Grateful Dead 06-07-70 Fillmore West San Francisco, CA Disc 1 Set 1 01. Don't Ease 02. Silver Threads 03. My Dog Has No Nose 04. Friend of the Devil 05. Candyman 06. Cold Jordon 07. Swing Low Sweet Chariot 08. Cumberland Blues 09. Me & My Uncle 10. New Speedway Boogie Disc 2 Set 2 01. Cryptical -> 02. Drums -> 03. Other One -> 04. Cryptical -> 05. Drums -> 06. The Main Ten -> 07. Sugar Magnolia* Disc 3 01. Louie Louie Jam 02. It's A Man's World 03. Mama Tried 04. Top of the World 05. banter 06. Cosmic Charlie 07. Casey Jones 08. Good Lovin' -> 09. Drums -> 10. Good Lovin' * = first time played Flaws: There is a reel cut during Casey Jones and It's A Man's World. Source: S:MR>Cass>DAT>ZA2>CD>EAC>shn DAT to CD conversion by David Hollister Editing: Recorded with SoundForge. Burned to CD using CD Architect. The only editing was to remove approximately 4 minutes and 22 seconds of repeated material on the DAT during the banter between Top of the World and Cosmic Charlie. I also removed a couple of minor pops. Other than that, no editing was done. The breaks between each CD were breaks that were already present on the DAT. The only addition was 2 seconds of silence prior to the start of disc 3. Hi folks, I am just now putting the finishing touches on a 3 CD set of the Fillmore West show from 6/7/70. This show is very interesting, and in my opinion is crying to be heard. Note: There is a cut (reel splice I assume) during Casey Jones. During the little drumming interlude prior to the Other One, there is some woman you can hear ranting and raving and generally going on about Viet Nam. It would seem the band kind of lets her state her piece in its entirety before going into the Other One. Very cool. The whole second CD is very cool. The jam after the Cryptical reprise is great. It goes into a kind of lulling drum beat which goes on for a few minutes (what I called Drums again, even though it isn't in the official setlist) before Phil takes it up and you hear the definite Main Ten bass line. A great Main Ten jam that goes on for about 4 1/2 minutes or so before Bobby takes it into Sugar Magnolia. First version of Sugar Magnolia. Very cool :) No, it doesn't rock, but up until now, the earliest version I'd ever heard was the one from the famed 6/24/70 Cap Theater show, which I thought was unusual enough to be of historical significance. This one is also interesting historically. Between Top of the World and Casey Jones the band sits around talking to the crowd and deciding what to play next. What kills me is Bobby's comment: "Hey, there's a guy over there, he's always over there and he always yells out 'Golden Road!'. I wanna know who he is, because man, you really take the cake. To tell you the truth we've forgotten how to play that song" or something like that. You can also hear several suggestions for songs, among them "White Rabbit", which cracks up the crowd. Great stuff. Let's get it out there. The acoustic set is pretty straight-forward, but it's the electric set I think that really shines. The boys just seems to be having a great time the whole show.