Album of the Day
Cornell 5/8/77
Forty years ago today, Grateful Dead played one of the most collected, traded and debated concerts by any group ever. Their performance at Cornell University’s Barton Hall was a favorite of longtime band archivist Dick Latvala, and was added to the Library of Congress’ prestigious National Recording Registry, and with the commercial debut of CORNELL 5/8/77, it's easy to hear what the fuss was about. The new three-CD set, mastered from the fabled “Betty boards” tapes, captures the Dead on a spring tour leading up to TERRAPIN STATION’s release in late July. The set list offers a sweeping retrospective of the band’s career, touching on the early psychedelic days (“St. Stephen”), the rootsy early-Seventies (“Uncle John’s Band”) and songs from the upcoming album (“Estimated Prophet”). In the words of producer David Lemieux, CORNELL 5/8/77 may be “minute-for-minute, song-for-song, the most high quality Grateful Dead release ever produced.”