Allman Brothers Band – Morrison, CO (08/12/01)

Allman Brothers Band
Red Rocks Amphitheatre
Morrison, CO
August 12, 2001

** 16 BIT **

Source: Neumann KM-140’s (ORTF) > Lunatec V2 > Tascam DA-P1 > DAT(m)
Transfer: DAT(m) > Sony PCM-R500 > S/PDIF > Tascam HD-P2 > CDWave > FLAC (16/44.1)
Mastering: .WAV > Sound Forge Pro 10.0a (boost mids and highs, minor edits, normalize, & add fades) > CDWav (tracking) > Trader’s Little Helper (level 5) > FLAC
Location: Row 10, ROC
Recorded by: Jeff Bowen, aka OldNeumanntapr, and Jack Hunt
Transfered by: Terry Watts
Mastered by: Dennis Orr
Tagging, Via xACT 2.53, And Front-Cover Artwork By OldNeumanntapr

Setlist:

  1. Tuning/Crowd/Intro
  2. Revival
  3. Statesboro Blues
  4. Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More
  5. The Same Thing
  6. Stormy Monday
  7. Who To Believe
  8. Dreams
  9. Rocking Horse
  10. Trouble No More
  11. Desdemona
  12. All Night Train
  13. I’ve Been Lovin’ You Too Long
  14. Midnight Rider
  15. Soulshine
  16. Jessica
  17. Encore Break

Encore:

  1. Mountain Jam

Gregg Allman – vocals & keyboards
Warren Haynes – vocals & guitars
Derek Trucks – guitars
Oteil Burbridge – bass
Butch Trucks – drums
Jaimoe – drums
Marc Quinones – percussion

OldNeumanntapr Notes-
This is one of two shows that I have recorded out of my home state of California, the other being Blue Oyster Cult in Utah on this very same trip. I flew to Salt Lake City and met up with my friend Jack, and we recorded Blue Oyster Cult at the Weber County Fair in Ogden, UT, before driving out to record the Allman Brothers Band in CO. I’d always wanted to see Red Rocks Amphitheatre after hearing stories about it for so many years. It’s a really cool place. We got there in the early afternoon after staying in a motel for the night in Wyoming en route from Utah. Red Rocks is a ‘park’ during the daylight hours so we were able to walk through it at see the complete amphitheatre. I had heard that from the upper part of the amphitheatre you can see lightning storms out over the valley below. Thanks to Kirk West, Jack was able to score a pair of backstage passes from the band that we used after the show. We both met Warren Haynes backstage after the show, which is actually ‘under’ the stage rather than behind, because of the natural rock formations that surround the amphitheatre. In addition to my taping gear, which the band had no problem with, I also brought in my old black-body Nikon FM. I had to hide the FM in the taping bag because the band would not allow cameras. So, I had Jack shoot photos during the show and I ran the recording gear, and I told him that if they threw him out for taking pictures at least I would be there to run the audio gear! However, when the time came for photos with Warren backstage after the show, the shot that I took of Jack and Warren was clear but the one that Jack took of Warren and me was blurry. I attribute that to the fact that Jack made several beer runs (for himself) during the show. (He claimed that he wasn’t good with available-light manual focus without a flash. The depth of field at f/2.0 is very shallow.) Likely excuse; He was drunk. Susan Tedeschi opened for the Allman Brothers, and we recorded both sets. We were lucky to claim a tenth row right-of-center position to record from. The sound was really good and I was fortunate to be able to use my friend Allen Chen’s Lunatec V2 microphone preamp. This was the first time that I saw the Allman Brothers do ’Mountain Jam’. We had a minor shock when we got back to the parking lots and found the rental car gone, but soon realized that it had been towed a short distance away and re-parked on the other side of a big rock outcropping. Not sure why. It took another day and a half to get back to Salt Lake City, after overnighting at the same motel in Wyoming. I stayed at Jack’s house just north of Salt Lake City for a week so I could ‘mine’ his DAT collection, and then I flew home. The flight from Phoenix to San Luis Obispo was almost a disaster because thick fog almost kept us from landing at the SLO airport. We made one or two attempts before the stewardess got on the radio and said that because of the fog there was a possibility that we would have to divert to Fresno. My girlfriend was waiting at the airport for me and I was not happy about the prospect of spending the night in Fresno. Fortunately, the third time was the charm and the pilot, whose name was ‘Captain Kirk’, brought us through the fog and we landed safely. Not quite a month later to the day the country would grieve over 9-11.

Do NOT Convert To MP3.
Enjoy! Share freely, don’t sell, play nice, don’t run with scissors, etc. 😉

Fifteen Years of Bootlegs

Though I started this blog in 2004 it wasn’t until 2008 that I started posting bootlegs for download. That’s approximately fifteen years (more or less, there have been some stops and starts along the way) of me posting shows on this blog. I don’t have any real idea of how many shows I’ve posted in all those years. I’ve got 6,960 of them that I’ve labeled “Bootleg Bonanza” which is what I used to call those posts. But that doesn’t include any of the shows that are still locked away in private mode, nor any of the more recent shows that I’ve thrown up on Google Drive. That’s a lot of sharing. I’m proud of that.

Five years ago I did a series of posts where I celebrated Ten Years of Bootlegs. I did a little countdown of my Top Ten most popular bootleg posts, according to my hit counter. I thought it would be fun to revisit that post with an update for the 15 Year Anniversary.

As always there are caveats. My hit counter is wrong. Over the years I have switched a time or two between WordPress and Blogger. I’ve had my own website, I’ve downloaded counters, and relied on whatever WordPress uses internally. I went private for a few years, blocking all search engine access. I urged everyone to sign up for my e-mails (which means most people never actually come to the site, they just download from the e-mail.) And now that I’m doing daily posts where I mostly link directly to Google instead of doing individual posts for each show. All of that has massively messed with my stats.

But with all of that in mind, I still think it is fun to see what is most popular.

Here’s the original list, with original stats.

10. Bob Dylan – Abandoned Desire – 2251 hits
09. Bob Dylan – 1978 Tour Collection – 2125 hits
08. Bob Dylan – The Genuine Never Ending Tour Covers Collection (1988-2006) – 2345 hits
07. Bob Dylan & The Grateful Dead – The Entire Tour – 3015 hits
06. Bob Dylan – The Complete Supper Club Soundboards – 3302 hits
05. Bob Dylan & Mark Knopfler – The Complete Recording Session – 3254 hits
04. Bob Dylan – Santa Cruz, CA (03/15-16/00) – 2874 hits
03. Bob Dylan – A Couple More Years – 3646 hits
02. The Allman Brothers Band – San Francisco, CA (12/31/73) – 3552 hits
01. Bob Dylan – The 1974 Soundboard Collection – 4367 hits

And here’s the updated list.

10. Bob Dylan & The Grateful Dead – San Rafael, CA (06/01/87) – 3802 hits
09. Bob Dylan – 1978 Tour Compilation – 3891 hits
08. The Grateful Dead – The Entire Warfield Theatre 1980 Run – 3963 hits
Van Morrison – Shows by Year – 4251
07. Bob Dylan – Santa Cruz, CA (03/15-16/00) – 4459 hits
06. Bob Dylan – The Genuine Never Ending Tour Covers Collection (1988-2000) – 4641 hits
05. The Allman Brothers – San Francisco, CA (12/31/73) 4880 hits
Grateful Dead: Shows by Year – 5103
04. Bob Dylan & Mark Knopfler – The Complete Recording Sessions 1979-1986 – 5191 hits
03. Bob Dylan – Complete Supper Club Soundboards – 5323 hits
02. Bob Dylan – 1974 Soundboard Collection – 6487 hits
01. Bob Dylan & The Grateful Dead – The Entire Tour – 8139 hits

So as you can see it mostly stayed the same, which makes sense, I guess. What was popular then stayed popular now. The positioning has changed a bit which is interesting.

The Dead’s Warfield run of 1980 joined the list. It wasn’t posted until the middle of these anniversary posts which explains why it wasn’t on the original list. And a single Dylan and the Dead show also entered the list. I’m not sure why that particular one is popular. Pushed out were two Dylan outtake sessions – Abandoned Desire and A Couple More Years.

And there you have it. I don’t know if anyone but me cares about this stuff but I think it is pretty interesting. It does sadden me a little to realize that the way I post shows now pretty much eliminates my ability to know which shows are the most popular. Maybe someday I’ll go back to posting individual posts for individual shows, but that day isn’t today.

The Band – Watkins Glen, NY (07/27-28/73)

THE BAND
RACEWAY,
WATKINS GLEN NY

I also have copies of the Grateful Dead’s performance on these dates. You can find them here and here.

Disc 1

FRIDAY JULY 27, 1973
THE SOUND CHECK

1 INSTRUMENTAL
2 audience
3 INSTRUMENTAL
4 audience
5 DONíT DO IT
6 audience
7 W.S. WALCOTT MEDICINE SHOW

Disc 2

SATURDAY JULY 28, 1973
THE CONCERT Part 1

1 Audience/ TUNING
2 INSTRUMENTAL
3 Audience
4 INTRODUCTION
SAM CUTLER & BILL GRAHAM
5 GOIN BACK TO MEMPHIS
WE’VE GOT A VISITOR
Comments about parachutist who sadly would die
6 audience
7 LOVINí YOU IS SWEETER THAN EVER
8 THE SHAPE IíM IN
9 THE WEIGHT
10 STAGE FRIGHT
1I SHALL BE RELEASED
12 DONíT DO IT
13 ENDLESS HIGHWAY
14 GENETIC METHOD
15 CHEST FEVER

Disc 3

SATURDAY JULY 28, 1973
THE CONCERT Part 2

1 THE NIGHT THEY DROVE OLD DIXIE DOWN
2 ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE
3 INSTRUMENTAL
4 HOLY COW
5 Audience
6 LIFE IS A CARNIVAL
7 SAVED
8 UP ON CRIPPLE CREEK
9 Audience
10 SHARE YOUR LOVE
11 WHEELS ON FIRE
12 W.S WOLCOTT MEDICINE SHOW
13 SLIPPINí & SLIDINí
14 Audience idiot demands allmans
15 RAG MAMA RAG

Disc 4

SATURDAY JULY 28, 1973
THE CONCERT Part 3

SUMMER JAM (various members of)
ALLMAN BROTHERS, THE BAND & Grateful DEAD)
WATKINS GLEN, NY. RACEWAY
JULY 28, 1973
AFTER THE MAIN EVENT

RICK DANKO
1 A CHANGE IS GONNA COME (1st Take)
2 A CHANGE IS GONNA COME
3 RICK & CROWD CONVERSE
4 RAININí IN MY HEART
5 ìIT HASNíT BEEN PLANNEDî
6 TUNING & DIRECTION AS VARIOUS MUSICIANS CONVERGE & PROCEED TO MILL ABOUT & PLAY
7 Richard Manuel vocal Have you ever been mistreated
8 ìGO JERRYî
9 DA DI DE DAY Rick vocal
10 NOT FADE AWAY
11 ìLEVEL CHECKINGî
12 LET ME WRAP YOU IN MY WARM & TENDER LOVE Rick and Jerry vocals
13 REELINí & ROCKINí
14 ìWE WANT OUR MONEY BACKî
15 MOUNTAIN JAM
16/17 AMAZING GRACE
18 MOUNTAIN JAM

WATKINS GLEN EXPERIENCE
I had not been to the Woodstock festival, so Watkins Glen was my chance to go to ìWoodstockî in style: A tent, cooler, ice, food, beer, and a í61 Chrysler

Newport, and my friend Arti.
We had 2 brand new Sony ECM-22P electret condenser microphones and the trusty Hitachi 222TRQ stereo cassette recorder.
The concert was scheduled for Saturday, we arrived Tuesday afternoon, set up camp a ways from the concert field. Friday morning there was a rumor that the

sound check was going to happen later that afternoon, and that ticket holders would be allowed in. Friday, just around noon the gates were opened. We headed

for the front, our goal 40 feet out dead center from the stage. Unfortunately there were people already there, the only prime real estate in that vicinity

was covered by about 2 inches of water, as it had been raining off & on all week. The promoters were thoughtful enough to supply bottled water, pallets of

it, to the ticket holders. Seizing the opportunity we gathered 4 wooden pallets and walked them all the way up to the prime but flooded area. We placed the

pallets over the water and squared them, put coverage on top and presto, we were dry and soon would be high. We were about 40 feet, dead center from stage,

or about halfway between the soundboard & the stage.
We had brought 4, 4 ft long 1 inch wide metal conduit, with couplers, to hoist the microphones. Everything was set as THE BAND took the stage. We had our

mikes up, way up, and with the surprise of the Friday event, the crowd was not so dense, making us quite visible from the stage.
There were flyers circulated by the promoters which threatened that there was to be no recording of the concert ìcords would be cutî the flyer stated.
THE BAND went through there sound check, we went through ours, the sound was a little strong, especially with our mikes so high and close, we were thrilled.
I do not remember if there was a complete BAND song as the first soundcheck tune. If it was, we either had the pause button on or were not ready. I do not

remember either way.
The levels attenuated properly towards the end of the set, and then the Allmans came on. We decided not to record the brothers. Next the DEAD came on, as

they began to play Phil Lesh looked out and asked ìare you all ready out thereî? We thought he was talking to us, but werenít sure. Everything was going

fine, the first set was drawing to a close. It was during BIRD SONG that we were accosted suddenly by a big red headed and bearded goon, who waded through

the crowd and demanded that we cease taping immediately and wanted ìour tapes and our blanksî. I was standing, Arti crouched down and began fiddling, I kept

yelling at the goon to waste time and keep the jackass busy so as not to actually be able to see or get his paws on our stuff. He was also distracted looking

behind us to locate his next victim, anyone who was taping the show. Arti came up, handed him a cassette tape and 1 box of TDK SD90 tapes, it was half of our

supply. The goon grabbed our stuff and took off behind us. Arti had given him a blank, good thing because the tape we were using for the DEAD was also the

one we had used for THE BANDís Sound check.
We stopped taping, our tape ends in the middle of BIRD SONG.
The set ended and during the break it got dark. We hand held the mikes and taped the spectacular 2nd set with that awesome jam, we were shaken, paranoid, but

determined to pull this off.
Saturday, we decided to lower the mikes, using one four foot section hand held just about head level. This is why you can hear lots of audience during the

Saturday show.
Also, with the crowd gathering and the inevitable crush of the latecomers to the front, this caused jostling even up on our pallets. Arti & I kept watch over

the deck and recording levels. There were 2 other “friends, mitchell +1” who held the poles with the mikes. The instructions were to keep the mikes down at

head level. This is why there are multiple dropouts of the high frequencies, mainly on the left side. The mikes were separated, held by 2 people who at times

could not see each other. There are periods when the stereo image is better than others. The idea was that any recording would be better than no recording.
Also, it rained throughout the day, mainly during the BANDís set. At a couple of points it rained so hard we stopped recording and covered everything, even

the wires. That is why there is no Garth solo during the rain.
ON SATURDAY :
The DEAD played first, we were paranoid and did not take our eyes off the goon squad on stage. We operated in stealth mode for THE BAND, who played next.
The ALLMAN BROTHERS played in the dark, we were not so paranoid by them, we had also peaked during THE BAND, so we were a little more composed. This was my

first association with Genesee cream ale, which we had an ample of supply in the cooler.
I have not traded this show ever, the only people who had copies were 3 of us and a small circle of trusted friends.
It would be nice to get a sound board of THE BANDíS SET, One exists, for the bogus ìlive from Watkins Glenî official lp contains a few soundboard tunes, as

does The Bands “TO KINGDOM COME”, An entire Sound Board of this show would be great.
Ever wonder why the dead shows were all taped but the supporting bands were not????

I think the playing order was:
FRIDAY JULY 27, 1973 THE SOUNDCHECK
1 THE BAND
2 ALLMAN BROS
3 GRATEFUL DEAD

SATURDAY JULY 28, 1973 THE CONCERT
1 GRATEFUL DEAD
2 THE BAND
3 ALLMAN BROTHERS
4 SUMMER JAM (members of all 3 bands playing)

TECH NOTES:
2 SONY ECM-22P electret condenser
microphones into
HITACHI TRQ-222 stereo cassette recorder
using TDK SD-90 cassette tape

Transferred the MC using a Sony tc we-175 deck with a dbx 2231 EQ
to a Sony rcd w500c, which is a standalone cd recorder

Master Audience Cassettes > EQ > CDR > EAC > CDR >
EAC > WAVE > TRADER’S LITTLE HELPER > FLAC

Jim Cooper January 2010

Grateful Dead – Watkins Glen, NY (07/28/73)

Grateful Dead
July 28th, 1973
Watkins Glen Grand Prix Circuit
Watkins Glen, New York

The Band also performed at this show, you can find a recording of it here.

–Set 1–
Bill Graham Intro
Bertha
Beat It on Down the Line
Brown Eyed Women
Mexicali Blues
Box Of Rain
Here Comes Sunshine
Looks Like Rain
Row Jimmy
Jack Straw
Deal
Playing in the Band

–Set 2–
Around & Around
Loose Lucy
Big River
He’s Gone ->
Truckin’-> Nobody’s Fault Jam ->
El Paso
China Cat Sunflower ->I Know You Rider
Sella Blue
Eyes of the World ->
Sugar Magnolia

–Encore One–
Sing Me Back Home

–Encore Two–with the ABB & the Band
Not Fade Away
Mountain Jam
Johnny B. Goode

Allman Brothers Shows by Date

1970.11.21 – Boston, MA – w/Bob Weir & Jerry Garcia
1971.04.26  – New York, NY – Grateful Dead show with Duane sitting in
1973.07.28 – Watkins Glenn, NY – Grateful Dead show w/Allmans and The Band sitting in
1973.07.28 – Watkins Glenn, NY – Features the aftershow with The Allmans and others
1973.12.31 – San Francisco, CA
1979.05.15 – Los Angeles, CA
1981.11.18 – Augusta, GA
1989.07.17 – Syracuse, NY
1990.06.30 – Savannah, GA
1993.05.25 – Los Angeles, CA
1992.07.18 – Santa Barbara, CA
1992.07.24 – Mountain View, CA
1995.07.01 – Mountain View, CA
1996.08.05 – Paso Robles, CA
1999.05.27 – Ventura, CA – Gregg Allman
1999.08.01 – Mountain View, CA
2001.08.12 – Morrison, CO
2003.09.09 – Santa Barbara, CA

Ten Years of Bootlegs #2: The Allman Brothers Band – San Francisco, CA (12/31/73)

Ever since coming up with this list, I’ve pondered why The Allman Brothers Band would be the only non-Bob Dylan show to crack the top ten. Why is there no Jerry? No Van on this list? I don’t have a good answer. My best guess is that Jerry and the Dead both exist in abundance on the Internet and that my little site is one of many places you can download and stream those artists. One thing you might notice in my top ten list is that most of the shows on it are either alt-cuts of a specific album or compilations of some sort. Thus far there hasn’t been a single show appearing on the list. The closest we’ve come is #4 which includes two complete shows from Dylan in 2000. The thing is I haven’t posted very many compilations from Jerry or the Dead. I suspect there just isn’t a single show from them that can push them above a Dylan comp.

As for Van, he doesn’t have that large a presence online. He’s kind of the opposite of the Dead where very few places exist on the Internet that are sharing his shows. Part of this is due to Van himself taking measures to stop the spread of his music being shared online. For years he used the Web Sheriff to take down anything that wasn’t officially sanctioned. He’s calmed down over the last few years but that still leaves people a little gun-shy. Van also doesn’t seem to be as popular as Bob and Jerry. At least he doesn’t seem to create the sort of fans that create passion websites about him.

All of this is just me guessing. I really have no idea.

So why the Allman Brothers? Over the ten years I’ve been doing this I’ve only posted a handful of shows from the Allmans. Fans are certainly not tuning into these pages for ABB bootlegs. I’m sure many of you are fans of the band, but The Midnight Cafe is not the place you are coming to for their shows. Similar to Van Morrison you can’t find a ton of places for ABB bootlegs. They officially allow tapers to record their shows but they get a little wonky in terms of letting people like me post the shows online. I suspect there is a high demand for the shows, but not as many places to find them. Thus when I posted this show people gravitated toward it. Or more likely someone posted a link to this show on some ABB forum or another.

It certainly doesn’t hurt that this is a pretty epic show from the band’s peak. Oh, and it does feature Jerry Garcia, Bill Kreutzman & Boz Scaggs.

Whatever the reasons the Allman Brother Band comes in at #2 in my Top Ten viewed bootlegs of all time. Here are the stats.

Allman Brothers Band
December 31, 1973
Cow Palace
San Francisco, CA

First posted on November 7, 2011.
Total number of views: 3,552

Here at the other Ten Years of Bootlegs posts.

#10 Bob Dylan – Abandoned Desire
#9 Bob Dylan – 1978 Tour Collection
#8 Bob Dylan – The Genuine Never Ending Tour Covers Collection (1988-2000)
#7 Bob Dylan & The Grateful Dead – The Entire Tour
#6 Bob Dylan – The Complete Supper Club Soundboards
#5 Bob Dylan & Mark Knopfler – The Complete Recording Sessions
#4 Bob Dylan – Santa Cruz, CA (03/15-16/00)
#3 Bob Dylan -Bob Dylan – A Couple More Years

Allman Brothers Band – Syracuse, NY (07/17/89)

Allman Brothers Band
New York State Fairgrounds
Syracuse, NY
07/17/1989

Source: Aiwa mics (worn at headband) > Sanyo cassette recorder
Transfer: MC > ?????? > Audacity > WAV
Mastering: Wavelab 6.01 (x-fade tape flips, patch small glitches, tracking, fades) > FLAC > tagging

1. Don’t Want You No More >
2. It’s Not My Cross To Bear
3. Statesboro Blues
4. You Don’t Love Me
5. Please Call Home
6. Blue Sky
7. band introductions
8. Midnight Rider
9. I’m No Angel
10. Trouble No More
11. Blues Ain’t Nothin’
12. Duane’s Tune
13. Southbound
14. In Memory of Elizabeth Reed
15. Done Somebody Wrong
16. One Way Out
17. Melissa
18. Just Before The Bullets Fly
19. Dreams
20. Jessica
21. Les Brers In A Minor >
22. drums >
23. bass >
24. Les Brers In A Minor
25. Whipping Post

I love this blog. For years now I’ve got to share great music with cool people. There are always tons of great conversations going on and many of you are way more knowledgeable than me so I’m constantly learning new information. From time to time various folks send me awesome shows to listen to and post. We’ve even had a few folks who’ve sent me so much stuff I just let them go ahead and share directly to the blog.

On a couple of occasions I’ve been lucky enough to get something rare – maybe a newly remastered show, or something only recently circulating, or something straight from a taper.

Today is one of those times. A few weeks back someone sent me a message saying he’d taped a bunch of shows many years ago and was looking for a place to share them. One of those shows was an Allman Brothers gig that he thought was both killer in performance and in the quality of his tape. Would I be interested in sharing it?

Of course I was. Due to my lousy internet and various other complications its taken us weeks to get everything in order, but here we are, mostly. The very last complication comes from the band. ABB is cool with tapers and traders, but they are kind of old school about it. Their official policy states that you can tape shows and share them, but only via pre-internet methods. They don’t want torrents, they don’t want digital downloads.

I have no idea why this is, my guess would be it has something to do with the anonymous nature of the internet and how grabbing something from a torrent doesn’t develop personal relationships like the old trading days did. Whatever the reason I’m planning to follow those rules and won’t be posting the show here.

The show does sound amazingly good all things considered. The taper did a great job of capturing it. It is also a very excellent performance. I’m not a huge ABB fan, but the boys were smokin’ this night. As far as I can tell no one else taped this show that night, and until now its not been in circulation. I know the taper has given it to a couple of other folks recently to help with the mastering or whatever so they might have shared it, but it really does seem to be a rather rare treat.

Allman Brothers Band – Los Angeles, CA (05/25/93)

Allman Brothers Band
Greek Theatre
Los Angeles, California
May 25, 1993

Soundboard recording of unknown origin.

Disc 1-
01. Hot ‘Lanta
02. Statesboro Blues
03. All Night Train
04. Blue Sky
05. The Same Thing
06. Temptation Is A Gun
07. Nobody Knows
08. Midnight Rider
09. Seven Turns
10. Come On In My Kitchen
Melissa
11. Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad
12. Little Martha
13. Jessica
14. What’s Done Is Done
15. Gambler’s Roll
16. Change My Way of Living
17. Whipping Post
Encore:
18. One Way Out
(Dickey sat on a stool and wore a blindfold during encore!)

The Allman Brothers – San Francisco, CA (12/31/73)

Allman Brothers Band
December 31, 1973
Cow Palace
San Francisco, CA

Disc 1:
(Set 1)
1. Wasted Words
2. Done Somebody Wrong
3. One Way Out
4. Stormy Monday
5. Midnight Rider
6. Blue Sky
7. In Memory of Elizabeth Reed
(Set 2)
8. Happy New Year!
9. Statesboro Blues

Disc 2:
1. Southbound
2. Come and Go Blues
3. Ramblin’ Man
4. Trouble No More
5. Jessica
6. Les Brers In A Minor >
7. Drums >
8. Les Brers In A Minor

Disc 3:
(Jerry Garcia, Bill Kreutzman & Boz Scaggs join up for the remainder of the show)
1. Whipping Post Jam >
2. Linda Lou / Mary Lou
3. Hideaway > You Upset Me
4. Bo Diddley > Mountain Jam > Bo Diddley

Disc 4:
1. Save My Life
2. Blues Jam
(Set 3)
3. You Don’t Love Me
4. Will The Circle Be Unbroken >
5. Mountain Jam

From the uploader:

Here’s the deal… There are multiple versions of this 12/31/73 show in circulation. The most common (and the only one that I’ve seen) is supposed to be from the Pre FM reels (which were most likely damaged, keep reading). On the heavily circulated version there were numerous flaws, most were either digital noise or clipping. A new transfer was just done from a Reel To Reel FM Master. This new FM master did not have any of the flaws that were present on the common “Pre FM” version, but FM Master was of slightly lesser quality.

The solution? Small portions of the new FM master were spliced into the higher quality version when there was digital noise, clipping, etc. Those defects have now been eliminated. The splicing was done well, at most points it’s unnoticeable, but there were a couple of splices that didn’t line up perfectly, one of those would be the splice that provides the intro to Liz Reed. Either way, this show sounds much better than it did before, and it’s the best source I know of to be in circulation.

Here are some of the other edits that were done… There was digital noise in some of Bill Graham’s band intro, this was spliced in OK from the other copy. Various count-ins were slightly clipped, but are now spliced in seamlessly. These are usually when KSAN DJ’s talk, those short station ID’s have also been put back in. The KSAN announcer’s (Tom Donahue) count-in at New Year’s was similarly clipped, this has been restored, clipped notes at the beginning of Jessica have also been restored. There were many other additional edits, but you get the picture.