• 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
  • JeffSmith
    Joined:
    Thanks Oroborous
    Very well 'splained! I needed that! ;-)
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Bob’s slide
    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!
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Three brothers. Aged 92, 94 and 96 live together....
    ...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."
  • cub
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Apples vs Oranges
    I concur Captain Kirk, on all points. Has anyone found a better Boise '83 recording to post on here yet? NO. Thank you
  • mhammond12
    Joined:
    DaP 27
    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.
  • daverock
    Joined:
    Bob's slide-Thin
    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!
  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Point of reference and apples vs oranges
    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 ; )
  • twoswans
    Joined:
    Late to the bus
    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.
  • Thin
    Joined:
    daverock re: Bobby's slide
    daverock, if your comment is not meant to be ironic, I applaud your positive spin on Bobby's slide. But with all due respect, you're comment comically hits EVERY cliché in the book! You sound like the father of 3rd grader following a disastrous violin recital, PLEADING with his wife to let the lessons continue.. After 52 Dead shows I think I have PTSD and am not capable of blowing such blindly effusive sunshine, or even reading it without a visceral gag reflex. (And vGuy, that photo is priceless). Bobby is inventive in his rhythm playing, but slide? When you have no licks and ZERO pitch awareness/control (Duane never hit a discordant note within a year of learning slide), then just say No. Jerry was asked if he was embarrassed by Bobby's slide in an interview, and he responded "Well, HE isn't embarrassed which is all that matters" as if to say: "Yep, embarrassing, but what do you want me to do?". And I disagree with the assertion that "he didn't rely on tried and tested licks when he played slide". Yes he did - he played the most basic, sophomoric licks imaginable - and basically the same stuff every time!! I bet you can't find two Bobby slide solos on Minglewood that are materially different - I can whistle his basic formula in my sleep, unfortunately: one verse (4 notes!) low on the neck, then repeat the same 4 notes up an octave (genius!), going to the 3rd octave on the turnaround!!! That 3rd octave is the killer - ALL the way up the neck beyond the frets and even the neck pickup (the Cheez Wiz zone) where pitch control is almost impossible, hitting nonsensical discordant shrieks while posing flamboyantly like Pete Townshend (I'm CRUSHING this!!!!!") - as if piercing, warbly dog-frequencies are musical Nirvana. (However, if your wording of "didn't rely on tried and tested licks" means he didn't practice, then I agree!) Bobby's slide playing makes Donna's early-70's "Playing' in the Band" warbles sound like virtuosity, yet people flame her mercilessly. At least Donna eventually figured out how to better monitor herself and make it work after a year or two, while after 3 decades of playing slide Bobby still sounds like a struggling middle school guitar student. Phew! OK, I feel better now.... that hit a nerve..... Apologies if my strong opinion upsets any Bobby-soxers out there. But if ya can't handle an honest, unfiltered opinion on the internet... (And yes, his rhythm guitar IS undeniably unique and inventive, of course, starting in '72/'73. Perhaps the most underrated rhythm player ever. Wait till you hear Bobby on 6/22/73!!! Hall-of-Fame stuff.)
  • cub
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Back To The Future with Stereo
    After offering my positive review of the quality of Dave's 27, I was reading the many so-so, reviews about which instruments are not heard compared to other releases. How are you listening to this? Are you formulating your opinion based on a car multi-speakers or ear buds (high-end headphones aside) or a MONO mini blue tooth speaker? I just got back to listening to all my GD and JGB in STEREO. Try a listen with some floor standing speakers (3 way) and 2 dedicated amplifiers about 250w ea. I was recently gifted this gear from a fellow head who had it in climate-storage for 28 years. I started to re-listen to everything I was sent from GD mdse and WOW what a game changer. I Instantly tried kicking myself for having left stereo listening of the 70s and 80's for multi-speaker Dolby Theater setups of the mid-90s', to present day 7 speaker home theaters w subs and rear speaker's. Now it's "Back-To-The-Future" listening with only two speakers separate from my home theater. The shows are not recorded for multi speaker Dolby, so why play them that way. Stereo images across the landscape between the two speakers (not across your desk) so that you can hear the different instruments and vocals spread-out as played on the stage. Now if anyone wants to school me on STEREO or your particular home system equipment I'm all ears. Thank you PS: Due to permanent/painful ear damage I'm not the one who listens to my purchases with headphones.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

8 years 1 month

"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

10 years 3 months
Permalink

You know it's funny you mentioned it. After I put it on this morning for the drive in, I started wondering if I was hearing Bruce, not Vince. So many shows, so little time. I was in a Throwing Stones frenzy at the time. I also recall a killer one that had a reprise a few songs later. I want to say DL series or Road Trips, but I remember there smooth synths, not piano. I'll dig around for it....
user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

My favorite Roxy Music song. I’ve been up all night Party time wasting It’s too much fun This version is better https://youtu.be/hHKFDPsaASg I have a DVD with Roxy Music from 1971. The DVD also has T. Rex on it. I don’t need TV When I got T. Rex All the young dudes....
user picture

Member for

16 years 1 month
Permalink

The debate about this pick is not steeped where the sound quality is or is not; though it may seem. For me, the sound is exactly what I expected. It’s an 80’s recording sprinkled with Jeffrey Norman’s magic dust. If you (which is YOU) have listened to the archive 80's recordings, minus the latter mulitracks, then you know what the 80’s “sound” is all about. There is only so much the good Doctor Norman can do. The sound quality is rich, but certainly not in the way that those 70's recordings are rich. I did the side by side Pepsi challenge with this Dave’s next to Dave’s 23 McArthur Ct., Oregon. The results were not stunning. Dave’s 23 sounded better; but for craps sake! not sooo much better that we need to throw Dave’s 27 out with the bath water. This is great show and worthy of repeat listens. No dust collecting on a shelf. I love Brent’s organ grinder twinkle sounds. I dig the dink, dink, dink…..dink. I also love his soulful voice. This is the distinguished sound of this recording / release. Sure Bobby is way up, but Brent’s presence sets this release apart from the others. Keep the releases coming! The fact that it rains down live Grateful Dead shows all year long keeps me smiling! Rock on rockers! Cheers!
user picture

Member for

7 years 1 month
Permalink

I love the entertainment you bring to this board space brother. You pick April 24th 1978, Daves pick 7 to go after?!? I'll get to that in a minute. From a factual basis, I don't think I've seen a more heavily disliked show in Daves picks than this one except for maybe the Boulder debacle that was Dave's Picks 20. I think half the comments may be about how bad the band sounds. But you're an 80s cheerleader I got that and I love it, I can just picture you with the skirt and pom poms. Dave's Picks 7 has more outstanding tracks on it than I can count on one hand. Heady version where the fans vote, there's a million songs in the top 5 all time versions ffrom that show for goodness sakes. Scarlet Fire 4th place Me and my Uncle 1st place Big River 2nd place Brown Eyed Women 3rd place Music Never Stopped 1st place Promised Land 2nd place Cassidy 1st place Werewolves of London 2nd place The final tally: 3 Gold 3 Silver 1 Bronze And let's face it Scarlet Fire had Cornell to compete with so may as well be a bronze.
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

Is this Box of Rain that I'm cranking from April 2nd 1973. I'm having a blast prepping for "The Box". It's been 73/74 Fetivus this week. I guess I should have posted this on the other page. Oh well what are we talking about here, Dave's Picks 7. That was my first Dave's Picks. I bought it after reading how good the music never stopped is. It's no joke folks. I don't remember much about the Big River and me and my uncle, but I much prefer those pre hiatus. The Scarlet fire is pretty solid, let it burn let it burn let it burn. It is a ripping Promised Land, even though the opening lyrics get missed or flubbed or something I forget which. Anyway I'm not sure how Dave's Picks 7 ends up in a worst of conversation but, I don't know how accurate that is. Definitely one of the better shows from 1978. I think it might even be in Rolling Stones top 20 shows. That being said, I think I also prefer the show from the 22nd which was Dave's Picks 15 that space mentioned. I think the first set of that show is almost flawless. Although it does have a couple pallets in a row that I'm not fond of. The second set is pretty solid too. I definitely don't have to fit over the equalizers much on this one either. I am in full babble mode how long has this been going on for? Feels like forever, what was in that stuff I smoked. Good luck hippie chick. Yours in coherence, KeithFan2112 P.S. This DaP 21 sounds unreal. I'm talking audio at the moment. If "The Box" sounds this good we going to get high high yes sir.
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

I remember that episode stoltzfus. Man that brings back memories. I think a lot has to do with what I listen to DaP 27 on, at least for me. It sounds much better in the car than on headphones to my ears. I also prefer this early 80s keyboard sound to the late eighties. I would say it's definitely growing on me. At least the parts I've been listening to, disc 2 mostly. I like the raunchy tone on Jerry's guitar, is that the Tiger?
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Spacebrother and I agree on DaP 7 as weak. The Music Never Stopped is very good, but I don't recall anything else that stands out to me. Yes Jerry says "let it burn, let it burn, let it burn" in Fire, but there's nothing special to me about that Scarlet Fire musically. The novelty of the briefest of Stayin Alive teases does nothing for me either. And I like Werewolves of London as a song, but also a relative novelty. But, just to prevent the world from spinning on its axis, my points of divergence with Space would be that while this would rank below almost every other DaP for me, 27 and 20, and possibly 4 are all right there with it, if not below. The challenge though was for a 70s official release worse than 27, so obviously 20 doesn't meet that criteria; still 4 and 7 are my bottom of the barrel 70s releases. The most glaring issue with DaP 7 for me is Bob's slide "playing". More like the sound of 2 street cats making love while someone steps on their tails. But on DaP 27, 5+ years later, it ain't any better. And you don't have the Healy effects on vocals on DaP 7. Another place Space and I agree: DaP 15 from 2 days before is fantastic. Especially, the Deal and Wharf Rat. Jerry botches his first Wharf solo (or is slightly out of tune), but definitely makes up for it with a second go at it. Also, it's fairly ironic that my agreement is with Space and my disagreement is with KF, so this is like Elaine's trip to Bizarro World to continue the Seinfeld theme.
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

As I was deciding where to go in '73, I scanned Dick's Picks 1 and thought, hmmm, I never listen to this one, why did Dick choose this as numero uno? Solid HCS I know. There are a lot of great WRS now, but this was a novelty at the time. Truckin' I don't recall too well, but how much better could it be than '72? Probably none better. Anyway, I thought I would put on DP 14, then reach out to you guys for DP 1 impressions. And then I saw the postings from kyleharmon and Terrapin Moon with Truckin' and WRS. Maybe I should just listen to it. Alvarhanso, I basically said the same thing you did, I think you might be mixing my comments with Ace Freh...I mean Mind Left Body - awesome picture dude! Where was I - oh - DaP 7 has some highlights in my mind, and better than a ton of 1978 shows, but not as good as DaP 15. Love Donna on Scarlet, love the Fire and the let it burn, and can't think of a song more ruined by Bobby's slide than this FOTM performance. Mind Left Body has the bonie for it, but I have to admit, that's a lot of Gold and Silver on Heady. Some people are bigger fans than me for sure. Mind Left Body - I just googled Ace and can't find that pic - can you hook an Ace fan up?
user picture

Member for

7 years 1 month
Permalink

It's comical that people are arguing that DaP 27 is better than DaP 7. KF, alvahanso, you may prefer DaP 27 and for the sake of making a coherent point, I'll agree with you. But here we are, the three of us in our DaP 27 creek without a paddle (and Space brother with his pom poms cheering us on from land), but all of those people voted for a quarter of the songs on DaP 7. I'd like to say nay, but let's see, we are not talking votes in the 10 or even top 5 lol, it's 1st place, 2nd place, etc. Let's be reasonable gentlemen, we are in the minority. DP36 I don't understand your post. You said the sound isn't the problem, but half of the dissention is being cited for bad sound. And what do you mean when you say DaP 27 is about Brent? Are you saying people aren't truly unsatisfied with the sound but rather with Brent? Please explain. KF, PM me your email, I'll send the pic.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Every fool who ever did blow and made music thought they were a genius at the time, this proves they were not. Almost done with my first and last listen to make sure the discs (made in Mexico) don't skip. Then this piece is going on the shelf behind my bootleg copy of Brent's solo album. Looking forward to some good stuff come the PNW box, Go Hawks.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

6 years 5 months
Permalink

This late summer '83 tour has long been my time capsule Dead. If I could travel back in time and do any single GD tour this would be it. Boise/Sawtooths to Park West/Wasatch to Red Rocks/Rockies to Santa Fe/Sangres camping and road tripping all along the way would have been a real hoot. I have an older cousin who first turned me on to the Dead with tapes, including Boise '83, and he was living in Park City when this tour blew through the Mtn West. He still talks about this tour with reverence, one of his first after leaving MN behind. There's a vid out there of the first set of the band at Park West, and it looks just like shows I still enjoy at State Bridge or Rancho....but with the goddamn Grateful Dead on stage! Phil in particular is a BEAST with his new Modulus and girlfriend front and center. (He devotes at least a couple pages of his autobio to this particular tour and period....the beginning of his renaissance.) Sooo I'm very psyched to have an official release of this one after diving in to another DLP sub despite misgivings. In fact this is my favorite Dave's release of the last few years hands down. Admittedly I'm biased for the aforementioned reasons, but I think the uniqueness and energy of this show standout despite some sound and era limitations. Frankly the peak 70s Dead releases from Dave over and over and over again have started to bore me despite their obvious musicality. I guess I like my Dead a little less predictable and rougher around the edges in order to really highlight the truly inspired moments. Like the Boise Big RxR Blues! My one suggestion for Lemieux on future early-to-mid 80s releases would be to stick to the matrix format of the Fox '80 release. It definitely serves the music and context better than a straight Healy SBD mix, and I know from my own listening that there is no lack of worthy AUD recordings on the LMA and elsewhere that I'm sure any taper would be willing to share for the greater GD good. Cheers to the Citizens of Boise and their Surrender to the Cause!
user picture

Member for

7 years 3 months
Permalink

"It's the total lack of cohesiveness, horrible vocal harmonizing, and the guitars sounding like they're on different songs and tempos." And you gave to read Trainwrecked's real time review for a good laugh. I can deal with the sloppy playing since the old flash is in there at least half the time, but I don't get how Brent starts singing on Estimated Prophet or any number of tunes, and there are people who think it sounds good. This just sounds like a band on the ropes to me. I really think Garcia made a mistake inviting this guy into the band. Their harmonies sounded so much better before. I'm no Donna fanboy either, just an objective listener. I thought she was great on the songs she was present for when they wrote them, like Music Never Stoped, Crazy Fingers, Estimated Prophet, Eyes of the World etc, but not so much on the real early songs like St. Stephen, Sugar Magnolia, Wharf Rat, and Ramble on Rose, to name a few. But I have to FF> past Brent's vocals on this show. I was hoping he'd be low enough not to ruin songs for me, and I gave it a half dozen listens. I hope to never get another Brent release as part of my Dave's Picks subscription (fingers crossed). Keep the quality in Dave's Picks and release the 80s on the side, unless there's another tape of the DaP 8 quality, where Brent isn't overwhelming on vocals. If it all sounded like that, I could deal, but that appears to be the rare exception.
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

If I were to rank every Dave's Picks this on would fall around 23 or 24. Having said that, I'm really enjoying it after multiple listens. Of course they're not at their peak here, we knew that going in. And yes, the sound quality is not great and fluctuates throughout. But the playing here really cooks throughout despite the many flubs. But that's what drew me to this band, the willingness to take chances and to go in without a set list and try to create something spontaneous. I'm not old enough to have gone to concerts in the 70s but I'll take this over any concert I saw in 1983 where Ozzy Osbourne or April Wine played the same scripted show night after night. I'm not trying to change anyone's mind here, but, as a Godchaux era fanatic, I'm pleasently surprised by how much i enjoy this one. Maybe some of you would like it more if you didn't compare it to 72-74.
user picture

Member for

16 years 2 months
Permalink

We miss you, Jerry. More than words tell. Today I'm listening to: Jerry Garcia Band Pure Jerry: Bay Area 1978 released: August 31, 2009. Label: Jerry Made JGCD0009 Disc 1 "Mystery Train" (Junior Parker, Sam Phillips) — 8:27 [a] "Catfish John" (Bob McDill, Allen Reynolds) — 9:36 [a] "I Second That Emotion" (Smokey Robinson, Al Cleveland) — 14:02 [b] "Mission in the Rain" (Jerry Garcia, Robert Hunter) – 8:44 [b] "Don't Let Go" (Jesse Stone) — 29:46 [b] Disc 2 "Tore Up Over You" (Hank Ballard) — 9:04 [c] "Simple Twist of Fate" (Bob Dylan) — 10:58 [b] "The Way You Do the Things You Do" (Robinson, Bobby Rogers) — 10:17 [b] "Let Me Roll It" (Paul McCartney) — 11:04 [d] "Gomorrah" (Garcia, Hunter) – 6:26 [d] "I'll Be with Thee" (traditional) – 5:37 [d] "Lonesome and a Long Way from Home" (Delaney Bramlett, Leon Russell) – 23:56 [a] Recording dates and locations: [a] February 18, 1978 – Marin Veterans Memorial Auditorium, San Rafael, California [b] February 19, 1978 – Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, Santa Cruz, California [c] June 10, 1978 – Keystone, Berkeley, California [d] June 18, 1978 – Keystone, Palo Alto, California Sorry, it's Out Of Print. This recording probably could be found on the secondary markets for a rather hefty price.
user picture

Member for

6 years 10 months
Permalink

devil, good vibes to you. It's refreshing to hear it described as such. I believe the bickering stems from this push and pull against reality. May Jerry's magic twanger reign over Deadville. KF, check out the Big River and Big Railriad Blues from DP 1.
user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

I liked your summing up of DAP27, which I heard for the first time yesterday. When it started, I thought all the negative criticisms were proving to be true. The playing and the sound seemed well below par. But from Big River on, the sound become more consistent and the playing really gels. Either that-or I just get used to it. Things go down hill again with the Help-Slipknot-Franklins jam, unfortunately, but Estimated and Eyes are fine and the jam into drums, led by Brent and Bob is great. Jerry's vocals are a let down throughout, though. On the final cd, Throwing Stones is alright-although I don't actually like the song that much-and Going Down The Road is great. Its a long, long, way from the highs of, say, 1968 or 1972- as rdevil said. But as a snapshot of how they played in 1983 I would think it was pretty good. I'm quite happy with it, anyway.
user picture

Member for

7 years 1 month
Permalink

"I really think Garcia made a mistake inviting this guy into the band." Wow. So many things I could say there but I'll let it go. Hopefully you realize the sour backing vocals on Estimated on this release are Jerry and not Brent. Brent is so low in the mix for this chorus you have to strain to find him. It's the high harmony buried deep in there. And on-key.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

the version of Poptones on the album is exquisite. drive to the forest in a Japanese car the smell of rubber on country tar hindsight done me no good standing naked in this back of the woods the cassette played Poptones or in my case, Deadtones
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

...this place has become lately. Not that it matters, but count me on the side that enjoys this pick and am glad to have it. I was concerned with the sound at first... the Wang Dang>Jack Straw does sound odd with the vocals WAY up and the instruments seemingly WAY down, but as others have said here before, Big River through the rest of the 1st set sounds good to these ears, and the band is cooking, (save perhaps on the verses of Minglewood, but the jam is HOT on that one, so I can forgive the lackluster "song" portion... I've got more Minglewoods than I need as it is.) The BEW, RxRBlues, LLRain, and Deal are all top notch performances too... As for Set II, not sure where the hate is coming from in terms of the Help>Slip>Frank. Does Jerry totally botch the lyrics to Help? Yes! Is the rest of the triptych well played? Absolutely! The Slipknot and Franklins are particularly strong. The Estimated>Eyes is strong too, and the patch in Eyes, while jarring, lasts for about 5 seconds... not going to lose sleep on that one. The Jam>Drums>Space is really cool, and like Dave mentioned, the Space on this release is really great. The solo in Throwing Stones? I hear noise, chaos, and craziness, and all of it sounds well placed to me, though not perfect. As a new tune, they were still working out what to do with it, and I think that it's pretty cool to hear the band experiment with Noise Rock like that... can't think of anywhere else they did. Also, isn't that Bobby making all of the noise? Obviously, they didn't think it worked, so the made the Samson-jam part, (something that has always bugged me a bit,) but it is cool to hear where they may have been heading. The rest of the second set is average... Black Peter has been called out as unlistenable by many here who say Jerry's voice sounds terrible... Really? I know it doesn't sound like 71 Jerry, but terrible? Unlistenable? I just don't get it... I think that is what gets me down about the discussion around here lately. So many here clearly have an ax to grind, or some point to prove, on both sides of the coin. What I see more than anything is a bunch of "Deadheads" shitting on the band and more over, shitting on each other. You all know that people have favorite eras, favorite keyboard players, favorite tunes, but rather than let them have that, a lot of you seem so keen to tell them that they are wrong for liking what they like. Get over yourselves. Now that Dave's Picks have made it to #27, this place seems to be more and more toxic... kind of like the lot scene 27 years in. Whatever. I like this pick, you don't. Discussion over. Now, where the hell is that HUGE n'FUNKY Shakedown Street Dave? The past few days, I have really enjoyed the two Alpine 82 shows, 8/7, which was Dick's Picks 32, and yesterday's 8/8 show. Check them both out if you have the chance! (Of course, if you Hate the 80s/Hate Brent/Hate the Grateful Dead, than these are not the droids you seek...) 8/7/82 https://archive.org/details/gd82-08-07.sbd-streeter-wise.unknown.7689.s… Pretty classic show all around... TMNS>Sugaree>TMNS opener! 8/8/82 https://archive.org/details/gd82-08-08.sbd-wise.unknown.7690.sbeok.shnf… Good 1st set, Very strong 2nd Set with Scarlet>Fire, Estimated, Other One... The Double Encore of Satisfaction and Brokedown is perhaps the highlight for me... check out Bobby dropping Wang Dang Doodle for the (1st time?) in the middle of Satisfaction. Cool stuff! Shouting in the wind, Peace
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

We all lost Jerry 23 years ago today. RIP good sir, and thanks for all of the joy you gave to so many. Is it a coincidence that there are no GD shows from 8/9? Peace
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

....lets try something new. Can we all agree that '76 Cosmic Charlie's are awesome? I'll start. '76 Cosmic Charlie's are awesome.
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

76 Cosmic Charlie's are totally awesome! My favorite of all the Cosmic Charlie's! Headed to Merriweather to see the boys this weekend, then up to Watkins Glen for Curveball... I doubt you're coming east for either, but maybe you'll see me on the webcast! BTW - I have heard there is a free webcast of Friday night's show at Walnut Creek! This may be the link for it right here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kcoOF7_mfU Peace
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

On this day, like all of you, I reflect on the events 23 years ago. The reality of it is still a little hard to handle for me sometimes. This time around, I have come to this realization that my generation (or age group might be more appropriate) was likely one of the last if not the last to ever see Jerry play. I have talked before about my own personal experiences of getting on the bus in 92, to get see a few shows, and then only to have it end all too suddenly . I have also talked about what I think is a common feeling for everyone of these importance of all of the shows that were recorded. These recordings are the next best thing to being at the show. I know that being at the show is different and is the ultimate best thing about the Dead. The experience is “it" , but the reality is that experience only happens once. After it is done those that attended any given show have the memories - which by the way I greatly appreciate when these memories are shared. Please keep that going when appropriate/needed! However after that the only thing that is left are these recordings which gives all a chance to hear the band go at it. The other reality of this is we all know that the number of shows in vault is vast, with variety being the key. I think DaP 27 is good release, certainly not perfect. When i look at how many shows have been released The Dead, Rhino, and Dave L & Co. have been generous. When I look at Deadbase 50 and I see the lists of favorite tapes, a lot of them have been officially released. I know there is more to come. We have also got some releases that were sleepers or maybe lacking in some aspects. The reality is that with the volume of releases that have been produced there will be some that just aren't to the level as many others. Of course everyone will have different opinions on this but it is bound to happen. It looks DaP 27 is one of them. In the end I have yet to discover a show that I hated. With sound quality, performance, and completeness being variables I feel I am lucky to be able to own any of these shows with the 9/2/83 show being one of them. I will say this though, if I was approached by the good Doctor with a Tardis or Marty and Doc in a Delorean and I was told this: “You can go back in time to attend 3 Grateful Dead shows but you can't choose them. The shows are 4/24/78, 12/9/81, and 9/2/83. Do you want to go?” Without hesitation I would say “Hell Yeah!” I say this all of the time but I appreciate all of you regardless of show/era preference. If it wasn't for these comment pages I wouldn't have anyone to talk about this with.
user picture

Member for

8 years
Permalink

'76 Cosmic Charlie's are bad.............but in a good way (did I fool you for a second?)
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

Dude! This show is great! Thanks for the recommendation! I have been working from home on an online course for work the past few days, so I have had the pleasure of being able to dig deep into the archives, and this one is hitting that sweet spot right now! That is one hell of a Shakedown opener, the Bird Song is nice and exploratory, Sweet Peggy-O... the band does sound great! Thanks again for the tip :) Peace
user picture

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

I noticed a general dislike for DaP 4, is it for sound quality or performance? I've always liked this show, the 2nd set jam is great!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

Big fan of the 76 versions of Cosmic Charlie. In fact lately I've been listening to the second set of 7/16/76 (the complete set, not the one that was released as a DaP 18 bonus). Man I love that jam...one of my favorites of the whole year. The dead offer something for everyone - that's one of the reasons I love them and that's why I collect everything that comes out (more or less). I have learned that even if I'm not in the mood for a particular release on the day it comes out, doesn't mean I won't want to binge on it down the road. I'm working from home today too and very caffeinated. Will check out that 84 show now. RIP Jerry - was always a blast
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

4 - 080sfan. I listened to the same bonus disc last night while prepping dinner with the wife. Her favorite year is '76. No need to twist my arm....
user picture

Member for

7 years 3 months
Permalink

But It's a fact. Verifiable. If every day was sunny, how would you know that it's beautiful?? If all food tasted the same, how would you know what is good & what is bad?? If every day was 26 degrees, how would you know what a bikini looks like?? If every Dead show was a 10, how could you appreciate it's greatness?? The answer is, you could not. You have to have the proverbial yin/yang or else you would not be able to differentiate one from the other. So if for no other reason, appreciate the less than stellar shows, they help you know when you are truly listening to a gem!!
user picture

Member for

11 years 4 months
Permalink

'76 Cosmic Charlie's are hyp-no-tic...... thanks for the tickle - been a while - I really should check that out tonight.... gratefulhan - Glad you got on the bus in time to see Jerry. There was something about being in the same room with him that the uninitiated will never know. Agreed that all the releases are generally great. Its easy to nitpick, but Dave & Co DO know what they are doing despite all the second-guessing.... at the end of the day, we get more and more great shows. Glorious.
user picture

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

Wait a MINUTE....to be "initiated" into the dead family you had to have been in the same room as Jerry at a concert? Uh-oh, our numbers are gonna drop significantly in the next 15-20 years, ouch! My kids won't be happy about this. And are we talking 26 degrees Fahrenheit or Celsius? Cause if you dont specify the scale, we could be in bikinis all day...but, I'd have to shave my chest first. 76 Cosmic Charlies can be quite fun, the one from the Orpheum release is very nice and the 76 Dicks release with the Autumn looking cover, whichever one that was. I'm gonna go give another listen to the Winterland '73 Bonus disc 12/4/73 and Dave's 2012 bonus 7/29/74 those have a been wonderful rediscovery the last few days.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Finished DaP 27 and was very disappointed. Its definitely a cellar dweller for me in the series. 83 is my favorite year in the Brent era though this show had escaped my attention. I agree with all the comments posted about how uneven the audio quality is in the first set. By the time the sound is enjoyable we are up to Big RR. I agree that song smoked, and Deal was nice and long. The second set was classic 83, which is good, but Help was a hot mess and the cut in Eyes was killer. Overall, I might go back to that second set, but there are so many better shows in fall 83 that i'm just not sure when. I am concerned we might not get any more 83 official releases given Dave's comments about recording quality/availability and the indication that if this is the best out there, we might be in serious trouble. FYI - for relief, listened to 10/14/77 afterward. ahh.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Hi - has everyone in the U.K. got their copy yet? Waiting patiently here in Nottingham.....
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Where we disagreed was I think DaP 7 is I took issue with the idea that 4/24 is better than most '78 shows. Granted, my knowledge of '78 is limited to the official releases and I had a couple of decent non-officials (3 of which are now officially released in 1/22, 7/7-8) back when I was collecting as much as I could get, and still physically trading tapes and cds. But I will take DaP 15, DaP 23, DP 25's 2 shows (one Bear one Betty), July box (esp 7/1 and 7/8), and the 30 Trips (the show before or after DP 25) over DaP 7 any day of the week. I like the Rupp Arena show that would have been the third of the mini-box before they put DaP 7 out over Normal, too. That was the bottom of my DaP personal rankings before 20 and 27. Also, I was really joking about the disagreement line, mainly because Space and I rarely seem to see eye to eye on releases, and you and I are usually more on the same page. Probably the inner Who freak. And I add 4 in there, too not for performnce necessarily, but because it just does nothing for me. I've listened to the full show probably 3 times, and Playing> Supplication> Playing a couple other times, and it doesn't move me. (I know that wasn't your question KF, but I saw it as I was catching up on the conversation, so thought I'd answer why that one is lowly ranked in my own case.) It's not an anti-'76 thing, either, I really like some of the '76 stuff, it has more space to it, more groove than other years. That particular show, and the DP from the night after would not be put on my stereo by my choice if I wanted '76. RT 4.5 would be my go to, DaP 18 next for officials, 8/4/76 for just a '76 show. To That's Otis, it's very funny that you bemoan the toxicity of the debate and seeming unwillingness of others to compromise/hear each other out, then you literally say "Discussion over." Was that irony? I just don't think someone has to have an ax to grind not to like a particular show. Sure, it probably sours other people to read a really damning review, but we can only hear things with our own ears and not somebody else's. I wish I could hear DaP 27 the same way Space does, but the fact I can't doesn't harm your enjoyment, nor his, and this seems to be the appropriate forum for that discussion. If you were being ironic, my apologies for taking it seriously.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

this whole release is a major experiment like the "what color is the dress" and "what does the voice say".
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

it's "inner Doors freak" because they are much better than the Who ;)
user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

Mine arrived here in sunny Lowestoft on Wednesday. Hopefully yours will arrive any day now.
product sku
081227931599