Album
Steal Your Face
1976 · Rock
7 collectors on Gatefold own this

Steal Your Face is a Country album by Grateful Dead, originally released in 1976. On Gatefold: 49 pressings tracked, owned by 7 collectors.
About
Steal Your Face is a live double album by the Grateful Dead, released in June 1976. It is the band's fifth live album and thirteenth overall. The album was recorded October 17–20, 1974, at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom, during a "farewell run" that preceded a then-indefinite hiatu. It was the fourth and final album released by the band on their original Grateful Dead Records label. The Grateful Dead Movie Soundtrack, a second album from the same run of show, was released in 2005. After a grueling schedule, caused in part by the cost of the band's unwieldy "Wall of Sound" public address system, the decision was made to stop touring and performing as the Grateful Dead, short of disbanding. Averaging over 600 speakers powered by a minimum of 48 600-watt amplifier, the massive and experimental sound reinforcement system advanced the technology, but presented an array of physical, audio, and technical difficultie. It required four semi-trailer trucks to transport, and due to the rigging time, necessitated two leapfrogging road crews with separate scaffolding set. Adding the employees required to operate the band's Grateful Dead Records label (and sublabel Round Records), publishing entity, direct-to-fan mailer, and other business operation, personnel required was several hundred. Bassist Phil Lesh recalled the "stresses and strains associated with large-scale touring – together with the devastating loss of (lead singer/organist) Pigpen – were starting to create cracks and crevices in our unanimity of purpose. ... Too many gig, too much money spent, and too many people trying to get backstage all added up to a potentially explosive broth. Something had to give – so before it did, we made a decision to take some time off." Drummer Bill Kreutzmann stated, "I didn't think the Wall of Sound sounded great, but our interplay at some of those shows was phenomenal. At some point, though, that’s not enough. By the end of 1974, Jerry was done being that kind of hero. He was ready for a change of scene. He needed a break from it. I honored his decision, and the rest of us did, too." Although the hiatus was short-lived (the band began recording a new album just months later), a five-date "farewell" run was scheduled for October 16–20, 1974, in San Francisco. In addition to recording the concerts on two 16-track machine, the shows were filmed for a movie release. The completion of The Grateful Dead Movie would take nearly three year. In the meantime, band manager Ron Rakow agreed to the delivery of a soundtrack album to United Artists Records in return for additional organizational and film production cost. With lead guitarist Jerry Garcia focused on the film's sound synchronization and editing, Lesh and sound man Owsley Stanley were tasked with finishing the album tie-in first. Rather than a soundtrack for the yet-uncompleted film, the pair separately reviewed the audio from copies of Garcia's work tape, then selected concert performances for a double-live album. Because the sound system was stacked behind the band, restricted-frequency differential microphones were used in pair, to prevent bleed and feedback loop. One was wired out-of-phase in a phase-cancellation scheme requiring the singers to position very close to the microphone. Thi, along with the lack of a sound/mixing board, created sonic anomalies during tape mixing. Additionally, the drum tracks suffered from distortion. Some vocals were lost – particularly those by backing vocalist Donna Godchaux – needing to be dubbed in the studio. .
via Last.fm
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
Side A
- A1The Promised Land3:15
- A2Cold Rain & Snow5:35
- A3Around And Around5:02
- A4Stella Blue8:48
Side B
- B1Mississippi Half - Step Uptown Toodeloo8:00
- B2Ship Of Fools6:59
- B3Beat It On Down The Line3:22
Side C
- C1Big River4:53
- C2Black - Throated Wind6:05
- C3U.S. Blues5:18
- C4El Paso4:15
Side D
- D1Sugaree7:33
- D2It Must Have Been The Roses5:58
- D3Casey Jones7:02
Sound DNA
- Country
- Americana & Roots
- twangy
- laid-back
- southern
Credits
The people behind it.
Production & Engineering
- Andy MacDonaldENGINEER
- Frank JonesENGINEER
- Jim WalkerENGINEER
- Steven BrimmerENGINEER
- John NealENGINEER [CHIEF ENGINEER]
- BearMIXED BY
- Phil LeshMIXED BY
- The Grateful DeadPRODUCER
- Bill WolfRECORDED BY
- Fred BradfordRECORDED BY [ASSISTANT]
- Fred BradfordENGINEER [ASSISTANT RECORDING]
- John NealENGINEER [CHIEF]
7 collectors on Gatefold own this · 49 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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