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    heatherlew
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    "We left with our minds sufficiently blown and still peaking..."

    We're headed back to that peak with the newly returned tapes from Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena, Binghamton, 11/6/77. The Grateful Dead's last touring show of 1977 finds them going for broke, taking chances on fan favorites like "Jack Straw," "Friend Of The Devil," and "The Music Never Stopped," carving out righteous grooves on a one-of-kind "Scarlet>Fire" and a tremendous "Truckin'." An ultra high energy show, with a first set that rivals the second? Not unheard of, but definitely rare. Hear for yourself...

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 25 features liner notes by Rob Bleetstein, photos by Bob Minkin, and original art by our 2018 Dave's Picks Artist-In-Residence Tim McDonagh. As always, it has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and it is limited to 18,000 individually numbered copies*.

    *Limited to 2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

    Get one before they are gone, gone, gone.

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  • Thin
    Joined:
    Music's Over, Jerry's reaction
    Seth - Listened to "Music's Over" from Absolutely Live. Great version! Very passionate. Now for that apology: I'm truly very sorry for you that your favorite recording doesn't have more low end. Maybe that's "their sound" and y'all like it, which is great, but its not my bag (and that's OK!). The organ (non-bass), cymbals/snare, and vocals are all very high in the mix and "up front" making the overall sound mid-high. Guitar mid-volume. The "bass" (or simulated bass) is clearly lower in the mix (my EQ reflects this) and of course has the organ sound -"wuf" instead of "bop" - no compression. I'd do anything to hear a real bass at full volume in there, especially in the dynamic part of the jam where the band is "3/3 timing" (11:00~). Actually, it would be nice to hear the bass do ANYTHING more inventive than redundantly repeat the EXACT same pattern over and over... no variation whatsoever! I find it distractingly redundant... A separate bass player would have been a little louder and "present", and would have been able to focus on a little more creativity with the bassline, unlike Manzarek who was distracted with his right hand lead he was playing much of the time. Can you imagine Brent repeating the same 4 bass notes throughout a 15 minute Dark Star so he could focus on the right hand, and saying "Yeah, I'm glad Phil's not here - Brent on bass sounds JUST as good!". I think Jerry's opinion of the Doors was possibly colored by the fact that Morrison stood for everything things Jerry couldn't relate to: self importance, L.A., proclamation of himself as a Lizard King and all the accompanying pantomime, the sex symbol thing, whipping out his dick, the drunk/belligerent screaming persona and all the stories he heard from the guy who had to "handle' Morrison during his boozy aggravated arrests - NOT a guy I could imagine chilling on a couch and shooting the breeze with Jerry. That combined with Jerry's opinion that their live sound was "very brittle sound live, a three piece band with no bass" (and ALL the other stuff he said about their music) left him flat from a musical AND character perspective. deadegad - Thanks for sharing that "The Doors themselves were aware of the 'thinness' issue as other described their live sound. They were planning a more proper tour after LA Woman and wanted to bring Elvis' bassist Jerry Sheff on that tour". I didn't realize that they were planning to finally add a bass player on stage.... that's a tour I would have liked to hear.
  • reijo29
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    Ray Manzarek
    First off Thin, glad you got to listen to that. And I guess I take those shortcomings in lack of full sound as simply being the sound of the Doors. And I do sometimes have an issue with the repetitive simple organ Bass lines. Great point on that. But overall I like it and I think Ray repeats a lot as he is waiting on Jim to do what he does. Perhaps he gives Jim the space and hopes that Jim behaves and keeps somewhat to the structure of the song. I may be biased in liking most of it cause I grew up with it. Mustin- Thanks so much for posting that Ray Manzarek story. It's interesting in getting a taste of the polar opposite dynamic of the LA and San Francisco rock scene. The whole I don’t know whether to call him “Pig” or “Mr. Pen” had me cracking up out loud. It's good to laugh at all this. Sounds like a true Spinal Tap moment the day the Doors encountered the Dead. Both bands seemed to take themselves a bit too seriously that day of the shared bill.
  • SkullTrip
    Joined:
    Close the Doors
    Can somebody close the fucking Doors already? The stench of self-stroking insecurity is flooding the room.
  • mustin321
    Joined:
    GD vs. The Doors
    From Ray's book... "The Dead’s support system was enormous. They had huge amps and many roadies, old ladies and groupies and yes-men, personal cooks and gophers and gurus and soundmen and manager types. Consequently, they had no need for normal human intercourse and/or discourse. They were completely insulated. It was a little world of its own and they were perfectly content to remain inside…with you locked out. I never did get to know any of them. I barely talked to any of them. I did try to communicate with their organ player, one “Pig Pen,” but that turned into a complete fiasco. Here’s what happened. The Doors and the Dead are playing together at some outdoor festival–type gig. The Dead are the headliners (it’s early ’67). They have a ****ing wall of amplifiers. It’s like the wall in Fritz Lang’s Destiny. It dwarfs any human standing in front of it. And drum sets, two of them. And guitars everywhere. And…a Vox Continental Organ! Just like mine. Set up stage right. Just where I set up. They have a sound check in the afternoon and it takes forever. They noodle, they fool around, they play out of tune, they try to tune up…but fail…and finally play a song. Vocals are out of harmony, guitars are tuned to some arcane, eccentric mode that each musician has kept as his own private secret, not telling the fellow next to him what the mode is, and the rhythm section is at cross purposes with each other, laying down what seems to be two separate and distinct rock beats that have no relation to each other. In other words, it’s a typical Grateful Dead song/jam. They finish and, to them, everything seems fine. The musicians begin to leave the stage and the roadies lovingly gather up all the guitars. Everything else has to stay exactly where it is. The drums are not allowed to be moved. Pig Pen’s organ must not be moved. Fritz Lang’s wall of Destiny is impossible to move. For our sound check—and performance—John’s drums will have to be set up on the floor, in front of the existing pair of drum risers. No riser for John. The Dead have taken both of them. John’s pissed, as well he should be. I take the opportunity to run up to Pig Pen. I don’t know whether to call him “Pig” or “Mr. Pen.” Mister sounds a bit formal between long-hairs and “Pig” sounds like an insult. I opted for the all-purpose, ubiquitous “man.” “Hey, man,” I say, bounding onto the stage before he retreats into the womblike miasma of Dead sycophants. “I’m the keyboard player with the Doors.” “So?…” He’s slow and unenthusiastic. I extend my hand but he doesn’t take it. Actually, he doesn’t even really see it. His pace is slow. I try to be jolly. “I play a Vox Continental just like yours.” “It can’t be moved,” he says. “I know that.” I smile, hoping to somehow communicate with this fellow musician. “What I want to ask is…instead of bringing my organ onstage and placing it in front of yours…I simply use yours.” “You wanna what?” He is slow. “I want to use your Vox. I play the exact same thing. I’ll just set my piano bass on top of your organ and it’ll all be simple and easy. Nothing has to be moved.” His head starts to shake back and forth. He isn’t liking the idea. But he is understanding the idea. I’m thankful for that. I press on. "If I have to bring my organ up, I’ll have to set it up right in front of yours. I play on the same side of the stage, just like you.” “So…?” “Then there’ll be two Vox organs on stage. One in front of the other. It’ll look ridiculous. People will think, ‘Why are there two identical organs onstage? Why doesn’t the guy from the Doors play the one that’s already there? Why did he have to bring up a duplicate organ?’ You see, man, it’s absurd.” Wrong word. Pig Pen didn’t like that word. His face scrunched up. Absurd was not a word that was used in the Grateful Dead camp. Too revealing. Too pointed. Even too inner-directed. The Doors, at least Jim and Ray, used the word freely. After all, isn’t the post–World War II second half of the twentieth century totally absurd? Do we have to add to the absurdity? Isn’t the whole point of psychedelics to break down the walls of absurdity and reestablish a divine intuition amongst the human species on this good earth? Well, of course it is. And the Grateful Dead is supposed to be psychedelic, but here I am having an absurd conversation with a person called Pig Pen. Man! “Nobody uses the Grateful Dead’s equipment,” he finally said. It was like the Dead party line and he had it well memorized. “I’m not asking to use the Dead’s equipment. I know these amps are all custom built for you guys. We’ll use our own amps. And we’ll use our own drums.” “Damn right you will,” Pig grunted. He was getting testy. “I know every drummer has his own setup. But the Vox organ…it’s generic.” “What…?” “They’re all the same! Yours is just like mine. They’re identical. It would be so clean and easy if I didn’t have to bring mine up.” I gave him my best back-slapping smile of camaraderie. “What do ya say, man? Come on, can I use your organ?” He paused for a couple of beats. Nice dramatic moment, I thought. Then the hammer…“No way, Jack. I told you, no one uses the Grateful Dead’s equipment.” And he turned and lumbered off, into the miasma. I gave his retreating back a peace sign and muttered to myself…“Share and share alike, ehh, brother?” Then more loudly to his rear end girth…“Peace and love, man.” He didn’t even hear me. He was lost in his own little world. His very secure little world. It was an absurd encounter." -- Thanks Mr. Dc for mentioning that. I didn't know about this tale.
  • Cousins Of The…
    Joined:
    Ray's recollections
    Does seem like the typical opener/headliner dynamics at work. There might be some slight exaggeration in there :-) "guitars are tuned to some arcane, eccentric mode that each musician has kept as his own private secret, not telling the fellow next to him what the mode is..."
  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Just like Elvis...
    ...Jim Morrison faked his death in Paris. He is alive and well and living in South Africa, or Honduras... or maybe Las Vegas, I hear he's a big fan of the all-you-can-eat buffets.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    My new word of the day....
    ....ABSURD.
  • LoveJerry
    Joined:
    Weeeehooooo
    I've been listening to road trips Austin 1971 November 15th getting ready for Dave's picks 26. The Sound quality is really really good. I have not listen to this in a long time. And the set list is really really good. I hope Dave's picks 26 sounds this good.
  • Mr.Dc
    Joined:
    The Doors and Jerry's comments
    From what I understand, Jerry was commenting on how the doors sounded in 1966 or very early 67. At that time, the Doors had cheaper equipment and did alot more covers. Weird to see Jerry slam another group of musicians in such a harsh and dismissive way, especially if it was just based off a couple early shows he saw before they had even really become the Doors we all know and had their sound dialed in. There is the story of Ray Manzerek and Pigpen having a heated exchange over the use of some keyboards during a show in which they were both billed, I think that indident could actually be one of the main reasons Jerry had such hard feelings towards them. I personally really enjoy quite a few of the Door's available live recordings, and I don't seem to find their sound to be nearly as "thin" as most people do. Maybe that thin sound, just sounds to me like how the Doors are supposed to sound.
  • Thin
    Joined:
    Rejoi29 re bass
    Thanks Rejoi29 - I'll check it out. Maybe the first album had no bass player? Who knows. From Rolling Stone: "The Doors famously lacked a bassist during live sets, instead relying on Ray Manzarek's Fender Rhodes' keyboard bass to lock into the rhythm with Densmore. For their studio albums, the band quietly supplemented their core lineup with session pros handling the low end. Some of these contributions were overdubbed separately from the band, but for L.A. Woman, they wanted the live sound of musicians playing together. Botnick suggested Jerry Scheff, fresh from backing Elvis Presley at Las Vegas' International Hotel. Morrison, a massive Presley fan, was thrilled. So was Densmore. " Again, I love the Doors. Always have - listened to them a TON in high school (very high...). I just never dug their live stuff - was always disappointed when I tracked down the DATs... similar to Jerry's "I can't put my finger on it but it didn't grab me".... It was when I heard that other band a few months ago and started talking to the B3 player about how (and why) he likes having a string bass on stage that it clicked - that's why I brought it up.
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"We left with our minds sufficiently blown and still peaking..."

We're headed back to that peak with the newly returned tapes from Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena, Binghamton, 11/6/77. The Grateful Dead's last touring show of 1977 finds them going for broke, taking chances on fan favorites like "Jack Straw," "Friend Of The Devil," and "The Music Never Stopped," carving out righteous grooves on a one-of-kind "Scarlet>Fire" and a tremendous "Truckin'." An ultra high energy show, with a first set that rivals the second? Not unheard of, but definitely rare. Hear for yourself...

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 25 features liner notes by Rob Bleetstein, photos by Bob Minkin, and original art by our 2018 Dave's Picks Artist-In-Residence Tim McDonagh. As always, it has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and it is limited to 18,000 individually numbered copies*.

*Limited to 2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

Get one before they are gone, gone, gone.

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from tying Ray Manzarek to the railroad tracks, where Little Nell will keep him company until the 4:10 from Yuma passes through... heh heh heh. "Pig, no Pig"? The plot thickens. Or Bolo just dropped a hambone into the chile con carne. First, bacon, then what? Tofu? That'd be the difference between 1971 and 1976. Gotta believe, based on 18+ months of uninterrupted ABCD Enterprises-related releases, that such a credit will roll again in the 2018 box, so that "narrows it down" to 1971-1980, right? We may well have covered the 2-3 strongest possibilities -- Pig-centric box from the sweet spot years, Summer '73 for reasons previously stated, or Spring '73 on the Pig-No Pig "clue." If we've nailed it somehow, Bolo's visits to the forum now are solely intended to turn on the fog machine and roil the speculation. Which is a job he seems to relish, and, he's damn good at it...
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I thought it made more sense as sort of Remembering Pig or equiv.. Yes.. nice call 4(20)wb.
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10 years 10 months
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So a long-tail Bolo clue that first plants Pig, then no Pig, and we may have a wiener: March '73, three nights? If it ain't Pigpen himself, it bett-uh be '73. Or Ray Manzarek and Little Nell are going to pieces...
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My very first show. NRPS opened. Great, great memories of my first exposure to what IT was all about. I would love to see a Spring ‘73 release as a box. Bring it on Dave! Rock on
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Ok, I give up! What is making that bass like sound in that recording? The keyboard guy is great, guitar man is great, but I've never like what he plays (more or less),,, sometimes people with incredible skill can bore the shit out of me with their technical proficiency. Also, the Partridge family had Shirley Jones, who looked damn good to this 13 year old back then.
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Dennis: It's the B-3! It is all in the foot pedals:
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I didn't realize that guy was playing a B3, went back and watched more of the video and yes I saw the pedals. The pedal demo was nice. I always thought if you could play one thing, make it the organ. You can be a one man band. I knew an old woman years ago who played a B3, had top of line in her house with a leslie cabinet. Said her dead husband got it for her a a wedding gift! (maybe her playing was such, that the husband wasn't dead, just hiding!) Anyway, she had tickets for a organ demo one time that she couldn't attend and gave me the tickets. This guy was the "company" rep for the organ he was hawking and went all over showing what "their" organ could do. (is that a zappa line?) This thing was very electric/computer driven. He could make any instrument sound, the organ itself would play lines for you, like setting up a drum sequence or a guitar/horn section. And of course the guy was a MASTER of his instrument. I was shocked recently when I looked up the price of a B3,,, they seem to be around 50K! Guess I will not be getting one this Christmas :-( (hell they're pricey enough that Jeff Chimenti had to borrow Brent's unit :-)) (borrowing Brent's unit,,,, is that a zappa line also?)
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Brent's B3 is not on loan...it was gifted to Jeff from the band...think about the level of that endorsement of talent and humanity! They also share a birthday...and came from Bobby's band originally...Weir'd... Edit: Don't know source of that but I remember I read the gifting in an article many moons ago...if I'm wrong, it's not the first time...and it seems to happen more with every passing decade! :) I believe, he's been playing it since '98 or so with Ratdog.
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Wowwie.. 50k, that's like two or three upcoming box sets and Dave's Picks subscriptions here at dead.net. I think I would like to borrow Brent's as well. It's a good thing I have a truck and know the combo to their digs at Club Front. Sorry Jeff... but I'm not forgoing the next few box sets.. besides, I think that's what Brent always wanted.. for me to learn how to play the B3. Edit: Looks like my post contradicts direwulf's. I stand behind my words, it's what Brent always wanted. ..but man, Jeff can really make that thing sing. Perhaps I will have second thoughts.
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The Tommy track is great. Doesn't sound like a mix. You somehow blended the crowd noise in with the music just exactly perfect. Volume is very consistent from song to song too. Are these all from the Tommy tour? They're clearly all Moon, but I'm curious if they span the entire 70s.
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Minus, the breakdown is as follows (these are all official / engineered / produced releases): Overature - Live at Leeds It's a Boy - Live at Leeds 1921 - Live at Leeds Amazing Journey - Live at Leeds Jam (starts at 11:30) - Isle of Wight 1970 2nd Jam into Sparks(crossfades in at 13:35) - Woodstock (taken from 30 Years Maximum R&B) The Acid Queen - Isle of Wight 1970 Pinball Wizard - Woodstock (taken from The Kids Are Alright) Go To The Mirror - Isle of Wight 1970 Smash The Mirror - Isle of Wight 1970 I'm Free - Live at Leeds Sally Simpson - Live at Leeds We're Not Gonna Take It - Isle of Wight 1970 See Me Feel Me - Woodstock (Taken from The Kids Are Alright) Woodstock was August '69, Leeds was February '70, and Wight was August '70. There wasn't a Tommy Tour per se. There were several European and US Tours in 1969 / 1970 where Tommy was gradually worked into the set lists. The first near-complete performance was early '69, maybe March; the last near-complete performance was September '70. https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gvnDVUzNQyjrs9XpNzKqkhGazTbb9cJI
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Here is another great example of competent bass playing from the B-3: Tune in at the 7:00 minute mark or so for the "bass" solo!
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Wadeocu - thanks for posting that. I had never really seen a full B3 with the footpedals (that I recall) until 3 months ago when I started seeing the B3 Kings in Boston on a regular basis. The guy recentlydid a two-footed bass solo.... was funny to watch him chugging away like he was on an exercise bike, hands free. Bostonians - B3 Kings will be doing a bass-less (B3 player plays bass with feet/left hand) show in Needham tomorrow (Thurs) night at Three Squares restaurant 7-10pm. In the below video of this band, you can clearly see organist playing bass notes with his left hand at the end of the keyboard on this song - I've seen him play bass melody with left hand while thumping the root note on the footpedals: https://youtu.be/1bwu3skpB48
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That beer on his B-3 makes me nervous though in light of Dennis' revelation on what one costs!
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Is it possible to play the "lead" guitar, ie. guitar solos while singing? I've been wondering, did Bobby and Jerry switch off on who played the solos when Jerry was singing? If so was it for the whole song, or just immediately while Jerry was singing and then back to the usual roles?
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Let's get back to the Grateful Dead's Dave's Picks 26.The remainder of the limited edition of DaP 26 goes on sale Monday 16 April 2018 @ 10:00 AM Pacific Time. It will sell out fast, I guessing about 48 minutes or less. If I recall correctly (and it's probably on this long thread) DaP 25 sold out in about 48 minutes. With the promotional email DaP 26 announcing this "event" it could sell out in about 30 minutes or less. This "event" could crash the system similar to 2017's Get Shown The Light box disaster. But that got fixed and this "event" could another test to see if preventative measures work. The bonus disc WILL NOT be included in this sale, as it was only for the 2018 Dave's Picks subscription.
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Right.. I hope it was a very expensive, small batch craft beer or a Chimay or something.. If you're going to risk a $50k organ slugging down some beer, the grains had better be stomped on by foot by hippie monks in Belgium and hopefully blessed by the pope himself. If you act quick.. I found what appears to be a steal on a new B3, only $26k. While supplies last :D (I ordered three). http://www.b3guys.com/Hammond+B-3+mk2+Organ+and+Hammond+C-3+mk2+Organ.h… I think what makes these expensive is the cabinets with the rotating, Leslie speakers that I believe are powered by individual tube amps. Brent's standard setup had ten wonderfully modified Leslie speakers.. What a powerhouse.. For the full effect, I recommend listening to the Gimme Some Lovin' from 11/1/85 turned up to 11 (starts about 2:08 in) or just crank up Dicks Picks 21. Phil, "LOVE YAA!!" Trouble Ahead, Jerry in Red.
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Wadeocu - Yes, the beer on top surprised me too - always does. Last time I saw them the bass players headstock was floating 4 inches from his beer - we couldn't stop watching the headstock! :0 Jim - The guy told me the keyboard console AND the leslie cabinet have 6-8 tubes EACH, thus the warm tone. I thought he said you could get a decent used B3 for $5,000 but perhaps I misheard him? Prices are high because these are very large, heavy items with TONS of hand-wired point-to-point connections. The guy showed me the inside of his organ and it was a spaghetti maze of tubes and wires. A simple hand-wired guitar amp is $1,500~ so a price tag well above $5,000 seems reasonable, actually. The guy also told me he has three (3!) of these Hammond B3's! (His backup one night said the same thing!). One in his practice space, one in the gig-van/garage, and the one in the shop, because they're often in for regular tune-ups, blown tubes, buzzing, humming, etc. How do musicians afford this stuff?
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Wondering if 11/17/71 is from returned Betty boards. I'm thinking that the two Ann Arbor shows should have been packaged together for this one, instead of soley as bonus material.
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To these ears, Gregg Allman and Jon Lord were two of the best on the organ. Stevie Ray Vaughan was known for running his guitar amplifier through a rotating Leslie cabinet for those churning organ-like sounds. Current listen: Go To Nassau, 5/15 - 16, 1980. Garcia full of energy and Brent being new was great on keys and not overbearing vocally. I know it's a composite and the purists will winge, but what a great album.
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The only source for 11-17 is a SBD>FM>MC>C>D>CD so it looks like it is a returned Betty Board. This will be a huge upgrade.
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I believe the answer is yes.. these are returned tapes. The reason I think so is that Dave mentioned they are a substantial improvement in sound quality to those that previously circulated. A toast to the best of times to be a fan of the GD.
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A tip of the glass to Melvin Seals too. The guy loved his gospel music and could play the hell out of his B3. When he achieved lift off, true religion was free for the taking... Sorry 4winds.. looks like we had the same answer at about the same time to space's question.
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Did Dave ever say how much of 12-14 will be included with the release of 11-17 because 11-17 looks like it's only two disc show.
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17 years 6 months
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....tonight is game 1 of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Vegas Golden Knights vs the LA Queens. GO KNIGHTS GO!!! that is all....
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Both shows in their entirety, if you have the Bonus Disc. https://www.jambase.com/article/daves-picks-vol-26-features-two-gratefu… I think Road Trips 11-15-71 is the best sounding 2 track release from the pre-hiatus years. I'm hoping 11-17 is the same (12-6 & 12-7 weren't quite there). Listened to some 4-11-72 to commemorate. Also got in some triple Bird Song 8/25, 8/27, & 9/24, 1972. Sunshine Daydream is soooo good. Then I hit up that 30 Trips 1972 Dark Star that heads into China Cat - great fidelity on that release. We're talking high volume car ride listening....
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Hey vGuy- Enjoy your Vegas Trojan Knights. Sorry but that logo reminds me of you know what. Nothing like the Stanley Cup Playoffs. My Rangers are not in the tournament for the first time in 8 years but I’ll be watching. Sound will be off as I resume my E72 anniversary trip. Tonight is 4/11 Newcastle.
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are the balls. My Red Wings are out, so I am jumping on the Winnipeg train this year. Sorry vguy.
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Just a quick share ladies and Gentlemen...if any member here has” The Big Box/boxzilla/ 30 trips around the sun boxset, flip the side panels doors open and read what the art production/band and ect. choose to Engrave / quote in that release! ;) ...... :0 ...I’m not trying to start another 120 post of the doors, ;)
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13 years 11 months
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What a fantastic release which proves that Jerry's best years were not over. The Jack Straw has the band playing it like they were a Metal Band. Fast. Furious. They all come together for the climatic chorus "Jack S from Wichita cut his buddy down!" They all hit the mark with a big crescendo and Jerry's playing just prior is as good as it get! Awesome stuff. The Doors.
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16 years 2 months
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I remember it now set 2 is included with Dap and set 1 is the bonus disc If I'm remembering correctly.
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17 years 6 months
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Makes sense to release it then. Thanks. Dave will probably explain in the next Seaside Chat in a few days. Uncirculated upgrades of shows are always welcome.
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....Jerry Garcia impersonating Dave Mustaine. Golden Knights shut out the queens. Onward!!Break On Through....
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4-12-71 from the Pittsburgh Civic Arena. In honor of the two time defending champion Penguins, who took care of business against that other team from Pennsylvania. I'm rooting for a Vegas / Pittsburgh final, so we can see a reunion with Marc-Andre Fleury. As a longtime Penguins fan, I've seen plenty of Fleury's handiwork in the playoffs so I like our chances :) Also really excited for a new Record Store Day release. Its a 7" single, A side is an obscure Ray Manzarek track titled "Mr. Pig Pen was a BIG Meanie Who Wouldn't Let Me Play With His Toys." B side is an experimental instrumental track from Jerry "Mr. Jim Morrison Was a Pretentious Drunken Lout But He Looked Way Better Than Me in Leather Pants." I pre-ordered a copy. 4-12-71 from the Pittsburgh Civic Arena. If anyone needs a copy, I know a Good Doctor.
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It's great to see these two gems finally get released. I'm all in. It's solidly Penguin country here.. I will have to give 4/12/71 a spin. Performed in the Civic Arena, which was flattened in 2010 and is now a parking lot. It was known as "The House Lemieux Built." Pittsburgh was home to many good shows.. perhaps the best venue the Dead played there was the Stanley Theatre (now the Benedum Center). A great place to see a show.
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Oh how I dislike Crosby. A whiner indeed, but what a talent. the Civic Center was also known as the Igloo. Game of the night was the Knights and the Kings. Good for you Vguy. But that rock em, sock em pace is exhausting to watch, let alone play. They must all be in a tub or bed of ice at this very moment. I'll have to pick up that RSD 7" with Pig on A & Jim in leather on B side. I fell behind on my E72 homework. Blame it on the NHL & the kids. Hope to finish the 4/11 Newcastle tonight. But then again 5 games on ice are scheduled....
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Not a fan of Sid.2010 Olympics he scored the gold medal winning goal in overtime. But I despised him before that. (But yes, he’s a good player). RogueDeadGuy, thought you lived in Michigan? And you like the Penguins? That’s treason. Angry Jack Straw, didn’t know you were a Red Wings fan. Unfortunately, for the second year in a row the Wings were more interested in playing golf in April than playing hockey. So who do I root for? Will have to think about that, but maybe the Thrashers (who used to suck when they went by that name).
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Don't forget Jimmy Smith. I thought he was the man who brought the B3 to the forefront of the jazz world in the sixties. And lets not forget Andy DeVito. WHO??? See you forgot. I grew up in roller skating rinks, in my family if you didn't skate you got kicked out. ( I think a have a brother or two out there I never met!) In their hayday roller rinks had organ players who played live music while you skated. Our man was Andy DeVito and his whirling Wurlitzer. The organ player can control the speed of the skate floor. As a kid I'd be spinning around the floor in time to organ, the speakers were spaced out on the ceiling so sound would spin with you while the colored lights could hypnotize. (there's a good line for a song, eh?) Where I learn music, motion and color. Other large instruments - anyone ever read Phillip Roth's, "I Married a Communist"? In this book one of the characters has a harp. Another character talks about the harp and how all these girls learned to play the harp because their mothers thought it looked so lady like. Only the damn things weighed a ton and were a pain to move and they were ALWAYS out of tune because of being moved. Brent and the B3 - I don't think I ever heard brent really walk the pedals as a bass line because they had phil. I thought maybe pedals were used just to add dark texture to the mix. (dark texture,,, is that like heavy air?)
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