Grateful Dead - 05-03-1968 Columbia U. (video)
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- Опубліковано 11 чер 2013
- See more archival GD video at deadvids.com Davidaron presents: FREE 24/7 Streaming Grateful Dead Concert Video.
Many thanks to KIT FILMS and The Prelinger Archives.
Hat Tip to Brokedown House Productions for the post work.
The Eleven/ That's It For The Other One from 4/26/69 w/ in-camera edited raw footage featuring Pigpen singing and playing organ. @8:38, this clip shows that The Other One was in fact played on 5/3/68. "Please Strike - Support Liberated Classes" banner @9:45.
For a week, 5,000 students had occupied five buildings on the Morningside Heights campus, protesting the university’s connection to the military industrial complex and it plans to build a gym in Morningside Park, a public park in the mostly African-American neighborhood next to campus. Police had forcibly removed the strikers from the buildings the days prior to their arrival, but the entire campus was in a sort of “lockdown” with police and guards denying access to the majority of the campus. This gave legendary tour manager Rock Skully an idea. Never one to shy away from confrontation and always the promoter, he got ahold of the strike organizers and offered to hold a free show on the campus. Knowing the police would never permit this, the band and their equipment had to be smuggled in. “Just think of the publicity,” I’m sure Skully thought. ” San Francisco’s Grateful Dead fooling the cops to play for New York student radicals.” The band members, also not ones to shy away from the spotlight of the fuzz, Merry Pranskter blood running through their veins, thought this was a great idea.
Both the Grateful Dead and their equipment made it from the outskirts of campus to Low Library Plaza in the heart of campus in the back of a bread delivery truck, and they were already set up and playing before the security and police could mobilize to stop it. But some of the radicals wanted to take the opportunity to make speeches using the band’s PA system, which the group has explained was only for music. At one point, Bob Weir actually kicked one of them in the ass when his view of Jerry and Phil was obscured; however, the show was deemed a rousing success. h/t: appalachianjamwich.com
My roommate and I were in the audience for the concert, which the Dead did for free to support the student sit-ins at Columbia that Spring. The student protestors emptied out of the buildings to attend the concert held on the steps of Ferris Booth Hall (no longer there, replaced by a bigger student union) and filled the Quad. Warm weather, most people high on the music and other things. A great memory.
Awesome
😎 Nice.
And the circle turns, except theres no Grateful Dead to bring peace.
Without these films, it's difficult to believe times like these ever occurred.
I think that's probably true, unfortunately
They were truly extraordinary times.
We must keep them alive in our hearts, for without them there is nothing.
IDK. My memory, for better or worse is acutely aware of what I experienced. Although I'll say Woodstock had more mud than I ever wanna see again!
oh yeahh
That kid around minute 5:17, air guitaring, dancing, losing his mind, having has face melted off! Love it!
"You've just been victimized by the Grateful Dead".
He looks like he was dosed & most likely was. Wonder where he is today?
I love that kid! I was looking for him and found him in this video!!
Little dude was sure getting into the jam.
He was more into it then anybody else! Must of tried some of that electric cool aid acid!
The moment someone's life changed forever 5:15. He doesn't care who's watching him. The only thing that matters at all is the music. RIP Jerry and Pig, the music never stopped!
Melted
Of course the one who can easily be considered an OG Head would be a child. This band will never stop amazing me.
Someone gave him the wrong kool aid
@@UndersackitchFungalbollockyeah that kid is dosed to shit.
I’ll take what he took!
Garcia with those unique,squirrelly lead solos propelling the band to the outer limits...what a talented man.
The first improvisational jam band
You better go listen to East-West by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band from 66’.
@@billlarstead8019the BEST improvisonal jam band.
OK ..this is going on the list of events i want to attend..when i finish building my time machine
righty!
I got a concert I want to go to I Central Park. And the Fillmore East. Maby I can share expenses on the time machine.
Take me..please
Ha!! Spot on, Hal!!
Count me in
I took guitar lessons back when they were starting out and Jerry was teaching at Dana Morgan Studios in Palo Alto California. Don't know if Dana Morgan store is still there. Jerry taught me Mississippi John Hurt music, and Elizabeth Cotton music. During the time he was giving lessons....one day he went up to the Filmore in San Francisco, with the Dead, played...got famous...never saw him again except when I went to a live concert they gave in Palo Alto at the park near Stanford University. He was a good teacher and I still play a few of those riffs...but mostly as accompanient with folk songs of that era. Great riffs. Great teacher.
My uncle owned Larson's drug store across the street and went to school with pigpen, Jerry used to sleep in his car in front of that music shop give out lessons, he said the reason he got Bobby to join the band was because Bobby had money haha!!
The building is still there, but Dana Morgan music is not. It's a home furnishings store
JUST.....WOW!!!! But i venture he didn't teach you "The Eleven",,,,,,,123 123 123 12 But maybe that was Phil who came up with that.
Dana Morgan Music is long gone. As I recall Dana's son ran it for a few more years after Dana retired, but then it closed.
I bought my Polytone Mini-Cube amp there from Dana (in the late '70's).
503 Workshop - don't be a hater. It's well known that Jerry taught out of Dana Morgan's back in the day.
e albert.@@rhmayer1 hi robert...why would i be a hater? Trying to figure out why you wrote. Jerry
Imagine playing for over 50 years ? Long live weir
They've been playing some of the same songs since '66, so they finally learned 'em.
Long live Lesh! ✌
Long Live Jerry Garcia...!!!!
Long live Kreutzmann
What about pigpen ???
Bless all the Tapers / Videographers who down thru the decades have taped every single GD show. Now everyone can enjoy their music for ever.
🎤 🎸 🎶 🥁 🎹 🎶🎸🎶
Beautiful Fender Amps..... And everyone is so young! Phil looked really happy. Jerry looked healthy and alert. Bob was just a baby! UA-cam has some great clips, and I really enjoy seeing these types of things. The sound is amazing.
Yep. And Pigpen was alive and healthy.
Nothing produced in the almost none existent music scene approaches this
What we are seeing is history past this is gone for good. So sad!
So grateful my dead friend
Everything past 1975 is jaded. This Era here is untouchable. You're talking the greatest moments in the history of music. The best vibe the industrial world ever went through...... 1965-68
@@kendallblack8502 and there will never EVER be another time like it. Turmoil and upheaval everywhere you turned back then,but the music just flourished.
I was there! 1st-yr Barnard student. My mom was visiting and they started their set with our Columbia Strike cry, "Up against the wall, MF!" I blushed in front of Mom. And no one was face down in a cell phone.
This version of The Eleven is almost as good as the one on Live/Dead. The dead brought magic everywhere they went in the 60’s
Love the early days,Peace brother
Back when Garcia rocked a Gibson Les Paul
agreed. almost
Vocals appear to be out of zinc with video.
Listen to 10/12/68 for what might be the most ripping version of The Eleven
What an era it was! So thankful to have been a teenager at this time.
You should definitely feel so privileged. It was a wondrous time indeed, with even more wondrous music.
a song with such a complex meter that even the dead phased it out. the final performance was an oddball jam in ‘75, a year notable for having just a few shows.
I specifically mean the eleven, the other one stuck around for a good while
The eleven has always been my favorite dead song… always.
LoL, that's what we looked like in the late 60s. Short hair, long hair, it didn't matter, we were all friends, gettin' with it intellectually and spiritually. It was fucking epic. I was a L.A. kid making treks up to S.F. in my buddy's Mustang, going to shows, getting turned on. NRPS would normally open for the Dead. My buddy pointed out Garcia to me when he came out and sat at the pedal steel. At my second show I remember wondering, "Who ARE these guys, this cowboy hippie kid with the long pony tail, that furry freak with the blazing guitar, the cowboy biker dude, and the kind geeky guy on bass? And that drummer who seems like a madman just barely in control? How can so few guys make so much sound??"
Ignore M T, the hater. I appreciated the memory since it brings back my similar memories from those times. Yeah, the NRPS always opened for the Dead back then. I don't think there's ever been a better matched opening band for another band than the NRPS opening for the Dead.
You are not deluding yourself. Those memories definitely mean something. (Just look at your upvotes compared to M T's.) Those were great, imperfect but happy times - a different world from today.
@@rhmayer1 So So So VERY TRUE.... nothing wrong at all allowing nostalgia to emit a smile or 2 !!.... Stay safe Robert ✌
The giant sound is really helped by 2 drummers, and the freshness comes from the clarity of the sound (they used so many amps to keep the sound clean, not just loud). The modal playing is very unusual, even for today. They seem almost completely uninterested in stage presence. The SF scene was really a rave, where the audience is the show. Nobody spends their time staring at the DJ. Nobody stares at the dixieland band either!
Dead Timber - You have definitely Got it all. I'm proud to make your acquaintence. Yes, this segment makes you proud to have been a part of it. My 1st show was 1980, yet I witnessed soooo much. I imagine you witness this sickness that I dreamed about as we travelled to show after show on the East Coast.... Insane I do appreciate your grasp of the phenomenon. It is a pleasure to read. Thanks...
@@rhmayer1 I couldn't handle the world then, and CERTAINLY not now.
God love whoever filmed this, the Eleven is my favorite!
mine too. Easily me (and all my pals's) favourite Dead song - the version from Live Dead, that is!
5:15 OK, who dosed the little kid? His stick turned into a guitar and then a slithering electric eel and then his face melts off. That Owsley again...
+MrFartboy79 Ha! That's hilarious! Could not be scripted better.
+MrFartboy79 Yes I think someone Dosed him that was way Too Cool!!!
+MrFartboy79 koolest thing ive seen in awhile. kid just bein kid...what acid was invented for but didn't last....be a kid as long as u can..al your life if possible.
baliscotsurf Yep I tell my niece and nephew this all the time. There 10 yrs old
myName I heard it was supposed to be a truth serum 4 prisoners during the ware at least that what I heard
I've had a couple of stills from this day on my wall for about 35 years. Great to finally hear and see the show itself. Jerry's face was so expressive that day. Also great to see long forgotten Pigpen without whom we might never have had the Grateful Dead. The Eleven...such an ambitious piece of music for back then. Among my friends, and we lived and breathed it, there was no one better in the sixties.
"for its time"- i disagree. MOST of my fav music comes from 1969,'70,'71. I think that very many (young included) would agree if I said that the late 60's-early 70's were the golden age of music.
Phil Lesh show just how important his musical ability was to the Dead.
Been a fan of the dead since early 70s. Have a lady friend 26 years old a musician in her right. In showing her this video after a while tears in her eyes. I asked her what's wrong. She said look how happy people are. , with everyone having fun, not like today's world. Had to agree with her. The woman is wise beyond her years.
I respect!!!
from Japan
Lamb chops Jerry is the best Jerry
like mahashnavu orchestra. devotion surrender santana sick!!
Yeah the doors did that for me
traffic and 10 years after for me ~
Frank Zappa and Return to Forever with Chick Corea for me!
Not jazz ... nowhere near jazz ... just jam rock.
We were all so young. I was just getting ready to start college. Spent end of 67 in San Francisco watching dozens.of great bands mainly at the Avalon. Dead was a good one.
Always loved The Eleven. Why it isn’t as revered as Dark Star is a mystery to me.
one of my all time faves as well but the time signature is challenging to the innards...it's a song for the musicians more than the audience. as i reflect on it live dead is one of my top fifty albums for sure.
I personally think The Eleven is every deadheads fav song they just don't know it yet
The Eleven is a fine example of why Phil is my all time favorite musician, and I do hold it in high esteem. Dark Star had more options to explore, and they played it for many years more then The 11.
My favorite Dead song…possibly. It’s the one that broke it all open for me.
Great song but Dark Star can never be touched. Perhaps the greatest of any and all.
"this is great a rare look at the Dead during their classic lineup....great to see rare footage of original member Ron " Pig Pen"McKernan on keyboards& vocals,this is my favorite lineup,thanks."-😃.🌐🎸🎹🎤🌐.
You betcha.
The little boy going crazy is the best thing I've seen all year!!!!
Face melting at 5:30
He's into it!
jamming with the dead!!!
He genuinely looks like he’s having a a bad time tbh
@@CeeJayDee94 No way! Notice how he's pretending to play the stick as a guitar
@@CeeJayDee94 You musta got the brown acid. Abort!
O..M..G!!! Now THIS is a real gem! can't even believe it! Got goosebumps from head to toe!
God bless the Grateful Dead!
Okay now, this is by far the most classic video I have ever seen so whoever posted it, my gratitude is extended to you
this is why I know how great The Grateful Dead will always be! tear it up Phil
5:20 into video the kid is precious.
Brings me home again being there .
Nothing like "LIVE DEAD"
What a beautiful piece of film. Gave me goosebumps..
they are having so much fun. I love this!!!!!
how could any one ever give the dead a thumbs down?!? i mean, come on man. God bless you Jerry!
Everytime I watch this it's like Christmas morning
That early dead sound is just so amazing!
Buddy Rich and others were my trip tickets into jazz and later in life found these guys
And am proud to say that I am now a great full dead head and I couldn't be more satisfied with it all.
Haven't listened to a lot of Dead, really surprised they're so proggy. This whole song's in 11. Really good, super jazz fusion-y
Keep listening! Never know where that rabbit hole leads.
They among other 1967 bands invented it, ill bet miles davis saw them then used two drummers on bitches brew in 69.
@@norbiudeako518 Duke Ellington often used two drummers. It's wasn't a new concept in the 60's
@@dylanwesley3964 surprised, i haven't seen it who were they? I know louie bellson used two bass drums ,i know james brown used two but it was for dance. I saw the dead at the fillmore east 3 times and they were improvising very creatively.
Well the song is called The Eleven.
There will never be another band like Grateful Dead ....... but in our mems, we are making America GRATEFUL again on YT.
Ty GD for the good vibes thru the decades 😍😍😎😎☠️☠️
at 5:30 minutes Garcia takes off and many fans start applauding - yup - thats when the bus came by and they got on ! Garcia sure could amaze with his playin - and the boys stay tight with him !! Much Thanks for this time capsule video ! (~);}
They were so Acid Jazz back then... I love it!
the young man at 5:30 says it all hang on to your boots
huh?
@1younguy jazz pretty much wrote the book on everything these guys were doing
1younguy it's literally a triplet swing with a 5/6 switch up every other bar that's jazz as all hell
1younguy... “1dumbyounguy”
This was mom's 25th birthday! Mom lived out here in this time period.. little did she know I would be born in '77 and meet and date that drummer's kid one day in the year 2000! Mom-5/3/43-7/8/2015
This is a real piece of history!
You said it mon !!!!!! History. I was thinking the same thing. Epic moment in time and space
The 11. My favourite ever.Those tumbling chords ...yeah!
This is just so fricken incredible. It moves me.
Back when the G.D. were pushing the edge. At the end of Jerry's time on the planet, they had become technically proficient musicians with the finest equipment all musicians wish for but their music lacked the "spirit" or the "magic" and the lyrics were becoming melancholy if not down right Mauldin. Thanks for posting this, a better way to remember the G.D. in the "wonder" years.
As Jann Wenner put it, they were "The Golden Days." I might give my soul to experience 1965-1972 in continuous loop.
I was at Oma's house across the street, 7 yrs old, 113th street & Broadway....rock on, kids!
Amazing to think that the people in this video clip are all in their mid to late seventies now. Time flies!
2023 and i am listening this awesome music ✌🏽☮️.
Still bobbing my head every time.........
Grateful Dead videos tend to be muddled. This one remains remarkably sharp, only a year after I fought as a Marine in JFK's horrid war in Vietnam. Peace, brothers and sisters.
Not many people realize it was JFK'S war......glad you made it through .
jfk was a puppet but glad u made it
TY for your allegiance and courage fighting 4 freedom -
You returned to American shores where your brothers In arms didn’t
I pray for u -
U have an Angel praying for u in WI
Thank you for your service. JFK made the mistake of listening to the wrong people and would pulled out if he weren't killed.
Thank you friend. Terribly sorry you had to go through what you did. A bullshit war but you’re a hero regardless.
I saw them live a few times and loved it. This video toward the end has that "Comin' comin' comin' Around" lyric and musical refrain from their second album that I always loved. And remember, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan was a member of the 27 Club. . .
Phil Lesh’s mannerisms changed quite a lot since this film was shot. If you watch Dead videos from the 80s and 90s he seems more laid back. In 68 he looked and played like a wild man!
He still played like this in the 1981 footage at Rockpalast.
It's surprising to find out how much of a rebel Phil was back then. He was one of the wildest guys in the group
Phils’ exposure to the elements!
:)) @@markreiser1898
Phil could drive the music back in the day. But in latter days he's almost in the background. the band got so big, their audience became "followers" thinking of Jerry as their leader. The pressure must have been too much and he fell back on Heroin. The band lost its nativity, its raw togetherness and became more like business. Pros and somewhat mauldin. Phil has said the rest of the band tried to get him off it, but they couldn't. Even Garcia said, when they didn't have "it" they fell back on technique. Too bad. Slowing down is a common thing as we age. Thankfully we have those early days recorded.
On or about that date; May 3rd, 1968 I graduated from high school and headed to San Francisco State for college. I had listened to the Dead from 1966 on but never saw them live until summer of '68. I moved into a dive apartment just off Geary north of Golden Gate Park and almost immediately discovered they would play free concerts practically every weekend in the park, and also places like the Family Dog and Fillmore for almost zero dollars which it essentially what I had at the time. Those were the best years.
Yeah, free music, free dope and community. Can't be beat.
I WAS AT THAT COLUMBIA SHOW!!! ;)
tell us what you remember most about that day!
+michael garrett cool! Were you near the stage ?
+timquinn66 i was on the stage?! ;)
+michael garrett two words....the quick and the dead. NW tour...the first. after the pot orgy......I was looking for actual footage from the Be-In cause it was ALL before my time.....you heads are funny!!! but in all seriousness, we need a Be in, and I am looking for my generations version of the Dead. we need it bad,
+michael garrett very cool
This is Why Music is Important
best part of the show lil kid at 5:28 freaking out,thats bad ass....hope he's still alive n remembers that...very neat footage thnx
A young blissful Jerry before hard core addiction took over his life.
The best 11 vocally I've heard. Amazing quality. My favorite dead song of all time.
Damn I got lost in Zeppelin Floyd, Old Genesis (Peter Gabriel era) and forgotten how damn good the GD was live. I bought American Beauty and Working Man Dead liked them but never dove deep until I paid attention to the song Operator’ studio version and was floored how simple but powerful the song was. I knew of the late Keyboard player Died early in 72’ I think but his style of music was definitely rooted deep in blues and (can’t think of the word) any recommend is greatly appreciated! ✌🏼
Comin around...Bob Weir’s cartoon life. What a musician extraordinary in his work. Garcia (RIP), it just seemed natural to him.
Great band, every member raw, excellent talent.
Absolutely brilliant! They were at the top in 68-69. Unsurpassed in cosmic eternity.
This may be my favorite Dead music ever. As I keep listening to UA-cam posts I discover Dead songs I never heard before. This one just keeps amazing me more and more. They truly were unbelievable.
Check out the album, "Anthem of the Sun." My all time favorite Dead album. "Alligator" captured the early scene as good as anything.
@@donaldgehre5964 That's my all-time favourite Dead album too. I remember seeing them in London in 1972, and people kept shouting out for them to play "Alligator", but they never did, sadly.
I'm not sure I understand... can't relate to PIG vocals as they are not in Sync With the 11 . but there is a moment that a young african american child is just captivated, he's just jamming to the shit like I used to do..and what a band does, sound, vision experience, (5:18) it so much like an offering, to my experience and reminds me is that this is the most inclusive band of all time (this is 1968 folks!) and it sure makes me smile tonight! Pure joy!! I'm glad I introduced my kids to this!
And Grateful
Great jam and great vintage gear
Notice the Sunn cabs with the Fender Showman heads ? My late brother had the same Starfire Guild bass as Phil.
that exact location is now starbucks featuring the killer psuedodelic veggeie latte shot
Oh really? How long is the line??
Does the Starbucks play Dead music loudly ??
Bob Weir's MASTERPIECE "The Other One"
Based on True Life! BRAVO 🙌 🎶🎸
Thank you for downloading these earlier GD concerts. I was.2.5 yrs old in May of 68' 🌺🌸
The Eleven - always the highlight for me.
I always loved how Jerry was always so happy & just loved the music and us fans... I wanna go back in time to those concerts lol
wow just WOW! This is my favourite Dead. ACID PIGPEN Dead. Hells Angels Freaks and energy. Great stuff. They still have almost punk metal energy going here. Fucking ACE! My god this is good. Like LIVE DEAD II
My mate , an old hippy, cool as fk, met Jerry and the band by accident whilst smoking a joint on a boat somewhere in Europe. Said he was the nicest man in the world. He did also mention many joints being shared. Peace.
Incredible. Even without the wall of sound.
Wow. They're just killin' it!
Those dudes were having a blast making a living the way people can only dream about....sigh....
So many emotions crashing in on me. I miss you so much, Jerry.
I loved Jerry in anything but the pigtails were so cute when he wore them ! ❤️🐰🐇🌹☠️💀☀️🔥🕊️🪭🥺😏😇😍🥰😘
Thanks for posting this!!! I love the early days, nothing better!
That little kid at about 5:20 was getting his mind blown!
Back when music was really great. Still listening @73
sincere thanks for this upload
Amazing musicians . Amazing music . May the Dead live forever !
This is great. Kreutzmann looks like Elvis on the drums. Didn't know it all these years but have come to appreciate how good a bass player Lesh was, (is since he still plays).
clafong9 - check out images of singer Robert Goulet. He looks a LOT like this drummer!
Yeah and he had only been playing bass for a couple of years at this point. I think he is the most important bass player that ever lived. He totally invented this style of bass playing. Amazing
@misterwunderfull123 YEEEEESSS!
Jerry at May ‘68 is the best. The world was on fire, Jerry provided the soundtrack.
Best live concerts but just listening to their albums with headphones was just so magnificent! 😎✌️♥️
Jerry used Les Pauls a lot in these days up to the early 70s, I personally think he had the best sound when using them, I used to help set up his rigs for free beer and pot. He was on fire back then.
And Garcia has one of the earliest Les Pauls in his hands here...the trapeze tailpiece being a 'dead' giveaway.
He is quoted saying he didn’t like Les Pauls because his fingers got balled up in the strings
Bob Weir is such a great guitarist and, I believe, isn't often recognized enough for it.
Agree, BEAST of a guitar player....
No one fills on the spaces between the notes better than him!!!
seeing the style of how they played never gets old
Good-God-in-the-Mornin’ - Jerry’s hotter ‘n a Pistol in this recording ! This is “Anthem of the Sun” Live (GD’s 2nd LP 1968-my favorite) stuff. Just beautiful ! Saw them for the 1st time on Feb. 18, 1968 doing the same set - haven’t been the same since & I was there Straight ! Thanks much for posting.
this is ridiculously good
I was 13 yrs old living in DaBronx.
I remember my father coming home cursing about the radical hippies uptown in the city causing problems again.
Hahaha
✌️🌹🐢💀🎶⚡️
5 yrs later I was at Watkins Glenn
I've been a big fan of 60s/70s music since my teens, but never really fully clicked with the Grateful Dead for some reason (admittedly I didn't give them enough time). I recently started watching their live videos online for the first time this week and...now I get it! I'm hooked. I like the vocals and raw energy on these live performances a lot more than on the albums. The guitar work and bass interplay just stands out. Really unique style.
HiddenFormula check out some of our other videos on this channel or Deadvids website!
They are amazingly bood here. So blad someone filmed this. Shots of the crowd are great too
What a combination of talents! Garcia - student of folk, jugband music and guitar virtuoso. Lesh - classical scholar looking for innovation. Pigpen - grew up on R&B. Kreutzmam and Lesh - one of the first dual drum teams laying down complex and simple rythems. And Bobby - the young guy with the voice, eager to learn. An American music band!
Best American band of all time. Its not even close mate
Gotta love those pork chops on Garcia. With a Gibson Les Paul no less.
Mutton , mutton chops
no les*
My favorite Jerry sound is the alligator guitar from 70 to 72, 57 Strat!
Yes and a Les Paul with P90’s! Feel privileged to be able to view this, but wish the video had even a little of Jerry and Bob’s fingerwork.
Rare guitar I studied it a little twin reverbs. That guitar weir got is a rare one he played too
Watching this after watching their performance on Letterman ('93) is such a trip
The Dead I fell in love with
If only the video matched the audio.
It mostly is here: ua-cam.com/video/WFtQr_W3opM/v-deo.html
It is what it is . Spectacular
Right! Great visual, but the soundtrack is NOT from that performance.
Dude! I was just there last night! 1968, man! 1968!
So happy I found this video! The early years, changing the world one concert at a time.
Wow! That's some remarkable footage! Kreutzmann looks like such a badass, and Hart looks so ... young. Such amazing video of Pigpin! Jerry's sideburns are hideous, and Bobby never seems to change. Lesh looks healthy (wow). I'd give $1,000 to know the identities of the audience members and where they ended up. Great footage!
I was in the audience. After Columbia College and Columbia Teachers College, I taught history for 6 years at Rye Country Day School. Then realizing I wasn't making enough to live on I went searching for something new and was hired by IBM, where I worked for 15 years as a Systems Engineer, Marketing Representative, Recognition Event producer and press relations manager. When I left, I was the corporate product spokesman. Left IBM to work for HP, which got me back home to California. Retired after HP.