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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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  • Autotransportcity
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    Car Hauling place

    That IS the primary time I've seen you post a final five Jimbo. i am perpetually game for hearing what everyone seems to be spinning.

    Jeff Smith - perpetually nice to listen to from you chum.

    Sixtus - i am going to second the feeling on another One dissection.

    Charlie3 - you have got American state trying forward to the opposite One on 4/11 Newcastle-upon-Tyne. If it's somebody's favorite American state, it's ought to be sensible. the opposite One is that the single most troublesome song on behalf of me to recall from show to point out on Europe seventy two. Everything else on E72 I will just about bear in mind the good ones from the extremely extremely f****** awing ones. For E72 alternative Ones, I just about recall 4/21 & 4/26. you'll marvel however i used to be ready to acquire a Ph.D. in Europe seventy two considering that circumstance, but my thesis was on Dark Star, Openers, and Lovelights; and in fact I did case studies on Mid-length Jams and sometimes vie Numbers; my short essay was Stage Banter and alternative Exciting Moments. you'll see however I got by with therefore very little memory of all those different Ones.

  • KeithFan2112
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    Charlie3 / Newcastle Other One

    First, you can't beat the 19 minute Truckin'. I am a little puzzled on why they separated the extended Truckin' jam on 4/16 Denmark into it's own JAM track, but not here. Not important, just things that make one ponder.

    I love this Other One. Very rockin', and Pigpen is all over the Hammond in the first 5 minutes, and again later. This to me is what we signed him up for. He plays sparsely but effectively, and when he's engaged you know it. They pretty much rock much of the first half, which is to my liking. There are some slower melodic passages where you can finally hear Keith's piano (it's a crime what was omitted from him in the mix); if you really want to know what that man contributed on the grand piano in '72, Sunshine Daydream is the to go (and Rockin' the Rhein to some extent). Jeffrey Norman on these very boards said he would like a shot at a remix. I have the impression he was rushed through the process. And love Rhino though I do, they were clearly aware of the problem, as they brought hyper-focus to Keith's performance in the liner notes on the Dusseldorf show from April 24th. He is present to a great degree on that one because they simply used The Rockin' the Rhein mix, which as we all know was released few years prior as a single project, so Jeff Norman had the time he needed. Otherwise, Keith just kind of floats in and out of the mixes. Shame too, because these multi-tracks captured him in his grand piano playing zenith. The '71 shows featured more stand-up piano, so you don't get that rich tone of the grand. The two tracks from 2nd half 72 capture some of it. Anyway, major tangent.

    The Other One! Don't think I missed the foray into Feelin Groovey, which came along nicely. The first 15 minutes are pure uptempo bliss, with some mid-tempo interludes. Bobby plays heavily into the sound on that kickass Gibson ES, and Bill the drummer just continues to carve out his niche as most underrated drummer in the world. I mean, WE know what the man does every night, but I've never seen his name in a discussion of the best. I'm not talking top 10, but somewhere in the top 20 he deserves a spot (certainly before Stuart Copeland). But I digress again.

    Next is what I call Bass Space. Phil leads the Space Jam, or at least trades off with Jerry, while Keith does his Space Pie-anner thing. The atonal stuff comes next, but only for a couple minutes, and then they come full circle back the main theme to close things out, as the bus comes by and Bobby gets on. A+ Thanks for the inspiration to pay closer attention. And then we get one of Brother Jim's favs in the aftermath, as Comes A Time rises quietly out of the sweat and tears.

  • 80sfan
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    show dates

    No worries DaveRock (I edited my post to provide the time period).

    Regarding DP 12 (June 74), I agree with Sixtus. That is one of the best releases of all time. Is there a better China>Rider than this?

  • daverock
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    Compilations-80s fan

    Good point, and I tend to agree. Many cds have been released that feature great music, but which don't feature the whole show. As has been said before, we are not listening to live music when we are listening to cds/downloads etc-we are listening to the recording of live music . A totally different thing. What works while you are in the hall doesn't necessarily work when you are sitting at home. A case in point for me might be that Live Dead 69 show I recently went to. I loved the show-but I would be very surprised if the magic I experienced there would be evident on a live recording.

    Also-I hope you don't mind me saying - but I often have no idea what show is being referred to if it is just referred to as DP, Daves Picks, Road Trips etc. without a date being included. I know that DP7 is a compilation of the London shows from 1974-but I don't know which other shows you are referring to. I know I could get up and go upstairs to have a look. But I tend not to. No offence intended.

  • Sixtus_
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    ...more on 4/11/72...

    ...Still ahead of the game so far here but I did go back again last night and listened to the Truckin' > Drums > Other One > Comes a Time > Sugar Mag from this show....what a wallop to the gut this is! BUT- what I really noticed this time (on top of the in and out of crazy that the Other One does all wrapped around a Feelin' Groovy) was the tail end of that Truckin'...it absolutely heads into TOTAL JAZZ for several minutes before it spills over into drums. Just some really interesting bass work by Phil that leads them off into this slower beat but very jazzy feel. When I had listened to 4/11 the other night, it was lost on me that this portion of Truckin' was actually Truckin'....I assumed it had landed in The Other One territory by that point....but no. I will probably listen to this suite again one more time before I cheat and get ahead to 4/14.....an all-time favorite. That Dark Star - oh boy.

    Appreciate the enthusiasm for these Other Ones....it's palpable.

    Sixtus

    P.S. 80s Fan - I'm ALL IN on DP12 - one of the best things they've ever released. Don't care it's chopped, what we got was pure gold.

  • 80sfan
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    in praise of compliations

    been listening to:
    DP 7 (London 1974)
    DP 12 (Boston Music Hall 1973)
    DP 14 (June 74)
    DP 31 (Aug 74)

    I know we all like complete shows, but if more compilation albums were released like the ones I just mentioned I'd be totally fine with it. Especially for eras where there aren't great tapes for whatever reason - just combine what exists and I doubt any of us would be unhappy...

    EDIT: Added the time periods to each release!

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Sergeant Pepper - Charlie

    I have just noticed your post on Sergeant Pepper. I am not sure if its the big box of Sergeant Pepper you are considering buying, but if you are-its well worth it. A beautiful book, three discs of outtakes,a documentary on dvd, but best of all, the best stereo version of the album that I have ever heard-plus the mono version-which many people, including me ( and John Lennon) consider to be superior to the stereo. This was how the album was intended to sound by The Beatles themselves - although this new stereo version is great too.
    Also nice to see the original promo films for Penny Lane and, especially Strawberry Fields Forever.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Wembley Empire Pool 4.8.72....

    ....track seven. THAT'S the best Cumberland ever!! My "wtf is that" moment when I first heard it on E72 back in '86. That was my bus stop my friends. Engrained in my grey matter to this day. As far as Newcastle goes, I'll be honest, I don't think I've spun that since 4.11.18. I remember loving it, and it falls in between the Vegas Golden Knights playoff schedule, so I'm all in Thursday knight. People get ready.
    Been binging on Alan Parsons for a bloody week now. Yay! So much music, so little time. Now news of some remastered '75 Garcia & Friends? The garden is indeed producing surprising fruit....
    .... edit. Cumberland.
    ....double edit. The new White Album release. I sampled some of my favorite tracks. Rocky Raccoon, Glass Onion, Dear Prudence....wait a sec. That list will get too long. I didn't sample the songs I don't like. Honey Pie, Savoy Truffle, Back In The USSR. I loved it!! The Beatles were very good. Junk and What's The New Mary Jane were fun. Spotifyed it. Not cheap, even though you get 107 tracks for your bucks.
    BTW. Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da is one of the best sing-a-long songs ever penned. La-la, how the life goes on indeed. You Go Desmond and Molly Jones!!

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Newcastle Other One

    Kiethfan, I'll be curious to hear your thoughts after hearing that Newcastle Other one, there is just something about it that really works for me. This time I was really listening for the jam Sixtus was pointing out earlier. Good stuff. I have been meaning to listen to Dusseldorf 4/24/72, perhaps my favorite show and favorite Dark Stars from all of E'72, but I am waiting till I have a long block of time to focus on it so it isn't just background while I work. Also, my wife needs to be out as 3 hours or so of loud dead will be likely to wear on her unless she is in just the right mood.

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Thanks

    Thanks Marye and Nitecat, I appreciate the input on those 50th anniversary Beatles discs, moved me another step closer to the apparently inevitable purchase. After reading a description of the remix and a wide variety of opinions about it's sound on a stevehoffman thread I am pretty intrigued. And the extra stuff looks cool, so glad to see that's what you folks thought as well. I saw someone describe the acoustic stuff on the White Album as the Beatles Unplugged.
    Jim, I counted your list twice and came up with a last 6 both times;) ( Unless you are counting the Electric Eel and Acoustic Eel as a singular item)

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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.

It's unlike me to ever refute the last piece of GD I listened to was not the best (ever).. but Shining Star (a compilation, released March 20, 1990), Pure Jerry 11/9/91 Hampton Coliseum and whatever the last release from 91 was (relatively recently) were all quite good.

The last JGB from 91 I listened to was Electric Eel 91, on the way home from the river today.. It was most excellent.. especially poignant was the classic Van Morrison You Stoned Me. But no Lucky Old Sun from this show.

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In reply to by MDJim

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.... objects in you mirror are closer than they appear. Shoreline '95. Something was amiss. A tang in the air so to speak. Psychedelia has many facets. As in projecting the future for one. Laugh if you want, but a majority of fans left that Sunday show feeling "weird". Sat on that hill outside the gates thinking, "I'm not coming back here". At least not to see the Grateful Dead. C'est La Vie. I've been back since, but it's never the same.

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Fewer than last night, and more of the teensy weensy :-)

Yes I lump 5/4 and 5/11 together too. I am not sure why.

I am very much looking forward to DaP 30. I have avoided those shows on archive.org so that I get a good virgin listen in. The are not enough Elevens in the world, but Dave is putting an end to that.

Nobody bit on the Bird Song comparison. Jim I was sure you would weigh in on that one!

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In reply to by LoveJerry

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ultimately, I'd go with 8/27/72

but luckily, I have access to both

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Impossible to choose between the two Bird Songs. One is a perfect performance with their 72 sound. The other is a perfect performance with their 73 sound. I think a few weeks ago somebody mentioned the difference in Keith's keyboards. One has electric piano and the other has acoustic piano. I may have read that somewhere beside here, but you can hear the difference if you listen closely. Actually you don't even need to listen closely, there is a really distinctive difference in sound. Oh, and one features a naked guy humping the ever-loving shit out of a telephone pole.

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Just read that live dead 69 played in London last night with Tom Constanten at the keyboards and during the show they played morning dew and it was sung by Bonnie Dobson ( she wrote it ) . Hope to get the same tonight when I go . 🤞

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Get some today.
This one sorta changed my life forever.
It's why I'm here with you fine people today.

https://youtu.be/sL6KeNuhr3Q

That is all.

Sixtus

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...3/29/90 is fantastic to these Deadheads ears!...
A dear friend and a member on this board is going to see “LiveDead69” as well in London. What I’ve heard is the band intends to perform the Grateful Dead’s Woodstock Set -list and more... pretty groovy, I dig it! Even though I never had the Privilege to attend one of their concerts, I’ve heard many ‘grateful ‘ primo stories about this band! 🙏❤️😎

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Fantastic show - Woodstock 1st set , mixture for the 2nd set . No morning dew 😾 but a lovely we bid you goodnight to close . 😸

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...the secret has been broken for many moons now, JimMD. It’s C20H25N3O 😉 lol ...

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Can anyone tell me what the cost of this box set was when it was released , and weather it’s any good . I can pick one up on eBay for around £150 ( $ 190 ) and need to know if I need it . I already have the PNW box and wonder if there’s much difference in style .
Thanks all 😸😸😸😸

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In reply to by perithecat

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There's a lot of similarities between Winterland 73 and the PNW Box. I recall when it came out people complaining about the sound, but I thought it sounded great.. similar to what we saw in the PNW box.. The setlists have some overlaps.

I would say Winterland 73 is more representative of a three show run, so you get more depth / width in the song selection from a specific time. You also get a couple To Lay Me Down's, which is nice and you don't get that in the PNW Box.. the whole run is really nice and you get two really stand-out shows in 11/10 and 11/11/73.

11/10 has the terrific second set sequence Playin' In The Band > Uncle John's Band > Morning Dew > Uncle John's Band > Playin' In The Band

...and 11/11 has that outstanding Dark Star > Mind Left Body > Eyes of the World > China Doll. That sequence is terrific, perhaps one of the stand-out shows of the year if that's fair to say, there were many stand-out's in late '73.

I hope that helps.. it's not night and day different, just a little more highly focused for that period of time (Fall 73). I can't advise if it's worth the extra coin or not - that's a decision you have to make.

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Thanks for that , I’ll sleep on it . 😺

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In reply to by perithecat

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As Jim said, some overlap setlist wise, but that doesn't mean too much given it's 5 months after the June '73 shows and 6 months before the May '74 shows, which can be an eternity in Dead time. The Dark Star from 11/11 is the biggest highlight to me, 35 min of high energy jazzy Dead, reminiscent of Veneta 8/27/72 in some aspects, but mainly the fact that it chugs along with little of the real dissonant sections. The version of The Sequence from 11/10 is my favorite of the 3 iterations (11/10/73, 11/17/73 DaP5, 3/23/74 DP 24), you get 3 great Weather Report Suites, a 1st set Brokedown Palace, and a Here Comes Sunshine. When it originally came out, it was $100, so $190 isn't too bad. It seems it finally sold out in the last 2 years or so, and hasn't hit the $500-600 Winterland 77 goes for.

The last PNW 73-74 shows I had on was just the other day, the 6/24/73 mainly for the Dark Star, then I went to 5/17/74, just to check sound quality again. Some really good stuff in there, should probably camp out for another week or so on that, but not this week...

Also, DaP 17 7/19/74 came upon my playlist recently as I wanted to hear a Wall of Sound era show that I recalled having less sound calibration going on in thenfirst couple songs, and that 29 min Playing was calling me, as was the He's Gone> US Blues, Weather Report Suite> Spanish Jam> Eyes> China Doll. Skipped Seastones after a few min. What a fantastic release this one was! Not a huge fan of US Blues, but for that couple months in 1974, I can dig it; the one out of the WRS> JAM on DP12 is fantastic, as is this one out of a great (if blown in a couple parts) He's Gone. Then that magnificent WRS fades into a definite Spanish Jam that is labeled as just Jam for whatever reason.

Lastly, the Bonus Disc on DaP 18, from 7/16/76 is pretty nice, for someone in the mood for a little more laid back jamming.

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The Winterland 73 box originally sold for $99, a bargain, and it was not limited edition. Winterland 77, the same price and also not limited. 77 goes for big bucks on eBay now, hard to find one for under $400 and I have seen some for $1500, which to me is crazy. I do believe these three shows in June are some of the best sounding recordings and performances of 77.

The Winterland 73 box is awesome, to my elephant ears sounds a tich better than PNW. Still can be bought new on Ebay for $199, just need to poke around.
Some guys are trying to sell this one for over $500.
Oh and there are no vocal dropouts in this box, unlike PNW.

Would love to see Rhino make these both available again. Shit, charge $199, it would still be a bargain!

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Perithecat, I see there have already been a few responses on this that lay things out pretty well, but I just listened to that whole box pretty recently and really enjoyed the whole run again. Overall the sound is excellent for those shows and while the 11/11 Dark Star is definitely a highlight, there is a lot of good stuff spread throughout all three shows. Also, since I love to rationalize the purchase of more dead shows, let me point out that the price of this box has been rising and may go higher in the future, so you could be saving yourself money by purchasing it now. Money you could then use to purchase more dead in the future;)

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In reply to by DeadVikes

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You need the Winterland 73 Box.
Hope yours has the bonus disc.

Yes, $99 was the price.
Several months ago there was an unopened one on eBay for $120 (if my memory serves me correctly).

Starting the day off mellow with a palate cleanse of Obscurred By Clouds on 180g vinyl.

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I've just got back from London, where I saw Live Dead 69 last night. Fantastic nights music. The first set started with Tom Constanten on his own, on piano. The first song Dylan's Frankie Lee and Judas Priest, which was unexpected. He played a few more, and then the whole band came on, opening with St. Stephen as per Woodstock. Pleasingly, they went into The Eleven before going into Mama Tried, as The Dead had done in 69. The whole set was good...well played...but something seemed a bit lacking - to me. They seemed like what I guess they are- a very good cover band. Everybody around me was talking during the 10 minute Dark Star, which was annoying, and none of the vocalists really had the bottle to pull off Lovelight. In a way, they seemed a bit upstaged by the material.

They went off for a while, and when they came back, to me, they seemed like a different band! They opened the second set with a great and jammed out Cold Rain and Snow, followed by Bertha. The audience seemed synched in with the band who seemed synched in with each other, and the joint was really rocking-all as one person. Everything they played in this second set worked like a dream-Easy Wind was played and they finished the set with a tremendous Franklins Tower. As Peri said, they then did We Wish You Good Night as the encore.

Everyone was grinning ear to ear as we filed out. That was the other great thing-many friendly people there who were happy to talk about The Dead and their experiences. I wish I'd gone on the first night now, as well!

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What a fantastic album and fantastic way to open a Saturday! So underrated and obscure, especially given that it was released between Meddle and Dark Side, but is so completely different from anything on those apart from Fearless sounding like it could fit in and Obscured by Clouds> When You're In being similar to Any Colour You Like.

More Dead, so you can save money.. and with the savings buy More Dead.

I always liked Wot's uh the Deal from Obscured too.. Floyd never played it, but Gilmour revised it a few years back and it appears as bonus material on one of his DVDs.. (forget which one).

One other Winterland 73 item worth considering.. The PNW box does not contain Morning Dew, and Winterland has remarkable version buried in the middle of an hour long jam. What's not to like about that?

Hard to argue with Charlie on this one.

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While shuffling thru the endless chore of music management, coffee in hand. I re-discovered folders I have buried down the in billbored section, Whitburn R&B. Of which I have for different years. I was once again shocked at the amount of music in these four folders. My quick goog revealed this guy whitburn, who, "deadbased" every r&b record ever done. I guess someone stated collecting all these cuts and I got 4 years worth of them. Any whitburn experts out there?

Hell, any billboard experts?

Amazing how many breakdowns.

Funny thing,,, don't see dead on a lot of them? :-)

Recently fell into huge amount, huge I tell ya, of these "time-life collections". One was EVERY hit the 60's, cross broken down by, early, mid and late. One night at the store we listened to 8 hours of 60's, knew every fuckin song! Along about 7.5 hours I look up and more co-conspirator and quipped "greatest hits of the 60's without 1 Beatles song!!!!!!" :-)

Guess they wouldn't sell the songs or time-life couldn't afford. Good chuckle anyway.

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The Winterland 1973 box set blows the trio of PNW '73 shows out of the water, especially in terms of sound quality. There is no unevenness to the recordings like PNW has (excessive tape hiss, symbols and hi-hat coming in too loud., Jerry's guitar disappearing frequently). On Winterland '73, the guitars are crisp and the sound is full throughout, with barely a hint of its analog sourcing. Others have spoken about the merits of the setlist already so I will skip that. None of this critical assessment applies to the 1974 shows in that box set.

In all fairness the Pacific Northwest box set has that awesome Bird Song and some awesome Truckin' jams. And the Dark Star ain't too shabby. Not to mention Box Of Rains and an outstanding Black Peter.

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After Obscurred By Clouds I went to Animals, also 180g vinyl.
Excellent way to round out my Saturday start-up. My 2nd favorite PF album followed by my favorite.
A few months ago I decided to buy 5 or 6 Floyd albums on 180g vinyl, to complement the Animals and DSOTM that I already had. Was totally worth it.
As a wise person from this site told me at the time, “those albums were designed for vinyl (with the requirement to get up and flip it half way through), especially Wish You Were Here”.

I bought a turntable about 11 months ago because I bought 2-27-69 on vinyl on RSD 2018, and was hoping that all of FW69 would come out on vinyl.........
Well, apparently not for RSD 2019......

I initially tried buying used vinyl but it always sounded like crap, and wasn’t even worth the $3-5 I was paying. So, I’m picking up new 180g reissues here and there (Rush, Exit Stage Left is on 200g vinyl), as well as GD new issues.

After my vinyl palate cleanse I hit the yard for some springtime yard work. Mid-60’s today, mid-30’s tomorrow. WTF?
Spring has sprung.
Beer in hand now, grilling in my near future.

Glad Daverock and Peri got to feel some Dead vibes last night.
D&C should really do a European tour to share the fun with our friends there.
No it ain’t the same, but as Daverock pointed out, last night brought fellow Dead freaks together, which is what we all need now and then.

Now, crosswalks, cars, buses, traffic lights, fire hydrants..........hey, ground score!

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Most has been said already but don't forget Loose Lucy, which oozes slink and sleaze like no other version I've heard :-)

Exit Stage Left, I may have to try this one on for size.

Obscured by Clouds, did you know Richard Wright sings lead vocal on Stay? I always thought it was Gilmour until recently.

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That's what I thought you wrote at first Jim, I was like huh? But seriously that is great logic. Dead for Dead. I would take out a second mortgage if I could just get all of the Grateful Dead stuff now. 5000 bucks for the rest of the library in Plangent.

I tried that video Sixtus, but just can't get into later Grateful Dead. I suck. Every now and then I do a retry, but it's always the same.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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One of the highlights of going to London for me is being able to go to physical record shops, and vinyl reissues are what I now look out for, too. Three I bought this morning on 180g vinyl, all of which sound superb, are Station To Station by David Bowie, Larks Tongues in Aspic by King Crimson and Blue Train by John Coltrane.

I prefer the 1973 Winterland box to the PNW one that came out last year. Its obviously a lot smaller, but the 1973 Winterland is my favourite box after the Europe 72 one-taking into account the fact I missed the Fillmore West 1969 box. Incidentally, was also hoping and expecting 2/28/69 to come out on vinyl this upcoming RSD. But going back to the 1973 Winterland , the set lists and sound are great, but I also just enjoy the playing more.

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Chock full of great shows

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Winterland 73 - Ah sod it i’ll Bite the bullet and go for it , tell myself it’s an early Christmas present !!
Live Dead 69 - as daverock says they didn’t seem much better than your average pub band with old Tom in the corner looking like a slightly creepy old wizard , who didn’t look overly fussed to be there . Guess they wouldn’t have been able to charge £25 a pop without his name on the poster . Got a flyer on the way out for the grateful dudes ( who I’d never heard of ) so I will be checking them out next month - they seem to be a bonafide tribute band which should be nice , I know you guys over the pond have them in every state but we’re a bit lacking over here .

Mind-left-body - I’m still chuckling at the fact that your spell checker has me down as Petticoat 😺😺😺

There were also flyers knocking about on Friday advertising a gig by long standing Dead cover band The Cosmic Charlies-on 13th April at The Fiddlers Elbow in Camden, if you are interested. I have never heard of The Grateful Dudes, but I have seen the Cosmic Charlies a couple of times and they were okay on those occasions-once covering The Dead and once covering JGB.

Yes, it was funny how Tom fitted in with Live Dead 69. His opening solo spot seemed to subdue everyone a bit, so that when the band came on, much to Slick Aguilar's, annoyance, no one reacted at all ! He also stuck to playing the piano, from what I could see/hear, rather than organ , which was his weapon of choice with The Dead. I liked seeing him there-the man has history, after all-but I would cough up £25.00 to see this band again with or without him.

...happy to hear you both enjoyed the show in London and made it back home safely ! 🙏
...Daverock great set of LPs you added to your collection. Speaking of reissues , the 2011release of ‘Aoxomoxoa’ was primo as well on vinyl, do you have that release in your dead collection...
...’Blue Train’ by John Coltrane lp is primo!
...Winterland 1973 boxset Primo!
It’s been a primal start of the new year 2019 so far for releases, I’m ‘Grateful’ for all of it!
Everybody enjoy your last Sunday of March & say hello to April spring flowers!... 🙏❤️😎
The bus has now become very fill and take off has begun occordindly... 🤠

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So....I have a digital copy of the bonus tracks from American Beauty. The live Truckin' from December 26, 1970 at Legion Stadium starts up late and kind of garbled, as it immediately goes into the "flashing marquees out on Main Street" verse. Can someone please let me know if this is normal for the release? Thanks!

-KeithFan

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... a grateful Sunday to everyone! 🙏🤠
This morning I listened to the entire performance from ‘Miami Arena’, Miami FL, October 26th, 1989! One of my favorite inclusions in the ‘Big Box’ 30TATS!!!
Taken from the bands 24-track recordings, the mixing was done at Bob Weirs TRI Studios!
A powerful performance from the band and it includes one of the bands crazy far out takes of “Dark Star” and the sequence following that song is just magical. Very good multitrack recording. 🙏❤️😎 next up, July 3rd 1988 Oxford Plains Speedway, ME...

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It's on youtube, and it does indeed start late and garbled. Mystery of the past 15 hours solved. Wish I'd thought of checking youtube before I tore apart my office looking for the CD (which led to the discovery of an old Easy CD Creator program that I had been looking for recently; destroyed my Windows 10 installing it). All of this to cover my compulsion to have all of the stray live songs brought together to form a CD box set called Scattered Bones.

No, Lovemy girl, I haven't got the reissue of Aoxomoxoa on vinyl. I still have the record I bought at the end of the 70s, which was the remixed version-very flat compare to the original mix. I think I'll hold off on Aoxomoxoa now until the 50th anniversary version comes out. And I'll be going for the cd, with the bonus disc, natch.

Blue Train sounds amazing-they could almost be here in my living room. I was actually looking for one of Coltrane's later albums, "Ascension" which I have read Phil credited as being an influence on the Dead's style of improvising in the late 60s. That one wasn't there, but "Blue Train" was-possibly a lot easier on the ears than "Ascension"...I will find out later on in the year, no doubt.

30 Trips is a great box-no doubt. I was back at 2/22/69 Vallejo this morning-surely one of the best shows in the box-or anywhere else, come to that.

....best $699.95 I ever spent. But for now, it's Nassau 3.30.90. Its got a midi Slipknot! for dangs sake!

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In reply to by Vguy72

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GD 10-28-72 20405.sbd.ashly-bertha (playing now)
GD 11-29-80 set2 139322.miller (yeah, what about Gainesville?)
GD 5-3-69% 95138.miller
Pink Floyd DSOTM 180g vinyl
Pink Floyd Ummagumma live album 180g vinyl

It’s been a good Sunday.

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Queen - Rock Montreal
GOGD - 3.30.90 Nassau
The Beatles - Beatles For Sale
Alice In Chains - Dirt
JGB - Eel River '91

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I Robot - Alan Parsons Project
Earth Crisis - Steel Pulse
The Dream Weaver - Gary Wright
Atom Heart Mother - Pink Floyd
Lonerism - Tame Impala

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....very nice charlie 👍 noticed the 4:20 time stamp as well 👍👍

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VGuy, I wasn't sure if anyone else here would dig I Robot or not. I put that on after getting back from a couple mile walk with the dog and found myself feeling pretty chill as I sank into the couch and just floated along on waves of sound. Put Bad Company's eponymous album and 5/16/72 Luxemborg later, and confirmed again that there are no weak shows in the E'72 set. Currently changing it up with It Is Such a Good Night by the Charlie Steinmann Orchestra - any Breaking Bad fans may recall the tune from the scene where Jesse Pinkman is slinging their batch of product around town, and then hitting up the dawn of electronica with I Feel Love by Donna Summer. Gotta mix it up now and then.

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....my last fives are a stamp on that postcard.
....it's been way too long since I've listened to Alan Parsons Project Breakdown.

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Nice to see a reference to I Feel Love by Donna Summer snuck in there. An amazing record-not that I really noticed it at the time. Why I preferred punk to electronic disco in the late 70s seems hard to fathom now. In fact, I think I'll play it now, as I get ready to hit the mean streets of Lowestoft.

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....you know this space is getting hot....but now I'm trying to capture

my last five
3/2/69 Death Don't....MorningDew
5/26/72 Morning Dew
11.7.69 Next Time You See Me (Garcia and Pig on vocals)
4.17.72 Truckin...Dark Star
11 1 79 Scarlet Fire Sam

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I glanced down at an email from work while enjoying my morning commute Dark Star. Doesn't matter which one. And some dick weed tried to throw me under the bus on an email with a lot of people on it. I had to pull over to respond to this email and light this guy up. I don't like lighting anybody up for any reason, but circumstances were extenuating. When I got back on the road, the Dark Star was not what I needed. I needed to rock out. I went with I Need a Miracle from the Closing of Winterland. It's got to be their best performance, at least with the Godchauxs. A very crankable song. But the point is, this MF'r had me so worked up I had to turn off Dark Star.

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Strictly forbidden in some European countries. Now you can see why. Interrupting and spoiling a Dark Star is a cardinal sin and inexcusable. Work is something where the hours are set out in a contract. Outside those hours you are free to listen to as many Dark Stars as you want.

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