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    clayv
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    An institution in American rock music, the Grateful Dead continue to surprise the ears with new arrangements and altered styles. If their playing continues with the force that was heard in San Bernardino, the spirit of the Dead will live on. - Sun Telegram

    We are more than pleased to kick off this year's Dave's Picks series with the much requested and quite spirited complete performance from Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, CA 2/26/77. The Swing ’77 show was a unique beast, unlike any others from this era: as the band’s first concert of the year, it bridged the gap between the new and re-emerging sound of the returning 1976 Grateful Dead and the precision excellence of the spring ’77 Dead. Debuting two of their most intricately crafted songs of the 1970s, “Terrapin Station” (to open, no less!) and “Estimated Prophet,” the Dead demonstrated right from the start of this new touring year that they were not going to be a nostalgia act; they were going to be as adventurous and ambitious as they were at any time in their career.

    Join the adventure as they soar through tried and true ("Playing In The Band," "Tennessee Jed"), well-loved covers ("Mama Tried," "Samson and Delilah," "Dancing In the Street"), and epic new jams.

    Rounded out with three songs from Santa Barbara, CA 2/27/77, this one was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

    Dave's Picks Volume 29 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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  • hbob1995
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    DaP30

    THE worst cover of any of Dave's Picks by a long shot. Very disappointing.

    Rock on

  • alvarhanso
    Joined:
    1/3 mysteries

    Can't wait to find out what parts of these fantastic looking shows we're gonna be devouring! I've been preparing by listening to DaP 6 2/2/70 (the show after the New Orleans bust, and sans TC), and 12/20/69, finished 2/2 on lunch break in the car, hoping Pig didn't go too much on the "reach over my left shoulder" rap as there was a young lady sunning herself whilst I blasted my music with my windows down eating my Zaxby's. But since somebody suggested they go into Not Fade Away for shits and giggles, we were all spared from a salacious Pig rap from 1970, and he only mentioned getting yo hands outta yo pockets once I recall. But the ride home featured the incredibly lovely 20 min Dark Star opener from the second show, 12/20/69 at the Fillmore West (with TC), 9 months previously the site of 4 nights of fire and fury captured for all eternity on 16 track reels (the first ever 16 track live recording) and gifting the universe with Live/Dead, but a lot had happened over the course of 9 months, if the setlist stayed somewhat the same. The band on the second part of DaP 6 goes Dark Star> St Stephen> The Eleven> New Speedway Boogie instead of into the Lovelight they eventually get to, and instead of light, they plunge into the darkness that was Hunter S Thompson's great crashing wave, sweeping the dreams and idealism of the 60s back out to sea. Talk about coming full circle... Which brings me back to DaP 30 and the wonderful mystery meat we get to devour in just over 2 weeks time. From 2 weeks after they played the Fillmore West, they were on the left coast to play Bill's legendary theater, and here's the only thing missing from keithfan's post, the 1/3 setlist:
    Ealy show: Morning Dew, Me And My Uncle, Hard To Handle, Cumberland Blues, Cold Rain & Snow, Alligator > Drums > Jam > Bid You Goodnight Jam > Jam > Alligator Jam & Reprise > Caution Jam > Feedback, E: Uncle John's Band;
    Entire Late show played was: Casey Jones, Mama Tried, Big Boss Man, China Cat Sunflower-> Jam-> I Know You Rider-> High Time Tease, Mason's Children, Cryptical Envelopment-> Drums-> The Other One-> Cryptical Envelopment-> Cosmic Charlie, Uncle John's Band-> Black Peter, Dire Wolf, Good Lovin', Dancin' In The Streets-> Drums-> Dancin' In The Streets, E: Saint Stephen-> In The Midnight Hour

    I am so looking forward to hearing some tasty stuff from that! I'm actually listening to The Other One from it now... But the combinations of these setlists is just mindblowing. We get everything. It's a Thanksgiving feast of epic proportions.

    And I wonder if these were part of the Houseboat Tapes, been a while since we got something from that batch. DaP 19 1/23-24/70 I believe was from that, as well as DaP 6 as mentioned above, and DaP 10 Thelma 12/10-11/69.

    Also, no 1969 show to come out with Aoxomoxoa?

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    DaP 30's reflection cover....

    ....it's fresh on my brain, but I freaking love it!! Looks like my dog's paws! And dogs are always the first to greet you when you get home. If you scroll down a bit, you get a cool rotating AOXOMOXOA thing. Ye haw!!
    Newcastle 4.11.72's first set is under the belt. Taking a break. I'm exhausted though, so the second set may be broken up.

  • MDJim
    Joined:
    No Email For Me!

    Fargin Bastages..

    Edit: One of the kind folks here forwarded me the email.. agree, they seem to be wolf paws. I like the cover art if for no other reason there are no cartoonish skeletons and especially no skeletons with full beards.

  • Cousins Of The…
    Joined:
    Got the email too

    Fantastic cover, no skeletons, no beards; just the Dire Wolf's paws.

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    the email just hit my box…

    the email just hit my box that the sale date for DP 30 is next Thursday the 18th...Don't quite understand the cover but that's ok...

  • KeithFan2112
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    Yes Sir 80s Fan - 7/7/89 - The Bus Came By and I Got On.....

    I'm from the Philly area, so it was big news that the Grateful Dead were taking the stage for the last event that would ever be played at JFK Stadium. It was the summer between my Junior and Senior years of high school. What do I remember? Well, I've told this story before, so if you've heard it, feel free to stop me.....

    It was a sweltering hot sunny day, as humid as NJ and Philly ever get. I had no idea I was going to the show until 4pm that day. I was sitting at my kitchen table playing around with my brother's unloaded Glock, shooting imaginary bad guys, just like Martin Riggs had done a few hours earlier at the premier of Lethal Weapon 2. As I goofed around with the 9mm, which, I actually had a legitimate reason for holding nearby (the purpose of which does not come into this story), I made phone calls to WMMR and WYSP, as well as the local record stores, in an effort to figure out the song that was played at the end of the movie, right as it looked like it might be Riggs' last stand; after all, he was lying in a pool of blood with knife and gunshot wounds, and the most somber gospely blues tune I ever heard playing - something about going to Heaven. Well, [SPOILER ALERT] Riggs lived to make two bad sequels to the sequel, and my eyes dried up by the time I left the theater; but I couldn't remember how that damn song went, and nobody I contacted had a clue.

    Then into my house walked two complete strangers: one was tall and lean, perhaps a year or two older than me; the other was a little bit shorter, thickly bearded, and smiling. I wasn’t expecting anyone when I heard the front door open, so call it instinct if you will - you know, the kind of instinct that guides us to mindlessly remove bongs and other various sundries from site, when an unannounced visitor enters our domain - only it was the Glock and ammo cartridge that I was reaching for. I might have jammed the clip in at once if the shorter bastard hadn’t been smiling so friendly and looking so damn familiar. He greeted me by name, still smiling, still friendly-like. You would think this might have settled my uneasiness, but among other things, the FBI guys instructed my brother not to acknowledge any strangers who called out his name (apparently this is a technique that some would-be harm-doers use to identify a target they’ve never met in person). A lot of things went through my mind in a flash: I should have loaded the gun instead of hiding it; I should have locked the door after I came back from the matinee; I can’t believe this “very small chance they would bother us” possibility came to pass; but overriding all of that second guessing was a rush of adrenaline that hit me when I realized they never saw the gun. I croaked “hello” or something equivalent, and began to insert the clip, out of site, under the table. I had no reservations about living out a different movie now, the one where our hero famously gets off a round from under the table - kill or be killed - at least until George Lucas got bored and started f***ing around with CGI; except now the bearded hippie SOUNDED familiar too. The whole encounter played out in just a few seconds, but it felt like an eternity. The voice belonged to my cousin from Buffalo. We're the same age and grew up spending a couple of weeks a year together; but up until that day, the visits were announced, and he certainly never showed up long haired and bearded (hell, I didn't even know he could grow a damn beard yet - we were only 17). Never met his friend before, so the duo WERE 50% strangers. Suffice it to say they didn't get shot that day, but the story echoed through our lives for many years.

    His buddy had come with him from the Truckin' Up To Buffalo show on the 4th of July. They enjoyed it so much they decided to surprise me with a visit and an invitation to go. I was not too familiar with Dead in those days. I knew In The Dark from MTV and MMR, and I may have heard Friend of the Devil once. But I wasn’t about to pass a Dead show by, just because I didn’t know their music. After all, my cousin was my partner in crime: we'd seen KISS in '79, Rush in '86 and '87, Van Halen in '86 on Sammy's first tour, Pink Floyd in '88; and now we had driver's licenses, so it was only getting better. He was supposed to be arriving a couple of days later for The Who Reunion at Vet Stadium, and then we had the Stones Steel Wheels Tour kicking off at the end of August. Good times.

    I remember the circus atmosphere of the crowd at JFK. I imagine the tailgating scene in the 70s was a drop in the bucket compared to this. We've all been to the rodeo, so I won't rehash it. But it made me feel liberated, watching all of these liberated people. Liberated from what? I don't know - just free. However free you may feel, I think live music intensifies that feeling, and I don't think any more so than with the Dead. I'd never seen so many people in one place before. When Jerry walked out, I remember my cousin smiling and saying "there he is – Jerry Garcia. He's like a messiah around here." My response was, "well, he has my respect - he's playing Pete's Woodstock guitar". Of course in hindsight, he was not - at least not since 1970. The guitar I mistook for Townshend's "Woodstock guitar" was The Tiger, which has a very similar shape and color. Pete had played the Gibson SG, which Jerry also used on Live Dead and into 1970 (depicted on DaP Vol 6). The crowd erupted when Jerry walked out, like no greeting I'd ever seen for a band, let alone one guy in the band (he came last and was greeted loudest).

    Then completely unheralded - no light show or elaborate stage rig, no announcement stating we'd got the best - they just simply started playing Hell In A Bucket. Good by me, I knew that song. But that was like a soundcheck for the crowd. The real DeadHead personalities came out on the next number - Iko Iko. Now that was a unique concert experience. In the course of the next 7 or 8 minutes, I GOT what all of the hoopla was about for this band. If ever a performance captured a band's soul and spirit and allowed it to be imbibed by the audience, it was Iko Iko at JFK, where the kids all danced and shaked their bones. Did I mention all of the beach balls? It was a sea of Tie-Dye and beach balls.

    Check out the contrast in crowd movement between Hell In A Bucket, the show opener, and Iko Iko, song #2

    Hell In A Bucket:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkAzMiEUUQ8

    Iko Iko (crowd shots around 1:47, 2:10, and 3:02):
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMpaD-ktv7Q

    Highlights at the time include Blow Away, Standing on the Moon, Garcia's soloing during Scarlet Begonias (how did he produce that tone???), the crowd singing Fire On The Mountain, and of course the encore, which, by some strange twist of fate was the very song I was trying to track down from the Lethal Weapon movie. I turned to my cousin and exclaimed "holy shit! THIS is the song I was talking about from the movie!"

    "Oh!" he said, "This is an old Bob Dylan song - Knockin' On Heaven's Door."

    Amen.

  • bob t
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    Anniversary shows that I was in attendance 4/11/88 and 4/11/89

    Got to say you know how you always secretly hope that the shows you attended will always be released, well I have to say these two I can wait for other shows to be released. I am a pretty positive person and would love to see a show tomorrow with the lineup that played at these shows. Not knocking these years because I saw the 3 Alpine shows from July 89 which were awesome, and the 88 Landover shows with Ripple... 4/11/89 Rosemont Horizon had a great Shakedown to open also. They were just the shows that you went to hoping to get that killer show. The Mecca shows from 4/15 and 4/16/89 were really good!! Maybe I am just trying to say in a round about way that there a lot of good shows that can still be released! Or maybe they used all the magic up on 4/11/72?? bob t

  • MDJim
    Joined:
    Awesome

    You guys (and hopefully gals) are awesome. Great posts.. great vibes.. plenty of energy and ideas on what to listen to next.

    Thank you.

  • 80sfan
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    keithfan

    thanks Keithfan - I was actually thinking of you the other day when I was listening to the Crimson White & Indigo release (7/7/89 I believe). You were there right? Must have been an awesome experience!

    1989 is full of so many amazing shows up and down the calendar. Wouldn't mind seeing a Dave's Picks from say, 10/19/89 (one of my favorite all time shows)

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An institution in American rock music, the Grateful Dead continue to surprise the ears with new arrangements and altered styles. If their playing continues with the force that was heard in San Bernardino, the spirit of the Dead will live on. - Sun Telegram

We are more than pleased to kick off this year's Dave's Picks series with the much requested and quite spirited complete performance from Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, CA 2/26/77. The Swing ’77 show was a unique beast, unlike any others from this era: as the band’s first concert of the year, it bridged the gap between the new and re-emerging sound of the returning 1976 Grateful Dead and the precision excellence of the spring ’77 Dead. Debuting two of their most intricately crafted songs of the 1970s, “Terrapin Station” (to open, no less!) and “Estimated Prophet,” the Dead demonstrated right from the start of this new touring year that they were not going to be a nostalgia act; they were going to be as adventurous and ambitious as they were at any time in their career.

Join the adventure as they soar through tried and true ("Playing In The Band," "Tennessee Jed"), well-loved covers ("Mama Tried," "Samson and Delilah," "Dancing In the Street"), and epic new jams.

Rounded out with three songs from Santa Barbara, CA 2/27/77, this one was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

Dave's Picks Volume 29 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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Catching up on old posts. Keith Fan seriously where the hell did you find The "Seven"? I didn't know there WAS a Seven, let alone that something that obscure would rock so hard. I did some research and they only played it four times. Twice as Mickey and the heartbeats. I'm stumped why they stopped playing it. Did everybody else catch that post from the weekend?

You surprised me again with your mushroom story. No offense, but I had you pegged for straight laces. I got what you meant when you said horcrux. Fell right the fuck off my chair I did. I've been there man. You trip and you feel like that part of you will always remain behind in the place that you tripped. Unless you trip a whole fuckload. Then I suppose you feel like you've left reality off in some distant place in the past. But I only did it a handful of times myself.

You surprised me a third time talking about 1981. I don't think I've ever heard you pay homage to anything past February 17, 1979. I must say I was disappointed ;-)

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...i wanted to ask everyone if anyone could assist me in trying to get a Copy of the Daves Picks #5 in the series. I’m not having any luck finding one and it WILL complete my collection. Any help of any kind would be gratefully appreciated from this true fan of the band, the Grateful Dead to another...peace be with you all. :)

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....and found myself watching Laurel & Hardy and The Marx Brothers for the last hour. My sides hurt....😂
$440 for Pauley? 😂😶🤤

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In reply to by Mind-Left-Body

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...$440 is way to much money for this collector & fan... :(

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This week I'm giving a listen to a couple picks not normally as high in my rotation, 19 Honolulu and 24 Berkeley. I've only listened to discs 1 and some of 2 so far for each. But what I've heard has been very good, and sounds great. How about the set opening China>Rider and a set list that includes the entire Other One suite AND Dark Star on 19?

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Awhile back I was playing a jam mix that somebody have made on YouTube on my surround sound system, sometime on a weekend I guess with it turned up really loudly. Lo and behold the seven came on, and I recall thinking it was part of a dark star or something that I've never heard before. I went into the family room to see what it actually was, and it was that September 29th 1969 version. I think I have the date right on that. I'm driving and I can't check but it was the longer one that I posted over the weekend. The audio isn't terrific, but it gets the job done. It is a little bit of a mystery why they dropped it, but they dropped a lot of good songs over the years. When your band is that good you can get away with it. It is a little bit one-dimensional, so playing it for 8 or 9 minutes probably isnt optimal, but you would have thought that it would have showed up in some of their other jams for two or three minutes at a time. If I had to guess, I'd say they just forgot about it. We hang on every note of every concert as if they knew exactly what they wanted, but I think they sometimes just wung it without much thought or preparation, and without looking back . I can just imagine them in Bobby's studio in 1975 saying, hey does anyone remember how the seven went? No? Well fuck it, I suppose we could look for the tape . Does anyone remember when we played it? No ? Okay well we'll just throw the 11 Jam on the end of trucking instead. Referring of course to Lindley Meadows.

Sorry about the spelling, I'm talking into my phone to write this.

You guys got me checking it out winterland 1973 again. I forget who recorded this but sounds awesome.

Jimbo - I'd like to borrow the Wayback machine and follow the dad for 10 or 15 years. Maybe even whack ramrod over the head and take his spot. Oi! Maybe I can take Keith spot. I'd have to learn the piano first. That would take years of Groundhog Day like repetition. Nah, what am I talking about. I don't want to alter the music. I just want to hang on every note of every song that I know they're going to play as they play it live.

Is there a better 1972 version of The Other One than the Hundred Year Hall? I came late to the show. 4u long-timers, just how awesome was it when they released hundred-year Hall, ladies and gentlemen, and Rockin the rhein? Was there general knowledge at the time that the entire Europe 72 tour have been preserved on Multi track tapes? In hindsight, it's a little bit curious that it took until 2011 to finally release at all. Especially when you consider that one from the Vault came out in what 91?

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9/26/81

I recently said the 2nd set feels a bit underdeveloped (e.g., pre-drums is energetic, but needs just a liiiittle more material, and NFA feels short)

but...Morning Dew is magnificent. I felt about 14 different emotions listening to it on the way home yesterday.

as the protagonist in the GD movie (John?) sez: "Grateful Dead forever"

I also need to go back and get a good listen to The Seven as I don't recall exactly how it goes or what it did....but I do recall it was only played a handful of times.

It's funny, we think about all of the great songs the GD played and how some came and went, others came back again - we know this pretty well being the rabid base that we are. But, I recall reading an interview with Jerry (not sure when it was) and he was discussing Here Comes Sunshine, and he said something along the lines of "we only played that song like 4 times in the early '70's...." which of course if completely off base, but still quite interesting in terms of how *he* recalled this memory. Now of course, we all know Here Comes Sunshine was a MONSTER in '73 and '74, played many more times than '4'......and it was one of the hearkening calls to that era in my opinion. It's just funny to reconcile our attention to detail with others' who were actually there....

As for the contemporaneous releases of the aforementioned Europe '72 fodder, i distinctly recall going to the record store and finding Hundred Year Hall and being f%#@ing ELATED to have more of those crispy Boards at my disposal. Not to mention that Lovelight > Jam >NFA Tease > GDRFB blew me away time and time again (and still does). Indeed, I found it curious then when 'Steppin' Out' was released, but I had not thought so far ahead to believe they would EVER release the entire tour. The delay could have been a few things, like not being 100% sure the fandom/cash-in-hand was there to justify such an enormous box; it could have also been due to the fact that Dave's Picks hadn't started up yet (this was in 2012), so there was not yet a "main focus" on the releases, so perhaps they used that lull to put the big box out in fall of 2011. Or, it could be some other reason simply because I am throwing pasta at the wall here.

Always happy to speculate and find a good Seven.
Sixtus

Clearly KF's dad was a rabid touring deadhead. Makes perfect sense to me. :D

I suspect The Seven was a work in progress.. Mickey brought to the game more focus on polyrhythmic and syncopated accents and beats. The fact that half the time they played this.. it was under the moniker of Mickey and the Heartbeats might indicate Mickey was at least partially involved in pushing this theme forward. This is also about the same time The Main Ten (prelude to Playing In The Band, again written by Mickey and later adopted by Bob) came to be. Add in The Eleven and you see a theme, seven, ten, eleven, etc. They were experimenting with non-standard time signatures and syncopation (and experimenting with 'other' things which plays a very big part in it all).

I suspect Phil was a big part of this push too, but have no proof. Phil and Mickey seem to have that funk and sense of (off)beat rhythms and strange timing signatures. If you look at the 74 Jam between China and Rider (I forget what people are calling this, anyone??), but it is also a play on changes in timing signatures and beat emphasis.. seems to have Phil fingerprints as does the jam from Eyes > China Doll from this period which again is some sort of planned arrangement they slipped into preexisting transitions. Great stuff.. and for me is the drippy antimatter that keeps my attention.

A lot of these jams disappeared over time, perhaps because as they evolved they became less fluid and cumbersome to play?? This is especially true of the older songs like Seven, The Eleven, I have heard Garcia comment that St. Stephen and a lot of the stuff on Aoxomoxoa was often cumbersome to play so it was dropped over time.

Anyway.. just my two cents on how these songs came to be, why they might have been dropped as time went on. Oh.. it's suffice to say these guys were pretty high a lot in this time period and were somehow really good at playing in this condition. How on earth they were able to pull this off is beyond me, but I have a hard time remembering stuff when I am feeling other worldly.. if that makes sense.

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mine is my metrognome (sic)

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In reply to by wilfredtjones

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Unless you just got robbed or worse, usually not a good sign.

Good catch Stolie:

Garcia to Blair Jackson in '88 on why they stopped playing St Stephen. "We used it up... It's got little idiosyncrasies and verses that are different from each other...it's unnecessarily difficult. It's been made tricky. It's got a bridge in the middle that doesn't really fit in... It has a couple of things that work real good, but finally, the stuff that doesn't work overpowers the stuff that does work... If you don't remember every bit of it: 'Let's see, what verse is this?' They're not interchangeable - you have to do them in order. So a song like St Stephen is a cop. It's our musical policeman: if we don't do it the way it wants to go, it doesn't work at all. That means it's inflexible. "When you get good enough at those kinds of pieces, people think, 'Wow, that's really far out and open,' but that's an illusion. It's just written complicated - what we need is material that is authentically open."

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I am new to the releases as well, but i have heard that they had to fight for Fillmore West to get released in completion, since Rhino did not think that people would want to buy full shows with mostly repeats. I feel the success of this box opened the door for the runs of shows that we occasionally get.

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Winterland 73 was recorded by Kid Candelerio. I believe he recorded most of the November 73 releases like Dave's 5 and RT 4.3, which are top notch as well. With the Winterland 73, we also got the Plagent Process bonus.
I do remember buying 100 year hall in the mid 1990s and it was just a two disc best of set at that point. I personally had no idea the treasures they had for E72. Of course this was all pre-internet days, so most the information we got was from Relix. Remember those days? A long time ago.

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In reply to by DeadVikes

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gone are the days

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...hello All my brothers & sisters , hope everyone is doing well.
Today I put Daves Pick #9 on play. I started with disc one and enjoyed it once again! Jerry guitar is so strong on these recordings, ear piercing at times, I love the Fat Man playing on this release.
David L. Didn’t write much in the liner notes/booklet that was included with this release. ‘Gratefully’ a lot of primo photographs and news paper clippings are found in the booklet.
Anyone have any thoughts on Daves Pick #9, would love to read any feedback...
Thank you, peace be with you all.
: )

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In reply to by NCDead

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I could be wrong.. but wasn't this the last item produced by GD Merch? I think so.. Wikipedia has the record label = "Grateful Dead"

I would bet Lemieux pushed to get it released in it's entirety.. by then the battle of the completists vs. the best of war was already well underway. If there was pushback on getting it released in it's entirety, I bet it was on the GD side.. band members, Cutler, who knows.. not that I think there was not push back, I bet there was.

Still.. one of the early truly great releases. I listened to 2/27/69 in it's entirety quite mood enhanced yesterday back country skiing on some fresh show at one of the local mountains. Sublime. That Dark Star is really something. A masterpiece.

oh.. comments on DaP 9, 5/14/74? Frightening.. Don't listen to that Dark Star at high volume on a day when you missed your meds.. Atonal madness that seemingly symbolizes the end of the world and just when you can't take it anymore, the bittersweet sounds of China Doll deliver you safely back to earth. A great release, albeit a bit scary at times.

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In reply to by MDJim

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...I Absolutly agree , this Dark Star is frightening,scary at times and then what sounds like ‘space’ the band is deffently exploring unknown regions in cerebral canyons of delightful space bending musical structure...then into a nice ‘china doll’ & the Not fade away with going down the road & finish things off with a fine ‘one more Saturday night! I’m still enjoying this show, Daves Pick #9 #9 #9 #9... ; )

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Continuing to spin some things I haven't listened to in too long.
1- The Harder They Come soundtrack- Jimmy Cliff and Others, a great foundational reggae release, great mix of tunes. If you have never heard it, it is well worth a listen.
2- FW '69 3/1/69 - Grateful Dead, I usually gravitate to 2/27 when I reach for the FW '69 box, so I went with 3/1 instead. I missed this when it first came out and had to pay a bit more than I would have liked when I picked it up, but no regrets. This is a premium primal dead run.
3- Goats Head Soup - Rolling Stones, dig some of the more off the beaten path tracks on that one, 100 Years Ago, Winter and Can't You Hear the Music may not be what people think of first when they think Rolling Stones, but those songs just have a cool vibe.
4- Blues for Allah (remastered and expanded) - Grateful Dead, been a long time since I played this one but what a cool album.
5- Emotional Rescue - Rolling Stones, cause sometimes that title track just gets stuck in my head. Don't you know promises were never meant to keep? Just like the night, they dissolve off in sleep, I'll be your savior, steadfast and true, I'll come to your emotional rescue...

As far as that Hundred Year Hall release, I remember how psyched I was when that came out, had that cool artwork, sounded great, and really opened my eyes to the fact that there was way more to E'72 than what was included on the first E '72 album.

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In reply to by Charlie3

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AC/DC - Dirty Deeds
David Bowie - Scary Monsters
GOGD - Portland 5.19.74
Huey Lewis and the News - Fore!
Phish - Drum Logos, Japan 6.14.00
....that's what I did

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Went in to work early today (before anyone else arrived) and knew I needed some primordial dead. Thru on 20 Oct 68 and started working on a lesson. Good morning and then a Lovelight with Pig, followed by one continuous ride on the star all the way to the end of the tracks. Sure wish I had seen this show. I guess this would have been following granddad. Short show but 5***** quality and effort. Hopefully we'll get a gem box from this era soon. Also, I think the lesson I worked on is far better for it too.

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I was shaken from the pleasant thoughts via Drpryan's Psychedelic Breakfast to someone telling me I need to travel to India for porn and steamy, expensive sin.

I feel dirty. I'm taking an shower and will return when MaryE bans this filth monger from our world. Yukky.

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bizarre item to find on this lil' board.

sorry, but not _alllll_ posters are welcome here.

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Very cool feedback on the Hundred Year Hall release. On the one hand it's kind of a bummer that I didn't get to enjoy these releases when they first hit the streets, because I missed out on the community excitement. On the other hand, getting into the Grateful Dead hardcore revolved around ordering a new Europe 72 show every week for a couple of months, and then ordering a couple a week when I just couldn't wait any longer.

https://youtu.be/pt67BUeQ1-Q

This Tivoli show comes and goes on YouTube. Enjoy it while you can as it just came back up after a long absence.

Today I'm going with the opening drive of the '73 marathon, February 9th. China Cat - check; Sunsine - check; Loose Lucy - check; Dead Battery - check.

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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I loved 100 Year Hall, especially the Comes A Time as I have a soft spot for that song.

..but what really blew me away was getting the steamer trunk and listening to all 22 shows, uninterrupted, in succession. In fact, it rejuvenated my interest in the music in a way my previous decades of listening had not. I still hit shows from that tour regularly and in the right mood.. it transcends my mood and outlook on life.

Speaking of which.. planning my afternoon adventure now including what to listen too. What fun.

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What’s it going to be today Jim? Back Country Skiing? Single track mountain biking? Or maybe some kayaking down the ice filled river? 😊

You Should do guided tours....Psychadelic Outdoor Adventures with Jim. Maybe even fire up the time machine..... I’m in!

And speaking of outdoor adventures, if y’all have not seen Free Solo yet, I would highly recommend, and if you like that also Valley Uprising which has some nice psychadelic moments....think about hanging off the side of the largest rock face in the world while tripping....makes me woozy just thinking about it! Both are on Amazon...

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...was like Michael Jordan in 1991 or Tiger Woods in 2000. Creative playing, adventurous, yet so muscular, too. No wasted effort. They could see things that no one else saw and they could execute it. Definitely the peak for me.

Now, the Dead in 68 and early 69 was more like Mike Tyson in 1988. Hard and fast and no matter what you do, you know you are gonna be flat on your back.

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DaP 9 is probably my favorite release of the series. Followed by 29! But that Dark Star will definitely have you hiding under the covers.

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Had to comment on this release, love it, the liner notes by Hunter are also quite good and adds to the release in my opinion. I think this has been discussed before but the same show was released in it's entirety in the E 72 box and to my old ears, even back then, the 100 year hall release sounds a bit better, clearer, bigger, ??? hard to find the right word or words to describe the difference, but it is there, different mix or better production? don't know, but that is a favorite of mine and has been since it's release. Agree about E 72 also, that was soon much fun to received the box, see the box and the special name you could give it, open the box, trying to get the cd's out of those sleeves without ripping the sleeve, then the big payoff, listening to them all in a row, just a whole lot of fun. I did have multiple discs that malfunctioned with the big box release and it did take almost a year to resolve the problem, but it was finally resolved with replacement discs being sent, even replaced ripped sleeves. My first encounter with customer service, which is a whole other story.

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Thanks for the link Keithfan. The video is sweet. Just love seeing old pigpen in the mix. So they have video of some of this tour??? My God, let's get that out! What are they waiting for? I get excited just watching this link with the constant commercials.

I know I have beaten this drum before, but let's get some Blu-ray, DVD, whatever out. When was the last release with video? Sunshine Daydream? Don't these guys want to make money?

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I haven't been on this site in forever, but I am currently knee deep listening to 5/25/72 so wanted to share.....and here I see you all talking about shows from the tour. Life is funny...hope everyone is well.

PS the dark star from 5/25 was never my favorite from the tour but today I feel like I'm hearing it in a new way and I'm wondering where it's been all my life (even though I've heard it several times)...that kind of day.

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Funny this comes up this week, as I just finished comparing the sound of the HYHall and E72 release from the box. I think I compared big railroad blues back to back. I preferred the E72 sound. I thought the HYHall was thinner, and the E72 was warmer. YMMV. Some one said this box is the gift that keeps giving, and that's the truth. I'm on my third listen to the tour, and each show is breathtaking.

I've also been enjoying the latest Dave's, great release. Last night reIistened to the 30trips 79 and the first set is a little rocky, but the second set Dancin'>Eyes is a keeper. Had to stop so I look forward to the Caution tonight. Aint that sweet?

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I could be wrong.. but I believe 4/17/72 Tivolis was partially recorded by a local TV station until they ran out of film. The second set jam is completely missing, but we do get to see the bozo's in full form during Big RR Blues. Still, they have most of the first set starting with Bobby McGee and Big RR Blues Truckin' from the second set.

The Beat Club was also recorded on video which is sometimes visible on YouTube and was featured on GD at the Movies five or so years back.

I think that's all that exists. I suspect there just isn't that much money in GD DVDs or they would do more. I'd love to see the '71 Chateau d'HerouvilIe - Herouville, France cleaned up and released one day too.. that one is a gem.

Ha.. KCJanes, today's grand adventure was edibles and some cross country skiing, 8/25/72 BCT DaP 25 and back by 3:30. What a great little show that is, I had forgotten that TOO went into an early Stella Blue, I was expecting Sugar Magnolia - pleasant surprise. It's gotten too cold for winter boating, hasn't been above 15 degrees for the better part of the week, we got 8" of snow Sunday and it has been snowing a bit every day since, so snow is the fun this week. I guess I can rest easy knowing I have a second career as a raft guide though.. thanks for the confidence! ..and yes, it's been a light work week. I love light work weeks!

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Yeah, it's a drag they didn't get the Dark Star from Tivoli II, but that's what Sunshine Daydream's for, right?

We do have the Beat Club, including what's actually a killer Other One:

Bertha / PITB

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poSf7UHlQuE&t=433s

Mr. Charlie / Sugaree / Saturday Night

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JisJWN_UTog

PITB II / BIODTL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uggVpXujD70

Truckin' / Drums / The Other One

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKiM9gH9Ndc&t=1107s

Rumor has it they were sober and just about awake, as this was an afternoon engagement for TV recording. (since they were recording on "normal" people's schedules). All I can say is - look how fucking BORED these guys look straight.

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These E72 videos got me thinking....that's not the Alligator.....and neither is the one he plays at Veneta...where the f's the Alligator Strat??? Turns out the E72 one is actually it, pre-Alligator sticker. It didn't look quite yellow enough to me, so I thought it was a different one, but I guess not. In any case, I stumbled across this (check them out playing my Uncle's 30th birthday party in his backyard - mislabeled France '71:

https://www.fender.com/articles/gear/iconic-mods-how-jerry-garcias-alli…

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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I do not think the GD owns Tivoli, the Beat Club or Chateau d'HerouvilIe. So we are at the mercy of cooperation, contracts, lawyers and money to ever see them get released.

Fingers crossed..

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Love the Swing, man. What a classic. Besides the obvious highlights / debuts, really digging the Deal.

Been on the Fillmore West 69 set now for the first time; the 3-disc compilation was one of the first 'deep cut' Dead I bought in 2013 (I was surprised by the amount of sleazy blues), I have 2/27/69 from Record Store Day last year (the only live show of theirs I have on vinyl, wasn't really keen on the idea but that show was worth it) but I hadn't listened to the whole run before. Spinning 2/28/69 in the car on repeat these last two weeks, gowzah. That Drums > Jam. Nevermind actual songs! :O

A friend bought me a book on pro wrestling, it put me on a nostalgic run of Youtube back to 1999..we were all about that around 8th grade, the Attitude era. Fun to go back; Stone Cold, The Rock, Mankind...DX! I've got two words for you..

Speaking of books wrapped up one on Chernobyl, never knew much about it before. Talk about fascinating..from the process safety behaviors that lead to it, to the response, the fallout, the poor casualties, the eeriness of the Exclusion Zone. The author I read gave a history of it all, but was also an urban explorer / photographer that got to visit 'the Zone' in 2011 and that aspect was fascinating and disturbing in itself.

Rumors abound of a Dylan release of live Rolling Thunder (first leg, '75) box set to coincide with the coming Scorsese documentary. That's alpha and omega for me, bringing it all back home. *cue The Office it's happening! meme*

When I Paint My Masterpiece in a transparent Nixon mask. Renaldo and Clara. Appropriate for this week, eh...commedia dell'arte. Cherise was dressing as Pierrot* in white...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRkjUBusSdU

Don't tell me this town don't got no heart.

https://vimeo.com/262350673

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Ooops that was Dancin' > Franklin's Tower to kick off the second set of 30Trips79. Listening to it again tonight, and then on to Caution!

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I count 5 days until the Jerry Eel box ships, can you tell I'm looking forward to it?
I've been diggin' the Beatles 50th ann release of the white album and I just ordered the Kinks 50th ann release of Village Preservation Society.

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I too am eagerly awaiting the Electric on the Eel box, got my pre-order in last month. Looks like some cool songs on there, particularly looking forward to checking out the Don't Let Go, always one of my favorites, and I have high hopes for the You Never Can Tell (C'est La Vie).

So Muleskinner, you piqued my curiosity about the Chernobyl book - any chance you can post the title? I have seen a couple of articles in National Geographic about Chernobyl and some of the photo's that I have seen of the deserted remains of the town of Pripyat are just eerie on some basic level. Always dug the virtual recreation of the Pripyat amusement park in the FPS video game COD 4: MW. Abandoned places kind of fascinate me, sort of the physical embodiment of the sublime power of time.

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Well...and I thought Hippi Chick was kinda crazy....now we have Shikhashiripune who takes the personal pic to another level....nice tits, or maybe just another worthless spammer that Marye will eventually Deal with. Seems the bot test is not so good which some of us already knew...

Now spinning: ThE Ornette Coleman Trio at the “golden circle” Stockholm vol 1.....

And Now,,,,The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.....my dog is a Howlin while a make a CD for a friend.....

And now...The Beatles Abbey Road while most of you sleep!

KCJ

KCjBot

As I was reading your post and you hit upon this abandoned amusement park, I IMMEDIATELY thought of that piece of COD4 as you've so masterfully referenced. Indeed, that was an eerie setting not to mention I had to do it over like 50 times to beat it. I would end up hunkering down in one of the bumper car pavilions to survive the onslaught. Clearly this is totally out of the GD realm but nonetheless your mention brought my mind to this exact scene...

And as others have noted, I too am eagerly awaiting the next Jerry Box....this comes from one of my favorite eras for his band so it will surely be a treat. Poke The Eel.

And it's Friday.....exhale

Sixtus

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Some of the Paris May 72 shows were recorded on video tape: saw It Hurts Me Too & I Know You Rider in 1976 in a theatre in Paris, part of a "rock and roll on video" show; these were in black and white, not the greatest quality. I've always wondered if they filmed more than that.

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Pretty funny, I haven't played COD4 in a while, but I definitely recall that I spent some time maneuvering around the bumper cars trying to survive. Took a few tries for me to get through that section on the high difficulty setting.

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