970, the theater was briefly a competitor to the Fillmore East called The 46th Street Rock Palace. The Grateful Dead and the New Riders had headlined four thinly-attended shows on November 11-14, 1970. The 3000-capacity former movie theater had first opened in 1927, had been converted into a rock venue around October 1970. The venue was located at 46th Street and 11th Avenue in Brooklyn, near Alben Square. The venue booked some of the top touring acts: The Byrds, The Youngbloods, the Dead, Jefferson Airplane and others. The venue had only been open for a few weeks.  There were plenty of Grateful Dead fans in New York City, and plenty even in Brooklyn, but for whatever reasons fans did not come to the 46th Street Rock Palace. By 1973, the theater was called Bananafish Gardens and periodically used for taping ABC In Concert, but it's not clear how many other times the venue was used.

The New Riders episode of ABC In Concert was broadcast on May 11, 1973. Other acts on the show were Hot Tuna, Jerry Lee Lewis and Gladys Knight And The Pips. I don't know for sure if all three of those acts also recorded this night in Brooklyn (I would bet that Hot Tuna did, since we know where they were the night before). At this time of the In Concert broadcast, I had all three New Riders' albums, but had never seen them live. When they jammed out on"Willie And The Hand Jive," teenage-me was thrilled: I had no idea they sounded that cool in concert. It's impossible to underestimate the impact of ABC In Concert (and competing shows on other networks) on expanding the audience for different touring bands during this era. The New Riders were no exception.

 


March 23, 1973 Capitol Theater, Passaic, NJ: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Ramblin' Jack Elliott (Friday)
For this weekend, pity poor John Scher. In New York at the time, Howard Stein and Ron Delsener promoted shows North of the Hudson River (New York City proper) and John Scher generally promoted shows South of it (in New Jersey). Scher's principal venue was the Capitol Theater in Passaic, NJ. Scher booked both the Grateful Dead and the New Riders throughout 1972 and '73. Scher had booked the New Riders at the Capitol for Friday, March 23, 1973, five days after the Felt Forum show. The New York City (Tri-State) metro area is so large that the Passaic show would have drawn a different crowd than the Felt Forum show, even though they were only 20 miles away from each other.

However, with the Dead having made a surprise guest appearance at the Felt Forum show, and the Riders opening for the Dead, the buzz would have been in the air, so everybody in New Jersey must have assumed that the Dead were going to drop in at Passaic, too. Never mind if that's a rational judgment: I guarantee you everybody standing in line for the show that night had heard about New York (probably in a greatly exaggerated fashion) and was fully expecting Jerry and the boys to make an appearance. Anyone on the Deadheads mailing list could have seen that the Dead were booked for Utica on March 22 and the Spectrum March 24, so it would have seemed perfectly plausible.

The 1973 New Riders were a great live band, and I'm sure they put on a terrific show at the Capitol. Kathleen Miller of the Paterson News gave the band a very positive review, although she didn't seem that familiar with the material. Still, I think that the audience was probably still let down. It must have been tough for the Riders to rock through their best songs while a crowd of Jersey Deadheads (plus some Philadelphia lunatics, of course) shouted "Jerrrry!" 

Per the Miller review, Ramblin' Jack's opening set was poorly received, even if he was backed on a few numbers on drums by actor Michael J Pollard. Sound problems marred Elliot's set, a common  enough scenario for solo performers playing big halls.

March 25, 1973 Playhouse, Hofstra U., Hempstead, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Sunday) early and late shows
The Hofstra University Playhouse was an 1105-seat theater on the Hofstra campus. Hofstra is a private college that was founded in 1935. It currently has about 10,000 students, although I don't know if it had that many in 1972. Ramblin' Jack sang at least one song with the New Riders in the early show, so I wouldn't be surprised if he opened the shows as well.

March 30, 1973 War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday) Festival Presents
The New Riders played a couple of Grateful Dead dates, where they had a chance to add to the Dead's audience and also pick up some new fans. Although the New Riders' audience overlapped about 100% with the Dead, by booking them, the show was longer and more of an event, so it would have been appealing to bored teenagers looking to fill up the whole evening.

The Grateful Dead had been playing Rochester since 1970. After playing some smaller halls, they were moving up. The Community War Memorial Auditorium in Rochester had opened in 1955, and had a capacity of over 11,000 for concert (now the Blue Cross Arena). 

We know that Keith Godchaux played piano on at least some of the New Riders' songs, possibly all of them. Keith would go on to sit in with the New Riders a number of times over the next two weeks, occasionally joined by his wife.

March 31, 1973 Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Saturday) Harvey n Corky Present
The Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (not "War Memorial") was a big old concrete block, built in 1940 with a concert capacity of around 18,000.

It's doubtful that the Dead sold out an 18,000 seater in Buffalo in 1973, even on a Saturday night. But they probably didn't have to. The economics of the show were probably that the promoter could break even on a half-filled arena, and the band and promoter split the overage. Why was there such a big venue in Buffalo? Buffalo, in its way, is a symbol of the history of the Erie Canal and New York State. When the Erie Canal took hold in the 1830s, Buffalo was the gateway to Lake Erie and thus the city was a critical transportation hub linking Canada, the Atlantic Ocean (via the St. Lawrence Seaway) and Manhattan, all via canals and later railways, feeding the Central and Upstate manufacturers. In 1940, Buffalo had a population of 575,901.

By 1970, however, the world had changed and Buffalo was declining significantly, with a population of only 462,768. It was shrinking during the Baby Boom. Still, there were still a lot of people in Buffalo, many of them young, and they wanted to rock and roll like everyone else. The biggest local promoters were "Harvey 'N' Corky." The independent production company was run by Corky Burger and two brothers, Harvey and Bob Weinstein. After some years as successful concert promoters, the Weinstein brothers moved into the movie business. Miramax pictures was extremely successful in ensuing decades. Harvey Weinstein is also widely known as a convicted rapist.

It's pretty likely that Harvey Weinstein, a former SUNY Buffalo student, had had some engagement with a Howard Wales/Jerry Garcia concert in Buffalo in January 1972, and at a New Riders show at SUNY Buffalo on April 12, so that probably provided a level of confidence for the bands to book with an untried promotion company.  Things must have gone well, since the Dead played for Harvey 'N' Corky Productions again later in the year, and again in 1977.  

Once again, it's known that Keith Godchaux sat in with the New Riders for a few numbers, possibly more.

April 2, 1973 Boston Garden, Boston, MA: Grateful Dead/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Monday) Cable Music Presents
The Boston Garden, at 150 Causeway Street, was the city's principal arena. It had been built in 1928 and had a capacity of about 15,000. It was the home arena for both the NHL Boston Bruins and the NBA Boston Celtics. As a result, potential concert dates were limited. At this time, no specific promoter had an exclusive least on concerts at the Garden. Jim Koplik and Shelly Finkel were presenting the Dead for their debut at the Garden.

Boston was both awash in college students and a big city surrounded by suburbs, so it's no surprise that the Grateful Dead had a big following. Still, the Dead had played Boston less than you might expect prior to 1973. Nonetheless, per a Boston Globe review, the Dead managed to sell out the Boston Garden, even though it as a Monday night. Once again, booking the New Riders as part of the show seems to have been a strategy to help fill out the crowd when the Dead were playing in bigger places than they had played previously. 

As a funny footnote, sometime earlier in the tour, David Nelson had told Robert Hunter that he had a dream where he was writing songs like "serving up cheeseburgers." Hunter then than turned up in Nelson's hotel in Boston with the lyrics to the song "Crooked Judge" (supposedly adding "do you want fries with that?"). Nelson would write the music, and the song would turn up in New Riders' sets in the Fall. It was later released on the 1974 album Brujo.

April 3, 1973 Orpheum Theater, Boston, MA: Hot Tuna/New Riders of The Purple Sage (Tuesday) Don Law Presents
The Grateful Dead's Spring tour had ended at Boston Garden on Monday night, but the New Riders kept right on rolling. The next night, the band played their first gig for Boston promoter Don Law. The Grateful Dead had played for Don Law at the Boston Tea Party in October and December 1969, including New Year's Eve in Boston. Law was one of many promoters in the Boston area, but the Dead had not played for him since '69. By the mid-70s, the Grateful Dead would play the Boston area exclusively for Don Law, a relationship that remained intact until 1995. Similar to John Scher and Jim Koplik, it seems that the New Riders were the ones who re-initiated the Dead's relationship with Law.

Don Law Jr was the son of Columbia Records Staff Producer Don Law Sr (1902-1982). You can look up Law Sr's remarkable career, yourself, but among many other things he produced Robert Johnson's recordings (yes, that Robert Johnson) and became head of Columbia's Nashville division, steering the careers of the likes of Johnny Cash. Law also produced numerous legendary country hits himself, like "El Paso" (Marty Robbins) and "Battle Of New Orleans" (Johnny Horton). 

Don Law Jr was a Boston University college student when he started presenting local events. By mid-1968 he ran the Boston Tea Party, Boston's principal underground rock venue. The Tea Party was particularly legendary for booking touring English bands like Jethro Tull and Ten Years After. Law also co-owned Boston's first full-time FM rock station, WBCN. WBCN began broadcasting on March 15, 1968, with dj's often spinning records from a studio on an upper floor of the venue itself (the all-night DJ, known as "The Woofuh Goofuh," was future J Geils Band lead singer Peter Wolf). 

The tiny Tea Party had closed by the end of 1970. Law went on to book other venues, but initially he was just one of many promoters in the competitive Boston marketplace. There were numerous college students in the center of town, plus public transport to bring in teenagers from the suburbs, so there was a market for far more events than in some typical bohemian downtown neighborhood. Every hip band came through Boston, whether mainstream or underground, but they didn't just play one or two places.

By 1973, Don Law Jr's principal, though not only, venue was the 2700-seat Orpheum Theater, at 1 Hamilton Place. On this Tuesday night, Law booked Hot Tuna and the New Riders together, like so many other promoters. One interesting thing to consider is whether Keith and Donna Godchaux played with the New Riders this night, since we know they played at least two of the next three nights.

April 4, 1973 Atwood Hall, Clark U., Worcester, MA: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Wednesday early and late shows)
Worcester, MA is about an hour West of Boston, and the Grateful Dead had played at Clark University there in 1967 and '69. The Dead returned to Worcester on May 9, 1970, with the New Riders but this time at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. The bands had played Harrington Auditorium (at 100 Institute Road), built in 1968 and home to the school's basketball teams. The venue held about 3,000.

The New Riders now returned to headline Atwood Hall at Clark. Atwood has only 658 seats, so there were early and late shows. An archival cd of the complete show was released by Kufala Records in 2003. Keith Godchaux sat in with the New Riders for both sets, and Donna Godchaux sang a few numbers as well, including singing lead on Loretta Lynn's "You Ain't Woman Enough To Take My Man." Keith would have known all the New Riders material from all the shows the bands played together, and he adds a lot to the band's sound. 

It's worth noting that the Godchauxs' presence couldn't have been casual. The Grateful Dead had returned home, and yet Keith and Donna stayed on tour. Bringing a piano player on stage also means that a piano has to acquired, and at Clark it seems to have been a grand piano. It may have been a university piano.

April 6, 1973 [venue], Syracuse, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
On Friday night the New Riders played Syracuse. I don't know the venue, but given that it was a weekend it could have been Loew's Theater, a 2900-capacity theater at 362 S. Salina Street. I'll bet Keith and Donna sat in, too.

April 7, 1973 McGonigle Hall, Temple U., Philadelphia PA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Meters/Dr. John (Saturday)  Electric Factory Presents
McGonigle Hall was a relatively new 3900-capacity basketball arena at Temple University. The arena had only opened in 1969, and was located at Broad and Montgomery, just North of downtown. The concert was co-promoted by the Temple Student Union and Electric Factory. The Electric Factory were Philadelphia's biggest rock promoters, and had been presenting the Grateful Dead since 1968 (and would continue through 1995). The size of the venue and Electric Factory tells us that the audience wasn't exclusively students, but also downtown rock fans (although Temple Students got tickets for $4 instead of $5).

The Electric Factory probably didn't expect the New Riders to sell McGonigle out, but by having a bigger venue they could absorb as big a crowd was available. The show must have been an absolute banger. Dr. John The Night Tripper had played with the New Riders many times in 1972. In late February, he had released his sixth album, In The Right Place, on Atco. It was Dr. John's best selling album, and it would reach #24 later in the summer. The signature hit single "Right Place, Wrong Time" would reach #10 in the Summer. There were other great songs on the album, too: "Qualified," "Such A Night" and "I Been Hoodoo'd," to name a few. 

As if The Night Tripper wasn't enough, his backing band on this tour was the same as his album, namely New Orleans very own Meters. Each member of The Meters--guitarist Leo Nocentelli, organist Art Neville, bassist George Porter and drummer Ziggy Modeliste--was an absolute monster. So The Meters would play an incredibly funky set, Dr. John would come out, and then the New Riders had to follow that.

At least the New Riders came heavily armed. Keith Godchaux played electric piano for the whole show, and Donna sang on a few songs, including joining in for the "Honky Tonk Women." Such a night, indeed.
 

Newsday listing from April 7, 1973 for the Monday, April 9 New Riders show at Queens College


April 9, 1973 Colden Auditorium, Queens College, Flushing, NY: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Monday) 7pm-9:30pm shows
The Grateful Dead had played Colden Auditorium at Queens College on October 10, 1970. Once again, the New Riders were following a prior trail.

Queens College had been established in 1937, and by 1970 was part of CUNY (City University of New York). In 1970, the school had also adopted an "Open Admissions" policy, allowing any New York High School graduate to attend regardless of scores and grades. So, no matter what, it was a forward looking place at the time. There were probably about 15,000 undergraduates in 1970. Colden Auditorium had been built on the campus in 1961, and had a capacity of 2,085. The fact that there were early and late shows suggest that the show was trying to draw people from around the area, not just college students.

April 13, 1973 [venue], Pittsburgh, PA: New Riders of The Purple Sage (Friday)
April 14, 1973 [venue], Providence, RI: New Riders of The Purple Sage
(Saturday)
A tour ad lists two final weekend dates, in Pittsburgh and Providence. Both seem very plausible, and these may have happened, but we can't find any confirmation.

May 1. 1973 Ahmanson Theater, Los Angeles, CA: New Riders of The Purple Sage/Dr. Hook and The Medicine Show/Bruce Springsteen (Tuesday) 
Whenever the New Riders Northeastern tour exactly ended, the band returned to California and took most of the month off, prior to a run along the West Coast later in May. In between, however, there was one extremely interesting performance in downtown Los Angeles, a reminder that the hippie New Riders were signed to a very big corporation.

Columbia Records was the largest record label in the world, and also a division of the powerful Columbia Broadcasting System, so the label could do things on a scale beyond that of other labels. In early 1973, Columbia chose to book all their major acts in Los Angeles' finest theater for seven consecutive nights. The real purpose of this mini-festival was to showcase their acts for radio djs, talent agents and Columbia sales staff. This was commonly done at company sales conventions. At a typical sales convention, however, with the drinks flowing, newly-signed bands found themselves playing to drunk industry pros catching up on gossip with their pals. By selling tickets at a big theater, the hall was filled with regular civilians who liked the bands. It was more of a true concert atmosphere, and the pros could more fairly guage the impact of each band.  



The Ahmanson Theatre had opened in 1967, as part of the Los Angeles Music Center. It was Los Angeles' premier theater, and regularly featured prominent Broadway productions. For the week of April 29-May 5, Columbia booked the 2084-capacity Ahmanson for seven nights, with three acts each night. The acts ran the gamut, as Columbia was prominent in rock, soul, country, jazz and pop styles. Billboard reviewed all seven nights, which were apparently 95% sold out (Part 1 is here, and Part 2 can be seen here). 

The New Riders played Tuesday, May 1, headlining the show over Dr. Hook and The Medicine Show. Dr. Hook had released their album Sloppy Seconds, which included their lasting single "Cover Of The Rolling Stone." Opening the show was one Bruce Springsteen, who had released his debut album Greetings From Asbury Park in January 1973. Columbia recorded and filmed the shows professionally. Bits and pieces of all seven nights have turned up over the years. A tape of the five-song Springsteen set has circulated for decades, and a fragment of the video even turned up in a 1998 BBC documentary. Apparently the entire set can be found on YouTube now.

An unnamed Billboard reviewer ran down the Ahmanson show in the May 19, 1973 issue:

If any one artist captured the essence of what the week was really about it was Bruce Springsteen. Latest in Columbia's recent acquisitions of singer-songwriters (Bill Quateman & Andy Pratt) he has an appeal that borders on the universal...a glowing and vibrant performer in his own right.
Conversely, the reviewer was scathing about Dr Hook, calling them "insufferably self-indulgent...instrumental sloppiness and vocal insipidity did nothing to salvage their performance."

All in all, the Riders came out fairly well. He says:

The New Riders of The Purple Sage have uncovered nothing new or outrageous, but they do what they do very well and with more than a little bit of inspiration. The mode is country, mellow and laid back yet ready to set off sparks at a moment's notice. Joined by Grateful Dead members Bob Weir, Keith Godchaux and Donna Godchaux they transformed the staid Ahmanson into a veritable hoe-down.

So Bob Weir made his last appearance with the New Riders, and Keith and Donna played yet another gig with the band, lending a little star power to the proceedings. This was never nothing in status-conscious LA. Also, given that we know the Springsteen material exists, it's just possible that there is professional audio and video of the May 1 NRPS Ahmanson show, deep in the Columbia vaults. 

New Riders of The Purple Sage Status Report, May 1, 1973
By May, 1973, the New Riders of The Purple Sage had released three albums on Columbia Records, all of which had been moderately successful. The band had established themselves as a successful touring entity independent of Jerry Garcia. They were inevitably associated with the Grateful Dead, which was not at all a bad thing, but it made it harder to establish a fully separate identity. Long-haired country rock seemed to be rising in popularity, although no one suspected that the Outlaw Country sound coming out of Austin at this time would supersede it. The New Riders were becoming an established act in the Northeast, able to fill the smaller halls and college gyms that the Grateful Dead had been filling just a few years earlier. 

For the next post in the series (NRPS Tour History May-Sep 1973) see here