Clothing
+ Fashion
Jewelry +
Watches
Home +
Furniture
 Pottery 
+ Glass
Art +
 Photos 
Paper +
  Books  
Music +
Movies
Toys +
Games
Sports +
Outdoors
Ads +
  Signs  
Eras +
Themes
Post your own itemIn Posters and Prints > Music and Concert Posters > Show & Tell.
Show and Tell

The Image that Goes with the Music

Posters and Prints85 of 87The week Jimi became Hendrix PREVWes Wilson's Captain Beefhart NEXT
Love It Like It
1

1

Please create a username. Already have one? Log in here

If you don't already have a username, create one here.


VintageTAKER54VintageTAKER54 likes this.
BelltownBelltown loves this.

Learn more about:

Get the Led out!

Music and Concert Posters

Related article:

The Sources of Psychedelic Art? Drugs, But Also Picasso and the Fire-Bombing of Tokyo

Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate



Posted 23 months, 24 days ago

Email

Belltown
(99 items)

I love Lee Conklin, who was perhaps the trippiest of the Fillmore-era poster artists, but this postcard of a Grateful Dead show in late February and early March of 1969 is not one of my favorites. With its ghostly photograph of the band by Herbie Greene at its heart surrounded by numerous fiery skulls, it's just too creepy.

So why did I buy this postcard? Well, 2/27/69-3/2/69 are the dates when the band recorded "Live Dead," which for some fans was the first vinyl to adequately capture what made these guys so great. That two-disc set was the gold standard until the band released "Fillmore West 1969: The Complete Recordings," in 2005. That 10-CD limited edition (10,000 copies) routinely sells for hundreds of dollars used on eBay (unsealed copies of the box set go for thousands).

As it happens, I've managed to download less pristine versions (second-generation versions of the master reels, audience recordings, etc.) of all four nights, so it just seemed right to close the loop and get the card.


Want to post a comment?

Create an account or login in order to post a comment.