Oh, boy!
One of my Winter Solstice gifts from Senior Management was Amelia Davis & David Gans's brand new coffee table book The Grateful Dead By Jim Marshall: Photos And Stories From The Formative Years, 1966-1977!
Gans we all know; Ms Davis was Jim's assistant the last 18 (IIRC) years of his life - and thus has control of his archive. Many amazing pix - a goodly number never before seen, and more never before seen by me, with blurbs & short essays from many of our favorite characters.
Among the highlights for me:
A number of shots of people with instruments I've never even heard they'd played (Garcia on a block-inlay 335, and a sunburst Strat with a rosewood 'board & a flag decal south of the wiggle stick, Weir on a '68-'71 Les Paul Custom) and more shots of things they played briefly (a bunch of Jer with his late '52 or early '53 Goldtop, converted to a Tune-O-Matic bridge off a Gibson acoustic & a 330/335-style diamond trapeze tailpiece; I take especial note of it as I think a friend may have owned it in the late '70s).
Then there things like:
Yes, we get the famous color shot of the 5 core SF bands (Dead, Airplane, Quicksilver, Big brother, and Charlatans) together in the Panhandle - plus B&W shots of everyone walking to the shoot, and a great one of the managers; the Charlatans apparently didn't have a manager, but the other 4 had 6 betwixt them (JA & GD 2 each), and they're all in a line - with each guy reaching into the next guy's pocket. Perfect managers shot!
And then there are the actual music shots, including a number of one-offs, including proof of the long-rumored Garcia/Traffic street jam in support of striking KMPX-FM employees (and proof Jer enjoyed hisself greatly doing so), and what was apparently a one-night band dubbed "Grateful Butterplane". Alas, we don't get a rundown of the whole night, but we do get a fine shot of Jack, Jerry, Elvin, Spenser, and Jorma in full swing.
Opened it about 11 hours ago, and (with time out to make & eat dinner, calm Her down because I was spending too much time enjoying Her gift, etc.) I have 8 pages of 288 left to go - and that's just an afterword by John Mayer.
The book is highly recommended.
Peter