• 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
  • libertycaps97211
    Joined:
    DaP27 Street Date = 8-1-18
    Give or take a few days based on where you are In the US. Iirc sub sets get shipped first. A Dave approved 1983 show?!? Who'da thunk it??? Yes!
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Santa Fe *sigh*....
    ....so close, but yet so far. I remember this tape. I remember it being en fuego. No complaints here. Except jumping forward 8 days. Maybe they are listening to me, and waiting for a better source. Yeah. I'm going with that theory.
  • carlo13
    Joined:
    Hey, Wisconsindead74
    What were you yelling while doing that victory lap around the block? I swear I heard something here in Massachusetts at around that time. Just wondering. peace.
  • carlo13
    Joined:
    So excited i....
    So excited I had to top off my sub. with an al la carte. Now I don't know what I'm going to do with it? Expensive beer coaster. Listening party is a sweet snack!! Peace.
  • amdew122
    Joined:
    Finally Dave!
    What a wonderful Monday surprise to finally get a smokin' show from September of 1983... a very auspicious time and the precursor to that excellent fall tour that had so many outstanding shows. I have to say after reading Dave's liner notes for the 10/21/83 show, in 30 Trips Around the Sun, it was painfully clear he did not get it. I guess hearing a Help > Slipknot!> Franklin's every other show or Phil playing his new six string bass was not enough to win him over or my god Brent. It is clear that the period from 1982-1986 has much must hear material and hopefully this show represents a major turning point. I missed this show but my first foray to the inspiring Rocky Mountains and New Mexico was the Red Rocks shows that followed this show four night later. For anyone who was luckily enough to see the band at Red Rocks it was a cosmic culture shock of the highest order.For this East Coast head you were really on the road on this tour. Read Rocks was a melting pot of East and the laid back, but no less enthusiastic West Coast heads; who enjoyed watching us gets our minds blown off the Rocks. Everyone together created a wonderful intimacy that soon would become more fleeting as time moved forward. At the end of the first show Wavy told everyone about Chief Hosa and we all high tailed it over there. A late night of camp fires to keep festivities going strong. I remember hanging with these dudes from New York, who passionately believed the GD should be called the Phil Lesh Band, especially after another killer Help> Slip> Franklin's played earlier that night. Dave please take note. Then to wake up that next crisp Colorado morning and have the Rockies right in front of you...Wow! Hitch hiking to Santa Fe which featured the best scene I was every part of. I am not as familiar with this show, as I am with the ones that I saw but everyone was raving about it when they arrived in Morrison. I have to note the Big RR Blues is on par with the one played a year earlier in Kansas City and the one that would follow later in October in Hartford, where Jerry just completely unleashes. Jerry let's loose here big time as well. As for Dave's reality check in his SS chat that many shows from this period have not survived the test of time is not encouraging but the answer might be more matrix or even a remaster killer audience recording. Either way I eagerly await heading back out to Rockies during that memorable September of 1983.
  • guit30
    Joined:
    Many versions on archive
    https://archive.org/details/gd1983-09-02.sbd.tetzeli.33819.sbeok.flac16… Lots of good recordings on internet archive. They are mostly from cassette master. Once the Dead get it mastered, should be a great show. How long did it take to sell out? Jim
  • Gratefulhan
    Joined:
    DaP 27!!!
    So I am really excited for this release. I don’t have a lot of familiarity with 83 shows. I was recently introduced to the 6/18, Saratoga Springs show which I liked. For this show, I have not heard a single note of it so that is always a good thing. For me I love going into shows blind, so to speak. It makes the listening a little more exciting. Obviously I know the setlist, so the surprise of what song comes next is not there, but I have no clue of how it went down. I can look at the set list and make a guess on how things went down based on the year and such. Yet as many have said “can’t judge a show by the set list”. I agree with that 100%. I also agree with what that several people have said in earlier comments that it is nice to see a change of pace. I certainly would have been in to a show from 72. 73, or 74. However we are getting our fill of those years from the Pacific NW box and recent DaP releases. The only thing I may differ on with some is what a change of pace could be. Of course this 83 show is one great example of a change of pace from the recent releases. I never would have even looked at this show had it not been released, to be real truthful. I am super grateful for this release simply for that. Yet a change of pace for me would have been a 68, 76, 79, show, just as much as and early to mid 80s show would be. I will always maintain that Dave L. is one of us and he is always thinking of us when he works to put out a show for official release. We know the sound quality by in large will be outstanding and we know the show will be a good one. Now there have been a few releases in DaP series that have generated some mixed reviews. There are few that I myself think are good but not as good as others. That will always be subjective to the listener. The bottom line is that we know that with the DaP subscription, every subscriber gets 4 complete, great sounding, good shows per year. That subscription has to be one of the best things Dead.net came up with. Finally I am bummed out to see some miss out of these releases only to have to tackle the secondary market. I have a horror story I will share some time about my pursuit ( which is on going) to get DaP 5....
  • Kevin Levine
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Finally a 1980's release
    All I can say is thank you!
  • redemption searcher
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Wow.
    This baby went fast. Only goes to show, yeah, the 70s rock, but there is PLENTY of demand for later stuff too. Used to love this 1st set audience tape, as that Phil intro to the crowd was the most hilarious I ever heard in my whole tape collection. The whole band sounds so hyper-coked-up!
  • Rmarkl
    Joined:
    John Coltrane’s “Both Directions at Once”
    Listening to it now. Soundw Grate a Grateful Thanks Love my Google music subscription $10 a month, not much music you cannot find Agreed! Way to many uptight people here in the northeast about the dead, just let this music flow, and let it go were it wants. Every time i walk into a dead concert/ D&C I leave the outside world behind, such a grate place to be knowing The Dead would be out soon...... I live in the NorthEast BTW.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years 8 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

14 years 9 months
Permalink

WTF?? Couldn't you just have posted the link instead of the whole thing?
user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

Nothing like a little public self-therapy at the expense of others to build up an illusion of validity and relevance in otherwise pathetic, meaningless lives. So sorry for you brother(s). . .
user picture

Member for

6 years 10 months
Permalink

If only I could block Terrapin moon and shitderp. That's the real solution here, put a preference section that allows you to input usernames of people who's posts you don't want to see. JimInMD - f*** Terrapin Moon he IS shitderp. Correct me if I'm wrong dreading, but were you just shoving shitderps stupid video links to the bottom of the page? I noticed shitderp posted a couple this morning. Yesterday was nice when the f*** wad thought he was going to lose his account here and didn't post anything.
user picture

Member for

6 years 11 months
Permalink

This has been a public service message from Democracy Now.......Hopefully we can get back on course,I ignore EVERY troll. and just wait for the majority of folks who post fun, funny, interesting, demented, Etc. things. I'm pretty sure the government is not involved in the selection or release of ANY GD stuff. Peace......"Music is the Best"--FZ
user picture

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

Not my scene, but it's hard not to feel bad for all involved in the Curveball fiasco. A lot of folks were really looking forward to that, and I have to say that if I, like so many folks, was already onsite waiting when the plug got pulled, AAAAGH! I'm sure something good will come of it all long term, if only in stories about where one was when the show got cancelled, but in the meantime, condolences to the Phish folks.
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

8/22/93 8/21 and 22/93 was a whole lotta fun. I had "needed no rest" (wink wink, nudge nudge) the night of the 21st. In that state, I listened to Nirvana's Nevermind ("I'm on a plane, I can't complain", indeed), Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti, and other things, including Dead Set, which worked in that set and setting. the 22 started with a long Jack Straw due to Bobby's guitar malfunction during the tune. They vamped for quite a while. Help Slip Frank in set 2...yummy.
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

saw a Netflix thing on TV last evening, a show with Steve Martin and Martin Short. very good entertainment. as I sat there, though, I realized my daughter must have thought we were like grandparents watching Lawrence Welk.
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

Showitime has an EXCELLENT doc running now, If I Leave Here Tomorrow, about the history of the band HIGHLY recommended, even if you are not a big fan of theirs. These guys made some great music and were pretty down to earth. ALL they knew was music and they are not ashamed to admit it. Rock on
user picture

Member for

14 years 9 months
Permalink

For those arriving late, here's a quick summary of all forum members' opinions of Dave's Picks Volume 27.
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

I heartily encourage you to listen to this show. extremely strong, powerful playing. yet another energetic Big Railroad Blues :)))
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

my dog has no nose. "no nose? how does he smell?" bloomin' awful.
user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

Don't let this gem become a Dave's, it needs the Plangent processing to fully bring out that Betty goodness. https://archive.org/details/gd1977-02-26.sbd.cantor.deibert.83283.flac16 Grateful Dead Live at Swing Auditorium on 1977-02-26 Set 1 Terrapin Station 1st ever New Minglewood Blues They Love Each Other Estimated Prophet 1st Ever Sugaree Mama Tried Deal Playing In The Band -> The Wheel -> Playing In The Band Set 2 Samson And Delilah Tennessee Jed The Music Never Stopped Help On The Way -> Slipknot! -> Franklin's Tower The Promised Land Eyes Of The World -> Jam -> Dancing In The Street -> Around And Around Encore U.S. Blues Identifier gd1977-02-26.sbd.cantor.deibert.83283.flac16 Lineage 7" Betty Board Reel @ 7 1/2 ips > PCM501ES > DBX Type 1 decoder > PCM501ES analog out > Fostex D5 @ 48kHz > Fostex D5 optical S/PDIF out (Jace's tape) > disk (Tim Deibert) Location San Bernardino, CA Source Betty Soundboard Taped by Betty Cantor Transferred by Jace and Tim Diebert
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 2 months
Permalink

This is not meant as a personal attack but maybe you should have read it and even acted on it. We, the US, got our ideas of the rights of man from the English but we went one step further and wrote it down. The British who have a long and proud history of a liberal constitution but with 2 major flaws. The Primacy of Parliament which givesthem the right to do anything. And a bill of rights that is ephemeral you can't see it therefor the official secrets act. That all said, on this side of the pond there are far too many people including judges willing to ignore Ben Franklin's warning. "Those who would trade liberty for security, deserve neither and will loose both. Me thinks we both need to study up on liberty we're losing it fast
user picture

Member for

8 years 8 months
Permalink

Not that grate of a song....But it sure got played a lot. They should have dropped Liberty and brought back Day Job. Seems Shirdipshit is trying to prove he’s the coolest kid on the playground. As a general rule of thumb, if you have to try that hard to prove how cool you are, you’re probably pretty much a douche.
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

I actually like that song. "Ring that bell for whatever it's worth When Monday comes, don't forget about work By now you know that face on your dollar Got a thumb to its nose and a hand on your collar" those last two lines are so true
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

don't feed (acknowledge) the trolls
user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

And so too, will this odd skirmish that's been going on around here lately. I would suggest, no one any longer antagonize anyone publicly, and, like a child, not getting the attention they crave they will just fade away. It's definitely not cool to hijack and spam these boards. How about, we offer amnesty, and you stop deliberately trying to hi-jack the page and annoy everyone. There must be a reason you were here in the first place - an interest in the Grateful Dead. So you do have some redeeming value as a human being. Why not revisit that, and give us some more classic, rare Jer photos. Something of value. Take my advice, and all is forgiven. \m/
user picture

Member for

6 years 8 months
Permalink

Pretty sad state of affairs for a man when he has to begin his remarks with "this is not meant to be a personal attack".
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

....I would be on board 100% for that show. Plagent or not. Record it on Mayan stones. Just do it. Remember the days when we bantered about Jims time traveling John Deere? I do. I miss that lawn mower. I also recall sharing recipes. Because of food....because it was a beneficial topic.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

...the joyful namechecking of so many Paisley Underground/80s Americana bands. Thin White Rope, Mazzy Star/Opal, etc. Even in this internet/FB age, I don't read much recognition of my personal favorite bands (except the team we all gather here in shared adulation of...). Amidst the ugliness that has dominated these parts this week, another great band was brought up. I have been interested in posting a link to a mindblowing version of "Preaching The Blues". I couldn't find the recording as a YT vid, so I didn't. The band performing is is The Gun Club and their album Miami was linked to here recently.I HEARTILY endorse The Gun Club! Miami is their second album and far from their finest hour. Their first album, Fire Of Love is stunning and their later works are powerful records by a maturing singer/guitarist/songwriter (Jeffrey Lee Pierce) living a maverick life that killed him young. Great starting points are the live albums Dans Kalinda Boom (featuring the band's second major line up with Kid Congo/Congo Powers on the other guitar) or Live in Europe (featuring the band's main 90s line-up and a great song selection). and Daverock/Dogon/Simonrob: Julian Cope, quite good, eh? Favorite: Peggy Suicide or Interpreter? Or a different album? I don't normally bother with minor pleasantries here, but the times seem to call for them, so: Welcome back Dave Duryea and Doc. May Jfr's sabbatical be shorter than either of yours!
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

....doh! Forgot about them. Seth knocked his knuckles on the side of my head and reminded me of them. So much music, so little time. And we ALL come here for the music. Psychotics besides....been on a female lead voice thing for a few days now. Fits like a glove. The fifty year olds of us appreciate the 80's. Chaffing the wheat. Big hair, coke, spandex and synth. I need Jim's mower.
user picture

Member for

13 years
Permalink

Fine.
user picture

Member for

13 years
Permalink

(is it too soon to say) "Get Off My Lawn You Damned Hippies"
user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months
Permalink

I agree-a brilliant album. I got this when it came out, and it seemed a really refreshing take on the blues. Most white blues bands I had heard up to that point seemed to rely on the virtuosity of lead guitarists-but The Gun Club adopted an irreverent punk attitude which emphasised speed and drama. The whole album is like a catalogue of short sharp shocks. Unfortunately, Miami was a massive let down, and I only heard one after that-The Las Vegas Story. By then they seemed like just another ordinary band. Maybe I got that wrong, and they returned to form later on. It was also through reading interviews with Jeffrey Lee Pierce that I came across the names of Son House and Charley Patton-who I still listen to. And lest it be forgot - Kid Congo/Congo Powers played with The Cramps on their Psychedelic Jungle album. Also a thumbs up for mentioning Julian Cope. But again it tends to be the earlier stuff he cut that I have heard-with The Teardrop Explodes. Their two albums are well worth hearing-Kilimanjaro and Wilder are both great - especially Kilimanjaro. Of the solo albums, the only one I remember hearing is one called "Fried"-which I liked at the time, but haven't heard since about 1989. There were a few good bands in Britain in the 1980s. Echo and the Bunnymen were alright - lead singer Ian McCulloch was in the same band with Julian Cope initially -"Ocean" may be their best album.But the absolute classic from that era, for me, is "Underwater Moonlight" by The Soft Boys. A tremendous Syd Barret inspired album. Leader Robyn Hitchcock went on to develop a solo career inspired by Barret-but the best thing he ever did that I have heard was "Underwater Moonlight". Yet another great album is "Chips off the Chocolate Fireball" by The Dukes of Stratosphere. Its a compilation featuring all of their brilliant EP and all their slightly less brilliant album. They were actually another band-XTC-who pretended to be a group called The Dukes..in order to make a psychedelic album. It works on every level.
user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months
Permalink

Having just read the posts on the other board about pressing charges, I wondered about the images which are shown down below on this board. Taken out of context, as the images are, they are a clear portrayal of child abuse. Which moves the whole debate into another, more serious area, in terms of breaking the law and the possible consequences of having done so.
user picture

Member for

7 years 11 months
Permalink

Check your PMs Then your email "This message will self-destruct in *seven* days"
user picture

Member for

8 years 2 months
Permalink

What happened to this musical messaage board?I don’t think we are in Kansas anymore Toto or is it the other way around :(
user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months
Permalink

I'm not really one for anniversaries-but 50 years ago today has come to my attention. Incidentally, I got my copy of Two From The Vaults back when it first came out, in the early 1990s. I've only just noticed that it was re-released, with the bonus tracks originally served up as extras on the earlier version of Anthem, added. So-is this upgrade of Two From The Vaults much better than the original version? It probably is, but I'd be interested in finding out for sure.
user picture

Member for

8 years 2 months
Permalink

...hope this helps you Grateful Dead: Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir (vocals, guitar); Ron "Pig Pen" McKernan (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); Phil Lesh (vocals, bass); Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart (percussion). Engineers: Jeffery Norman, Don Pearson. Recorded live at The Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, California on August 23, 1968. Includes liner notes by Harper Barnes, "Maestro" Dan Healy and "Dr." Don Pearson. All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology. You want prime early Dead, you got it. The August '68 Shrine Auditorium concert captured on TWO FROM THE VAULT is the sort of gloriously extended jam-a-thon for which the Grateful Dead became famous. Multi-part pieces like "That's It for the Other One" are like miniature symphonies, with Garcia's guitar building devilish musical spirals around Phil Lesh's thunderous bass and the two-headed drum team's galloping poly-rhythms. The set's highlight, though, is when Ron "Pigpen" McKernan steps out front for easily the finest "Lovelight" the band's archives have officially released. Strutting like a jive-talking dandy, trading hollers with Bob Weir, and conducting the band's groove as though they were the JB's on acid, Pig demonstrates how he really was the Dead's original captain. As an encore to such raucous behaviour, the hall's custodians turn off the power just as the band starts hitting warp speed on "Morning Dew." Grateful Dead: Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir (vocals, guitar); Ron "Pig Pen" McKernan (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); Phil Lesh (vocals, bass); Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart (percussion). Engineers: Jeffery Norman, Don Pearson. Recorded live at The Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, California on August 23, 1968. Includes liner notes by Harper Barnes, "Maestro" Dan Healy and "Dr." Don Pearson. All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology. You want prime early Dead, you got it. The August '68 Shrine Auditorium concert captured on TWO FROM THE VAULT is the sort of gloriously extended jam-a-thon for which the Grateful Dead became famous. Multi-part pieces like "That's It for the Other One" are like miniature symphonies, with Garcia's guitar building devilish musical spirals around Phil Lesh's thunderous bass and the two-headed drum team's galloping poly-rhythms. The set's highlight, though, is when Ron "Pigpen" McKernan steps out front for easily the finest "Lovelight" the band's archives have officially released. Strutting like a jive-talking dandy, trading hollers with Bob Weir, and conducting the band's groove as though they were the JB's on acid, Pig demonstrates how he really was the Dead's original captain. As an encore to such raucous behaviour, the hall's custodians turn off the power just as the band starts hitting warp speed on "Morning Dew." ...An expanded edition of the album, with a third CD, was released in 2007 featuring the three songs (from August 23, 1968) previously released as bonus tracks on the 2003 reissue of ‘Anthem of the Sun’ Two from the Vault was released by Light in the Attic Records as a four-disc vinyl LP on December 9, 2014 ..,I enjoy the 2007 CD mix very much. I would recommend this release to any Grateful Dead fan! Smile smile smile :) ..,same goes for the vinyl release... Grateful Dead: Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir (vocals, guitar); Ron "Pig Pen" McKernan (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); Phil Lesh (vocals, bass); Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart (percussion). Engineers: Jeffery Norman, Don Pearson. Recorded live at The Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, California on August 23, 1968. Includes liner notes by Harper Barnes, "Maestro" Dan Healy and "Dr." Don Pearson. All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology. You want prime early Dead, you got it. The August '68 Shrine Auditorium concert captured on TWO FROM THE VAULT is the sort of gloriously extended jam-a-thon for which the Grateful Dead became famous. Multi-part pieces like "That's It for the Other One" are like miniature symphonies, with Garcia's guitar building devilish musical spirals around Phil Lesh's thunderous bass and the two-headed drum team's galloping poly-rhythms. The set's highlight, though, is when Ron "Pigpen" McKernan steps out front for easily the finest "Lovelight" the band's archives have officially released. Strutting like a jive-talking dandy, trading hollers with Bob Weir, and conducting the band's groove as though they were the JB's on acid, Pig demonstrates how he really was the Dead's original captain. As an encore to such raucous behaviour, the hall's custodians turn off the power just as the band starts hitting warp speed on "Morning Dew."
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

.......what the hell is going on here???
user picture

Member for

13 years 1 month
Permalink

I had a dream last night that Dave's 28 was 12/5/79 Uptown Theater, and we FINALLY got a Shakedown Street in the series (I know, broken record... :) However, in the clear light of day, I now see that Dave's 28 will be Avalon Ballroom, 4/5/69, with all or the majority of 4/6/69 as bonus material in a wonderfully cleaned-up, pristine remastering. Finally, these past few days, my GD buddy and band-mate has encouraged me to jump ahead a little in This Day in GD History and play the 8/29 and 8/30/80 Philly Spectrum shows... Holy Frijoles, Batman! These shows are fantastic, and the SBDs available on LMA are great! I would love to see these taken, remastered, then released as a mini-box, a la RFK 89. 8/29/80 - https://archive.org/details/gd1980-08-29.sbd.miller.91694.flac16 (Great playing from all, a ton of passion! Rare 2nd set Let it Grow, great He's Gone>TOO>Drums>Space>Wharf Rat,... Check out Candyman, if nothing else...) 8/30/80 - https://archive.org/details/gd1980-08-30.sbd.munder.tetzeli.fix-8875-15… (Killer show top to bottom! One of the most rocking Cold Rains, Estimated jam is off the chain, and the post Space NFA>Black Peter, while commonplace, is exceptional! Jerry is on absolute FIRE!) If anyone is interested, PM me your email address and I can send one, or both, your way! Peace
user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months
Permalink

I'll pay more attention to that Lovelight tonight. I've always thought of New Potato Caboose as being the highlight of this show. But its all good.
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

One was great, especially for its individual and historic natureThree is good, but not one off my favorite releases, but DOS has always rocked my boat! The songs, how they were played, sounds good, and yaasss, great Lovelight. But I’m with Daverock about that whole New Potatoe etc, still just blows me away. Phil on lead bass, phew, gives me chills just talkin bout it! I don’t have the rerelease. Is it worth the upgrade?
user picture

Member for

9 years 10 months
Permalink

My other favorite Keith. The clip from 5:40 to 6:00 playing Christmas live is the darndest thing I've ever seen from a drummer.
user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

He'd be a mere 72.The best professional Keith Moon type drummer there ever was. I liked Moonie's drumming on Pinball Wizard and the rest of the Tommy "rock opera." I was a Who fan before the Grateful Dead rammed their Truckin' single in my ears. The only time I saw The Who with Moon was at The Spectrum in December 1975.
user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

I really appreciate the shout out to Moonie. What a nutter. Read a Keith Moon bio the next time you're bored. What an inspiration. I mean, what a damaged wasted life/amazing drummer rock legend. Reminds me of this great refrigerator magnet we have of like an early 1960s broad tossing her hair back, "I hate being bipolar. It's awesome!" I'm revisiting Steal Your Face. For all the shit thrown on it, I still hold it as one of the Grateful Dead's great performances. I'm not kidding, it's charming warts and overdubs and all. The backstory of how they had to throw this piece of shit together is great. Seriously, I love Steal Your Face. Beats the hell out of anything coming out from new bands today.
user picture

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

I gotta stick up for Steal Your Face, too. The first car I drove in high school just had an 8-track player and I only ever had 4 tapes for it: "Steal Your Face", Hunter's "Tiger Rose", "Cats Under the Stars", and Jefferson Airplane's "Bark". Those tapes were my driving soundtrack for a couple of years. I LOVED "Steal Your Face". It was the first I ever heard the mellow live sound of 74. The first I ever heard "Black Throated Wind" and "Sugaree". My first live "Stella Blue" and "Ship of Fools". It was the only live Dead I had from 73-74 and for me it was pure gold. "Steal Your Face", "Tiger Rose", and "Cats Under the Stars" all got heavy rotation, but "Bark", not so much, except for "Third Week in the Chelsea"- what a gem of a tune!
product sku
081227931599