06/xx/67 Cafe au Go-Go, New York, NY Like Walter, I too saw my first Grateful Dead concert at the now long-defunct Cafe au Go Go in June of 1967. I can also recall having to order a non alcoholic beverage as part of the cover charge (I think my ticket cost $3.50 and the drink cost $2.00). I must admit, the names of those drinks were rather intriguing! Prior to the band taking the stage, I ordered an ice cream soda called The Trip. My friend Jerry( no, not Garcia), ordered another ice cream soda called LSD. Not to be outdone, our other friend, Julie, ordered a plain cherry soda named Panama Red. So there we sat, sipping liquid "psychedelia" through straws admiring the cozy atmosphere of this East Village basement club. The walls were unpainted red brick sparsely covered with drapes and pictures and the room held perhaps 150 people. That night we were fortunate to have seats that were no more than twenty feet from the stage. I was dressed to kill replete with a paisley shirt, red corduroy jeans, "beatle boots" and love beads around my neck. The opening act was a solo performer who, as I recall, tried to be like Bob Dylan... you know... the acoustic guitar and the harmonica brace which he had to keep adjusting. We all got through the set and waited for the Dead to take the stage. Having bought their first album only weeks before, I was floored by Morning Dew and Voila Lee Blues and silently hoped they would play these tunes which, if my memory still works, they did. I also had to check out these guys with strange names like Pigpen and Captain Trips!! I mean, we were from New York, where strange things were (and still are) commonplace. I'll tell you...a great time was had by all that night, some thirty-one years ago. I also saw the Jefferson Airplane there, perhaps in 1968, but I can't be sure when. The opening band was a great bunch of guys from Canada called the Paupers. Later on, in the seventies, Richie Havens owned the venue but by then, the Fillmore East had taken most of the customers. The club eventually became just another folk venue and the Village had far too many. So the Cafe au Go Go passed on into history. However, one can still find vestiges of the club. It was located on the south side of Bleeker Street just west of La Guardia Place about fifty feet from the southwest corner of the intersection. Look for a corner building with pillars and you will notice some shops situated below street level. One shop sells used CD's. Go in and you will see the brick walls I mentioned earlier. Unfortunately, they have been painted. This is history my friends... the Grateful Dead played there! Carl Jaslo