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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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  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: Mike Campbell
    I read it was because LB got the boot. Could have been logistical, timing related with their upcoming tour. Would have been a trip if they could have gotten Peter Green.
  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Deepest Purple
    Ritchie Blackmore is a legend. His tone, solos and phrasing are right up there with the best. Of course the Mark II lineup is a favourite, but don't forget the Glenn Hughes/David Coverdale era. Stormbringer and Burn are great albums! Rainbow was a serviceable pop/hard rock outfit as well. It was always a pleasure to listen to Ritchie play electric guitar. He has just re-emerged with all new players he's calling Rainbow and has done a few shows in Europe over the last couple of years. It's sub-standard. The fire is gone from his playing. He plays like a gentleman now, which I imagine he is. His very recent Guitar World interview shows him happy and perhaps more humble and amiable than his old caustic self. Unfortunately, the edge has come off his electric playing. Too many years hopping around playing that hobbit music (Blackmore's Night, for the uninitiated) has taken it's toll. No matter, Smoke On The Water lives forever. Having just seen Steve Morse with the Dregs from the 2nd row, Morse is a brilliant player. He's not one of my favourites, but seems a nice enough chap and he has chops to burn. It's one of those businesslike, modern rock band economic decisions for him to anchor the guitar chair in Purple. As he should, he pays respect to the songs and the basic framework of Ritchie's most memorable solos without being a clone, he stretches out and expresses himself well within the music. Unfortunately, it doesn't really do it for me, and once-superhuman shrieker Ian Gillan has lost much of his power. No matter, he sings tastefully and uses what voice he has left very well and, last I've heard, is nowhere near the embarrassment some claim. Ironically, at 70 he and Ritchie are in about the same place regarding their slow decline. Which brings me to, we bought good floor seats for the upcoming arena tour of Deep Purple/Judas Priest. I never thought I'd see Priest again, but goddamn they still deliver even with new guitarists. It's a great band and Rob Halford is the Freddie Mercury of metal. Hell, yes, Purple and Priest! It'll be a blast one classic tune after another. I go see live music to enjoy it, not to nitpick at things that aren't the way the were 30 years ago. That goes for all iterations of the Dead, as well. Shit, it's 2018 and I'm seeing 17 rather large shows this year: Robert Plant Michael Schenker Davy Knowles Dixie Dregs Phil Lesh As The Crow Flies (seen) Stone Temple Pilots The Alan Parsons Project Ween Dead & Co. Dead & Co. Dark Star Orchestra (on the Rocks with Donna Jean Godchaux) Electric Light Orchestra Ry Cooder The Magpie Salute Deep Purple/Judas Priest Fleetwood Mac (still to come) I'm stoked to see Mike Campbell and he's the only reason I'm seeing the Mac again. They're rumoured to be doing some Petty songs! Tom Petty's death has left a rather large hole in my heart and I love Mike Campbell, the epitome of class and taste on the instrument. \m/
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Mike Campbell???
    Is playing with Fleetwood Mac?Whoa, that sounds interesting. Was this because of LB getting the boot, or was it already happening?
  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Dolby
    There's a place in hell for whoever created the Dolby hiss sensation.. Too funny.. Hated it! I wonder if it still comes up on some of these 80's cassette masters from time to time.
  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Deeeeep Pooooorple
    https://youtu.be/eDWQkRW2r2E Yes, there is more than 1 Oro Oroborous is currently a frequent poster. Oroboros made the sculpture of the dragon eating its tail and gave it to the band. He posted a link to a video that showed the dragon by the drums. I think he also gave us some first hand accounts of the shows that make up the July 78 Box.
  • Gary Farseer
    Joined:
    some poor batters
    too funny!
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Farseer
    Indeed!First, I don’t think I’m the oro some of you kind folks think I am? I have occasionally been a voyer but have not posted in many years. I believe their is more than one of us, since I’ve seen different spellings over the years.... I think I copped mine from THE DEAD, that old Hank Harrison book? Any-who, thanks for the kind words, I’ve missed talking the talk! Next, I can’t tell you how nice it was that at least someone understood what I’ve been rambling on about the last couple days. Both your responses were great.
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Space Truckin’
    Wait, that’s the purple right?? Uh huh huh....anyway, Deep &+$#@ Purple, man one of those great bands that gets waaay overlooked.Led; glad to see that folks like you are doing their part to keep live music, well, alive and well in America! That’s the spirit, ITS ALL GOOD, don’t get hung up, even if the show doesn’t move ya, maybe you’ll have a great time anyway, meet that special someone etc Rock On Brother!
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Cosmic Dave
    A big NC YAAASSSSS, great post
  • mbarilla
    Joined:
    cosmicdavid ~ Looks Like Rain ~ 2.6.89
    Captain Trips taps into an endless flow with his guitar channeling the sound of water replenishing the barren landscape with his melodic tones
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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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I recently had a surgical procedure (knee replacement) that is known for a long and painful recovery. 6 weeks post op I became depressed, which I learned is a common thing 6 weeks out. Point is depression is a real and powerful condition that is overwhelming and it could be a factor in how Doc is feeling. Hope the dark clouds pass and Doc has many good days ahead. Good Rockin Doc! Now what about David Duryea?
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I cannot add much more than what others have shared here except that I was touched and saddened by HF's shout-out. The last I heard from Doc was a few days ago, he said he was thinking about checking out, that things here had run it's course. I replied, but that was the last I have heard from him. David Duryeau also, which concerns me. I understand wanting to take a step back completely.. Doc is a kind soul. I have nothing but respect and wish him the absolute best in this world and the next. I might be naïve.. but I believe goodness gets returned. Sort of a karma thing. We all hit bumps in the road and we all have our days in the sun and days when life has kicked us hard and tossed us to the curb. My hope is that a series of unexpected positive things reach the good doctor and karma smiles back on him. The suns gonna shine in my back door someday.. right? Nothing but positive thoughts and much respect from JimInMD.
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I recently checked Doc's Dead.net profile and it has changed from an iconic photo of Bobby and Doc's real name and other information to a mere time since registering on Dead.net, his is currently 9 years 50 weeks. Then it struck me - and VERY LOUDLY - from my "internal, all natural, built-in built to last, 60+ year old Grateful Dead jukebox": CHINA DOLL
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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the pickins' are slim this time of year! After the abundant April, what do we have? a show or two in May, France, 7/02's cool, but he's not a big fan. Yale bowl? Meh. There's some sweetness in August, but things don't pick up again until Keith hits town. That's a loooong time between celebrations - I'd be cranky, too.I'll be listening 6/21.
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Member for

10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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17 years 5 months
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the pickins' are slim this time of year! After the abundant April, what do we have? a show or two in May, France, 7/02's cool, but he's not a big fan. Yale bowl? Meh. There's some sweetness in August, but things don't pick up again until Keith hits town. That's a loooong time between celebrations - I'd be cranky, too.I'll be listening 6/21.
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Member for

10 years 8 months
Permalink

Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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Member for

10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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Member for

10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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17 years 5 months
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the pickins' are slim this time of year! After the abundant April, what do we have? a show or two in May, France, 7/02's cool, but he's not a big fan. Yale bowl? Meh. There's some sweetness in August, but things don't pick up again until Keith hits town. That's a loooong time between celebrations - I'd be cranky, too.I'll be listening 6/21.
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Member for

10 years 8 months
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Maybe this will help me lighten up about Doc's dark passage... and perhaps let him know he's well-loved and we're just gonna wait to hear from him again. So after the usual preliminaries, Doc promises to send his favorite GD shows, best sound only (my request) from 67 to 74 (my request, again). And I like physical CDs so I can file 'em in chrono order on my live GD shelves. Geez, that's asking a lot, but Doc explained that his receipt of this music dedicated him to lifelong sharing without return favors. There's a Deadhead. One day a box arrives and it contains like 60-70 shows and nearly 100 CD-Rs. I almost had to strap on an adult diaper. In time, my ears get suspicious and we find that Doc has sent us 100 discs of MP3 files! Not high-rez flac, MP3s. So I call him and give him a good-natured "How could you???" He said, "Your ears can't tell." I said, "Why do you think I'm on the phone??" We laughed over it. And he promised to "make good." (Can you imagine how much work his first batch took, and what an ungrateful skunk in Colorado sounds like?) So, just based on his generosity, I obtain a pretty expensive, large-format B&W print of Pigpen in his overalls, playing harp, with Bobby in the shadows behind him taken by my photog friend, Larry Hulst, who's shot every rocker and blues-er since he came back from 'Nam in 1969. I roll it up, pack it in a triangular, not tubular, mailer and ship it off. Phone rings. It's Doc. Was that print expensive? he asks. Kinda, why? I ask. Cuz it arrived damaged, you shoulda used a thick round mailer, he said in a factual tone. Goddamn, so sorry, let me send you another, I say. Oh no, it's Pigpen and a little damage makes it even better, he said. So we're even in some weird karmic way, both having fumbled it slightly. Many months later, my listening buddy, Steve-o, and I are at his cabin in the foothills of the Rockies, absorbing yet another prime DaP. "Guess we'll never hear from the Doc again, eh?" We agree. Just a few days later, a small pkg arrives in the mail. It's a hard drive with 100 GD shows in high-res flac files, with tons of Freddie, BB and Albert King (Doc knows I love the three Kings), plus Muddy Waters; the thing is packed, all in high-rez files. The moral of the story: Doc always comes through, even for idiotic strangers like me. So tonight I'm sayin', Come on, baby, you're gonna pull through the darkness. You're gonna regain your coffee-fueled "Good Morning Rockers" attitude and our love and support is going to reach you and ease your passage back to the bright sunshine. I just hope you don't notice a couple of hot tears streakin' down my face right now.
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17 years 5 months
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the pickins' are slim this time of year! After the abundant April, what do we have? a show or two in May, France, 7/02's cool, but he's not a big fan. Yale bowl? Meh. There's some sweetness in August, but things don't pick up again until Keith hits town. That's a loooong time between celebrations - I'd be cranky, too.I'll be listening 6/21.
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17 years 4 months
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80s fan. Thanks for the link, finally got to hear the first set. Even better than I recall
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15 years 2 months
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Always enjoyed your witty contributions here.
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9 years
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That’s an awesome story. And your first show is one of my favorites. Got it on cassette and loved it. Then Dick blessed us all with it.
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14 years 10 months
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go the US on a whim wind up in SF "tomorrow the Grateful Dead and the Who will be playing in Oakland. and then the day after that, as well." man. speechless.
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13 years 4 months
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10/9/76 as a first show.. just by reading the entertainment section of the local paper? Wow. Did somebody say ether... zzzzzzthd
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9 years
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Best wishes.Focus on the recovery which will be hastened by listening to greasy GOGD.
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14 years 10 months
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I was listening to 5/11/72 the other day, and I really think I heard Pigpen talk about keeping a bucket of grease by his bed (yeah, horny ol' Pigpen...tmi, bro. do I talk about my "adventures" in public? not that there's that many anymore at my age, but...oh! tmi, you say? a-HA!) anyway, it caught my ear.
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17 years 4 months
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May our thoughts and prayers be also with Vguy at this difficult time ; )
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17 years 4 months
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Check out our little towns 4th annual block party sponsored by awesome Bonfire Brewing https://youtu.be/TypEfuRlFAU I mention grease because the Record Company, Saturday’s headliner, mumbled something about “since we’re out here in the Styx or whatnot, we would like to try something different” and then proceeded with a rockish version of Easy Wind of all things.....we have some of it on the wife’s phone, but we’re so Geezerish we haven’t figured out how to post it here yet lol It was different but good, we’ll send when we figure it out. You know, right after we get lectricity!
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9 years 2 months
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This Darkness Got to Give! Prayers, love, and light pouring forth for you Doc. Keeping you in mind, and feeling so grateful for all you've done for me and my friends here. In the Spirit of the good Doc, I'd like to reconnect with my mission of spreading this music to pay forward all the kindness bestowed on me by Doc and so many others. Whether you are looking for a specific show, 1971, or the whole damn archive; send me a PM and we'll get you "more shows"! Good night, Rockers! "We'll all be together, forever and ever, when we make it to the promised land."
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17 years 4 months
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....so don't feel sorry for me. It was a fun ride, but recent news puts certain things in perspective.
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8 years 3 months
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Just catching up on the news from Doc. I was just in touch with him not too long ago. I sent him an Allman Bros show, and a link to an article I found about said show. It was really cool finally getting to share something with him -- given that I probably have two dozen or more shows that he's shared with me. It sounds like the depression is really kicking his ass right now. It'll do that. It'll make someone insular and anti-social. It'll make someone turn away from people and things that normally bring them happiness. (Packing up his guitars? Deleting all the "guitar shit" from his computer?) Its a sombitch that doesn't fight fair. Hope he's getting the help he needs for recovery . . . both physical and mental. Hope he's back on these boards sooner or later, with a spirited post about some fantastic under the radar 71 show and the classic "You know where to find me." Even if he isn't, I hope he knows how much his prescence livened up this place.
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9 years 6 months
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Depression is a bitch. And you're right-it doesn't fight fair. Depression works against you in so many ways, including tricking you to stop doing the very things that help fight depression (excercise, being socal, indulging in your hobbies, etc). Like everyone, I've certainly had my bouts with depression too so Doc, if you're listening-I know how hard it can be. Keep fighting and just reach out to anyone here if you need someone to chat with. We'd all be happy to lend an ear...
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17 years 4 months
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Amen Vguy,I was just playin with you, and trying to lighten the mood. The more serious or shity the situation, the more I reach for the comedy.... It was a damn fine series though....
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10 years 2 months
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Because the linking of China Cat with I know You Rider was so perfect and the playing so visionary, I tend to forget about this earlier coupling. But I have just listened to the Road Trips Vol 4. No 1, which features the shows from 23rd and 24th May 1969. They had the thumbs up on here recently, I think form hippygirl. Anyway, they are both electrifying sets, and the jam between China Cat and The Eleven on the second date is amazing. It sounds so powerful and natural-it almost explodes with energy.
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12 years
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We saw Rainbow Full of Sound at Donovan’s Reef for Tie Dye Tuesday this week. Rainbow Full of Sound is led by keyboardist/vocalist Waynard Scheller who has performed with Bob Weir, Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady, John Kadlecik, members of Ratdog, among others. His Rainbow band members have changed several times over the years. This time the guy he had on drums had just returned from California playing with Phil Lesh. The band plays Grateful Dead songs as well as originals and some others. Tuesday night they played mainly Dead except for 2 originals. During the set break I went up and talked to Waynard, and he sold me his cd: Waynard Scheller with Rainbow Full of Sound – American Hippie (2017). SET ONE: 1- China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider, 2– Ramble On Rose, 3 How Sweet It Is, 4– Birdsong > Space > Birdsong, 5– He’s Gone, 6– The Way You Do the Things You Do > Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys tease, 7– Crazy Ally (original) SET TWO: 1- So Many Roads, 2- San Francisco Rain (original), 3- Jack Straw, 4- Catfish John, 5- Samson & Delilah, 6- Scarlet Begonias > Fire On the Mountain, 7- Comes A Time, 8- Turn On Your Love Light ENCORE: Deal ------------------------- If you're close to Sandy Hook, NJ, sounds like Tuesday nights are happening. ------------------------- Wipe a tear from the eye and raise a Cheer to Doc. Hang tough man and thanks.
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17 years 4 months
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My wifehad stroke about a year and a half ago. Recovery is long and arduous but progress is being made. I am now a full time care giver. Tough road I hope the good dr. Makes it back here. He will be missed. He was kind enough to share some ‘71 shows with me also. Long live the good dr! Rock o
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12 years 2 months
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Thanks for the post mbarilla. Fantastic Bobby Mcgee! So many wonderful shows in April leading up to the monster FE run at the end of the month. Pig was magical and in fine form in the Spring of 71'. Not being a musician, I am not sure how, but it does seem returning to the one drummer format gave Pig more freedom, energy, and confidence Man, how quickly life for Pig slipped away. April 71' box would be so kind. Have a wonderful weekend all and be kind to others! Sam T
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17 years 4 months
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28 years ago today. Damn “where does the time go?”First trip to the promised land and first Cali show. Love Cal expo, remember it was super chill GA, and drinking Anchor steamers at a concert! What a trip; 3 Cal EX, 2 JGB at Warfield, 3 Shoreline....booyah 8-17&18-18; just orderd tix for these Jerry G Birthday Band shows. Interesting line up. My cousin turned me on to a great video of them at the Rocks last year....figured we have to go since it’s in the hood.....usually go to Folk Fest in Lyons that weekend, but don’t get much “dead” associated music out here.... https://www.jambase.com/article/star-jerry-garcia-birthday-band-play-2-…
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10 years 7 months
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Sorry to hear about Doc. That email read like depression's internal override--I'm done, don't do it, its all bad anyway. Wishing Doc well. Sometimes you ought to pull out your full Live at Leeds or Live at Hull or Isle of Wight or Tommy deluxe with the '69 compilation version, and just listen to the Tommy suite loud. I tend to skip the silly songs (Fiddle and Camp and the 20-40 second ones), but the rest is amazing. Stunning what Townsend, Entwistle and Moon can do.
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9 years
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Evil stuff. Got Anthony Bourdain too (or so it seems).
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11 years 7 months
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Exactly what I do, every month or two, hit the reset button with The Who or a few other decent high fidelity recordings, put something on the victrola at volume approaching a live show and see about blowing a fuse or two. Will measure decibel levels with an old RS SPL meter so to not get carried away. Some systems provide enough distortion that listening loud gets painfull all too quicky, I can run some old but super efficient Klipsch Cornwall IIs up to 95-96 decibels driven by an old high end Onkyo receiver... really, 90-92 decibels is plenty loud enough for short periods for this codger. Most listening is done around 82-85 decibels. Permanent damage can happen at sustained levels above 100db, even long levels in the 90s. You might want to check your levels. Music certainly needs some headroom to become dynamic, show the spread between soft and loud. This is on the "if it blows up or catches fire" system, don't really care. Went to see Steve Vai about five years ago, now that was really very very loud, plaster falling from the ceiling loud. I work for that house, they made sure we had earplugs. Neighbors say they enjoy the old time GD music they hear walking the road by my house. No excessive noise visits from the local authorities in thirty years... but we are so small around here, they know me and i know them. We are all neighbors. And in three weeks, another law changes.... garden supply houses are already advertising on TV about indoor gardening set ups. It's hilarious. A quick shout out to the doc, he turned out to be an old neighbor of sorts, pleased to learn that he actually lived nearby many years ago and knew the area where I live, this is in Vermont, after all. To think we were zooming by each other twenty whatever years ago on the only main road through, not knowing which dead show might be on our car stereos, could it be synchronous? First dead show was Baltimore March 73, why did I go, because I could! Finally! I missed them badly several times, they first played DC at Georgetown U in 1970, then a free show at American U fall of 1972, then Baltimore fall 72 too, was up in Maine for all of those... had listened to them for about five years, still have all the original vinyl, trashed of course... be nice, otherwise I will bore you to tears with my mindless midlate 60s/early 70s DC music scene stories like how Roy Buchanon worked in a local barber shop cutting hair to get by, how Bo Diddley moved from Chicago to DC, then set up a small recording studio in his home on Rhode Island Ave NE which became a music hang out or how Muddy Waters was the house band at The Cellar Door for weeks on end, they were there so much early in 1973, one night our table was so close, literally under Pinetops piano I went to see Muddy open for Clapton in Augusta Maine in the mid/late 70s and walked out when Clapton came on... Just could not listen to what sounded like pop music after getting down with the real authentic blues cheers!
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16 years 2 months
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The "Elvis" of bad boy of chefs commits suicide in France, Friday 8 June 2018.Heck, he was only 4 months older than myself. --- Other deaths of *public folk* this week: Kate Spade, the fashion handbag designer sister-in-law of actor David Spade commits suicide, Tuesday 5 June 2013. She was only 55. --- Now playing: Dark Star - 10/26/89 Miami Arena Now drinking: QUAD from Weyerbacher, Easton PA
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15 years 2 months
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1-I am alone. 2-I am a burden. 3-Everything would be better if I was dead. Take care of each other. Friends or family can be vital in breaking this chain of thoughts.
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10 years 8 months
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Bro, I've been there, on both sides. I have examined the option of suicide because it would solve so many problems. Except that it's a permanent solution to a (likely) temporary problem. And my reasoning has always captured that by saying to myself, "It's not like going to Canada for the summer..." It's welcoming nothingness, surrendering being a conscious being. Plus, you don't get to take the CD collection with you. That snaps me right back. Seriously, at times I've considered checking out. But then I always say that I can try harder, do better, and that the sunshine and the high of being a sentient being is too good to give up til I got to. I love being alive. So we know I haven't had really bad depression because for suicidal folks there's no sunshine, no future, no stepping back from the abyss. Spade and Bourdain both prove that facades mean nothing. And that people who are going to do it don't send signals so someone can stop them. Let's not extrapolate to our missing crewman here. And, yes, there's something we all can do every day to appreciate the people around us and let 'em know they make a difference in our lives. And praying, which doesn't have to be a religious thing. It's a prayer to the unknown powers of the universe and helps channel our feelings and sometimes those vibes do get through at the other end. Keep on loving, keep on trucking, HF
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15 years 2 months
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Started the anniversary thing and got hopelessly behind. But that's a good thing. These shows are as good as it gets.
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13 years 4 months
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what?... sorry.. but I seem to hear better when I can see a persons lips move.
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13 years 4 months
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Huh..
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17 years 5 months
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the irrepressible Bob - Easy Skanking from the Boston Music Hall, 6/08/78. Also, today is Derek "carrying the Torch" Trucks birthday - 1979. Listened earlier to his and Susan's show from a year ago in Philadelphia - 'tis the shis.
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