05
1986
Sources
Taper: Oade Brothers
2:28:19
Taper:
Oade Brothers
Transferrer:
Charlie Miller, Jim Wise, Scott Clugston
SHNID:
gd1986-05-11.140257.fob.schoeps.cmc4.mk41.oade.wise.miller.clugston.flac1644
Taper Notes:
View NotesNotes: - Thanks to the Oade brothers and crew for their master recording(s), as well as a proper transfer to hard disk, and my apologies for not properly acknowledging their efforts sooner. - Thanks to Jim Wise for the hard disk drive - Thanks to Charlie Miller for coordinating this effort - Thanks to the folks responsible for the shnid3217 Beyer M88 source which supplies a 0:15 patch in "He's Gone" to eliminate some static/crackle - PA crackle at approximately 2:16 of Iko Iko (present on all circulating copies) - To everyone who chanted "Let Phil Sing"......are you happy? - Other One space included in "The Other One" Mastered by Scott Clugston December 15, 2017
Taper: OldNeumanntapr
2:20:45
Taper:
OldNeumanntapr
Transferrer:
OldNeumanntapr
SHNID:
gd1986-05-11.168552.RealisticStereoCardioidCondenser33919.ont.flac1644
Source:
OTS; Left, Realistic Stereo Cardioid Condenser 33-919 (On Stand) >Sharp Boom Box
Lineage:
XLII Master Tapes Transferred Via Denon DR-M12HR Cassette Deck >Tascam DR100mkII (24bit/48kHZ) WAV >Audacity (EQ, Amplify, Track Splits, Minor Edits, Fades, Down Sample To 16bit/44.1kHz) >FLAC (Level 8) + Tags Via xACT 2.53
Taper Notes:
View NotesOldNeumanntapr Notes: This was my fourth Grateful Dead concert, the very first successful show that I recorded, and was a few days before my 21st birthday. After incurring a dismal failure trying to record the May 3 Cal Expo show, I borrowed a Realistic stereo microphone and a microphone stand from the Cuesta College Music Department, where I was going to school and also working for the music dept. I was still using my boom box, because that was the only portable deck I had at the time, but the results were better with the better microphone. (I had tried to hand-hold two mismatched old mics from the 1960s for the Cal Expo show. I only tried recording the Saturday show and it was such a disappointment that I went up front on the Sunday May 4 show and shot photos instead.) Because the band actually ALLOWED live recording, I really wanted to try and get a decent recording so I tried again at the Frost. My ex wife Nikki's best friend from high school was getting married in Morgan Hill just south of San Jose, on Sunday May 10, so I thought that since we were already going to the wedding we might as well go a little further and see the Dead again. We camped up on the mountain at Henry Coe State Park in Morgan Hill in my '67 VW bus after going to the wedding, and got up the next morning and drove to Palo Alto. I remember that we parked in the lots next to a newer VW Vanagon with some cool bumperstickers on the back window, one that said 'One Nuclear Bomb Can Ruin Your Whole Day.' I also remember 'Mr Willie', an ex-Oakland police officer that the Dead had hired for security, and Willie walking up and down the line outside the gates while telling the crowd, 'There's NO drinkin' in the line! No drinkin' in the line, so Please, ... keep it out of site!' I thought he was funny. We set up on the left side of the tapers section, which was the closest side to the entrance gates. The Frost had tiered levels of grass with concrete 'curbs' that separated each level. I had taken my Pentax MX 35mm camera with me and took some photos of the band during the first set, including a good shot of Bobby singing 'My Brother Esau'. I also took some photos of the tapers section with all the microphones, and my ex wife took one of me as well. The whole recording phenomena really blew my mind. I had NO IDEA what I was doing, and I paused the tape between songs in the first set to conserve tape and alleviate 'dead air', but I wish now that I would have just let the tape run. I waited too long to flip the first set tape and ended up with a cut in the middle of 'Might As Well' because of the segue out of 'Cassidy'. I was really happy to have a memento of the show to listen to afterward, but I was not happy with the sound quality of my Sharp boom box. (I can't remember the model number but it had detachable speakers that I left at home to save weight.) I was lucky to find that a friend of a friend of mine in Morro Bay had a Sony TC-153SD cassette portable and two Superscope EC7 cardioid condenser microphones that he was willing to sell me. I bought the deck and the mics for $240, which, (for me at the time), was a lot of money because I was a poor college student. Lee had worked at Pacific Stereo in San Luis Obispo in the 1970s and special ordered the Sony deck. He used it, and the microphones, mostly to record sounds of nature like ocean waves for a soundtrack to his acid trips. This recording has never been shared, or transferred before. Though I was able to work on it in Audacity to correct some of the flaws it is still a bit rough. It was, however, my first complete audience attempt, and is what started this 38-year odyssey of live music recording that includes over 200 total shows including 40 or more Dead shows and probably 20 or so other attempts that failed because of equipment problems. (Mostly because of my Sony D7 mis-loading, but there was a few cable-related catastrophes.) It has seriously been 'A Long Strange Trip,' and I thank the Grateful Dead for making open live taping available for me to experience. It wouldn't be until 1990 that I would try anything other than open 'sanctioned' recording.
Taper: Executive Crew, Mike Davis, Kenny Davis, John Hance, Aaron; patched out of Poris/Olness rig
2:24:38
Rating:
10.00 / 1 rating
Taper:
Executive Crew, Mike Davis, Kenny Davis, John Hance, Aaron; patched out of Poris/Olness rig
Transferrer:
Kyle Holbrook
SHNID:
gd1986-05-11.156611.nakomni.holbrook.flac24
Source:
1GEN AUDCA speed corrected 2.25% usig Audacity Microphones: Jaime Poris custom mics: Nakamichi capsules customized, attached to plexiglass plates spread 20 feet apart > dbx 224|customized > Dolby decode side of patch bay > Recorder: Sony TC-D5M no NR Maxell MX90 Location: OTS- ~150 feet from stage spread 20 feet apart
Lineage:
Original transfer: Sony TC-D5M > Sony TC-D5M Maxell MX90 Digital transfer: Nakamichi CR-5A > Benchmark Sonic AD2k @24/48 > Marantz PMD-661
Taper Notes:
View Notes** missed start ## The entire first track had technical difficulties in the Right channel so I patched the left and made it mono. & half way through a loud PA crackle occurs the story: As I was not at these shows this is more of what I have been told between the contemporaneous stories and those from years later. The previous weekend the tapers had been told not to try to go FOB at the Frost. Therefore Mike and Kenny chose to ride it out alongside Aaron's crew and patch in to their customized microphone, pre-amp and dbx noise reduction system. All the credit goes to Jaime Poris and James Olness who were some of the west coast tapers who comprised what I term the "second wave" of Grateful Dead recordists. These guys came of age in the late 1970's to early 1980's when the game was all about sneaking in the gear. By this time in 1986 Dan Healy had created the OTS (Official Tapers Section) and for certain tapers often correlated to certain venues this became a grand audio engineering experiment of "best practices" for recording live soundfields. The setup they used for these shows was a customized Nakamichi 700 microphone with each omni capsule placed into plexiglass plate for increased frequency response. Also using a custom microphone pre-amp instead of the onboard Sony TC-D5M preamps. This signal was fed into a dbx224 customized for battery power and then into a splitter box which had both a dbx and Dolby output. This recording's master originated from the dbx output side then decoded for this first gen copy. These are truly unique recordings which sound equally as good as all the fancy words spent describing the gear. For an imgur link to an Audio Magazine January 1988 edition discussing the Poris/Olness set-up: https://imgur.com/a/ELRxIKC
Taper: Executive Crew, Mike Davis, Kenny Davis, John Hance, Aaron; patched out of Poris/Olness rig
2:24:39
Taper:
Executive Crew, Mike Davis, Kenny Davis, John Hance, Aaron; patched out of Poris/Olness rig
Transferrer:
Kyle Holbrook
SHNID:
gd1986-05-11.156610.nakomni.holbrook.flac16
Source:
1GEN AUDCA speed corrected 2.25% usig Audacity Microphones: Jaime Poris custom mics: Nakamichi capsules customized, attached to plexiglass plates spread 20 feet apart > dbx 224|customized > Dolby decode side of patch bay > Recorder: Sony TC-D5M no NR Maxell MX90 Location: OTS- ~150 feet from stage spread 20 feet apart
Lineage:
Original transfer: Sony TC-D5M > Sony TC-D5M Maxell MX90 Digital transfer: Nakamichi CR-5A > Benchmark Sonic AD2k @24/48 > Marantz PMD-661
Taper Notes:
View Notes** missed start ## The entire first track had technical difficulties in the Right channel so I patched the left and made it mono. & half way through a loud PA crackle occurs the story: As I was not at these shows this is more of what I have been told between the contemporaneous stories and those from years later. The previous weekend the tapers had been told not to try to go FOB at the Frost. Therefore Mike and Kenny chose to ride it out alongside Aaron's crew and patch in to their customized microphone, pre-amp and dbx noise reduction system. All the credit goes to Jaime Poris and James Olness who were some of the west coast tapers who comprised what I term the "second wave" of Grateful Dead recordists. These guys came of age in the late 1970's to early 1980's when the game was all about sneaking in the gear. By this time in 1986 Dan Healy had created the OTS (Official Tapers Section) and for certain tapers often correlated to certain venues this became a grand audio engineering experiment of "best practices" for recording live soundfields. The setup they used for these shows was a customized Nakamichi 700 microphone with each omni capsule placed into plexiglass plate for increased frequency response. Also using a custom microphone pre-amp instead of the onboard Sony TC-D5M preamps. This signal was fed into a dbx224 customized for battery power and then into a splitter box which had both a dbx and Dolby output. This recording's master originated from the dbx output side then decoded for this first gen copy. These are truly unique recordings which sound equally as good as all the fancy words spent describing the gear. For an imgur link to an Audio Magazine January 1988 edition discussing the Poris/Olness set-up: https://imgur.com/a/ELRxIKC
Taper: Mike Darby
2:19:26
Rating:
8.00 / 1 rating
Taper:
Mike Darby
Transferrer:
Keo
SHNID:
gd1986-05-11.Senn421sNak300s.Darby.120513.Flac1644
Source:
Master Audience Recorded By Mr. Darby; SennheiserMD421s+Nakamichi CM300/CP4s (PAS/DFC/2nd Row Of OTS/6 Feet High)> Sony MX 10>Sony TC-D5M, Tapes Maxell MX; Transfer Information:Tascam 112 MKII (XLR Out)>Tascam HD-P2 @ 24/48> HDD>Amadeus Pro (Tracking/Fades/FLAC8); Tracks Renamed/Dithered/Flacked With Korg Aqua To 16/44 By Keo; SBE's Checked/Fixed With Trader's Little Helper; Metadata Tagging With Tag&Rename
Taper Notes:
View NotesComments:Another Huge Huge Thanks out to Mr. Darby for recording and sharing his source for this second night at the Frost!!This is another excellent recording and share from the Darby collection and the GD's spring 1986 tour! AS ALWAYS ENJOY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!