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    clayv
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    Who's up for a revolutionary evolutionary ride? DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 1/2/70 captures the Grateful Dead as they make their first foray from the experimental 60s into their early 70s acoustic Americana period. Yes, this one is a little bit country and a little bit (psychedelic) rock and roll.

    When the "Magnificent Seven" - Pigpen on percussion, T.C. on keys - first took the stage on 1/2/70, evidence was clear that the trip was about to take a turn. From their western wears to the twang in Jerry’s “broken-string blues,” it appeared they'd brought the Bakersfield sound to the Big Apple. They worked through much of what would become Workingman's Dead, stunning the crowd with laid-back numbers like "Uncle John's Band," "Casey Jones," and "Black Peter." Just the same, they satisfied 60s stalwarts with magical versions of "Dark Star," "St. Stephen," and "That's It For The Other One." Sonic alchemy, indeed!

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, ​New York 1/2/70 has been rounded out with a bit of 1/3/70 (the subscribers-only bonus disc features the bulk of 1/3/70). It was recorded by the great Owsley "Bear" Stanley and has been lovingly mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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  • Cousins Of The…
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    ICECRMCNKD

    That's exactly it, even though I don't watch NHL :-)

  • JimInMD
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    Re: Day Tripper

    Five times played.. Blossom was especially good in my humble opinion and likely a releasable show.

    12/28/84- San Francisco Civic - San Francisco, CA
    02/20/85- Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center - Oakland, CA
    03/31/85- Cumberland County Civic Center - Portland, ME
    06/25/85- Blossom Music Center - Cuyahoga Falls, OH
    08/24/85- Boreal Ridge Ski Resort - Donner's Summit, CA

    Speaking of taking a while to pick up some steam, in the later years sometimes they started strong and ran out of steam..

    I didn't catch a Day Tripper. What a fun song.

  • daverock
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    Not dud...but less good

    From my own limited experience of seeing the band, I would say that there was more of a difference in quality on a nightly basis with them, than with other bands I have seen a lot. Going off the only run I saw them play, in London 1990, the first night, 10/30, was great. It was very exciting to actually see them after all the tapes I had heard and books I had read. I was right up at the front of the stage, and it was hard to believe that that was actually Jerry Garcia in front of me-within shouting distance as I remember it.

    The second night, 31/10, we arrived after it had started, and I could hear the strains of the first song Help On The Way, from outside the hall. Even from there, it seemed clear that they were playing way better than they had the night before. The energy level was sky high. I had been happy enough the previous night-but they were clearly much more in synch on this night than that one.

    The third night...I don't know what went wrong. I was upstairs in the balcony, on Bruce's side of the stage, and his piano playing seemed much, much louder than everything else. The music overall seemed quieter-a bit flat. I'd taken some mushrooms before this one, so you would think I would have been right in the zone-but I wasn't. It was a great set list, too-they played Dark Star-but I felt very outside things. It wasn't a dud, as such, but they didn't seem to play as well as they had on the previous two nights. Or was it me? That goes for many things in life actually-do I like something because of the quality of the "thing" in itself or because of the way I felt when I experienced it?

    I liked Deadegads expression of compassion for Bobby Sands. We surely don't have to agree with someone's ideology to feel saddened and moved by their suffering.

  • bob t
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    @VGuy

    It was one of the summers in the Midwest where it was 90+ everyday and no rain!! Not even close to the temperatures that you are use to!!! bob t

  • nitecat
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    Duds

    At every Dead show I also felt like I was at the best place on earth. Some shows it took a while for the band to get going.

    One obvious 'dud' that has been mentioned before was Boreal Ridge 8/85. I was there. It was advertised as "the highest Grateful Dead Concert in the world" because it was 7,200 feet at a ski resort in the California Sierras. They had big equipment issues that day, and had a hard time getting some juice going. I think it was the only time they played "day tripper".
    It was fun, as usual at a Dead Concert, but was a little weak.

    I just finished DaP 8 11/30/80 at the Atlanta fox. What a great show.

  • alvarhanso
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    Anybody receive the Pick or shipping notice?

    I'm hoping it will be in my mailbox when I get home, but no shipping notice or anything as yet. I may be so enthused if it's there to immediately rip and listen to the bonus disc and save the Dark Star for the weekend if I can. Probably won't.

    If anybody has received, I'm dying to know the bonus disc tracklist. :)

    As far as duds, I never got to see the Dead, so I can only go by an auditory exploration. But I've seen several offshoots, mainly Phil and Friends through many iterations, and while I never saw an actual dud, 6/28/06 Walnut Creek was a terrible setlist on paper, but the performance was fantastic. They Love Each Other (in a fantastically upbeat arrangement) was perhaps the highlight, that and Friend of the Devil> Hardest Part (a Ryan Adams original), and one would think that it wasn't a good show based on the paper and saying that. But Phil and his friends, particularly Barry Sless, Larry Campbell and Joan Osborne killed it. It was no 4/20/01, but it was a really good show. But can you imagine a better first Phil show than 4/20/01? 23 min 1st set Wharf Rat, 2nd set sequence of Dark Star> Blues For Allah> Dark Star> Night of 1000 Stars. Still one of the best shows I've seen. Oh wait, the subject was duds... :)

  • Vguy72
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    bob t said "June 22, 1988 Alpine Valley....Hottest summer ever"

    ...."seemed to be 90 every day." I'm guessing Bob, that you never saw the Dead at the Silver Bowl in Vegas. 90 degrees was a cool down!

  • deadegad
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    Duds and perception then and now: Dick's Picks 13, May 6, 1981

    I recall a lot of friends -- and this was a large entourage -- saying towards the end of this show that it was well below par. Another friend and myself were of the opinion that it was a great show and we took some lumps for our disagreement: "Oh what the hell do they know: they don't have as many tapes as we do?!?"

    And all those years later when it was officially released as Dick's Picks 13 and the LateGreat Dick Latvala wrote in the GD Almanac that this show was "The Big One!" Dick wrote that it was a show that had some unique playing and jamming quite unlike anything they did before or afterward for that matter. My friend and I were obviously right despite The GD Scholars-Idiot-Savants-of-Every-Note-Ever-Played being wrong. I took the high road after its release and never rubbed there nose in it but did feel quitely vindicated.

    On a personal note I will add that Bob's dedication of He's Gone to Bobby Sands who died after an extraordinarily long Hunger Strike in The H-Block Prisons was very moving at the time. Likewise, Jerry's singing and playing. Coming from an Irish family and having lived in Ireland too, that was an especially heart-felt and moving moment. There may not be a more painful death than starving to death over a sixty day period of time. Having said that, that does not mean that I condone all actions of The Provisional I.R.A.. The British soldiers who perished, among all of the others, have friends and loved ones left behind too. You have a heart, you know? Similarly, and not to get too political here, but since internet postings are so easily misunderstood, past and present U.S. Administration's actions are equally questionable. That would, however, apply to any and all conflicts.

    Despite, and it was what a lot of attendees thought, May 6, 81 was not a "Dud!" It was a show that the band being moved by the news headlines truly delivered on. Dick L could tell and wrote so in the Almanac at the time of its release. And thanks Bobby W. for the dedication of He's Gone for it was a thoughtful gesture even for those who wanted a ballot-box solution to The Troubles. You're a good man Bobby W.

  • icecrmcnkd
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    Cousins

    Maybe it’s like hockey where a team has a great game, but the next night they never really get up to speed until it’s too late. So the next night they come roaring back.

    I love 12-26 and 12-28. Not sure if I have listened to 12-27. Think I have video of 12-30.

  • Cousins Of The…
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    Duds!!

    One that sticks out for me is 12/27/79; right in between two of the best shows of the year, this was a letdown. Listening to it on the Archive, it's not that bad, but in person it sounded like Jerry didn't come alive until the post-drums.

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Who's up for a revolutionary evolutionary ride? DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 1/2/70 captures the Grateful Dead as they make their first foray from the experimental 60s into their early 70s acoustic Americana period. Yes, this one is a little bit country and a little bit (psychedelic) rock and roll.

When the "Magnificent Seven" - Pigpen on percussion, T.C. on keys - first took the stage on 1/2/70, evidence was clear that the trip was about to take a turn. From their western wears to the twang in Jerry’s “broken-string blues,” it appeared they'd brought the Bakersfield sound to the Big Apple. They worked through much of what would become Workingman's Dead, stunning the crowd with laid-back numbers like "Uncle John's Band," "Casey Jones," and "Black Peter." Just the same, they satisfied 60s stalwarts with magical versions of "Dark Star," "St. Stephen," and "That's It For The Other One." Sonic alchemy, indeed!

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, ​New York 1/2/70 has been rounded out with a bit of 1/3/70 (the subscribers-only bonus disc features the bulk of 1/3/70). It was recorded by the great Owsley "Bear" Stanley and has been lovingly mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Those scans look great!

#18946/20000 made it here yesterday... Whew! Looks like I just made the cut!

Peace

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DP 30 #3877 landed in D-Ville Georgia late this afternoon, had been watching the mailbox from my window for hours. Got my yard work done and am now enjoying a cold beverage and That’s It For The Other One is sounding stellar. Every year I think I won’t subscribe and then the bonus disc shows up in all its glory and I know I will belly up and do it again. Enjoy this one everybody!

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DP30 #3877 landed in D-Ville, Georgia late this afternoon, I’d been eyeing my mailbox for what seemed like days. Got all my lawn work done and am now enjoying a cold beveridge and That’s It For The Other One is sounding stellar. Every year I think I won’t subscribe and then the bonus disc shows up on all its glory and I know I will. The cover is wicked cool. Enjoy this one everyone.

....no bills. Yay! No Fillmore. Boo! Evens out. I have Monday and Tuesday off because I needed a break from work. All good things in all good time.

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Theres a package in there
The exact same size as a daves pick
same weight
Unusual address, but hey they are changing warehouses

Its not daves picks
Some bs electronic clock as advertising ploy

Duhphuq bro

Waiting at great clips for freakin haircut

"Whoop there it is" plays for about 12 minues

Aaaaagh

Other lame-o pop

Why cant they ever play Motorhead?

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Thank you VGUY72 ... the Archives I saw didn't have the same details. Greatly appreciated

...my man, I love the ‘Three Blind Boys From Alabama’ , what an amazing group of gentlemen in this band of the years gone by. I have quit a few LPs and CDs made available to get your hands on. I had the privilege to attend a few of the bands past performances. This was around the same time Paul Simons release his ‘Graceland’ LP which is a primo record! Big fan of Paul’s work over the years but I fell in love with his Graceland album. I even saw the group performe minus Paul in Newark nj over 12-14 years ago if I’m remembering correctly. Beautiful music and song from this pecticular group of performers. 🙏❤️😎

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In reply to by bluecrow

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Hey now Blue Crow,

Just wanted to say that I really enjoyed your recent Dead Concert story. I never got to see Jerry...too young or more Likely naive at his end .....and had no idea what was going on at that time. Wish I would have had the chance...anyways peace dude and rock On....more stories if you have them please?!?’ Same to the rest of you who have stories...bring em on!!!

I finally got my copy of Daves plus bonus disc earlier today. I haven’t listened to all of it, but I can already say that this one ranks as one of the best in the series so far. The recording sounds slightly upgraded and more crisp and as others have said the banter is warm and present which makes it feel that the boys are in your living room revving up Jim’s lawn contraption for interstellar galactic travel...or possibly a carpet ride!

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No Dave's Picks yet, although it looks as though there have been a few sightings in Britain over the last day or so.

Not really the time or place, but I did see Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets last Friday. Amazing set list, covering the albums from Piper at the Gates of Dawn to Meddle, with a generous helping of music from the Syd Barret era. Set The Controls for The Heart of The Sun was one of many highlights-and it occurred to me that that track may be the bands equivalent of Dark Star. Its starts out with a simple riff, features lyrics that point star wards, followed by a free space in the middle and then back home again. Sadly it was dropped by the Floyd when they went big time-but its all there in those 1967-1972 versions, and now in this Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets version. But every song and instrumental they played was stellar.

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Woah! What a beautiful journey I took via headphones and excellent sound into the mind expanding music of the Dead at Fillmore East 1.2.70!! There are so many highlights. I will not bore you with my geeked opinion of this show and how it sounds. I really just write this morning to express my awe and gratititude for the music of the Dead and the team behind making these shows available to us in the 21st century. I am grateful. Thank you Jerry and the boys for providing a truly incredible soundtrack to my journey... peace and love brothers and sisters! Enjoy the day and let there be songs to fill the air.

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FYI - This is the order I went with for the bonus material (1/3/70),,,, opinions or objections.

Vol 30 - Bonus Disc - 1970-01-03 - Fillmore East - NYC, NY

01 - Morning Dew
02 - Cold Rain and Snow
03 - Alligator ->
04 - Drums ->
05 - Alligator ->
06 - Feedback
07 - Casey Jones
08 - Big Boss Man
09 - Mason's Children
10 - That's It for the Other One
11 - Cosmic Charlie
12 - Uncle John's Band
13 - Dancing in the Street
14 - St. Stephen ->
15 - In the Midnight Hour

edit - is UJB early or late show? I got it down as late

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In reply to by Dennis

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Thanks Dave and crew for getting it to us.

Made it once through the CDs yesterday, then reordered the 1/3 tracks and put copies on my music player.
Just started my second pass through 1/3.
I reordered 1/3 based on what is in Dead Base 50 (note that Dead Base IX has 1/2 early and late shows reversed).
UJB goes after Feedback as it is the encore for the early show. It does not go into another song, unlike the UJB>Black Peter in the late show (unless it was modified to sound like it doesn’t go into Black Peter)

1/3 Early
Morning Dew
Cold Rain
Alligator>Drums>Alligator>
Feedback
UJB

1/3 late
Casey
Big Boss
Masons
That’s It>
Cosmic
Dancin
St Stephen>
Midnight

There’s a lot of riffs of other songs buried in Alligator.

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well I slipped away from the salt mine to grab a bit of breakfast and put in the bonus disc for the drive...me oh my, Alligator alone is worth the price of admission folks...when they come back to it for the post drum jam and then tease the China Cat intro and then work their way into the GDTRFB Coda I just about had a stroke from yelling out...what a great great bit...and I guess I'll have to take the long way home so i can finish it...it's only a 13 minute drive to home...

Thanks. Upon closer inspection I believe you are correct and have modified my order.

Upon quick inspection found my copy of 1/2 to be damn near as good as "official", but 1/3 stuff sound much nicer than what I have in stock.

....last night's set list.
Set One: Big Railroad Blues, I Ain’t Superstitious, The Same Thing, Tennessee Jed, New Speedway Boogie, People Get Ready, Way Down In The Hole, Nobody’s Fault but Mine, Pray For Peace, Sugaree

Set Two: I’m A King Bee, Deep Elem Blues, You Don’t Love Me, Mystery Train, Little Red Rooster, Amazing Grace, Higher Ground, Death Don’t Have No Mercy, Wang Dang Doodle, Deal, Friend of the Devil, Down by The Riverside

Encore: Going Down the Road Feelin’ Bad
.... definitely worth fifty bucks ✌️. High lights? Wang Dang. King Bee. Way Down In The Hole.
Low lights? Beers were $15. Shame....
https://www.jambase.com/article/phil-lesh-friends-blind-boys-of-alabama…

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In reply to by Vguy72

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Jealous, thanks for the trip report. Always a big Phil fan and appreciate Jackie Greene's take on all things Grateful Dead.

Keep up the good work, Senator.

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I hope the glasses were huge.

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In reply to by simonrob

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....but still. Goose Island IPA. Some peeps paid that much for Coors Light. Do your homework. Beer math.

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In reply to by simonrob

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At the time of my first show, it was $2 a hit.

Oh, and happy Cinco de Mayo everyone. In the spirit of Europe 72, I recommend 72 Par Elegance Extra Anejo. Yummy. :D

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Loser... one of my absolute Dead faves and quite possibly the best song on gambling ever. Kenny Rogers, eat your heart out.

I walked out of the Golden Nugget with an easy $500 and a grand, courtesy the Excalibur, off Wheel Of Fortune slots. Fortunate, indeed. As far as table games I have found the Fremont to be most favorable. I taught my wife to throw craps there and she threw 20 times in a row, exactly, before busting. That paid for the weekend and then some.

But, as Kenny says, you got to know when to hold them and when to fold them. Take the easy money and run, and as soon as it goes cold, stop immediately. Difficult for some.

\m/

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DaP 30 landed in my mailbox Saturday, and I've listened to the first three discs once each so far, with the bonus yet to come.

My reaction is somewhat mixed. I had pretty high expectations given Dicks Picks 4 and 8 and road trips 5-15-70, all of which are excellent. I had somewhat of a hesitation because this one is closer in timeframe to DaP 19, which is more of a mixed bag of good and average. Warranted, as it turns out, at least on first listen.

Disc 3 is excellent, as others have said. I think the DS>SS>Eleven>LL is the greatest string of tunes in rock music, in my opinion. It's different every time, and they'd had several years to perfect it by 1970. Can you imagine anyone else even attempting such a thing, other than some of the jam bands that followed (though I don't put them in the same league)? Maybe the Allman Bros. or Yes could pull off such a long jam string, but I doubt they'd make it so different every time.

Now on to disc one and two. Ok, many of the tunes were new, and were still being worked out. Still, there is a sloppiness to several of them. Phil's harmony vocals are too high in the mix on some, and that nearly makes my ears bleed at times. Not just out of tune, but something about his voice just wasn't meant to sing except very subtly in the background. TC is great on the Dark Star psychedelic sequences, but I can see how he didn't fit into the short tune based direction that they were heading with Workingman's and American Beauty. Finally, throwing in a few of my least favorite early tunes like Mason's Children and High Times (where Bobby seems to stretch beyond his capabilities on the harmony vocals) brought it in at a bit less than I'd hoped as well.

Other than the Dead, I mostly listen to jazz, classical, and bluegrass/folk/americana. So most of that other stuff is usually tight, on-key, played by virtuosos, and in tune. I look past the Dead's sloppiness and off-key moments because so much of the rest can be transcendent like nothing else. But sometimes, you just have to take the average with the extraordinary on a Dave's Pick.

Usually I hear more nuances and change my opinions on subsequent listenings, so I think disc 1 and 2 may grow on me more in time. Overall I'm happy with it, and time will tell on my longer range opinion.

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For some reason I just love how the first disk starts at the very beginning of the master reel, it just shows every inch counts in these Dap's...... and in other things as well.

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In reply to by carlo13

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....best odds in the house. Bar none. But you gotta bet smart. Six and eight all night long. Hard ways is how they keep the lights on.
When a player gets on a roll, it's amazing. Gotta strike when the irons hot. You can make some cheddar if you pay attention.
Passed some tables last night, but I didn't feel it.

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In reply to by Vguy72

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....I would cut and paste it, but why should it do all work? Get some. Still in bluuuuses mode here.
....I'm I bit jealous that I wasn't able to cut a rug at a juke joint. It's all about sliding your feet. Move on from there. It comes naturally....

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I must've got a very special edition of the bonus disc. When I popped it into Media Player, track 9 came up as "Cosmic Keithfan." According to Deadbase this was the only time they ever played Cosmic Keithfan. :)

Do we know if the UJB is from the early or late show? This matters for those of us who like to splice these tracks together with the rest of the show.

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In reply to by frosted

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I am still waiting for Dave's Picks-at that familiar stage of reading reviews without having heard the music. I must say, though, that Frosted's review chimes with my own experience of listening to live shows from mid 1969 and throughout 1970. Stellar jams on Dark Star-St Stephen-The Eleven-also on The Other One, Dancing in the Street, Viola Lee Blues-maybe others. But somewhat awkward renditions of shorter songs. This is what I am expecting to be the case with this here release, too. Which is okay by me. I have just been listening to the first set of 5/9/77-which may be the same situation as described above, regrading short songs and jams, but in reverse.

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In reply to by daverock

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With the exception of 1972 and 1977, I think there was always an aspect of hit or miss when listening to or seeing the GD. I enjoyed reading someone's post here recently (I forget who it was) where they said something to the effect that the 1977 charm had worn off.. they were too perfect that year and there weren't enough surprises. A funny comment there is some truth in it.

It's a dual edged sword really.. you never knew what you were going to get. 1970 is certainly one of my favorite years, but there was this big learning curve as they brought on not only a lot of new material, but an entirely different approach to songwriting than we saw in Aoxomoxoa and Anthem. ..and yes, Phil's harmonies sometimes sound more like an Amber Alert for abducted ducks then singing, especially in the early and later years. ..but I forgive him.

1973 was the same way as they brought on all this new material. Wave That Flag must certainly have been about the white flag of surrender. ..but as they began to fold all this new material into the mix it usually got better and better.. so songs that didn't congeal were set aside and the ones that fit grew and strengthened.

I guess I have a lot of patience in these periods because usually.. if you had a little faith, the stuff that didn't work began to click a few months later and the songs that never really worked faded into history.

Except for the first three or four shows I saw where it was so new to me and I didn't really get it.. at the beginning of each show I had an unsettling feeling in my stomach. It was the feeling of what are they going to play, are they going to be good, are they going to blow it.. are they going to play St. Stephen, Morning Dew, No.. not Day Job! It was the feeling of GD anxiety, I bet they felt it too.

I guess that's one of the hidden charms.. you just never knew exactly what you were going to get. I get the feeling they didn't know either. When they delivered, you left with feeling fortunate, perhaps lucky. 1970? Yes please.. I wish they would have recorded more shows that year.

I should get mine today.. can't wait.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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while I wait for DaP30...

listened to 3/5/72 (most of what exists) yesterday. my sense is that a reel is missing.

first disc is like a rehearsal. straight up songs.

disc 2 starts with a liquidy, in-the-zone Good Lovin'.

NFA > GDTRFB...exited car.

The rest today.

Good Lovin' is worth a listen.

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How on Earth did that happen...

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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The new Dave's should be waiting for me when I get home.

In the meantime I've been listening to Pure Jerry 1 (July 77 I think) all morning as a way to ease my way into the work week. A 30 min Don't Let Go to start the day puts me in exactly the mood I want to be in today....

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The liner notes for this DaP30 says it is one of Bear's Sonic Journals. I thought all of Bear's known tapes were in the Grateful Dead vault and owned by the Dead. Is this correct? Or is there a whole cache of unknown GD recordings owned by Bear's family (Owsley Foundation) that GD have to negotiate in order to get released (ie: DaP30)?

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In reply to by daverock

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...a grateful Monday to all! Daverock no joke, I was playing 5/9/77 from the Grateful Dead boxset Release ! Wow, when you wrote that my hair raised with cosmic activity & connect, hot damn that was so cool! Deffently put a smile on this deadheads face. Thank you brother for all your imput, I dig it! 🙏❤️😎 rock on my brothers & sisters! ✌️🤠
PS. 1/2/70 - ‘Monkey and the Engineer’ performance was a grateful highlight delight from Weir. I wish Tom C. would have performed/played along with Bill & Mickey on this song, it would of been extra primo! 😉

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In reply to by JimInMD

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I liked your summary of the band live. It made me think of the fact that they were growing and changing on stage, for all to see and hear. This wasn't a presentation of performance that was tried and tested and guaranteed to work every time. Late 1969-1970 was very transitional as they moved from the acid jams to the songs, while retaining large elements of the former. But it stands to reason that the newer approach, the songs, would be more hit and miss than the acid jams, which had been played for a year or two already. Certainly by 1971 they had the short songs approach down pat. And then they changed again.

I seem to like 1977 this year-but I also feel that sometimes its all just too smooth and...perfect. Coincidence that you also played 5/9/77 this morning Lovemygirl! Its a small world.

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I see I'm not the only one to get that on the id3 tags. Represent, Keith.

Only just received and ripped, haven't listened yet. Anything with a Monkey & The Engineer is OK with me. Did 90 miles an hour down the mainline run.

Anyone pre-order the Rolling Thunder box?

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no email. no tracking number.

customer service is useless.

-----

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by muleskinner_blues

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thanks for the heads up, just preordered my copy. I thought good deal, 14 disc for 75 bucks.

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Hello everyone... any recommendations for awesome Smokestack Lightnings sung by Pigpen... I know 2/13/70 seems to be the consensus as one of the best. I like the one from the Felt Forum from 12/7/71 and 2/19/71 at the Capitol Theatre.... Thanks for any advice... Bob t

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Anybody else hear melody run a lot like Sugar Magnolia around 22:30 in the Bonus Disc Dark Star jam? First Sm is 6 months later.

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