LiveAuctionTalk com Highlights The Grateful Dead in its Weekly Free Article

Released on: September 17, 2007, 11:44 am

Press Release Author: Rosemary McKittrick

Industry: Internet & Online

Press Release Summary: : Rosemary McKittrick's website gives you all the
information you need about what's happening at auction around the country. Visit
the site and sign up for a free weekly subscription.

Press Release Body: Santa Fe, Sept. 17, 2007--The first time Lawrence "Ram Rod"
Shurtliff showed up in the Grateful Dead's life he rode in on a Harley wearing a
chain and lock around his waist.

He said "Names Ramrod -- Kesey sent me -- I hear you need a good man."

That was in 1967. Shurtliff started out as the rock band's truck driver. By the
1970's he had grown so irreplaceable he was named president of the Grateful Dead
board of directors. For three decades he was more than just a roadie.

\"When things were crazy, Ram Rod kept everybody grounded. He was the trusted soul
of the Grateful Dead,\" said the band's publicist and historian Dennis McNally.

Born in Montana, Ram Rod was raised in the ranch country of eastern Oregon. The
nickname "Ram Rod" came in the summer of 1966 when he went to spend time with Ken
Kesey and the Merry Pranksters in Mexico. Kesey asked for someone to ramrod
stuffing seven Pranksters into a Volkswagen bug.

Shurtliff volunteered calling himself Ramon Rodriguez Rodriguez. Prankster Neal
Cassady christened him \"Ram Rod\" and the name stuck.

While the Grateful Dead went from being a small time band to a big time legend, Ram
Rod was in the background managing mounds of equipment. Setting up. Tearing down.
He was there for every show making sure everything and everybody was taken care of.


"He led a group of equipment technicians that were second to none," said, Sam
Cutler, former Tour Manager for the Grateful Dead and the Rolling Stones. He wasn't
pushy, loud or difficult--he was simply there doing his job.

No surprise Ram Rod ended up with so many relics of the band's past. It didn't hurt
that he also had a huge barn capable of storing memories, magic and memorabilia of
one of the cutting edge rock groups of the 20th century.

On May 8, 2007, Bonhams & Butterfields, San Francisco, featured the "Life on the
Golden Road with the Grateful Dead: The Ram Rod Shurtliff Collection" at auction The
115 lots in the auction sold for over $1.1 million.

Read the entire article at www.LiveAuctionTalk.com.

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Web Site: http://www.LiveAuctionTalk.com

Contact Details: Rosemary McKittrick
info@LiveAuctionTalk.com
www.LiveAuctionTalk.com
505-989-7210

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