• 1,815 replies
    heatherlew
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    "The Grateful Dead picked up their instruments and hit the first note with perfection. They never missed a note for the next three and one-half hours. People followed the flow of the tunes. Down on the floor in front of the stage was a sea of heads keeping time with the music. No one sat still. No one, except the youngsters behind us sat still. They were still and stunned." - The Power County Press

    And what a stunner it was, that show at the Boise State University Pavilion in Boise, ID on September 2, 1983. Dave's Picks Volume 27 contains every stitch of music from this mid-80s show (our first in this series), one that's as good as any other in Grateful Dead history. When the Dead were on, they were ON! Straight out the gate with a definitive take on the old standard "Wang Dang Doodle," the band swiftly switches back to a setlist of yore, firing off 70s staples like "Jack Straw" and "Brown-Eyed Women" and wrapping things up with a terrific trio of "Big Railroad Blues"/"Looks Like Rain"/"Deal" (don't you let that epic guitar solo go down without you). Primed for the second set, they tackle the complexities of "Help>Slipknot!>Franklin's" with heart and ease. It's clear there will be no stopping their flow - Bobby and Brent hanging in for a fantastic pre-Drums "Jam" and Jerry and Bobby in the zone on a not-to-be-missed melodic "Space." Not a skipper in the whole lot!

    Dave's Picks Volume 27 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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Mind-Left-Body
    Joined:
    I guess it's just not for me
    I keep hearing all the cool kids saying this release sounds great and features the band in top form (with just a few exceptions, such as Black Peter). I'm just not hearing it. I keep putting it back on, thinking maybe I just didn't adjust the equalizer correctly, but it still sounds awful mostly. I hear moments of good playing, but like the one guy said, every time I start grooving to something, some off kilter element yanks me out of it. I understand where you're all coming from. When we really love a version of the band, we listen to it all with passion and I think probably aren't affected by the negative elements. There can't be so many people wrong about how bad they think it is, and conversely, there can't be so many people wrong about how good they think it is. Just always going to be cheers and jeers, that's just the way it is. Get it. That's just the way it is. Love ya'll. Edit - Jason, just saw your data here, going to read it in a few, looks interesting,thanks for taking the time.
  • Jason Wilder
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Yeah, just comparing Dave's vs. Dicks
    There have been a lot of '80's Dead/Brent releases with the Spring '90, Warlocks, '90 TOO, RFK, View From the Vault, etc. In terms of actual releases/shows, the totals (including partials, etc) look like this, and I may be missing some of the partials/splits/multi-year stuff (Garcia Plays Dylan, etc). Generally speaking, there has been a very good job of releasing more from the peak years (IMHO = 70's, '69, '89-'90) while getting something from every year (30 Trips Helped). Did not break down by #shows, includes digital downloads, not included Pacific NW yet. Rank, Year, # Releases, # Discs 1. 1972, 16, 119.25 (peak Dead, justifiably #1, K&D & Pig) A+ 2. 1977, 15, 72.50 (peak late era K&D) A+ 3. 1990, 10.5, 64.50 (peak Brent era) A 4. 1973, 11, 41.0 (PC NW coming) (peak early Keith) A+ 5. 1978, 10, 41.0 (darn good late era K&D) A- 6. 1974, 13, 40 (PC NW coming) (darn good early Keith) A- 7. 1971, 13, 36.12 (darn good year, multiple lineups) A 8. 1969, 9.5, 31.90 (Peak Pig & TC) A+ 9. 1976, 8, 28.0 (improved Donna) A- 10. 1989, 8.5, 27.50 (darn good Brent era) A- ----------------------- 11. 1970, 9.5, 20.83 (the new tunes explode) A ------I would consider this the line for "A" years------ 12. 1980, 8.15, 19.0 B+ 13. 1979, 7, 19.0 B+ ------------------------ 14. 1991, 4, 11.50 15. 1968, 6, 11.30 T16. 1981, 3, 9.0 T16. 1983, 3, 9.0 (This is a C year) T16. 1988, 3, 9.0 19. 1987, 4, 8.5 20. 1982, 3, 8.0 21. 1966, 4.57, 7.50 22. 1985, 3, 7.0 -----mostly C years from here--------- T23. 1992, 2, 6.0 T23. 1993, 2, 6.0 25. 1975, 2.5, 4.5 (B year, just no shows) 26. 1967, 1.5, 3.1 (B year, so few tapes) T27. 1984, 1, 3.0 T27. 1994, 1, 3.0 T27. 1995, 1, 3.0 30. 1986, 1, 2.0 31. 1965, 1, 0 (studio stuff/Birth) (no tapes available). Again, remarkably good distribution overall. Not so much with the Dave's Picks. Agree that 70's is better in a lot of respects (though not as much variance and fewer different songs) and certainly the sound quality is one factor (nothing matches a Betty). However, I have too many sweet sounding 80's boards to buy the idea that there are not many good sounding tapes in the vault to release them. As good as Betty's? No. Still very enjoyable? Yes. For 1967 I buy it, not for 1985 or 1989 or 1980. But I tend to be a show quality over sound quality guy anyway. Lastly, I do have a bit of a beef (small one) with Dave's 80's picks. A summer '89 Box that has no Alpine? Come on. No full 80's acoustic shows (yes, I know Dead Set/Reckoning)? I'll amend my original structure to Dick's Picks parameters. For every series of 6: 1) At least one Pig 2) At least one early Keith ('71-'74) 3) At least one late K&D ('76-'78) 4) At least one Brent/Bruce/Vince 5) At least one Epic/Iconic show (any era) 6) At least one lesser known great show (any era) Converting to Dave's picks parameters, every 3 years (12 releases), that would generate, thru 24 releases: 1) At least 4 Pigs (he does well here) 2) At least 4 early Keith's (he does well here) 3) At least 4 late K&D's (he does well here) 4) At least 4 Brent/Bruce/Vince (not enough but getting better) 5) At least 4 Epic/Iconic shows (he does fine here) 6) At least 4 undiscovered great shows (he does well here) Again, these are small nits to pick. A tad more Brent/later era stuff with a tad better selections from that era. Summer '85. Another fall '89 or '89 pre-midi. '87 when the comeback was in full swing and good vibes were everywhere. '80/'81 acoustic. A piercing Althea. I did not mean to seem too critical, if I came off that way, my apologies. Sorry for length, lazy Sunday.
  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Well, that settles it
    Simonrob, Daverock, and the rest of us are catching flights to Vegas...... I love Amsterdam, but I think Vegas flights are cheaper.....and I speak the language......sort of.
  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Rain.
    The wet stuff is in short supply here in Europe this summer, as I'm sure you have seen on the (real) news. I also suspect that you are more than used to arid conditions there in Vegas.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Breaking down Boise....
    ....simonrob didn't pull the ripcord. Took the Switzerland route. I would very much like to meet you. Down some Belgian ales, spin some Dead, smoke some lettuce and enjoy the English garden rain.
  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    For the record
    I think that 5-8-77 sounds awesome. That reverb was on the first cassette I got of the show. Thus, it’s all I know. I also have the matrix and the 5.1 version. I’ll take the Full Norman version.When GSTL was released a few people complained about the reverb, I was just referencing those posts. Overall, I think the release was pretty well received..... My refusal to compare DaP27 to 5-8-77 is because 1983 is not 1977. They can’t be compared, as described extensively in posts below. During past 80’s releases as people complained about the quality other people posted theories along the lines of: There are probably a limited number of releasable non-multitrack 80’s recordings. Eventually all the releasable 60/70’s shows will be released, and then that well will dry up. By that point a lot of the people who saw shows in the 60/70’s might be deceased or in ill health and won’t be making purchases. But, people who saw shows in the 80/90’s will still be making purchases and will keep buying the 80/90’s releases. Thus, the revenue stream continues, as long as some good stuff is held back now and released later. That’s my summary of what I remember people posting in the past. Doesn’t mean that it’s the policy of Dave/Rhino. And, keep in mind that there should be DAT masters of 90’s shows. Hopefully there’s some with good mixes on them. We are due for a Bruce release.....
  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Got it, heard it...
    My copy has finally made it across the pond and I have now listened to it in its entirety, not without some trepidation bearing in mind some of the comments posted here. My personal observations, for what they're worth: Those 80's afficionados who claim this is a great show are exaggerating and those who claim that the mix or the sound quality or the performance itself are appalling are also exaggerating. The performance is mostly fine. I did not notice much that some songs were played at breakneck speed and I did not notice too many momentary disasters along the way. I did notice that Jerry's voice was shot on a couple of songs, notably Black Peter. Also the patch in Eyes brings one down to earth with a jarring thump. As for the sound quality, it is pretty good for a cassette master, certainly better than some of the earlier releases that were recorded on cassette. No real complaints there. The Mix? It was mixed for the PA in the hall, not for my living room so it is not ideal, but it is eminently listenable. The vocals are a bit too prominent but not as much as some on here have suggested. For the rest, the balance of the instruments was not perfect, but not so bad that people were missing entirely. The were a couple of places where the music got really intense and the mix made it sound somewhat confused. Again this was not as bad as many had stated. The overall sound level did vary somewhat but not so much that I had to adjust the level on my pre-amp. I was listening to this on my good quality stereo in my living room (which lacks any form of tone controls or equalization). I just insert the CD and hit play. My only point of reference is "Is what I'm hearing acceptable". One cannot expect true high fidelity from these releases. In this case, I found it perfectly acceptable. There have been better performances and better sounding releases, but there have also been worse. We were spared the Fisher-Price piano sounds from Brent, and his cringe-inducing songs. I am also not a fan of his vocals which also did not intrude here. Before I get called out as a Brent hater, I should say that I found his keyboard sound here just fine and I have always enjoyed his B3 playing (as long as it is not overbearing). This will not be sold instantly orgo on a shelf never to be listened to again. Pretty good for an early - mid '80s performance.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    I'm just grateful.....
    ....that these releases are coming out regularly. If they weren't, what would we all have to debate about?
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    RE: Alvarhanso
    Right on my brother, agree with all you said. And of course people can believe what they want for good or for ill. It’s just been frustrating when other folks make these grand statements and comparisons (like 5/8/77 is a 5 outta 10), or when they have no point of reference. e.g., I think Vguy or kid said something like Cornell compared to other Beatty’s “has to much reverb for my taste” To me that’s a great example of a critique based on proper point of reference as well as his personal taste etc But your also right to suggest that apples to oranges can be compared also. A release is a release and therefore fair game....my caveat is that hopefully the critic has at least an idea of what their comparing when speaking of technical matters. Just like a experienced musician would be expected to have a better point of reference when critiquing performance..... But then the bottom line perhaps is Vguy’s example. He just pops it in and likes it or not, well, Vguy perhaps not a good example as that brother seems to dig it all. ; ) Personally, I go both ways (pun intended! for vguys comedic entertainment) I like pretty much every release, but I can certainly critique or find idiosyncrasies in any release, even good ol Cornell! But for me, I’ll take most any official release. Like someone here said, if all your looking for is the warts, well that’s all your going to see..... Finally, like you said, this isn’t aimed at you, hopefully some of us can provide interesting insight for others not as fanatical as us lol Thanks for your great posts! PS; didn’t get on the Dave train until a couple years ago, so I’d gladly take any releases from you, for a reasonable price, were you so inclined to part with any.....please PM me if your interested, looking for ....in order of preference... DAVES PICKS - #9 5/14/74 - #6 12/20/69 with bonus disc - #19 1/23/70 - #5 11/73 - #10 12/11&12/69 with bonus disc - #2 7/31/74 - #17 7/19/74
  • dilbert
    Joined:
    So I listened again to this
    So I listened again to this release and 5/8/77, and I stand by opinion that the audio is better on this release; the SBR recording places you front row center, and the volume is just exactly perfect. The aud patches are also cool, because it gives you the impression of being at the show. The 5/8/77 audio is cavernous, It places you last row upper deck, and the audio is low, you have to turn the volume up loud to hear the band.I prefer the sound of this release to the 5/8/77 mix. Performance wise - I prefer the versions of TLEO, Mama Tried, Big River, Brown Eyed Women, New Minglewood Blues and Deal on this release over 5/8/77. This is a fantastic release and I welcome more like this. And as the wise sage Master Shake once said: https://i.imgflip.com/sgkf3.jpg
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years 11 months

"The Grateful Dead picked up their instruments and hit the first note with perfection. They never missed a note for the next three and one-half hours. People followed the flow of the tunes. Down on the floor in front of the stage was a sea of heads keeping time with the music. No one sat still. No one, except the youngsters behind us sat still. They were still and stunned." - The Power County Press

And what a stunner it was, that show at the Boise State University Pavilion in Boise, ID on September 2, 1983. Dave's Picks Volume 27 contains every stitch of music from this mid-80s show (our first in this series), one that's as good as any other in Grateful Dead history. When the Dead were on, they were ON! Straight out the gate with a definitive take on the old standard "Wang Dang Doodle," the band swiftly switches back to a setlist of yore, firing off 70s staples like "Jack Straw" and "Brown-Eyed Women" and wrapping things up with a terrific trio of "Big Railroad Blues"/"Looks Like Rain"/"Deal" (don't you let that epic guitar solo go down without you). Primed for the second set, they tackle the complexities of "Help>Slipknot!>Franklin's" with heart and ease. It's clear there will be no stopping their flow - Bobby and Brent hanging in for a fantastic pre-Drums "Jam" and Jerry and Bobby in the zone on a not-to-be-missed melodic "Space." Not a skipper in the whole lot!

Dave's Picks Volume 27 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.

user picture

Member for

12 years 5 months
Permalink

......it's ok. But if this is the best of the mid 80's that Dave can find..........YMMV
user picture

Member for

7 years 10 months
Permalink

This show from 83 is without question my least favorite Dave’s Picks. The band is clearly high on mass quantities of cocane. I’ve never heard anything like it. Every song is so fast they lack any groove or substance. Disc three is the only saving grace of this release. The jam out of space with Jerry and Bob is captivating and the band finally eases off on the gas pedal long enough to keep the show in our collection. Maybe Dave needs to get back to the great shows from the 60’s and 70’s next time. Peace
user picture

Member for

14 years 8 months
Permalink

went to a "Zoo Tunes" show at (you guessed it) the zoo. X and Psychedelic Furs X RROOCCKKSS. what a great band. so much great rock n roll. Hall of Fame worthy. so good. yes. they should have been the headliners. Psychedelic Furs: some good tunes, and an overall good sound. Richard Butler has a great voice. A band I liked from a distance, but never "got into". overall a great time. of course, these bands formed when I was in 7th grade. 7th grade. 1977. wow. they didn't hit their respective strides until 1980 or a little later. but still.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

I tried again to listen to this show...It is an assault on my ears...Not only is the mix horrific there is no cohesion to the playing at all. The sum is definitely not greater than the parts...I too cannot understand why this would be released...I listened to 5-3-72 to cleanse the sonic palette...
user picture

Member for

10 years 8 months
Permalink

My listen has been on my computer system (good speakers, but not through my studio monitors), and mainly in the car. It's not my ears, it's the tapes. I'll take you at your word that the keyboards are lower on headphones, but I must ask do you really blast a show into your headphones as you would your stereo or in your car? I could check the sound on the living room stereo, but I don't think Jerry's guitar will suddenly spring into focus over Brent vamping, and I also doubt it will remove the Healy effects on the vocals. (I can't believe it took over 10 years of him adding that stuff to question him about it.) Just because somebody recorded something on reel to reel doesn't mean I have to listen to it that way for it to sound good. I don't buy that argument. Otherwise, I'd just find some old blank Maxells and dub this show and try it that way.
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I fully agree with what you said including the bit where you said "Maybe/hopefully these again-available releases were withheld from initial sale as potential replacements. Who knows?". I hope you are right, but what nobody yet seems to have discovered is if these items actually do have a number printed on 'em. In the past some people who have received replacements for damaged sets have allegedly received unnumbered ones suggesting they are from a back-up stock. It remains to be seen if these WarnerMarket items are like this. There is also the question about when an item is sold out. If it is claimed to be a limited edition of, say, 18000 when do they say it is sold out? When they have received 18000 orders? Surely not, unless they have extra back-up stock for lost-in-the-post and damaged products. These would surely have to be unnumbered. Maybe they shut up shop when they have received 17500 orders and hold the remainder back as replacements. It is something we as mere punters are not privy to so it is hard to speculate on how the mighty Warner/Rhino machine works. Also, this appearance on Amazon begs the question: "Why now?".
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 5 months
Permalink

curious what else will appear on that page...definitely worth bookmarking. Hey maybe a Dave's Picks 1 will show up and some lucky guy will be in the right place at the right time (a man can dream).
user picture

Member for

7 years 10 months
Permalink

I make every effort not to think about how much we paid for Dave’s Picks 1 thru 10. Or all the box sets we missed first time around. Very glad we own them as we love it all, but it took a large amount of money to own em’. At least we’re caught up now and can own what’s going to come out from now on.
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

It’s painful to see folks trying to “compare” these wildly different kinds of recordings.So perhaps I can give a bit of reference for those who don’t understand? (If you do, pardon moi) The two biggetst apples vs oranges things to consider are multi-track versus 2 track stereo, and the purpose of the mix involved. The stuff most all y’all love so much were purposely, consciously mixed to listen to more like a studio mix if you will; balanced guitars, vocals etc. Betty et el had separate feeds JUST for recording, to listen to later etc. The 80s stereo mixes etc were a feed off the soundboard of which the mix was for the live reinforcement of sound relative to the venue etc. Guitars are often so loud on stage, that not as much needs to be reinforced through the PA, while the voice doesn’t normally have a “loud amp” so they need to be more prominent in the mix.....voices and acoustic instruments are not as loud as “guitar amps”....if you’ve ever tried to have a conversation next to someone cranking an amp you understand this... Now out in the audience, preferably in front of the soundboard, everything sounds appropriate, balanced etc. That’s the purpose of a live reinforcement mix; to sound balanced and good in the audience, so one can hopefully fully appreciate each and every channel. Also, unless you have a multi-track mix, you cannot go back and change individual tracks later. This would be like trying to lower the level of the bass guiitar, on a stereo, 2 track album your plating in your living room. You can mess with the tone of the bass, but you can’t do much about how loud or soft it was mixed. That’s why multi-track releases usually sound better. Perfect example is Live Dead, Skull fuck and Europe 72. Though they were recorded live, because their multi-track recordings, they were able to go back and sweat-in up the vocals, and in some cases even do overdubs (redos). That’s how they added Merls organ on Skull Fuck. Nowadays with auto tune, they can go back and fix flat or sharp vocals. My guess is they’ve done that with some of the old 70 shows, and DG in particular... The multi-tracks tend to be what audio folks call more “airy,” they breathe more, there is not as much compression of all the different sources, so the instruments stand out better. There is also the matter of physics as related to the increased tape area of multi track to cassette, and the usually increased speed the multi’s were recorded at. This also makes a huge difference. They multi’s also don’t usually have much as far as effects on them. That is added later as need be, for different purposes, and usually more sparingly, another plus of Muliti. The live house mix has the same effects used by Healy to enhance the sound in the venue, not for your living room, and certainly not for your car.... Hopefully this helps to see how completely different these techniques are, and how their inherent characteristics based on their intended purposes make them so very different......also hope it helps understand how often the vocal to instrument balance can be so different too? One more notable fact. No soundboard recording, whether multi or stereo sounds exactly like the actual instruments recoded. Take Phil’s Alembic bass sounds on all the 70s releases everyone loves so much. As great as Beatty et el did, I’ve never heard a SB only mix that sounds what his rig really sounds like live in a actual hall. This is based on owning/using the same gear, and working with other musicians as a tech. There is Increased full freaquncy range live, versus the often overly middy sound of especially the Alembic basses direct....this is in part because a direct to tape mix does not incorporate all the other gear in the line; pre-Amps, eq, even the power amps can effect tone, especially more power. The great thing about huge amps isn’t that they can be louder, it’s that they have way more tone, or fuller sound, without having to be loud! So if you must compare, try to understand what your comparing. Of course with any audio, gear, speaker set up etc. the bottom line is YOUR point of reference and what YOU like. Also, the Dead played for thirty years, not four or seven....some of us want to hear as much of all years as reasonably possible. Obviously there are some shows that are better than others, and some years have much more consistency But that doesn’t mean there are not great shows from all years. The problem is mostly finding both great shows, that were recorded well that also sound great.... This is what Dave has alluded to. And yes, unfortunely, for much of the eighties these 2 track House mixes are all there is. I’m with the folks who would rather have a great show, even only from a house mix. As Eecktars rule of relativity states sometimes “a little bit of somethin’ is better than all of nothing” And hey, like some have said, If unfortunately you don’t dig some of this stuff a) don’t buy it, b) don’t listen, and/or c) sell it or pass it on “take what you need and leave the rest”! Remeber what I think Vguy said “ remember how bad old shitty cassettes with the hiss, wow, and flutter sounded” This perhaps is a fairer more reasonable comparison; old 2 track cassette soundboards to this type of release. Comparing Multi track recordings intended for remix, mastering and duplication for release I.e., 90 boxes, E72, Live Dead etc, to stereo cassettes based off of the house mix and intended more as a way to critique the house mix, is beyond apples and oranges ; )
user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

So we agree-neither of us like Bob's slide playing. I was speculating on why someone might like it. In so doing I was reframing his..unusual.. approach as being the result of experimentation , rather than poor technique. No big deal. I wasn't aware this was a cliché-I've never read anyone else saying that. Unsurprisingly!
user picture

Member for

15 years
Permalink

My problem with this release is Jerry's voice. It is shot. During Black Peter I thought Jerry was going to die before Peter does.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 6 months
Permalink

I concur Captain Kirk, on all points. Has anyone found a better Boise '83 recording to post on here yet? NO. Thank you
user picture

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

...One night the 96 year old draws a bath, puts his foot in and pauses. He yells down the stairs, "Was I getting in or out of the bath?" The 94 year old yells back, "I don't know, I'll come up and see." He starts up the stairs and pauses, then he yells, "Was I going up the stairs or coming down?" The 92 year old was sitting at the kitchen table having coffee listening to his brothers. He shakes his head and says, "I sure hope I never get that forgetful." He knocks on wood for good luck. He then yells, "I'll come up and help both of you as soon as I see who's at the door."
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I liked the slide, eventually, once he became proficient....obviously not a virtuoso, but he did with slide like he did with everything else...his own way. Not going to argue that it didn’t sound worse than train brakes screeching or a cat in heat early on though!
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

Very well 'splained! I needed that! ;-)
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

these 80's releases are a real novelty. I like all eras but this will get listened to probably only on the anniversary date. Sorry but like the Boulder release sound is not so great and to me it seems like they're going through the motions, not to mention at like triple time...? Maybe it was just me today or first listen or that I started the day and did enjoy 7/31/74 this morning...
user picture

Member for

6 years 5 months
Permalink

I've said it before and i'll say it again lol Rhino/Grateful Dead Productions are not responsible for your merchant business on ebay I find that market place shit fuckin hilarious
user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

I think it sounds fantastic, not sure what everybody else is hearing or not hearing but it sounds like they are live in my cave and that’s enough for me!
user picture

Member for

6 years 5 months
Permalink

if you need and want your digital copies of Dave's Picks to look fancy and have the fantastic artwork that is adorned on the covers, than look no further than www.albumartexchange.com it is free, but you will have to register to download artwork. if you don't register you will have a "watermark" on your artwork and it will look like poo poo
user picture

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

Healy should have known that years later Dave would release this show and have made the perfect board tape.
user picture

Member for

10 years 8 months
Permalink

There is no debate about multitracks going on here as the Dave's and Dick's Picks were all 2 track recordings with the exception of Dave's 8 which is a 2 track plus an Audience recording for a Matrix. Healy's PA mixes are what sourced this show, and most of the 80s tapes, and, yes, that is a totally different animal than Betty's (or Owsley's or Rex's or Kidd's) 2 track reel to reel recordings that they mixed from a soundboard feed that probably included amp mics mixed into those 2 tracks. And it is this difference (plus the use of cassette masters) that many of us dread. Plus the PA mixes have to have vocals and keyboards pushed up front where that was much less an issue with Keith and a piano that couldn't be plugged in and prior sound rigs. This recording is good in having more low end than is normally heard on these 80s PA mixes, but that could be Mr. Norman's deft touch, rather than a stronger low end mix by Healy this particular night. Owsley denigrated Healy's mixing abilities, claiming "he couldn't mix a cake from a Betty Crocker package", and though I wouldn't go that far, his additions to vocals often detract, as they do here, to me, most obviously on Mama Tried and Big River. And Healy's effects are definitely on the 2 track recordings, because it went through the PA, so he mixed it in there. There may be less in 1983 than in 1988, but it's definitely there, and while it may work for something psychedelic like The Other One, it doesn't sound good on Mama Tried. At all. I totally get different recording techniques yield different results. I also get that Dave also said that this is a better sounding PA mix tape from the 80s, and while that may be completely true, it doesn't mean it's a great sounding tape. I'm not expecting it to sound like Dave's 21 4/2/73, but I don't see why any of us who do not like the sound of this Pick need to adjust our expectations or listen on headphones when we don't like how it spunds in our cars, on our stereos, or on our computers. When the AUD patch in Eyes hit, I thought that sounded good, and that they maybe should've gone Matrix again, though that wouldn't bring the guitars up much, and the vocals would still be well out front. If they want to put out more '80s-'90s shows, that's great. If they sound better than this. I actually would love for them to use the multitracks where they have them, so they can put out some of those later shows. That would give us great sound quality, and if it's picked, usually the playing quality is strong as well. If a crappy board tape surfaced of say 11/8/70 I wouldn't want to pay for it, even though that show is about at the top of my wish list, because I'd rather a somewhat lesser show with much better sound come out. Of course, that's just me, and I am not Rhino's only customer, and this isn't Duane-era ABB we're debating, where you literally have 80-100 tapes floating around in various quality, whereas the Dead have hundreds of high quality tapes, hundreds of mediocre tapes, and hundreds of incomplete or bad sounding tapes. On Phil's Alembic sound on tape versus live, I never got to see him playing the Alembics, so my reference for those is the tapes, and I love the sound that's captured. And it's funny you say that, because a Phish show I went to a few years ago, Mike Gordon onstage sounded just like Phil on tape in the '73-'74 period, and I thought he sounded great, and looked forward to hearing that tone on the board tapes later, but it was gone, replaced by the sound of his direct out and whatever mix the sound guy threw on there, so he sounded like Mike on tape, but live I was blown away by that wooden tone (that's always how I've described it) that sounded just like Phil.
user picture

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

....are we talking sound quality or performance. Other than the missed verse in Help On The Way, performance was fine for me. Other that the jarring aud splice in Eyes, quality is fine for me. My dogs ran out of the room though and hid under the bed. Should I be concerned?
user picture

Member for

6 years 5 months
Permalink

ok, lmao fourwindsbelow comment has been the funniest comment I've read in here second to a '90 show comment story that had me in tears of laughter. yeah, cuz these are two track tapes they were never recorded for commercial posterity. but just for reference to listen back to and see what worked and what didn't. any major enjoyment from these two track tapes is purely coincidental.
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

Last time I saw Dave’s Picks 1 on Amazon, it was listed at nearly $6000.00. Obviously, I passed on it.
user picture

Member for

6 years 5 months
Permalink

mine came in today. I haven't played it but I have it ripped and im gonna tear into it after a jaunt on the treadmill with phish. but look I have heard some '70's shows also were jerry was low in the mix, whatever that one 72 dicks picks one is in NJ, whatever that '72 show for daves that's at the academy of music, the Waterbury show for 30 picks, and quite a few shows where jerry's guitar is kinda low for many estimated prophets in the late 70's. its just not 83 but sound quality is really subjective when you get down to it
user picture

Member for

14 years 8 months
Permalink

I was able to listen to all of the show today except for Baby Blue. a hot show. again, it's not 11/19/72, but it's hot enough for me. I welcome the deeper foray into the 80s.
user picture

Member for

10 years 1 month
Permalink

That comment about Jerry sounding like he was going to die before Peter really hit my funny bone for some reason. Good one. Vguy, enjoyed the 3 brothers joke. Expecting my copy tomorrow.....
user picture

Member for

11 years 4 months
Permalink

This whole unearthing of "sold out" dave's picks on amazon does seem a little fishy to me. What could be the nature of this recent offering. It would be nice if someone in the know could offer some insight. Maybe Mary E. She seems to be somewhat of an insider. Bolo would only offer clues!
user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

I'm scared of my first listen due to somewhat neg.responses. but Like some of you guys say "A little bit of something is better then all of nothing".. which is true for most things in life.
user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

Bobs slide riffs are different, but good in my opinion. Kind of Dukes of hazzardy. Mixing it up sometimes makes it unique. The first set sounds kind of muffled but evens out later on.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

While it's unfortunate that some of the reviews here suggest that this is not a pleasant listening experience for some. I cannot gauge my enjoyment based on that of others. Quite simply, I love this release, I love the sound, I love Phil' Sonic Base. For me there is something to like or love about almost any era of Grateful Dead. It's like watching your kids grow up, hit peak times and some valleys, always interesting, always moving forward. If I took a snapshot of just the released material to date including box sets I would need lead to believe that this band only existed from 1972 through 1978. Great music in these years for sure, but it only tells part of the story. One of my favorite things about this band and my nearly 40 year journey with them is the fact that the thing I loved about them on Monday is not the thing I love about them on Friday. In other words, I would get tired of listening to them if only one thing or a set of things appealed to me. The fact that there are layers and caves to explore with this music is what makes it endlessly fascinating. This release opens new doors and rekindles old memories of when I toured with them during this period and had, quite frankly, the time of my life. Thanks David for letting '83 loose!!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years 1 month
Permalink

Why oh why did they not at least patch in the whole final/3rd verse in Eyes during that brutal cut to the audience???? Daves Picks 27 is missing part of that 3rd verse that is on the bootleg/archive versions. I'm inclined to just listen to the archive version due to this. What a horrible decision! Like this release otherwise. Yeah, SQ cant compete with the Betty boards, 16 track Europe 72 remixes and especially the 89/90 24 track remixes, but it still sounds decent on a nice stereo. Drums go DEEP in the low end which surprised me. My subs came to life! Not patching in the entire 3rd verse to Eyes is inexcusable though. WTF???
user picture

Member for

7 years 1 month
Permalink

Got mine today. Have not heard the entire show yet. But a couple of thoughts:While reading the booklet, I was surprised to read that this show has been in the vault for a while. I guess I just assumed they had a ton of recently returned stuff to put out. 20 years ago, I would only listen to shows up to '72. A snob you might say. Then I started checking out '73-'74 shows. Great stuff. Slightly more open minded. When 30 Trips came out, I decided to buy only the first 10 shows. Then '76 looked interesting, then, what the hell. '77. Accidentally over bid on '85. Kind of liked it. Finally, there were 5 shows I was never gonna buy....but I bought 'em anyway. I don't love all the shows, but each has it's charm, and value. Went back, bought all the DP's I passed on. All the Road Trips I passed on. Bought subs for all Dave's. Only missing 2 bonus discs from RT's. Have only ever passed on 4 box sets. What does it all mean?? I have learned to appreciate everything, without LOVING everything.I will Happily investigate ANY show, and find SOMETHING to like about it.I think this pick was for the folks who keep asking for'80's shows. That's nice of Dave to support these fans. I have no problem with it. Life is not fair. We don't get everything we want, every time. I can be happy with that. Maybe you should too. P.S. Everybody knows Tiny Tim invented Rock & Roll.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

6 years 10 months
Permalink

...this show is hot! Well, as far as I've gotten at least, and that's through the first set. Will make my way through discs 2 and 3, tomorrow. Definitely "luvinit," so far, like sklnrzs put it, and by the way the rest of your post is well-said. Couldn't agree with you more. I'm finishing up Deal right now. Sonic Phil bombs away! Dave talks about the "magnificent" shows from June 1983 that unfortunately lack any usable recording. There's eight shows from that June- each one is blistering. On another note, what's Bobby singing in that back cover photo???
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

Is screaming the "we are in our own" verse from Throwing Stones
user picture

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

....and I double dog dare you doubters on that opinion. You know it to be true (Obi-Wan hand sweep motion). Jerry's chasing Jerry throughout. Can't catch me! I'm the gingerbread fuckin' man! Even my wife asked me. "Are there two Jerry's on stage?" Golden.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

6 years 1 month
Permalink

I can't say enough good things about this release. I love the energy here, the the performance and the tempo. I get what other's are saying about the quality however this was a big problem for all shows recorded in this era. I'm so glad to have a release from this era. Love the fast tempo the band plays here.My Favorites are the Wang Dang opener and Jack Straw in set I, Set II I love the Eyes>Jam Drums>Space>Throwing Stones. Hot Show!!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 7 months
Permalink

Best yet, imo! sparkling gems everywhere. I can hear Bobby!! Thank you!
user picture

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

I have made an appointment with the audiology dept to have my hearing checked. If anyone really thinks this sounds good, which some have stated here, then I must need a check-up. I am listening to this through a audiophile stereo with Altec Lansing speakers. Cut my teeth on early 80's shows and....well, this is just not how I remember them sounding. The entire band must have consumed an oz of coke that night, which doesn't go well with the doses that anyone in the audience partook of. Wait, was there doses in Boise back then? ;) Back on the shelf this will go to collect dust.
user picture

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

Your ears are fine this doesn't sound that good. After some equalizing mostly lowering the middle around 400hz to 600hz and around 2000khz and increasing a little on the ends it's not too bad. The only Dead I have official or not that doesn't need at least some equalizing is (you guessed it) Spring 90 The Other One.
user picture

Member for

14 years 8 months
Permalink

the sound on this does have spots of "wha'?" the performance itself is fine. I like really good sound, but I have never been a major audiophile. I enjoy this show. more 83, Dave. really too bad that 6/18/83 and 6/20/83 and 6/22/83 are either not in the vault or are deemed not releasable. 5/13 5/15 10/11 10/15 10/31 "mowr, mowr, mowr", Dave.
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Well said. Great post.Totally respect folks personal favs and would never disagree that some eras are more consistent then others, but the Dead gave us thirty wonderful years of music, not six, and what you dig at any given time does not have to be static.... “Some times you feel like a nut, sometimes you don’t”
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Great Post, love the philosophy. Just because everything can’t be a favorite, doesn’t mean it’s not good or have some value.....
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 5 months
Permalink

We recently moved so things have been a little crazy lately. My wife laughed when literally the first piece of mail we received at our new place was Dap 27. However, I didn't get a chance to listen to it until today. Even before I put it on, I was in a mood for an 83 show. Sirius was playing a chunk of 10/21/83 when I was in the car earlier today so I was already in the right mindset. I have heard others say there are sound issues, but it sounds just fine to me. It sounds like an 80s show which is not an insult in any way. It's not flawless, but neither were the 80s, especially 83. It captures the era and overall I'm really happy with it. I obviously like 80's shows in general so I'm biased, but this is a really fun show. The boys are obviously into it and having a great time. I'm happy to have this one in my collection and I have a feeling I'll be spending the rest of the week going down the 83 rabbit hole. thanks Dave and co!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 10 months
Permalink

I saw 20 shows in 1983 and for sure had a great time. But listening to this one again gives me pause. Jerry's voice is shot, they race through most of the songs (Jack Straw, Deal, Help on the Way) and the Help on the Way is cringeworthy. He can't remember the words, he can't play the leads, they cannot get it together. Hey, we have a whole decade of amazing stuff (68-78) so it's not like there's nowhere to turn. But I'm baffled that the masses are clamoring for more 80s stuff, or raving about this show, neither the sound quality nor the musicianship is notable. Back to '72 indeed!
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

#10297 finally landed last night. There have been some pretty good links already, but If you need a higher-res, color-corrected version of Tim McDonagh's cover art, here are my scans:https://www.dropbox.com/sh/lz8295bje2dpsxf/AAA2cik9bkrnlJ8kxsNPA1iQa?dl… There’s a “Rectangular” version (just like the CD cover) plus a “Square” version for anybody so inclined You can also find my scans for all Dave’s Picks and Bonus covers at: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qx5j9ydoc7bzm8z/AAD8yK_vCv_kQ-oLkLJQVCEla?dl… Pass ‘em around, and keep the music playing.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 4 months
Permalink

The performance is uneven, as mentioned in many posts some tunes are raced through. But mid 80s shows were always more about being there than the quality of their playing. You went because the scene was still too much fun to miss. I can accept the performance because it is mid-80s. But the sound? Not sure how this show can be touted for its sound quality. The mix is poor, Brent's keyboard is in your face, Jerry sounds like he's playing in a back room a good 50 yards behind the stage and Bobby is some where between them, but still far back. Drums? From the recording I'm guessing Billy and Micky had the night off. Just a terrible recording. This will most likely be the first and last time I listen to this show. Dave if this is the best of what's left of the mid-80s then leave the rest where they are.
product sku
081227931599