From the Vault: Property from the Grateful Dead and Friends
From the Vault: Property from the Grateful Dead and Friends
Property of Grateful Dead Productions
Lot Closed
October 14, 06:42 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000 - 5,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property of Grateful Dead Productions
Wall of Sound
McIntosh 2300 power amp with original road case
Solid-state power amplifier (10.5 x 19 x 17"), 300 watts per channel or 600 watts monoblock, with anodized gold and black panel. Front panel: white tape reading “1009” below power meters, duct tape reading “M-7” above McIntosh emblem, Steal Your Face sticker below McIntosh emblem. Right panel: Hard Truckers Speakers ticker. Left panel: Steal Your Face sticker. Serial number: 1Y621. With original orange Anvil rolling road case, with Grateful Dead sticker to front, and “K27A” in felt-tip to right side.
“Big” Steve Parish: “This amp was used in the Wall of Sound.”
The Grateful Dead’s commitment to playing live with the best sound possible lead them to using audiophile rather than commercial sound equipment and the legendary build quality and low distortion of McIntosh fulfilled both the sonic and roadworthy requirements. An afternoon at the legendary Watkins Glen concert further influenced their concert set up, helping pave the way for the Wall of Sound. Janet Fuhrman, amp technician for the Dead, remembered:
“One memorable tour in July, 1973 included a stop at the Watkins Glen Jam, held at the famed auto raceway. This all day outdoor concert featured just three super groups – the Grateful Dead, the Band, and the Allman Brothers. But that bill was enough to attract the largest crowd in rock history, if not in all of American history – 600,000, easily topping Woodstock’s smaller but better remembered crowd of 300,000. The Dead would need a massive amount of amplification to reach all those people. At the time, they insisted on using only McIntosh 2300 power amps, an audiophile rather than pro audio product, made in small quantity and hard to find on short notice. The McIntosh factory happened to be near Watkins Glen, in Binghamton in upstate New York. We were already backstage at the concert, and every road in the area was clogged with concert traffic. My assignment was to get five more of those giant amps, any way I could. Sam Cutler, the former Rolling Stones road manager now working for the Grateful Dead, handed me $6000 in cash and the use of a helicopter and pilot. Though it was a weekend and the McIntosh factory was closed, I tracked down the owner at his home. The pilot flew me from the venue to downtown Binghamton. Helicopter landings there were not an everyday affair, and there was great media interest. Flashbulbs popped and reporters stuck microphones in my face. In the summer heat, I was wearing only shorts and a concert T-shirt, with the cash wadded up in my pocket. I met up with the owner, who drove me to the factory and sold me the amps off the production floor. We drove back to town in his station wagon, his wife and kids aboard on their way to a summer vacation, and transferred the amps into the copter. At over 100 lbs each plus two people, it was a heavy load for a small helicopter. We had a very scary moment as we took off, coming within inches of crashing into a highrise building. But back at Watkins Glen, the sight of that enormous crowd from the air was unforgettable. In the moment I landed, delivering the goods, I became an instant hero.”
REFERENCE
Janet Furman, http://furmanhistory.com/
For McIntosh restoration questions, please contact Audio Classics in Binghamton, NY
Photograph © Ed Perlstein. To purchase a print, or view more of Ed Perlstein’s work, visit https://www.musicimages.com/.