Grateful Dead: Cornell '77
Grateful Dead: Cornell '77

Movie spotlight

Grateful Dead: Cornell '77

2017
Movie
10 min
English

A short documentary about the Grateful Dead's legendary May 8, 1977 show at Barton Hall at Cornell University.

Insights

Director: Various (Live Recording)Genres: Live Album, Rock, Jam Band

Plot Summary

Grateful Dead: Cornell '77 is a multi-disc live album featuring the complete performances from May 8, 1977, at Cornell University's Barton Hall. This recording is widely regarded as one of the band's finest shows, capturing the group at the height of their improvisational prowess. The album includes iconic performances of songs like "St. Stephen," "The Eleven," and "Help on the Way/Slipknot!/Franklin's Tower." It showcases the Grateful Dead's unique blend of rock, folk, blues, and jazz improvisation in a legendary concert setting.

Critical Reception

As a live album capturing a legendary performance, Cornell '77 has been met with overwhelming acclaim from both critics and fans. It is consistently cited as a definitive example of the Grateful Dead's live magic, praised for its pristine sound quality and the band's exceptional energy and musicianship on that specific night. The release solidified the 1977 era as a golden age for the band's live shows.

What Reviewers Say

  • Exceptional sound quality captures the band in peak form.

  • A landmark recording showcasing the Grateful Dead's improvisational genius.

  • Considered by many fans and critics to be one of the greatest live albums ever released.

Google audience: Audience reviews consistently praise the remarkable sound quality and the electrifying performance by the Grateful Dead. Fans frequently highlight this recording as a definitive representation of the band's legendary live shows, with many considering it a treasure.

Awards & Accolades

None notable (as a live album release, though the concert itself is legendary)

Fun Fact

The May 8, 1977, concert at Cornell's Barton Hall was so legendary that it was unofficially bootlegged and circulated among fans for decades before its official release, often referred to as the 'holy grail' of Grateful Dead recordings.

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