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    heatherlew
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    The unexpected return of the masters of the Grateful Dead's triumphant show at the Albuquerque Civic Auditorium, November 17, 1971, yields great rewards. The Dead came in HOT for their first New Mexico show. Aided by clarity and precision and abetted by confidence and focus, they finessed old standards with definitive takes. With Keith now blending in seamlessly on keys, the first set offered up a triple shot of electric Blues, an exceptional "You Win Again," and a stellar "One More Saturday Night" to wrap things up. And the second set, well, it might just be unlike any you've ever heard. Archivist David Lemieux urges you to turn it up and do it loudly. We won't dare spoil all the surprises, but pay special attention to the rippin' "Sugar Magnolia," the aggressively monstrous "The Other One," and the highly-danceable "Not Fade>GDTRFB>Not Fade." Rounding out the 3CDs, you'll find selections from Pigpen's return tour at Ann Arbor, MI, 12/14/71. Subscribers will get nearly all of the complete show as this year's bonus disc.

    As always, Dave's Picks Volume 26 has been mastered to HDCD specs from the original analog tapes by Jeffrey Norman and is limited to 18,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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  • Lovemygirl
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    ‘Ripple’ :)
    https://youtu.be/MHo1fNnXFVU ;)
  • Mar-T
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    Deer Creek
    Ahhh, Terrapin... Deer Creek is a sensitive subject for me. My last show, and I knew it, walking out of the venue, that the scene had crashed and Jerry was gone. That being said, there is a crappy sounding monitor mix up on archive.org -https://archive.org/details/gd1995-07-02.monitor-sbd.unknown.74201.sbeo… its dubious sound quality, I find this recording really interesting, because you can hear the band members talking to each other, without being heard by the audience. During Desolation Row, you hear the crowd roaring and Phil (I think) saying "Check out the back wall," as the gate-crashing idiots stormed the venue. This was the beginning of the end of the Dead, unravelling in real time on the recording. Phil handled the situation with grace and humor. Coming out of space, Jerry pretty much falls asleep, and Phil casts the understatement of the evening, "shall we move on to something else?" only to segue into a cringeworthy Attics. During the show, I remember hearing the first notes of Scarlet and getting excited, only to see Jerry mangle the words and chords, while dicking around with his new Digitech whammy pitch bend pedal with little success. By the end of Fire, I was practically in tears with disappointment, but even more disturbed with Jerry's state of being. Yeah, I know, there was a death threat before the show, but that ain't an excuse to double up on the Persian. I've listened to recordings of this show a few times and it's always bittersweet for me. Good luck getting a real soundboard! It's an important recording in Dead history, but imho, for all the wrong reasons.
  • Sun King
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    Mickey & Neil
    shirdeep. Thanks for sharing. Great story. I've never heard or read anything Rush/Dead related...
  • shirdeep
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    dead and pratt
    o3 o3 92 omni from neil pearts book traveling music "In 1990, Mickey had co-written a book (with Jay Stevens) on the history of drums and rhythm, artfully interwoven with his own autobiography and some of the Grateful Dead’s history, called ‘Drumming at the Edge of Magic.’ When [Peart's daughter] Selena was looking for a topic for a junior high science project, I suggested something I had learned about from the book, the “Theory of Entrainment.” The theory held that any two mechanisms, including humans, tended to synchronize their rhythms, to “prefer” them, as compared to beating against each other. Thus two analog clocks placed in proximity would eventually begin to tick in sync with each other, neighboring heart cells tended to pulse together, women living together often synchronized their menstrual cycles. And thus, thought Mickey, he and the other Grateful Dead drummer, Bill Kreutzmann, should (and did) link their arms before a concert, to try to synchronize their biorhythms with the Theory of Entrainment. Selena put two old-fashioned alarm clocks, with keys and springs and bells, beside two digital bedside clocks, and made a poster to describe the principle. I think she got a good mark. "For my part, I was so impressed with the scholarship and artistry in the book that I wrote Mickey a letter of appreciation, and we began to correspond. "Later that year, in 1992 it happened that both our bands were playing at the Omni Arena in Atlanta on successive nights, the Dead one night and Rush the next, and Mickey and I invited each other to our shows. On our off night I went to see the Dead play, accompanied by our tour manager, Liam, and what an experience THAT turned out to be. "Liam and I arrived just as the show was starting, and gave our names at the backstage door. One of their production crew gave us our guest passes and escorted us to our seats – right behind the two drum risers, in the middle of the stage! Liam and I looked at each other with raised eyebrows as we sat down, and noticed that right behind us was the production office, with telephones, fax machines, and long-haired, bearded staff dealing with communications and logistics (presumably, though the production office is normally a room backstage, where such work can on APART from the concert), and we also heard there was a telephone line run through the crowd to the front-of-house mixing platform. Catering people walked across the oriental rugs that covered the stage, delivering salads and drinks to various musicians and technicians, even during songs, and meanwhile, the band played on. Lights swept the arena, reflecting off white, amorphous “sails” suspended above the stage, and clouds of marijuana smoke drifted through the beams and assailed our nostrils with pungent, spicy aroma. "My familiarity with the Grateful Dead’s music began with their first album, back in ’67, when my first band used to play several of their songs, “Morning Dew,” “New New Minglewood Blues,” and “Good Morning, Little Schoolgirl. "And they played and sang really well, too, augmented by the soulful keyboards and accordion of Bruce Hornsby. The drummers, Mickey and Bill, became an interlocking, mutually complementary rhythmic unit, right out of the Theory of Entrainment. "Liam and I couldn’t see much of the “front line” guys, the guitarists and vocalists, because of the wall of amplifiers, but occasionally, on the stage-left side, the spotlights caught an unmistakable bush of gray hair that could only have been the legendary Jerry Garcia. "During intermission, Mickey invited Liam and me to his dressing room in the familiar backstage corridors of the Omni (each band member had a separate room, which hinted at certain “divisions” among them; after Jerry Garcia’s tragic death, I read a story asserting that he hadn’t enjoyed touring very much, and when the others wanted to go on the road again, he responded, “What, they need MORE money?”). Mickey was a friendly, outgoing man, with an engaging smile and an intense, joyful enthusiasm for percussion. With all my African travels and interest in African percussion music, and Mickey’s musical explorations in print and on records, we shared a few things we knew and cared about, and had a good conversation until they were called to the stage to begin their second set. "Liam and I returned to our center-stage reserved seats, and I noticed that not only did the band members have separate dressing rooms, but the wings of the stage were lined with small tents of black cloth, one for each of the musicians to retire to during the songs on which they didn’t play, and have some privacy. During an acoustic number in the second part of the show, Mickey disappeared into his little tent, then motioned for me to join him. We talked for a few minutes about drums and drumming, and I told him how much I was enjoying their performance, then he went back up to the riser and started playing again. "Next night, the positions were reversed. That tour ('Roll The Bones'), we had a metal gridwork runway (dubbed the “chicken run” by the crew) about four feet high, running across the width of our stage behind my drum riser, where Geddy and Alex could wander while they played. During the show, I looked back and saw Mickey, under the chicken run, smiling out between its black curtains. He was just as close to me as I had been to him, and he seemed to be enjoying himself."
  • Terrapin Moon
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    7/2/95 Deer Creek
    sorry to bother people but does anyone have a SBD "scarlet Begonias" track for 7/2/95 Deer Creek? my copy is missing it.
  • KeithFan2112
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    Signals 5.1 Surround
    I was shopping around a few weeks ago, and saw they have Signals available in 5.1 Surround mix, but only as part of the "Sector 3" box set (which also includes Signals regular, Grace Under Pressure, Power Windows, Hold Your Fire, and A Show Of Hands). Would love to get my hands on the Signals Surround mix, but I already have those other albums, so...no go. Wish they'd release them all in 5.1 a la carte. Steve Wilson did the remixing, and I'm impressed with his work on the early Yes records. Tales From Topographic Oceans never sounded so good. But what Rush really needs to do now, is start releasing shows from their archive. Let's have a show from the Moving Pictures Tour in its entirety. The 2112 anniversary edition in 5.1 Surround sound also had some bonus tracks, which included the opening of one of the shows off the Moving Pictures tour: Overture (Northland Coliseum, Edmonton, AB – June 25, 1981) The Temples of Syrinx (Northland Coliseum, Edmonton, AB – June 25, 1981) 80sFan - I'm intrigued by your comment about the Charlie Miller copy sounding better than the release. Must check it out....
  • 80sfan
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    2/3/78
    Been a while since I heard DP 18, but I have recently listened to the Charlie Miller remaster of 2/3/78 and it might even sound better than the official release. Considering DP 18 is out of print, check out the archive. Maybe the best all time Music Never Stopped...
  • 80sfan
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    2/3/78
    Been a while since I heard DP 18, but I have recently listened to the Charlie Miller remaster of 2/3/78 and it might even sound better than the official release. Considering DP 18 is out of print, check out the archive. Maybe the best all time Music Never Stopped...
  • Lovemygirl
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    Re: Dennis & the gang
    ...your welcome. I’m a member of the org. A beautiful group of people all acting as one, love! :) ....I still can’t believe the shrine vinyl didn’t sell out as well. This record, from start to finish, art wise/sound/ect. Is A+++++ Grab one , you won’t regret it! ;)
  • icecrmcnkd
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    Keithfan
    The Rush webpage offers no info but the description on Amazon says remastered on 200g vinyl at Abbey Road Studios. I also wanted All The Worlds A Stage but the 200g vinyl on Amazon is only for Prime Members which seems stupid. I’ll buy it elsewhere.
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The unexpected return of the masters of the Grateful Dead's triumphant show at the Albuquerque Civic Auditorium, November 17, 1971, yields great rewards. The Dead came in HOT for their first New Mexico show. Aided by clarity and precision and abetted by confidence and focus, they finessed old standards with definitive takes. With Keith now blending in seamlessly on keys, the first set offered up a triple shot of electric Blues, an exceptional "You Win Again," and a stellar "One More Saturday Night" to wrap things up. And the second set, well, it might just be unlike any you've ever heard. Archivist David Lemieux urges you to turn it up and do it loudly. We won't dare spoil all the surprises, but pay special attention to the rippin' "Sugar Magnolia," the aggressively monstrous "The Other One," and the highly-danceable "Not Fade>GDTRFB>Not Fade." Rounding out the 3CDs, you'll find selections from Pigpen's return tour at Ann Arbor, MI, 12/14/71. Subscribers will get nearly all of the complete show as this year's bonus disc.

As always, Dave's Picks Volume 26 has been mastered to HDCD specs from the original analog tapes by Jeffrey Norman and is limited to 18,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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Ice, Was just going to post the same thing about the collatteral expenses. Since it's so cool, the kids want the yet to be purchased turntable in the family room, not the designated GD listening studio in the basement. That requires a new receiver. Not such a big deal until you factor in the wife who now requires compensation to "even the balance sheet." To be fair, neither one of us are really like that, but she did order four new dresses for the upcoming weddings this summer as a preemptive strike. So, I go out and purchase a few albums to help out a local record store. I can't even play them, but now I'm in deep.
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I have a couple of at 120 turntables they are the knockoff of the oop technics 1200. It's a good turntable for the money. But since it's based on a dj turntable it is fully manual which some people concider a pain. Be careful using the cue it has a tendency to give out and your sylus bounces across the disc. Finally get a different cartridge since again it is a dj table it at tracks at 3 grams. Visualize me shaking violently. I use a Shure m97xe but there are plenty of good ones put there
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Oh yeah don't use the preamp that comes with most of the new turntables. They aren't very good. If your amp/receiver doesn't have phono inputs splurge for a dedicated phono preamp they aren't that expensive. Someone mentioned a Crosley don't waste your money
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12 years 2 months
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Lots of good ones already mentioned. Check out the 9/20/90 MSG w. Hornsby. Hot stuff!
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The version of The Way You Do The Things You Do on the new Garcia Live is my new favorite!! Great release
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I bought this box set in spring of 2005 and I'm just now giving it a proper listen. musically its like like rooting around an old junk drawer and finding some things of interest.
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I bought a basic Pro-ject turntable and preamp about three years ago, just to listen to the old albums in the attic. I was very impressed with how good the albums still sounded, some 40 odd years after I bought them. I didn't intend buying any new albums-although I did occasionally treat myself. It was only with the release of Binghamptom 1970 earlier this year that I started focussing on vinyl again. And now I am really keen-the 4 Dead albums I have already got sound great. And Wheels Of Fire looks as impressive as ever propped up on the mantle piece. I have been very happy with my hi fi (do people still call the that?) set up so far...but I am now thinking of upgrading.
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I bought this album too, just because it's cut from a new Remaster. I still have my old Techniques turntable from the 1980's.. I suspect I will need to upgrade at some point, but time is on my side.
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I was fortunate enough to get 2/27/69 -- This is what its all about. With the house to myself, I had this cranked up...goosebumps were a plenty on Saturday afternoon. Sound quality is just exactly perfect. I also picked up the Allman Brothers Live at the Atlanta International Pop Festival 1970...two shows that are basically identical but the sound quality is excellent.
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Ah record store day. It really is Christmas in April. I have always been a big CD guy. I thought I would never get into vinyl. When my dad passed away a few years ago, I was helping to clean the house and saw his turntable. Said WTH and brought it home and bought a few records. Here I am 2.5 years later with almost 900 albums. Every Friday, I go to the local record store, been around for 40 years, buy some vineyl. than my wife and I sit at the bar in my basement, drink great beer and spin records. No better way to end a long week. It's a deep, deep rabbit hole but man is it awesome. As for turntables, the Audio Technica LP-60 is a very solid beginner table. It can be had for around $100. As someone else mentioned, the pre-amp in it and in most receivers suck. You definitely need a stand alone phone stage. Project has one that works pretty well for around $70. If you want to go a little higher lever, I highly recommend the Project Debut Carbon or the Music Hall MMF 2.2. Both are $299. For the person that has the Project and was thinking about upgrading, I recommend getting a new stylus. You can easily upgrade from the Ortofon red to the blue in a few seconds and it makes a big difference. That's the cool thing about the Project. You can easily upgrade down the line, for a few bucks ;). You can also look at getting a better phono stage. That will make a big difference as well. As for sound between digital and vinyl, well I have to say vinyl is much more natural and real. I have a really good headphone setup, with a very good DAC, cd player, headphone amps, etc. I designed to have an analog feel. As a CD guy, I spent a fair amount getting it just exactly perfect and it sounds awesome. I still love it. With that said, vinyl is just so warm and inviting. It's like sitting next to a warm fire with your significant other on a cold winters night. It just feels so right. I had a very good RSD, got all of the releases I wanted and some I didn't even plan on getting. Like I said, it's a deep 'ol rabbit hole. Enjoy!
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Rush put their reissues on 200g vinyl.An extra 20g of vinyl. I’ll probably have to get ‘All The World’s A Stage’ and ‘Exit Stage Left’ to see how they sound. Yeah, this rabbit hole is pretty steep and deep (Steep and Deep is the name of a ski run at Vail).
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Glad to see so many psyched over their vinyl RSD acquisitions and their enthusiasm for purchasing or upgrading turntables, JOY of Joys! Yes, it is a deep rabbit hole, it is a ritual really getting everything correctly setup, (but no hardship) its all part of the pleasure, taking the time to sit with a loved one, pal or by one's self and taking the time to listen. I remember 200g pressings from the long gone Classic Records, I think MOFI are the only ones pressing 200g now. Vinyl is definitely very addictive, some of you folks that have a neglected vinyl collection packed away in an attic or basement would be pleasantly surprised how good they still sound, although the use of a record cleaning machine, would also be a complete revelation. PS, I like the tale of the Bar in the Man Cave!
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Hey, that's great, I'm glad to hear it was you who got the Dave's Picks 5. I was into the Dead heavy for many years, and then got away from them and into the Stones for many years, so I missed all of the great box sets and Road Trips, and Dave's Picks 1 - 16. But then I got right back in with the subscriptions for Dave's Picks, and started shopping around to back fill my collection. I have a ways to go, but I'm on eBay every day looking for deals. And I mean mean LOL, I am addicted to that eBay app. When those last couple minutes start counting down for a show I need, it's like a gambling rush. Still, the prices sometimes just get too high, and I have to back off. One day I'll find a new Dave's Picks 1 - 9! Or Maybe a Winterland June 1977 Box Set, or if the light's really shining on me, the mother lode itself, Fillmore West 1969 Complete. I've been cobbling together Europe '72.
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Ah, the warmth of vinyl... put a record on and have a seat next to the fire with a cold beverage... only to get up twenty minutes later to turn it over. Wait, fire? What's that crackling noise... do I need a dust free, no static charge environment? We can't have any surface noise, can we? Pop, skip and a bump...And what about acoustic isolation? Belt drive please and thanks, record clamps at the ready and turn that subwoofer down, getting some low frequency muddiness if not feedback here... My vinyl goes back fifty years and would go further except I lost my Chubby Checker Twist records in a poker game. I need one of those $5000 ultrasonic cleaning machines to give all those records a bath with some real cavitation. Those $450 record cleaners don't do half as well as my homemade vacuum cleaner attachment. I'm so old I have antique turntables for my antique records... Yes, my dog sits right next to the horn... Tell me again, a diamond stylus in a vinyl groove, do I need any shaving cream for that? By the way, humbly suggest a name for Jim's lawnmower "Further II".
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Thanks for the tip. I've got an Ortofon red stylus at the moment, so I will take your advice and switch to the blue one. Cheers.
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9 years 2 months
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Mine has a button for operating in forward or reverse direction.Half tempted to play 2-27-69 backwards and see what secret messages Pigpen slipped in there.
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Until DaP 26 is released.
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When you play the LP backwards looking for hidden Pigpen messages, you'll no doubt hear some earnest testimony about an an adventure he shared with a young lady who "got her leg up against the wall", so he could "jump in the saddle and ride".
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Have a good friend in the music business right in Hollywood. He's got thousands of albums, began building that collection in the 1970s. We were roommates 20 years ago in Boulder and the collection was massive then. What's it's become is monstrous. I haven't asked how many in years. I also don't recall the model of turntable but it sounds really good. Nope, not gonna go there... got two kids to put through college. And a nasty guitar habit. My old Pioneer sits collecting dust in the garage. I have around 60, 80 albums. Haven't played them in years. I am a completist. It's a horrible affliction, but it is what it is. At least I have the self-control to just say no to getting back into vinyl now, because with items like these available, I fear there would be no going back... and student loans happening. https://www.whathifi.com/best-buys/hi-fi/best-high-end-turntables To all of you who indulged on Record Store Day, I'm with you in spirit. Enjoy! \m/
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9 years 2 months
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Pigpen sure had his mind set on one thing. Maybe that’s why he got into rock n roll. Sex, drugs, and rock n roll, as David Lee Roth was quite fond of saying.
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8 years 8 months
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...dirty pigpen makes me smile smile smile! :)Ann Harbor 12/14/71 is ‘Prime meat’ ;) Jerry is so so sweet as well ...
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13 years 6 months
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Too funny.. the basement bar and turntable. I have a similar tale.. I held on to all my albums, my 1980 Marantz 220 Watt Tube Amp and my Techniques turntable. In my old house, just across the river from where I live now.. I had it all set up in my basement office (which, was somewhat lawlessly and cleverly cantilevered over the river). First.. to preface, vinyl nights were never sober.. but I had more than a few albums at the time that had not been re-released on CD. So it was a blurred attempt at firing up the Way Back. So funny you mention that in this way.. totally coincides with infamous Vinyl night at JimInMD's Basement office at my last house. ..and it was always a blast. wadeocu.. you can borrow the lawnmower anytime. The engines gotten a bit finicky.. it seems to like high test over regular.. Liberty Cap scraps seem to work just fine.
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I've said it before on here, nothing else like this show for 78!!! As unique as you will get for this year!!! Read up on if Bob was sick!!! Listen to the last, If I had the World to Give... Jam to start off second set, followed by a short drums followed by another Jam, followed by the first song sung in set II which is Jack-A-Roe!!! If anyone was there would love to hear the details of it.. bob t
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13 years 6 months
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..I did a search for the theme of the Drew Cary Show (Cleveland Rocks). This is what came up on my browser. It does have rocks in it. I guess a little off topic, but harmlessly coincidental and entertaining (I hope). Happy Monday.
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What does this have to do with the Box Set?What about Gainesville? I know.. tail between legs, going to sleep. Apolog.xxx.... Edit: Too early to sleep, or perhaps the bufotenine is kicking.. it's springtime in the Mountains East afterall. If anyone here hasn't seen this, it's quite refreshing. Really the whole thing, but it kicks up a gear when PITB starts.
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Gainesville is the largest city in Alachua County, Florida. The population of Gainesville in the 2013 US Census estimates was 127,488, a 2.4% growth from 2010. Vinyl... I don't get it. I know.... "it's the fastest growing format!" But it's easy to grow off a base if your starting point is almost zero. BTW, where do all these RSD announcements come from? The only time I ever see anything about RSD is here.
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7 years 2 months
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Just got my Anthem preorder confirmed, this time ordering was smooth as silk....
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In the end of his latest chat he mentions upcoming releases....states that he's picked a good one for DP#27, and of course we'll get DP#28 also. He also noodles or mumbles about 3 other "THINGS" this year for release....the box set seems to be the mention of a "big release later in 2018" with no details from him. My guess is that this is one of the "things" of course dialed up for release....the other two "things" fore release are now out would be my guess: they are RSD "Live Dead" vinyl & today's Anthem deluxe edition (with a 1967 show for some reason, shouldn't it be a show from 1968?!?)....ANYWAY, my guesses below are what we will see for the remainder of the year: 1) DP #27 = 1974 2) DP #28 = 1976 3) Box Set this Fall 1973 (3-4 shows)
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16 years 9 months
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I'm headed to Gainesville!
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This was the one, the album that made a Dead Head out of me. For me, Sugar Magnolia is the BOAT here, for many reasons, but it's really only the final act in one of the best medleys of the tour: Dark Star => Me & My Uncle => Dark Star, Pt. II => Wharf Rat => Sugar Magnolia. It was my first Dark Star. There are no specialty jams in this one. Take your list of 20 best Dark Stars, then remove any of them that have Feelin' Groovy, Tighten Up, or Mind Left Body. What are you left with? I prefer this 4/24/72 Dark Star above many others, not only because it was my first (and those firsts have a way of sticking with you), but because it's long and covers a lot of new ground. It also doesn't spend too much time in "Atonement", which is that place where there's a lot of....er...how does my wife describe it...ah yes "noise". That's atonal music! I insist. But not this Dark Star; it's experimental, but not over-baked or too noisy. And as I said, the experimentation does not yield to common themes; they improvise their way into several new arrangements you'll never hear again. And it's a long bugger, clocking in at 41 minutes. Best of all, it's possibly Jeffrey Norman's best treatment for an E72 show, as (most know) this was released individually, a good 7 years before it was incorporated into the Europe '72 Complete Recordings Box Set. Best of all, Keith is well represented in the mix, which, alas is not the case throughout the entire box set (the esteemed Mr. Norman himself once commented on these message boards that he would love to remaster the box set anew (but with more time to deliver the final product). The Wharf Rat that emerges out of it is also sublime (just listen to Keith dancing on the pinky keys in the beginning). I believe my top 5 Wharf Rats are the 5 from this tour. The multi-track brings out Garcia's Alligator Strat and Weir's Gibson ES-345 as pure as can be, and the vocals on this song were soooooo good when Jerry sung them alone. And of course Sugar Magnolia. This is the one that caught me and melted my face for the first time. Don't they all sound the same on this tour though? No. As always, it's in the nuances. There were few songs in the Dead catalog that showcased Weir and Garcia in the fabled "guitar weaving" mode that Keith Richards sought for (and achieved) throughout his career with the Stones but Sugar Magnolia in the early days was one of them. What makes the Rhein so special: longer hook chord opening on this night, before the first verse (= extra groove time); more backing vocals on the verses - makes for some nice harmonizing (mostly unique to this version); Billy's best drum fill ever? (you know the part, after "take me out and I wander round") - well, let's just say, he opts for the tom-tom roll instead of the ratta-tat-tat snare attack, and the timing is impeccable (the only other time he plays it quite like this on the E72 tour is closing night 5/26 - but the sound production is a little flatter and less impressive); and then one of the most uncommon elements you'll ever find in a Dead song occurs after Billy's drum fill - everyone plays the same thing for a few bars, in perfect harmonic bliss (i.e. the Sunshine Daydream chord progression, but no vocals yet). This goes on for a few bars, and the harmony of instruments is a thing of beauty that just doesn't click like this every night of the tour. Eventually Jerry starts soloing, and they go into the Sunshine Daydream coda, which does not include Donna (as much as I love her, I "grew up" on this version without her, so her inclusion on this part of the song beginning in August '72 sounds alien to me - sorry honey!) Me & My Uncle was great in that medley too. What can I say? Lotta pow pow, shoot 'em up from a couple of honest Denver men; and despite varying accounts of this classic brawl over the years, these were the days when our anti-hero relied solely on his pistols, and indeed cracked no one in the jaw with a bottle. What we can surmise about the good Uncle in this story, is that though he taught his nephew the good book, he either failed to translate accurately from Latin, or he simply underestimated the significance of the line: radix omnium malorum avaritia; avarice is the root of all evil.
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Got the notice DaP 26 is on the way. Sooner than I expected. Maybe will get here in time for my road trip to Red Rocks next week to see Phil and family. Oh, and Keithfan, I love Rocking the Rhein. The Dark Star is one of my favorites, especially the way Me And My Uncle just pops out of some rabbit hole, skips along the prairie, and dives right back into a swirling labyrinth. Can't hear it too many times.
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Love 4/24/72. Still not warming up to 4/24/78 though. Some decent moments, but overall leaves me underwhelmed. I get more enjoyment out of 4/22/78 Nashville (DaP 16).
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17 years 6 months
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Got the "on its way" mail just now. Will it arrive before I leave for a well earned break in Kreta. One can but hope. I leave in twelve days, about the same time as it usually takes an order to cross the pond. Whatever, it ain't gonna spoil my holiday! Bring on the calamare and Metaxa 5-star.
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16 years 9 months
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Gatorade = Koolaid with Electrolytes = Electric Koolaid It is all beginning to make so much sense now!
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8 years 8 months
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https://youtu.be/-UHHc7POovg “ I remember having a daydream about the opening acoustic guitar part of “All Along The Watchtower” ending with a Native American scream and a big native drum on the downbeat. That was the spark to assemble one of our biggest and deepest Songs Around The World. From Beirut to New Orleans to the Lakota Nation, musicians play and sing like a musical army determined to stop suffering and greed all over the world. As a society, we need to get back to our roots and connect deeper with our ancestors and native people in general so we can find the wisdom we need to move forward as a human race. As Jimi Hendrix once said, “If there is something to be changed in this world, then it can only happen through music”... ...Look for John Densmore of The Doors on drums! :)
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9 years 2 months
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What about Albuquerque and Ann Arbor?Let’s get these things in our mailboxes.
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7 years 5 months
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I'm not following why you posted a link to a dude playing Watchtower, Or what that quote is that accompanies it. Pl ease explain. First year as a Dave's Picks subscriber, and I can't wait for the bonus disc. Just because it's the badge of subscriptionship.
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