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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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  • Trainwrecked
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    Yeah Right Thin

    All the music in the world, 90% of which I won't listen to, for 10 bucks a month sounds as good as that cable TV bill I was paying 15 bucks a month for in 1980. Was great at the time, but my cable bill is 10x the cost now, and keeps going up. Have fun with your streaming in 10 years. And besides, streaming and digital technology has killed the recording artists, and in turn, the concert scene. Piracy IS the reason the reason concert ticket sales are so high now. Artists have to make their money on the road, because there's little for them in songwriting royalties anymore. Technology killed the concert scene. What used to be a festive getaway for any who desired it is now reserved for the priveledged. And like wise Charlie said, the only CDs I buy is Limited Edition Dead CDs, and like wise KeithFan said, the fun part is opening the damn package and enjoying the artwork, the liner notes, and that great smell.

    There's no turning back from it all, but make no mistake, we're being tethered and robbed in the long con. Enjoy your financial bondage.

  • JimInMD
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    Interesting Discussion

    First.. why only ten comments per page? You blink or take a day hike and you have scroll back 10 pages to get the pulse of what's going on.

    Second.. 8-Tracks always sucked... well, they were ok for the first ten plays but on the 11th play your car or portable 8-Track player would get hungry and inevitably eat your tape. Then you realized you had to buy a really nice, expensive deck so it wouldn't eat your tapes.. you'd then get 37 listens before it got hungry and ate your tape and be out an extra $350 for a new high-end, but still shitty deck. If you were skilled.. you could somehow pull it out, bend and tuck all that extra tape back into the 8-Track cassette, but every time that part of the album came on it would sllllloooowwww dooowwwwnn where it was stretched.. then skip 10 seconds where you had to cut and splice it back together with scotch tape, etc. There is no comparing any media to 8-Tracks because they sucked that bad. As soon as my first tape was eaten, I loathed them and could not wait for a better technology. They were the first media you could play in a car, once another arrived they were gone like the dodo. Plus, album art or liner notes, forget about it. Comparing any of this to 8-tracks is like wondering why no one drives Edsels anymore.

    As for streaming.. I find it just doesnt work well for dead music. I mean, what band has 2,318 albums? Amazon Alexa, for example, has a ton of concerts on their service.. but asking 'her' for one and having 'her' return and play the show you like is next to impossible. "Alexa, Play Grateful Dead Cornell University, 5/8/77" (which is in there) and you get "mmm I can't find that, here's Donnie and Marie Paper Roses 1977 instead", said in the most polite, androgynous voice possible.

    Streaming just becomes difficult for a band with so many [albums] or shows, whatever. If it was quicker/easier to find exactly what I want, I would stream more. Perhaps tomorrow this will get better.

    Who knows. I think for deadheads, who seem to have an almost unquenchable thirst for good music.. they will stream for the convenience and buy Dave's Picks and perhaps a box set a year, so why would Rhino walk away from that extra revenue stream of the new releases from the vault? In fact, their revenue is increasing, they are not going to pull the plug just yet. Streaming is for what has already been released and all the other music you listen to, but vault releases will likely continue to be released on physical media as a niche product. ..then in a few years it will wind up on the streaming platforms.

    My two cents and I could be wrong.. I see GD listeners as being perhaps streamers and I'm going to get Dave's Picks too because I want it and it makes me happy and I want it now.

    Oh.. and Charlie3, I totally get why you live where you live and it being worth the sacrafice of being plugged in all the time. An amazing part of the world.. beautiful and lots to do. Nothing wrong with cities, but you are in big sky country, I'd take it for 15 (slow) gigs a month or whatever the limit is and speed is. Perhaps 5G will change some of this.

    So anyway.. this could be the year of the Ark. Makes sense, doesn't it. Bolo, bolo, bolo. There, said it three times.

  • daverock
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    Pointless progress

    There have been so many changes in format since I bought my first L.P in 1971. The move to cassettes, on to cds, on to digitally remastered cds-circa 1995, onto new digitally remastered cds this century using the latest technology. And now streaming. I am not sure what progress has been made, really. A lot of it seems, now-with the benefit of hindsight-to be a marketing ploy.
    The move from having videos, onto dvds onto blu ray seems to me to have marked progress-but a lot of improvements to consumer items is surely designed to create profit-not to improve quality.

  • cub
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    Will Music Streaming Servers Survive an E.M.P.

    I too prefer hardcopy CD's. As far as I know Cd's cannot loose their data in the event of electro magnetic pulse event,
    solar event etc.

    I also preorder Dave's Picks Subscription every year for $99. Not try something stupid like try to cancel 1/2 my placed order. Just sell the extra at cost.

  • Charlie3
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    Slogan of the Day

    Just as an aside, my vote goes to VGuy for the slogan of the day with "You can lead a head to Winterland, but you can't lead him to his seat."

    The answer to the recurrent question of "how could I have purchased a copy of this release before it sold out?" is to SUBSCRIBE. Don't chase each Dave's Pick, subscribe and trick them into showing up at your door.

  • Charlie3
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    Thin

    I get what you are saying, and you may be right about the expense issue to some extent, but let me expand on a couple of my points.

    My total data for the month through my internet provider is 15GB. For the month. I burn through that in two weeks just reading news and for work purposes. I would be seriously limited in my ability to stream or download music, let alone video, and would have to ration my listening time. That has no appeal. My phone service is also a plan with limited data, so that really doesn't change the picture. The data limitations alone mean that streaming is not really an option unless I jump up to a substantially more expensive data plan, and then pay for the streaming service on top of that. Your calculation assumes that there is no cost to data or internet access, but that is not the case for me. I would have the streaming cost, plus the cost of the additional data needed to make it worthwhile. I get this is an issue related to my geographic location, but I really like my geographic location with it's low population density and spectacular scenery. I have limited data access, but the one of the largest roadless area in the lower 48, the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, is just across the valley, with hiking trails in every just about every drainage up and down the Bitterroot Valley and an abundance of other nearby wilderness areas in just about every direction. I am getting by without the extra data.

    As far as cost, most of what I buy at this point is limited edition dead releases, including Dave's Picks and the annual box set, that won't be available on a streaming service, so I will be stuck paying for that on disc whether or not I stream everything else. If I buy something on disc this month and go broke with unexpected expenses next month, I can listen to the music I already own without spending a dime, but with streaming I am committed to paying the monthly fee forever or I would not be able to listen to any of "my music". I would be paying for the same music month after month, most of which I already own on disc at this point. Which brings me to sunk costs. I already have a decent number of discs, since I haven't counted in a while I'll estimate about a few hundred, maybe close to a thousand. At this point I can listen to them without paying a dime, and since they represent the things that I am most likely to listen to, I would be paying to stream a lot of music that I already own on disc and can listen to for free. And to be honest, the whole streaming thing triggers some kind of atavistic luddite response for me, and I make no claim that this is necessarily a response that will seem logical to others.

    Bottom line, if you dig streaming, go for it, the future looks bright for you. If you're one of those folks who dig vinyl, good timing, it seems to have made a comeback. For me, I foresee CD's being the source of my music for the foreseeable future.

  • jrf68@hotmail.com
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    F**k streaming

    I have no use for it.
    Proud to be that guy.
    :O)

  • Vguy72
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    If you know how it works....

    ....you had both right there! Sell one! Jeezus.....you can lead a head to Winterland, but you can't lead him to his seat.

  • tmctighe
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    I would love to experience…

    I would love to experience Dave's Picks 30, but unfortunately, due to a ridiculous purchase process, I lost out. Won't go into gory details, but I got no help trying to deal with a problem (mistakenly ordered two cd's and tried to cancel one). Supposedly couldn't delete one unless I emailed a request. I did not get a response until 5 days later, and now the cd is sold out.

    Because of this, and the fact that there is such a ridiculously low number of cd's released, making it virtually impossible to purchase a cd, I will not purchase anything from Deadnet again.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    "Being able to see the TV from the kitchen is key"....

    ....yeah. About that. Been in our current house for three years. I love it, but that was one complaint I had about it. Mrs. Vguy trumped me. Now where's my sledgehammer? (a wall. Not my wife).
    ....streaming. I'm slowly accepting it. What choice do I have? Buffering sucks major ass. An exercise in futility. 😡 I dread being that guy who has a laptop/tablet in every room. Ptth.
    ❤️ Spotify....I'm not an audiophile, so it works just fine for me.

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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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Hey DaveRock, I just upgraded my stereo a couple of years ago and discovered a couple of things that may interest you. I was unaware that if I connect my cd player to my receiver via the digital optical cable, the DAC chip in my receiver is actually processing the digital information from the cd and converting it to an analog signal to the speakers, the cd player is essentially just spinning the disc and streaming the information to my receiver for conversion. So you may want to compare the DAC in your receiver and compare to the DAC in the cd players, and if the one in your receiver is good enough there may not be an advantage to a more expensive cd player. I put the bulk of my stereo budget into speakers and the receiver and didn't upgrade the cd player which wasn't really that old. If you already knew all this, sorry, you're not getting that minute of your life back. If not, hope it helps.
Edit: If that's not clear, what I'm attempting to convey is that if you use a digital connection from cd player to receiver the receiver's DAC is doing the work and is responsible for the sound.

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Don't forget one of the best screams of all time-- Victim of changes on Sad wings of destiny. Oh yea!!!!

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In reply to by carlo13

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....Sea Of Madness. If you need to look that up, I'm so sorry.
Geoff Tate from Queensryche can belt it too.

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Ditto

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Carlo and VGuy, have to admit that I had never heard either of those songs till tonight when I checked them out on youtube after reading your posts. Outside of my usual comfort zone, but I can see it fitting certain moods. The more you know...

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Thanks for that information, Charlie. I am not very knowledgeable concerning electronics unfortunately. My cd player, like my blu ray player, will be connected to the amplifier, which is about 8 years old. I am supposed to be going to a shop on Friday to listen to some cd players. I think I will phone before I go, and discuss what you have pointed out. Many thanks.

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In reply to by daverock

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Onkyo 6-CD changer paired with an Onkyo receiver works quite nice.
I also have an Onkyo subwoofer and Bose 301 speakers.
The system works well to vibrate the walls of my house.

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I ended up doing a bunch of research on various components prior to upgrading my stereo and took a little time to try to understand the whole digital-analog conversion process as it was all completely beyond my understanding at the time. That's when I discovered that if you use an analog connection you are using the DAC in your cd player, and if you use digital connections the DAC in your receiver does the conversion. When I did some rudimentary internet searches I found a large amount of information on these topics, with some good explanations of the various issues involved. The SteveHoffman site has a few illuminating discussions on this issue as I recall.

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Roger Daltery - Won't Get Fooled Again

The scream that taught the others how to scream?

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Daverock; Charlie is right on again! The problem with digital isn’t necessarily digital, it’s the conversion and the hardware involved. The original hardware was not intentended for music (long, interesting story about the history of digital filters etc. check out Schitts website) but they have made great steps in Digital to Anolog Conversion, or DACs....
You can get a decent DAC now for very little money that can really make a difference, especially if your using a computer or laptop......the DAC chips in those things are cheap garbage that should never be used to listen to good music.....for as little as $50 you can get a audioquest USB DAC that you can use with your phone, computer, or via a digital connection from your player like Charlie says. I think Schitt makes great, reasonably priced products that don’t have all the bells and whistles, i.e., DSD, but work/sound amazing!
SANS DAC; like Charlie mentioned, unless you have a really good multiplayer like an oppo or the new UHD Panasonic’s that basically replaced the oppo’s, chances are your receiver has a better DAC set in it than your average, or especially a cheap player.
Look up your receiver or pre-amp on line and look at the input section.....there should be an optical, digital coax, or perhaps an HDMI input (HDMI is all over the place though for music)....connect your player via the digital connection as Charlie mentions....
If your receiver doesn’t have a digital connection, it might make sense to get a less expensive player and invest in a separate DAC.....as I say, it’s all about the conversion. This why so many people hate “digital” but it’s not necessarily the digital, it’s the conversion! Good Luck!

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I'm partial to Ian Gillan, myself. Many standouts on various Deep Purple records not to mention his lone Black Sabbath album, Born Again - but Highway Star has to be the all-time.

\m/

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Without wishing to speak for others, as far as I am aware both receivers and multi-disc players are very much American market stalwarts. I have never known anyone on this side of the pond who possesses either. Amplifiers rather than receivers and single-disc players are the norm here. Maybe other Europeople know differently. Interesting to hear other's views.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Ha, ha
Had to say it.

I do use fiber optic to connect my CD player to my amplituner (I think thats what it actually says on the box - combo amplifier/tuner).

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...the 2 CD ‘Warfield 1980’ 2019 RSD Release of only 6000 copies available have been sold out on the Grateful Dead’s store on, Dead.net folks...

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The recent conversation about components has motivated me to ask a question I have been contemplating for quite some time.

For those of you who have individual components (an amp, pre-amp, etc.) as opposed to a traditional receiver that combines everything, is there really that big of a sound difference? I have been purchasing receivers for years for no other reason than I am lazy. Yamaha is the current brand of choice. But the more I read, the more I am considering individual components. Any feedback would be appreciated. For what it is worth, I went out and purchased an HDCD player and I'll be damned if I can tell the difference.

DaP30 - have not listed to it entirely as I have been too invested in hockey. With a few exceptions (like the Dark Star jam), the playing seems measured and deliberate. Not as raucous as the prior years and not as exploratory and the ensuing years.

Thank you in advance.

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Anyone have any idea or thoughts how many might have been left over for sale here? Just curious, glad i was able to get one here. bob t

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Hi, I switched away from receivers/amps/etc. to using powered monitors with a separate subwoofer and bluetooth connectivity. At home I'm using Klipsch RPM41s with a ten inch powered Klipsch subwoofer. They sound excellent, take up very little space and I'm happy to run everything from a kindle tablet, although they also have a phono line in/optical in/other options. I don't need tons of power and am very happy with them. It's a third option to consider.

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10 years 4 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Many thanks for all the feedback on components. I feel tempted to phone the shop I am going to up later in the week, to quote some of what has been written on here, and see how he responds. Although he may well be prejudiced in what he says towards recommending what he has in stock.

I felt reassured to read Simon's post. That reflects my experience, too. A single disc player, an amplifier, a turntable and a bluray/dvd player sitting under my television is what I have. But I will ask about the DACs and receivers etc and see what response I get. Cheers!

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In reply to by daverock

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Might I recommend the Wall Of Sound upgrade package.

Anything less isn't worthy.

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In reply to by daverock

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Get as much info before hand so you don’t get sold more than you need.
An AV receiver is an amplifier that can pick up radio signals.
I buy receivers, but haven’t actually tuned one to a radio station since the 90’s. So, I guess I should just buy an amplifier next time.
The main thing, for me at least, is that it has optical input. My Onkyo has 2 optical ports, one is connected to the CD player, the other to an iBasso DX80 digital music player.
I read a while ago that optical ports were being phased out in favor of HDMI which, the article claimed, can carry an equal quality signal as optical. I don’t know if that is true.

I did a receiver vs amplifier search to help you out.

https://www.google.com/search?q=receiver+vs+amplifier&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8…

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In reply to by JimInMD

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So finished this latest relisten, and since I listened all the way through from Bertha (across several commutes) to Staurday Night. I have to say this is a great show. Very well played, excellent sound, one of the better Wall of Sound tapes. Makes me want to dig into the PacNW shows next to compare the Plangent Norman to "just Norman". But they are ripping on this show, and the songs have a nice flow. They're probably energized to finally play with the Wall in a more stable environment and without hundreds of blown speakers as opposed to the Reno show with the wind blowing the Wall, particularly the column of tweeters above Bill the Drummer and the debut of the Wall at the Cow Palace where they blew the speakers with the first notes. But here, they're indoors and they have a clearly receptive audience. A shame they never gave Montanans another show... Anyway, love the Loser, Black-Throated Wind, and 2nd Scarlet, especially Jerry apparently digging the Wall's possibilities with those single chord hits early in Scarlet, which would sound more reggaeish if he had a delay, but it still sounds cool. Donna gets a little too into the wailing, but a nice jam and segue into a mighty fine It Must Have Been the Roses. Everything else pretty good up until that Playing. It does go deep, even though it's not the longest out there, at almost 21 minutes, but a deep, jazzy jam. They miss the re-entry to the Reprise, and then Donna wails early, so she does it again when they do go to that turnaround, and they again miss the landing, but when they're done singing they blaze into the finale with a little more vigor than usual to make up for the screwups. I can certainly forgive them with that coda!

Dave was really big on this Row Jimmy; me not as much, just seemed pretty average. But the Weather Report Suite> Dark Star> China Doll is the real topic. WRS is beautiful and fantastic as always, the dissolving segue into Dark Star is quite magnificent, and the Dark Star starts off pretty and melodic, then goes a little jazzy, which is very nice. Some nice distinct parts up to the fairly early first verse which hits about 13 min in, following that lone verse they descend slowly into a huge dissonance/feedback jam that is one of the darkest I know, it doesn't let up until past the 20 min mark, where they resume the jazz odyssey for a few minutes before chaos reigns again for a few moments before they crash beautifully into China Doll, similar to how Dark Star had risen from the ashes of WRS almost a half hour before. NFA> GDTRFB is great. High energy Saturday Night to close it down. Wasn't bothered by the darkness of the Dark Star this time, but I don't recommend ever trying to go to bed to that one. This would probably be right around top 10 for me now. I'm glad I pulled it out to test my ears against y'all's ears.

Wish I could add to the cd player convo, have Denon 5 disc changer one of my best friends gave me and Kenwood amp (he had it hooked to his McIntosh 240 tube amp, he ain't parting with that and I couldn't afford it if he was). Have it hooked up to 2 Pioneer 12s, I have Fisher 15s in the garage I want to swap for, but the house shakes enough. In my music room, I have decent computer speakers, but 2 KRK Rokit powered monitors if I really want to test something digital. Turntable is in the living room going into the Kenwood.

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In reply to by alvarhanso

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Funny how the conversation segued from WOS Speaker Upgrade to one of the more bombastic (and great) WOS Dave's Picks. The last time I listened to this show I retreated to a small encrusted stance beneath by bed during Dark Star and remained there until the music stopped curled up in the fetal position. Scary Dark Star.. PTSD Scary Dark Star.

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My setup for serious listening includes a high-powered Class A amp and modified tower speakers from the mid-70s, plus modern day headphones and HDCD player.

I would have compared my gear to the home version of the Wall of Sound, but I recently turned it up to "11" and the wall caved in.

C'est la vie.

.... would like to have a word with you.
A wonderful pick in Boxilla. Montana takes second place in regards to jump scare DS's. It's in my marriage license that I never play either one within earshot of the Mrs.
There was a romping Shakedown at the Greek this date in '83. Listened to the show at work today. Nice Brother Esau too.

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Why should I care, why should I care?
Girls of fifteen
sexually knowing
the ushers are sniffing
eau-de-cologning
the seats are seductive
celibate sitting
pretty girls digging
prettier women...

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In reply to by Charlie3

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It just seems odd.. that we have one reel from 2/27/77 (and what a reel that was, great Dew).

It just seems odd that 8/25/72, Dave's Picks 24, was the one show from the infamous '72 BCT run where the complete soundboards never circulated and this is the show that gets released first and soundboards from the other three shows did circulate, yet Lemieux contends they cannot release the entire run because not all the soundboards are in the vault.

It just seems odd.

I think we need to form a new corporation, call it ABCDE Corporation to find, secure and release the boards that exist and still seem to be missing.

I suspect they recorded more of 2/27 than "the last reel" yet the previous reels do not exist? The liner notes state this is reel 5 of 5.. so the other 4 were surely recorded. Yet, they released just the last reel as an admission of defeat that the other four would one day turn up and make this a complete show release. Why would they just give up? Where are the missing reels?

The only conclusion I can make is that they are still aware of other reels that either exist or less likely used to exist. Either way, it seems they are not confident they will ever take ownership. ...or some of them have degraded beyond what can be restored?

Food for thought.. There is something awry here and it just doesn't make sense.

Methinks.. there is a cache of reels still worth tracking down and absconding with, by hook or by crook.. before it's too late.

My last random thought of the day.. I bid you all a goodnight.

....the last decent Motley Crue record. Wait. Did Dr. Feelgood come after?
Love the pretty ladies. Luckily for me, I married the prettiest one. One can look at the menu, but thou shalt not eat of it.
And that's where Phish phales. It's usually a testosterone fest.
Go to Vegas. Watch the lines going into some of the nightclubs. Day'um!

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...the featuring songs performed by the Grateful Dead at Woodstock are in this boxset in this order on the CD Tracking...
8-Mama Tried (2019 Mix) - By Grateful Dead
9 -"It's a Sinister Plot" (2019 Mix) - By Ken Babbs, Country Joe McDonald, Et Al
10 -Dark Star (2019 Mix) - By Grateful Dead
11 -High Time (2019 Mix) - By Grateful Dead
...an all New Mix of the recordings are a highlight for the boxset... Rock on brothers and sisters ! I broke out 3/28/90 for a late morning start! Great show! It doesn’t feel like a nice spring by me yet, still a little chill in the air from all the rain we had for the last two weeks. The sun is shining today tho’!🙏❤️😎

DaP 30 - Disc three. I keep going back to this...so good
Pure Jerry 1 - July 77
Garcia Live 8 - 1990 or 1991...can't remember off the top of my head. Ain't No Bread in the Breadbox is so so good
DaP 30 Bonus disc
Pure Jerry 7 (1991)

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In reply to by SkullTrip

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Here in Thneedsville.. it's a new release we thneed.

(apologies to those that might not have received theirs yet.. hopefully that issue is behind us now).

Happy hump day.. we're on the downward slide to the weekend.

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, Nothing is going to get better. It's not.”

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In reply to by loudmouth

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I was also going to mention ‘wall caved in’.

Additionally,
‘11’, The Eleven
‘Wall of Sound’
‘70’s’

I think that we can find links to anything Bolo posts, even when they are not intended to be clues. But that’s part of the fun.

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...is it just me or does this show sounds more like the bands performances from back home on the west coast than there style of playing usually on the east coast like in New York. New York crowd vs San Fran attendees were like night & day at this time in history.
The photos prove that lol ... almost like the ‘Thelma’ in LA pick/release...either way I’m in love with this latest pick from the vault, keep em’ coming! 🙏❤️😎...have a grateful day everyone!
Nothen left to do but Smile Smile Smile...

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10 years 4 months

In reply to by SkullTrip

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I'd get a copy of this too, should it come out. But taking into account last years box, with those three 74 shows, I wouldn't have thought it was too likely a choice for this year. Maybe next year, though.

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10 years 6 months
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Sorry it took awhile for my Dave’s to get here***. Here are fresh-squeezed, high-res, color-corrected scans of Dave’ 30 and the 2019 Bonus CD for anybody that's interested. Be sure to share.

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/5jebsau6n1xt883/AACOQ7qtAN691E3VC4Qv7lDRa?dl…

*** The Long Strange Trip: Even tho UPS officially declared this package “lost” at some point after it boomeranged up to Harrisburg, PA, somehow a new label with a new tracking number resurrected the shipment and it was delivered yesterday. You might be interested to know the official route my Dave’s 30 took (per UPS tracking) was:
Franklin, IN > Urbancrest, OH > Carrollton, TX > Midland, TX > North Houston, TX > Dallas, TX > Lubbock, TX > Harrisburg, PA > Jersey City, NJ > Dallas, TX > Midland, TX > Fort Davis, TX.

Based on driving distances between cities as calculated with Googlemaps, the total distance traveled was about 6,612 miles, more than twice the 3,214 miles from Bangor, ME to San Diego, CA. By logging 6,612 miles in 14 days, I suspect my Dave’s 30 #14,436 set a New World Distance Record for official Grateful Dead releases shipped within the lower 48 . . . Still, well worth the wait, and the music smokes! A big thank you to MaryE for therapy along the way.

Onward!

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16 years 2 months
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Anticipation its making me wait.

I think maybe were getting 2 smaller boxes this year. One from '69 and one from '89. Hope it's The Ark and The Spectrum.

I heard from a reliable source that because of a snafu in the warehouse move, MaryE delivered all of these by bicycle herself. The music is good enough to overcome travel delays.

Your tale made me chuckle.. reminds of the stolen lawn gnome that someone took on an around the world vacation with them and sent the owners pictures of the gnome wherever they went, then returned it w/ ports of entry stamps all over it documenting its travels. Surely it was 'borrowed' by a deadhead on tour.

As much as I love 1974.. I am not feeling it for this box. I guess those of us that were not able to decipher the easy bolo clues will have to wait. I am thinking an announcement soon, Friday or Monday perhaps? I am still thinking 50th anniv. for 1969, but I would be ecstatic for something returned where the quality blows the socks off of what currently circulates..

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by fourwindsblow

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Right on brother! I like the way your thinking. I don’t think I could pick two “just exactly perfect” better choices for both years/anniversaries, of course I’m extremely biased about the spectrum shows😃... The only other choice that would trump those, and only for totally personal reasons, would be Summer 85. Unfortunately, we all know that ain’t happening any time soon...

Thanks Jeff!
Also, couldn’t help but chuckle at your tale. Glad it worked out. Ridicules but totally believable story in this day and age.

JIM; holy shit! I thought that was Saint Mary on a road bike going over vail pass the other day.
She had good form and was making great time even with that large rucksack!

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