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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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  • Vguy72
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    Y'all enjoying your Swing....

    .... meanwhile, I'm here shuffling to 7.31.82. #poorme
    p.s. sarcasm

  • Willysin4wd
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    16091 delivered home

    Well, this is fun. Friday night fun to me and my 14 yr old son who tells me what I want to hear concerning the Dead, 'Yeah, the sound is pretty great Dad', I can add that there is great dynamic in the recording.
    Ahh the simple pleasures of life, dragging the speakers into the living room (moms gone), eating pizza and drinking Resiliance IPA, (Recent news headline: 10yr old brews Resiliance IPA, donates proceeds to Camp Fire Relief), ok and yes listening to the newly arrived 2/26/77.
    Thanks to the earlier prompt to listen to the 2/27/77 Santa Barbara show on Archive, I was prepped coming home tonight.
    The liner notes and news clippings are enlightening, I never knew the Dead had a cult following that rivaled the Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman cult following...just goes to show....wow into playing in the band now and indeed it's a swell show....kudos to the the journalist who wrote the Santa Barbara clipping....and thank you Jeffrey Norman! enjoy ya'll

  • MDJim
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    Re: Larry

    Haa! Mine arrived today, but I haven't had a chance to spin it. How is the sound?

  • Larryl49
    Joined:
    Dave’s Picks 29

    Once again the roof of my skull is gone cause the dew just blew my brain right out of it !!

  • KeithFan2112
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    On The Beatles

    I love the Revolver / Sgt. Pepper / Mystery Tour psychedelic sound. Some great singles accompanied that period too (Rain, Day Tripper, We Can Work It Out, Paperback Writer come to mind). I always listen to St. Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour back-to-back, like a double LP, because they sound so much alike (and as you all know I'm sure, several MMT tracks were recorded during the Sgt. Pepper sessions, most notably Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane).

    Let It Be has some great tracks, but it's not my favorite record. I really dig Dig It (ha! had to) and Two of Us is real nice. The Let it Be track of course is awesome, but I grew up on the Blue Album version, which has the take where they replaced Harrison's solo with choral backing vocals, and I love that version. Across the Universe is one of my all time favorite Beatle songs. I've Got a Feeling was the surprise nugget I found on Let It Be when I bought the CD after college.

    Abbey Road. Ah. I've always thought of side two as the single, Here Comes the Sun + "The Golden Slumbers Medley" is sublime. The trippy guitar strumming on Sun King should come with a nitrous balloon. I do have to admit though, that I don't care much for the last bit by Paul - the 20 second "Her Majesty". I simply didn't rip it to my phone with the rest of the album, so the Golden Slumbers Medley concludes with "The End" - as it should have. If I ever see Sir Paul, I will lie and say it's my favorite part of the record. Which could happen. My cousin used to live in his neighborhood. I have a nice pic of his house, as well as Abbey Road Studios. And of course I did the march through the legendary crosswalk.

    The White Album feels like a lot of filler to me. I think there are 3 LPs of top-shelf Beatles, and then a bunch of B-sides. I kind of feel like they should have put the electric kick-ass version of Revolution on that album, and maybe reserved some of the singles they recorded that year (Hey Jude, Lady Madonna, Hey Bulldog) to put in place of Revolution #9 and some of the other weaker tracks. I would say to include It's All Too Much as well, but it honestly wouldn't fit in with the rest of the sound of that album, where the other songs I mentioned would. Wait a second....if I can edit Her Majesty out of Abbey Road using digital technology....then I can make the White Album whatever I want it to be. Dear Prudence!

  • deadfeat1
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    Who Knew?

    My wife had Grey's Anatomy on the other day when I inadvertently noticed a picture on the wall in one of the scenes. It looked a lot like the artwork on the PNW Box set and Believe It If You Need it releases. I was able to scan back to the scene and freeze it. The picture, upon additional scrutiny, was amazingly similar to the art on these releases and obviously painted by the same artist. Similar art was hanging in various places during another episode. Who knew that Grey's Anatomy had a Dead connection...and who cares? Ha!

    Stereophile magazine reviewed the PNW Box Set as one of it's records of the month and gave it very high ratings for both performance and sound. I guess they didn't get one that skipped...

    Recent listens-
    Believe It If You Need It - Steady rotation since it's release - one of my favorite all time Dead compilations
    Beatle's White Album 50th - Enjoying all the Beatle's conversations - My favorites are Revolver and Rubber Soul
    Hendrix Electric Ladyland Legacy 50th - Very well done
    Ry Cooder - The Prodigal Son
    A Day In The Life - Impressions of Pepper - Various artists - If you like the Beatles you should give this a try - nice jazz improvisation
    Witches Stew - Lettuce - A well done nod to Miles Davis
    And some Stones, Little Feat, Dexter Gordon, and Jimmy Smith - to name a few.

    Waiting for Dave's 29 to arrive on Monday.

    Enjoy!

  • direwulf
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    Arrived today...

    Will be listening this evening as well and picked up the new Garcia 'Electric on the Eel' box.

  • Jack Baller
    Joined:
    Ahoy, the White Whale!

    Aka DaP 29 has landed in my boat! To paraphrase the great Bob Marley, I will be a-burnin' and a-rippin' tonight.

    So I'm sitting here earlier today, fidgeting anxiously for the notification on my phone that Swing has arrived in my mailbox.

    My phone pings and an email from my alma mater comes across the wire.

    The title of that email..."The Value of Herman Melville."

    You can't make this stuff up.

  • Charlie3
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    Beatles

    That's Otis, I also find that Let It Be is the peak Beatles album for me. Something about the album as a whole really works. It did surprise me that it took so long for someone to mention Magical Mystery Tour, that is another excellent album with some overlooked gems. Blue Jay Way anyone? Baby You're a Rich Man? The other albums everyone mentioned, Abbey Road, White Album, Revolver, Sgt. Pepper's, Rubber Soul, they are all among my favorite albums as well as Hard Days Night and Help which were among the first Beatles records I heard. Good stuff, much like the Grateful Dead I pretty much like it all.
    All this talk of Dave v. Dick made me glad to have access to both of their picks. Currently going with 10/19/73 DP 19, although after someone here pointed out that Dick only made the first 15 picks of the DP series and mapped out a few more for Dave, who gets credit for DP 19? Personally, I think that argument misses the point that without the fact that Bill Candelario made the great recording of the Dead's excellent performance on 10/19/73, neither Dave nor Dick could pick it.

  • Oroborous
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    Beatles

    Always dug the weird stuff the most, though don’t recall ever hearing anything I didn’t like.
    Abby road was my go to forever, but since I got a copy of Let it Be a few years ago it’s grown on me.
    The white album of course. Peppers, I of course dig, but it doesn’t move me as much as some others.
    The big surprise was Magical Mystery Tour! Somehow that one wasn’t really on the radar until a few years back when I finally got my vinyl collection back from the rents. Holy-shmoly! Coo-coo Kachoo indeed.
    Really wish they would release that on Blu-ray high res format....

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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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...from the ‘Big Box’, “30 Trips around the Sun”
...An excellent selection for 1979.
Cape Cod Coliseum, South Yarmouth, MA 10/27/79!!! So ‘grateful’ for DaveL. Releasing this performance. Audio wise, it’s easly 5 stars if you know what I mean. Phil is a genius, Jerry is heavenly , Brent Mydland on Keyboards & vocals is just perfect in this Mix ; )
17 minute “franklins tower” beginning with “dancing in the streets!” at14minutes long. The second set is just a monstro/monster! ;)
I’m going to have to agree with David Lemieux, where this show is “perfecto”,
Dave L. Ends the CD notes that, “This,to me,is a flawless show. That is not to say that the Dead didn’t make mistakes, but when they did hit their stride—they really hit it! It was perfection.” Come home 1979!!! I love you. ;)

OCTOBER 27, 1979
last "Caution Jam": 10-22-78 [68]
Setlist
Jack Straw
Candyman
Me and My Uncle
Big River
Brown Eyed Women
Easy to Love You
New Minglewood Blues
Stagger Lee
Lost Sailor
Saint of Circumstance
Deal

Dancin' in the Streets
Franklin's Tower
He's Gone
Caution Jam
The Other One
drums
Not Fade Away
Black Peter
Around and Around

One More Saturday Night

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In reply to by Lovemygirl

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Thanks for the info about Dark Star being included in the Woodstock box set that came out for the 40th anniversary. I have just checked on Amazon, and there it is, 6 cds for £18.17- the equivalent of $24, including the track in question, as you say. This release had completely slipped under my radar. Seems like a real bargain-apart from the Hendrix and Airplane, I no longer have any of this music on vinyl or cd. The only quibble is....no Ten Years After! After Hendrix, that was the highlight of the original film for me. Still, it will be great to have the Dark Star, and to sift through all the other the pearls and pebbles.

Having a Bell’s Lampshade Party Ale.

https://untappd.com/b/bell-s-brewery-lampshade-party-ale/2931918

Listening to
12-01-73 Miller.112205
The Playing>UJB transition is very nice!

Woodstock
Last spring/summer somebody posted a link to the complete Woodstock FLAC download, unfortunately I don’t have the link.

I do have the 40th anniversary Director’s Cut on BluRay, maybe I’ll watch it on the anniversary.

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All you have to do is copy and paste the text in the address bar of whatever web site your article is on. By address I mean the part at the top of your browser window that says https://dead.net for instance. It's the same thing that you are doing already, except instead of copying and pasting the text in the article, you would be copy and pasting the website address. No new skills involved.

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I don't know a lot of soundboards extremely well, but I know that Playing => UJB => Playing like the back of my hand. You're absolutely right that is great stuff. Phil is up. Love the Brokedown Palace. My Uncle Gary got me that one, and he's just about the coolest cat you could hope to meet. Just pulled into my driveway and I'm going to put it on my headphones while I sit in my glider. Hopefully this one will get released someday.

Captcha fu-huck just nailed me for half a dozen. Is the pole part of the traffic light?!?

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Done with 12/1/73. On to DP 7. Started with Truckin' => The Wood Green Jam => Wharf Rat. This is all really really top shelf stuff. At least on headphones it is. I'm not usually into the long NFAs, but the one that they pull off here is out of this world - Keith & Jerry are putting on a funk clinic. Dark Star and Morning Dew still to come. I would love to hear this one and DP 31 remastered with the latest tools, including Plangent. If they could get these two sounding like the '74 shows from the Pacific Northwest box set....

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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I have a lot to say about Dicks Picks 7, but I am simply too buzzed and had a big day.. not sure I could put it together coherently.

I think one of our own, SimonRob was there??? but could be wrong about that.

We were talking about 77 Morning Dew's yesterday, I might just like 74's a touch more. The DS>MDew from 9/10/74 is top shelf.

I love 1974 GD.

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In reply to by MDJim

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10/27/79.....Yes this is a great show but I can't believe how overlooked 10/28/79 is, also in Cape Cod. They picked up where they left off from the night before with a show starter of half step and then a FRANKLINS storming out of that. WHOA where did that come from. A rippin Althea and a great 79 version of Music Never Stopped. The second set is also thumping along with China/Rider...Samson..Ship of Fools ...Playin..Stella ...Sugar Mag and a nice send off with U.S. Blues. A Definite show to check out if you are into 1979 .....

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In reply to by MDJim

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I've just checked, and yes, this is the compilation from Ally Pally September 1974. In which case, I must say that I have recently listened to the second set from 9/11/74 , which wasn't included in the official release. One of the most incredible jams I have ever heard-Seastones, space jams, Eyes of the World - maybe as "out there" as the band ever got. I hadn't started travelling about seeing bands in 1974, and didn't know who The Dead were then. Even if I had-this music would have gone way over my Hawkwind fixated head.

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Gotta agree on the shout out to 12/1/73 - a fantastic late '73 show and especially that Playing > UJB > Playin'. The transition to UJB as noted is pretty special. I recall getting my grubs on this via a Grateful Dead hour back in the early '90s and being blown away by that transition as well as the start to UJB...Jerry just jams on the theme for several minutes which I had never heard before (and never really since as far as I can remember). There is also some fun/interesting banter going on during this show, as the fire marshall was getting all amped up because everyone was dancing in the aisles. They stop several times to coax the crowd back their seats, and even play a little diddy taboot.

https://archive.org/details/gd1973-12-01.sbd.miller.112205.flac16

Oh, and KeithFan....nearly blasphemous that you hadn't yet been turned on to the funky-'74 Not Fade Away's. Dick's Picks 7 notwithstanding. IMHO these are some of the coolest romps through this classic due to said funk as well as some differing approaches to transitions into subsequent songs. And they are usually a bit longer than the earlier versions. I'd say the Portland PNW show from '74 is a perfect example of this.

Funk.
It makes Everything Better.

Sixtus

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Indeed I was present at one night of the '74 Ally Pally run. It was excellent, but I was unable to appreciate Seastones, possibly due to the copious and excessive quantities of space cake I consumed during the first set. Got so hopelessly lost trying to get home that I ended up spending the night in a airport lounge. Really.

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In reply to by daverock

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...a grateful Wednesday to everyone! The Sun is Shining brightly here Today, I hope everyone else is enjoying some Sunshine on this day in March...
...your welcome ‘Kevinbrandon’, I have to concur with you on 10/28/79 being a Primo example of how beautiful 1979 was in DeadLand...🙏❤️😎
What an amazing run /tour in 1979...
...’Woodstock 40th Anniversary Boxset’ is a great release. Believe it or not I listen to it on days when I’m thinking of what I want to play next😉
Audio is excellent ! Also includes a great booklet inside/included with the boxset. I heard it’s available on Amazon for $24 dollars which is an amazing price! I paid a lot more when it was first released in 2009! Lol ha ha but it was well worth the price at the time. Primo Audio in my book!
They did an amazing job on that boxset...🤠
Keithfan I to have to concur with your views on Dicks Pick #31 August 4th - 6th, 1974. Just days after Jerry Garcia’s Birthday the band had this great run in 1974, primo stuff. I believe but might be wrong, my memory, we are missing about 25-27 songs not included/released in the Dicks Picks #31... still a great Pick in the series, thanks Keithfan. And also thanks for the tips “Trainwrecked” ; )
It got me too! Lol The first time it happened to me, I was asked if I was a robot...and a photograph came up of a traffic light. I was waiting for a while for it to turn green lol ha ha 😂...
...and 12/1/73 ‘Playing>UJB>Playing’ is a beauty!
And i can’t recall if I have heard 9/11/74, sounds interesting. Thanks again Daverock. 🙏
...late this morning I decided to listen to the Grateful Dead’s performance on May 16th, 1981!
Cornell university, Ithaca NY a another Amazing release from ‘The Big Box / 30 Trips Around the Sun’! Both the first & second sets are primo.
‘Shakedown Street’ starting off with the second set is great. 🤠 it’s a shame the vault doesn’t have the end of this show, starting after Trucking, During production an audience tape was used to include/complete the Dead’s performance that day. 🙏❤️😎
Peace be with you all on this grateful Wednesday my brothers & sisters! Rock on 🙏❤️😎

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My surprise show from the box, the 93 show's anniversary is today.

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Catching up on 03/26/90 Knickerbocker today....Monster set list with a second set run that goes: Dew, Brokedown, LTGTR> HELP>Slip>Frank....

Just starting to Roll Away That Dew now.....pretty damn phenomenal.....but earlier in this show, I must say that Brent shines brightly! Perhaps one of the best versions of Blow Away.....I would bet so!

Also listened to the 30TATS 93 show a couple days ago...fine show also from Knickerbocker which includes a mighty fine Comes A Time....aren't they all mighty fine? Any blind man could certainly see!

Simon Rob....darn it.....my carpet rides were not running back then, otherwise you could have caught a flight home from that blue-light, cheap airport :-)

Peace all,

KCJ

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Chuck Berry - Definitive Collection, lots of good stuff. Carol and Nadine always smoke. Nadine, honey is that you...
Steve Miller Band - Book of Dreams. Saw the album cover, along with some others, on big squared blotter in the '80s. Good stuff. The album and the blotter.
GD - Rotterdam 5/11/72, saw all the talk on here about this show recently and figured it would be good to hear again. That Dark Star is more melodic than I recall, I must have confused it with one of the more chaotic E'72 Dark Stars. The Rotterdam and Amsterdam shows from E'72 were the first individual shows I picked up, back when I thought I would just get couple. Then I thought why not a couple more? Ultimately I picked them all up, including replacing my Hundred Year Hall cd with the full show and my Rockin' theRheine with the show in the correct order.
GD - DP 11 9/27/72. I was going to continue running through some more E'72 shows, but then it occurred to me that I wasn't going to hear a Birdsong that way, and DP11 was the first thing I came across with a Birdsong.
GD - DP 23 9/17/72, seemed like another '72 show with a Birdsong would be a good idea, so DP 23 it was. The clarity of the recording by Owsley on that one is amazing, and the show smokes.
Currently spinning Deep Purple - Machine Head for a little variation. Been digging the comments lately, things seem to be percolating nicely. More than I dig looking out the window and seeing more snow falling, which is the other thing I just did.

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Just thought a completely off-topic post would be apropos....

Original ABB lineup, January 1971 -- two months before Live at FE -- is set to drop later this year. Apparently, they played 3 shows, opening for electric Hot Tuna, and a 4-CD box is forthcoming.

The two-track soundboard reel is said to be well-balanced and well worth the listen.

RIP Duane, Gregg, Butch, Berry.

Oh, that's right.. I forgot about the overnight at the airport part.

I was awestruck that you made part of this legendary run, but I can see setting up an emergency bivouac at the airport is the part that stands out all these years later. What an incredible story!

Thanks for the tip Hendrixafficianado
:)

RSD2019 list said that a vinyl version of Bear’s Sonic Journal would be released.
I already have the CD and the 24/196 FLAC download. I probably need the vinyl too...

listening to it the other day on the way home, I was like, "wow".

10/2/80 also has a trainwrecked Stella Blue, followed by a superb, stompin' Sugar Magnolia. what a contrast.

I sure do love the GD.

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In reply to by Thats_Otis

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When my significant other comes home from a hard day.. she won't even let me play the Dead (well, at least loud). I'm envious, and thank god for headphones and (almost) legal weed.

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I’m with you Jim....after a hard days work or any days work for that matter, my wife does not want GOGD playing...especially loud! I am either on head phones, walking the dog (or both), or pushed to my upstairs man cave, and then inevitably she says “are you going to be up there all night” (sometimes she throws in an “again” at the end of that statement, if she is upset with me)”

NO HONEY!!! (not all night, just until the end of this show)...

she probably deserves a medal or something for staying with me this long!

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And a teensy bowl. Charlie I rarely post anymore but usually read everything. I saw your post on 5/11/72 and laughed. I'll tell you why. I also read the comments on Rotterdam and played the show. but then I thought the exact opposite as you, I thought Gee, that Dark Star is less melodic than I remembered. Funny right?

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I see that amazon are already advertising this with a June the 7th release but no track details yet .

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Correction , on the delux version they have songs from the Avalon on the 24/25&26 of January 69

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In reply to by perithecat

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Yes, thanks, I have just checked it out on Amazon, too. Nice to see both the original and the remixed versions being included. Like with Anthem, the original version always stuck me as being the most impressive. The live songs on the bonus disc look as they have been thrown together a bit- a compilation from 3 nights, 24/26 January 1969. Nice that Clementine is included. Looking in Deadbase, it seems that The Eleven and Lovelight from this run were the ones featured on Live Dead. Dark Star is conspicuously absent from the bonus disc. Maybe they wanted to compile a cd that reflects the era, but which bears no resemblance to Live Dead. Which, for better or worse, they have done.

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What is everyone's thoughts if they will issue a 50th for this one as well, with bonus material?

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In reply to by NCDead

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Looks like most of the bonus disc is from 1/25…'Cosmic Charlie' on the 2001/2003 reissue is also from 1/25 for those interested...

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I am not sure what made me think I could drink IPAs like a seasoned alcoholic but that sure is what I did last night. Sorry for the obnoxious ending to my post. It's gone now.

I liked the full show release bonus discs from the debut and Anthem but that can't go on forever with just one bonus disc. From what peri said the anniversary Aoxo release will feature material from multiple dates. Maybe Dave will use the anniversary releases as an opportunity to release footage from shows with missing reels.

Bird Song Veneta 8/27/72 or Bird Song PNE 6/22/73?

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So as mentioned earlier post, there is the Aoxomoa 1969 deluxe release, then DaP #30 is 1970 with a 1970 bonus disc.....when is enough enough for 1970s releases!?!? DaP #29 was great, 2/26/77 is one show everyone has wanted as long as 5/8/77- if for novelty value if nothing else. BUT, its just time for a BOX SET from the 1980s- probably SUMMER 1989(my guess is 7/17-19/89). I mean how many releases including the BOX SETs can we have from: 1970, 1972, 1974, 1977, and 1978 already??? It's just time to move into what I consider the prime years: 1979-1991....can't wait to hear deets of the 1981 or 1989 BOX SET

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My wife is fine with GD music - it's GD singing that kills it for her - LOL !!
She just doesn't get it - the GD sing pretty good.......right ??

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Just got the official dead net e.mail .
Cheaper for us limeys to buy it on amazon though . 😸😸😸

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LoveJerry, that is funny. I have the 5/4/72 Paris show spinning now because I thought maybe that is the one with the more chaotic Dark Star that I was thinking of, but now I am gonna have to go back to the 5/11 Dark Star again and see if it still sounds melodic or if I just spaced out during the chaos. Also, there is a certain amount of chaos in most Dark Stars, it is the contrast of the melodic portions and the chaos that makes the song what it is, so it in my mind it is really a question of which portion seems to stand out more on any given Dark Star, if that makes sense to any one other than me. It always struck me as following a similar pattern to tripping, with the contrast of calm and chaos shifting and stabilizing then shifting again, often in ways you didn't anticipate.

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A friend of mine owns a head shop (yes and I work in one), one of the things they sell in his store is sheets of blotter art. He gave me a sheet with Jerry on it. I will be using this pic for a short while :-) He had a small photo album with sheets of blotter art, one was all the Dead albums covers, steal your faces, can't remember what else, but a shit load of "dead" art. He pointed out they were all signed by Ken Kesey!!!! I'm like how the fuck did you get blotter art designed, printed and autographed by KEN KESEY??? He's like, "yeah, it's ken kesey,,,,,,,,,,,, ken kesey JR! I gathered Jr has a business selling blotter art. He said 20 bucks a sheet online. I have not looked into where, how and if.

Thought I'd share.

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FYI stuff,,,,, I just ordered a load of Firesign Theater. If you know who they are I need say no more. If you don't,,,, you're too god damn young :-)

If any interest out there, hit me up with PM

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9 years 3 months
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I stumbled across the newer blotter art stuff from Zane Kesey a couple of years ago, kind of interesting. Perhaps even more interesting is the Blotter Barn site which features images from Mark McCloud's "Institute of Illegal Images", vintage blotter designs from sheets that circulated. If you have never heard of Mark McCloud or his legal battles, check it out, it is a pretty fascinating story. The images on the Blotter Barn site include a number that I recognized as identical to designs that I had come across in the '80's as markings on blotter that had definitely been dipped, a virtual trip down memory lane.

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7 years 9 months

In reply to by Charlie3

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I checked this out a while back too.. very cool..

Ok.. so now I have some blotter paper, all we need is the secret recipe for acid, some beakers and Bunsen Burners and we should be good to go. What could possibly go wrong?

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7 years 1 month
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Yes of course....I can contribute. I purchased the 2018 Bicycle Day Print as my avatar now displays. To my surprise it came with 900 potential hits of acid that looked just like the print. I have the print framed but the potential acid hits are a big book mark in my Dead Base 50, and that makes me sad :-( .........

I recently asked a friend to send me a liquid vial of white lightning, but all I got was an external drive full of 3 hour concerts labeled GD.....WTF??? Did he not understand? Maybe some hidden messages in those FLAC files....

And to the "Powers That Be".....we have now figured out how to post pictures on Dead.net....only a matter of time until my compadres have tunneled into the vault, and then what will you do???

Oh and ...the picture is the blotter, not the print!

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10 years 3 months
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Cranking In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida at the moment, the full 17 minute version (3 minute radio edit, cmon). Love the Mosrite fuzz and the organ, not to mention the drum solo. Not exactly the sound of thick air, but it works. Reminds me of Home Improvement...

The next year, but glad to see the Ox-oh-mox-oh-ah announcement. As with the previous two releases, I'm sure the live release will be the best part here.

Enjoying the Eel; speaking of organ, sounds like Melvin Seals stole the church organ for the '91 show Deal to close the first set.

Reminds me back in 2006, not long after I first got 'serious about music' and into Dylan in college, we went back up to Hibbing for the Dylan Days celebration, which at that time was in it's peak. That year, they had the Blood on the Tracks band playing the headlining show, that was the band that played on the Minneapolis sessions of the album.

They performed in the Hibbing High School Auditorium (where Dylan got the curtain pulled on him for singing Little Richard, and my parents attended a decade later) and before Idiot Wind, the keyboardist Gregg Inhofer told the anecdote how they had to 'borrow' the organ from the local funeral home. "Hope they don't need it tonight." :D

Anyways, dig the Eel. I've also had I'll Take A Melody and Waiting For A Miracle in my head all week (not Leonard Cohen, though that's good too).

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by muleskinner_blues

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....agreed muleskinner. His sound during that show is like nothing I've heard from him before. My favorite show from the box. I haven't removed it from my carasol since I plopped it in.
....the AOXOMOXOA news is grate! We all get a brand spankin' new Alligator and a Caution. Blotter level stuff.
Did the math, and realized I'm older now than Jerry was in '91. Wow.
C'est La Vie....https://youtu.be/thkqtpjjIIg
.... yummy.
Hornsby killing it y'all. Where is that Bruce/Vince release Dave? Fuck man.

Accordingly.. knowing the math.. if I was jerry, I would look like I was 75 and a week from now I would be dead.. exactly.. wait for it.. a week from now. In truth, I am old and grey, but still feel healthy and young.

So sad, like a red giant, his flame burned bright, he lived his life, and then.. (not so unexpectedly) it was over. Actually.. like a slow moving car crash I did not expect it.

Still.. he left so much for so many. I love the GD, all so talented.. but with JG, it would have never been. I'm so thankful for what they left us with.
Hope that's ok to say, no negative vibes intended.

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