My post on Old And In The Way in Santa Cruz on Friday, October 5, 1973 referenced some of the band’s contemporaneous gigs. One of these was a gig the next night in Berkeley.
In comments, I then noted that Vassar was advertised with Tut Taylor that same Saturday at the Exit/In in Nashville, whereupon commenter extraordinaire runonguiness pointed me to Andrew Bernstein’s California Slim (2013, p. 139), which published a handbill showing Jerry, Vassar and the OAITW crew at Homer’s Warehouse that same night.
So, ex ante, Vassar was triple-booked this night.
While I haven’t checked for the Tut Taylor record that was being recorded this night, there is no tape of any OAITW, alas. But, thanks to various miraculous institutions (the concert review) and technologies (microfilm), I happen to know he and Jerry and the rest played the Berkeley gig, because Len Lyons (1973b) evaluated it in the next week’s Berkeley Barb. He loved Asleep At The Wheel, which opened, and he admired Vassar, but he had little but contempt for Jerry’s banjo playing and OAITW’s whole style. I paste the review below.
Mr. Lyons was no Garcia fan. A few months earlier, he had excoriated the recorded-for-Fantasy July 10, 1973 JGMS gig (see, among others, here, here, here and here), urging readers, “Don’t bother buying the record. Five years from now, you may be hearing it for free over Safeway’s MUZAK system” (Lyons 1973a). He was, as I say, not a fan.
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