I was wondering if John knew about this one. I found it in a local shop here and just had to pick it up for my companion as she almost certainly attended the gig as a teenager. It came out in 2010 on Sony so therefore is not a bootleg - although it sounds like one. Subtitled "Signe's Farewell", it is a recording of Signe Anderson's last performance with the band. I daresay it was made on a reel to reel with a microphone slung over the balcony. The quality is serviceable but not professional. The band are endearingly enthusiastic but equally unprofessional. Skip Spence has departed the drum seat to make way for Spencer Dryden. The only musician who really sounds like he knows what he's doing is Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady has yet to find his style and Paul Kantner's 12 string drifts further and further out of tune as the show progresses (as 12 strings are wont to do). Signe and Marty Balin sing like their lives depend on it. They do material from the first and second albums along with a hilariously inept highschool band version of "Midnight Hour". Charming, if you like.
The best track is a version of Donovan's "Fat Angel" - which also features on their "official" live album of a couple of years later ("Bless It's Pointed Little Head"). The later version, having been played in thoroughly, is an accomplished exercise in psychedelic dynamics but this is just a joyful splurge. In it is all the hope and excitement and keen anticipation of the time. There's the message-in-a-bottle from a very distant age.
Recommended for fans.
