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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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  • CaseyJanes
    Joined:
    Deadhead Stories

    Good morning dead people....if you haven’t ordered your copy of deadhead stories, I would do so quickly. As of yesterday there were only 60 copies left. It is very well done, with 11x8.5 color, and over 300 pages of awesome stories. Got mine on last Monday and already 1/3 of the way through. By far my favorite book about the Dead so far. There is one Grate story about the 2nd group to get in line for The Closing of Winterland...5 days early! By the time the show started the line was around the block!!!!!

    Link to deadhead stories site to order is here. All proceeds go to Charity.

    https://deadheadstories.org

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Tales Fron The Gorge-KCJ

    Great story-thanks. Almost makes me wish I lived in America!

    Listening to 7/1/78 from the 1978 box set as I type. This was the one where the Dead played with many other bands as part of "Willie Nelsons Picnic", so its a single set show. But its got some great playing on it. Estimated is the highlight for me-great jamming leading into The Other One. Minimum slide show - it doesn't detract from a great Tennessee Jed, if you factor it out, and actually sounds quite nice and mournful leading out of Playing in the Band. Less is more, as they say. Great Jerry guitar in Wharf Rat, now, too- hey, this show is really alright!

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Entry lines....

    ....it's all about timing. If you snooze, you lose. Fact checking from Vguy, who has spent more time in lines because he pushed the envelope. Nobody's Fault But Mine....

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: KCJ / Buttons Stems, Caps and Ediblezzz

    The Buttons, then the stems and caps.... and a three week delay in posting. Thanks to the good, quick thinking folks here at dead.net.. we set up a GoFundMe to get KCJ out of jail and back to work..

    Don't mind me, I didn't have time to read your whole post, but I did quickly skim through the text, and having gotten four hours of sleep this week alone, I am quite sure I absorbed the entirety of your post:

    ' ..sorry didn't post, gone for three and a half weeks, brought my newbe brother in law to a show against his wife's best wishes, dosed him.. then got him stoned.. and there was nothing left to drink but hard liquor and IPA's.. what's a guy to do? '

    It was Sixtus and his grower/attorney friend Cosmic Charlie that first come through with the plan that freed the J' family from the calamity that was sure to catch up to them. In the end, a clear case of mistaken identity.

    Tragedy narrowly averted.

    Great tale, KCJ.. good to hear you had fun and escaped the long arm of the law (meaning your sister in law in this case).

    In all honesty.. I really wanted to go to the Gorge this year (and perhaps Folsom Field as a close second), but the timing and ticket prices worked against me. Still, I love the PNW.. a truly great spot in the planet blue I plan to revisit as often as I can.

    Glad it all worked out.

    Edit: Did nothing but art (woodworking, live in a 115 year old Victorian - it ever ends) and a moderate bike ride today.. but listened to the Good Ole GD the whole while. Started at 7 am with 06/24/90 Autzen Stadium Eugene, OR which only fueled more high intensity GD.. so for the bike ride and table saw amped it up with 10/12/84 and 9/18/87 from 30 trips. Good golly. I realize 30 trips got mixed reviews.. but they are just wrong, it's pretty freaking awesome when an 84 and 87 show can get someone so amped up. Perhaps not my best purchase but, well.. No Regrets. Diplomatic enough?

    Back to your previously scheduled June '74 GD.

  • CaseyJanes
    Joined:
    Lines

    Some are starting them
    Others are forming them
    Most are standing in back

    Some folks are cutting them
    Others are snorting them
    Come on dude, spare me some slack

    No Cuts...more on these later :-)

    Edit: Hey Stoltzfus....missed you out there. I have a button for you and the Mrs. if you would like a couple of them?......please PM your address. Happy to oblige!!!

  • stoltzfus
    Joined:
    Interesting synchronicity

    I am listening to motorhead at park
    "Runaround man" lyrics
    Chase my tail
    Catch me if you can

    5 seconds later i see a tee shirt emblazoned with "catch me if you can"

    Totally true

  • stoltzfus
    Joined:
    Gorge tales

    Dont get me started on the entry lines

  • CaseyJanes
    Joined:
    Tales from The Gorge, A Dead Head Story (part 1)

    Hey now Dead Rockers......first let me apologize for my long absence. Landed back here in KC a week ago today at 4am, fresh from a 10 day trip to the beautiful PNW....back to work last week and then Friday a very large tree uprooted from our back yard and fell on our power lines, so we have been without power and internet for most of the past weekend, but onward!!!!

    Although I have been only lurking here the last few weeks, I have still been keeping up and appreciate the call (Oroborous) for my return......and so now that I have taken the opportunity to get everything exactly perfect, let my inspiration flow till my tale is told and done........

    Me, Mrs. Casey, and her brother (brother in law-BIL), all caught the red-eye into Seattle from KC on the night of June 6th. By the time we scooped up our bags and negotiated the rental car lines it was 2:30am. We checked into a blue light cheap hotel there by Sea-Tac that I had booked months before in preparation for our drive to the Gorge for two nights of Dead & Company. In the morning BIL and I hit the nearest dispensary to load up on some legal party favors while my wife finished getting ready to go.

    Now I’ve been to Colorado since legalization, but the “Cannabis Clinic” we found was on a different level than anything I’ve experienced before. There were a lot of options and we took full advantage., and the bud tenders were of course very helpful…..
    “What would you recommend for pre-rolls”, I say…..
    ”Do you like Indica or Sativa”, she asks,
    “both”, I answer!
    “Hash Infused”?
    “Sure that sounds Grate”!
    Went through a similar process with some other goodies, and out we came 30 minutes later with 4 tubes of pre-rolls (hash infused and also Willie’s Reserve), a couple grams of flower, 2 oil cartridges, a new pen (Seattle Seahawks – 12th Strain branded - for the oil), a couple packs of chewable candies, and last but not least, a plastic syringe filled with some hashy goo which we found to be very applicable to the candies….
    “Be careful with this she said”, “Only rice grain size portions”…..
    “Sure, no problem” I say…….(smile, smile, smile), out we go, back to pick up the Mrs., sharing candies along the way, and on to our hotel at Moses Lake about 40 minutes east of The Gorge.

    After stopping for lunch, and a very scenic 3 hour drive through the mountains and over The Columbia River (wow, what a site), we rolled into Moses Lake about 1:00pm. First stop….the liquor store, to load up on IPA for me, Jack Daniels for BIL & wine for the Mrs., a bag of ice, plus a disposable cooler if we could find one. I asked the liquor store dude if he had any styrofoam coolers, but no dice. Payed for everything else and walked out…..then, just as we were loading up I spotted some old buckets that someone had piled up…looked like trash in front of the store….and just like that we had a cooler  Time to check in to the room

    Ok, for those who already know the background story on my choice of accommodations, I apologize, but I think for context it bears repeating. I planned this Dead & Co tour stop in connection with my in-laws 40th Anniversary Celebration to be held on the Oregon Coast the following weekend (what timing….couldn’t believe my luck). I would have preferred to camp, and my wife agreed to do so, but she is no Deadhead, or camper for that matter, and so she only agreed to one night. I of course wanted to see both nights, and BIL also wanted to come to a show, so in compromise, I offered to purchase the VIP package which included 2 tickets to each show, 2 nights hotel accommodation in Moses Lake, plus bus ride to and from each show. Needless to say, she agreed, and so here were leaving the liquor store and on our way to the hotel.
    When we get there and walk into the lobby it is a quarter till 2:00 and there are already 25-30 Heads milling around in the lobby. The guy at the desk tells me that they are all waiting for the ticket packages that would be handed out at 2:00. First bus to The Gorge leaves at 3:00, 2nd bus at 4:00……that means BIL and I have 1 hour to check in, get ready, get our tickets/wristbands, and then be across the street to load up for the first bus.

    Back in the room we start getting ready and stocking supplies. Gonna be a little nip to the air tonight so I wear some jeans, one of my Courtney Pollock Tie Dye’s, Bolt hat, and my bright green Morning Dew sweatshirt tied around my waist for the later chill. I load up one plastic tube with 4 or 5 pre-rolls, pocketed my oil pen plus cartridge and then grabbed a half a handful of stems and caps that someone had mysteriously packed inside of my zip up shorts pocket that I had stuffed in my checked baggage…...what luck!!! Next we stock our new disposable cooler bucket full of IPA’s, bottle of JD, couple Cokes, and some ice. BIL is in his 30’s, about 10 years my junior and 13 years my wife’s little brother, and so before we go, she makes sure to tell me not to lose him….make sure he gets back OK! Of course, Of course…no worries BIL and I laugh!!!!! Now up to the lobby to grab tickets just before 3:00, and out to the bus….do I have everything? Nope, Oh shit…….I forgot THE BUTTONS!!!

    Here’s the background on THE BUTTONS….I think most of y’all know Agent Jeff Smith from our boards here, but if you don’t you should, because he’s one of the coolest Heads around these parts, always quick to share his fine art work of making our Dave’s Pick’s and Box Sets Digital Album covers pop with High Definition detail. Earlier this year, Jeff had helped me acquire some GD digital shows that I was missing from my collection, and in his mail parcel he included a button that he had made for the Dead & Co Boulder shows last summer. After seeing Jeff’s Boulder button, I asked him if he wouldn’t mind designing me a button for the upcoming Gorge trip and he kindly obliged with one of the coolest designs I could have imagined (see my avatar). I ordered 200 of the 2 and ¼ inches in diameter with sparkle background for the shows.

    Back to the room…grab 100 of the buttons, run across the street, and then finally after 28 years of being of being a GD fan, I AM ON THE BUS…..which is a fucking Greyhound!

    No folks, although we were just a few hundred miles north from where the famed vehicle now rests and rusts, this was no Kesey bus. There was no day-glow graffiti, or Merry Pranksters riding on top. The music was not blaring shows from long past as it should be, nor were there any stray travelers looking to hop aboard. And thank God Cowboy Neal was not at the wheel, because I don’t believe we would have had enough defibrillator machines to account for the carnage. Not surprisingly BIL and I were the only ones on the bus who had thought forward enough to bring a bucket full of beers, and so we sat quietly sipping beers and sucking on our oil pipes and eating edibles, hoping against a last minute ransack by the group of aging hippies on our supplies..

    After arriving at the scene/parking lot, and not listening closely to instructions about how to get back to The Bus……we straggled off with beer bucket in hand down the Golden Road (walking path) to the entrance of The Gorge, and things were starting to pick up as we were high steppin’ in to town, it was a rainbow full of sound…..there were fireworks, calliopes and clowns, and everybody was dancing!!!

  • wilfredtjones
    Joined:
    P.S.S.

    Anyone see the Grateful Dead get name dropped on The PBS Newshour this evening? That's twice in 2 weeks!

  • wilfredtjones
    Joined:
    Ain't nothing changed

    Still upright- So Fine :-) Hanging in there...

    P.S. This reply is stale, but late checking in. tehe

    P.S.S. Vehicles AND Traffic Lights.

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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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7 years 2 months
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I listened to DaP 28 from June 1976 this morning. It's a top notch show, but 25 years and 350 or so shows into the vault releases, it's just considered ok by most (that's what I gathered from the comments). I believe if it had been one of the first released, back in the days when we were only getting one show a year (if that), it would be hailed as a brilliant masterwork. That's what I call The Theory Of Relativity.

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10 years 1 month

In reply to by Mind-Left-Body

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1. 1977 Chicago
2. Outlaws - Bring it back Alive
3. Dickey Betts - Highway Call - "Hand Picked" get some!!
4. Holland Rotterdam 1972
5. Phish - Bakers Dozen

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LnG tGD fillmore east
Plasmatics new hope for the wretched
Metallica m o p
Metallica ...ajfa
13th floor elevators various

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Mind-Left-Body

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Well put, so true!

DeadTony: the Outlaws, nice! haven’t listened to them in decades, probably because I only have on vinyl from waybackin the day, and the tables not set up yet........need to!
Saw them as the headliner back in December 79 I think it was? 38 special, Molly Hatchet, and the Outlaws. Great night. Believe I saw The Who the next night which was the next day/show? after all those poor folks died in Cincinnati.
Needless to say very powerful show......believe that was the first time I saw a show with Meyers PA, though didn’t know it at the time, and like the first few times I saw the dead use it, it didn’t sound so good. Such new/different (think early 83) technology that I don’t think they new how to use it?

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I don't know that we're ever going to have a release that completely blows us away anymore. I'm sure there's a lot of great stuff left, but in the shadow of what's come before it we're probably looking at a case where we're always saying it's about as good as <name that show>. One factor that I think JimInMD mentioned, is sound quality. Our evaluation of a new show is immediately colored by the quality of the recording. C'est la vie. I'm just happy the tunes are still flowing.

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17 years 6 months
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There's inlaw's and there's outlaws.
We used to listen to the Outlaws in Montana back in the 70s. Green Grass and High Tides is a cool song.
And then there were The Outlaws- Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glasser.
Also the comedy sketch , Wailing Willie. Thats a lot of W (double u).
Ah yes, the english language.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Strider 808808

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.....an all New Years Box!
67, 73, 74, 75, and 92-95 there were no New Years shows....
76, 78, and 87 have already had official releases, that leaves:
66, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 88, 89, 90, and 91....
Nice cross section of years ala 30 trips, possibly 18 shows, 3 Dark Stars, and a bunch of “other” stuff. Maybe not as awesome as the 90 boxes, the 72 box or Boxilla, but a big meaty one anyway.....might generate enough interest to be worth their while? Of course not sure they have em all? But many, especially the later years were radio broadcasts so you’d think they’d have recordings better than just the Healy cassettes? But I’m just talking out my ass, I’m sure some of you more knowledgeable folks out there would have a better idea of availability?

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In reply to by Oroborous

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I’m still going with 10/80 Warfield electric sets to accompany the acoustic release.

Yes, glad the releases continue to flow. And please, please, please do what kayakguy proposed: Plangentize all the reels that have good sound quality.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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....there needs to be a Motorhead one. I will call it Ace Of Spades. Watching a cool Elton John concert on YouTube.
https://youtu.be/bF14ECixT9I
....so much music. So little time. All of us can agree on one topic. We all 💛 music. Universal language indeed....if I lose one sense, I pray it's not my hearing.
Appreciation for Dee Murray on the bass.
Crocodile Rock is one of the first songs I remember hearing. That and The Boxer by Simon & Garfunkel and Penny Lane. Thanks Mom & Dad.... Somewhere Over The Rainbow is in the mix as well is Snoopy vs The Red Baron by The Royal Guardsmen. I could go on....House of the Rising Sun. I told you I could go on.

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If I had one realistic box set to authorize for release just prior to my banishment to the desert Island with a few of my best friends and a lot of weed, it would be "The Dark Star Constellation". I sent this to Lemieux already.

The Dark Star Constellation

* 25 complete shows, all featuring a Dark Star.
* Manufacture 15K, maybe even 18K, which is doable, based on the Dave's Picks subscription increase in numbers, along with Dead & Co stoking Grateful Dead interest - not to mention the theme of the box: * DARK STAR *

* $649.99

* Ok here's the tough part for marketing- what years? I would personally enjoy 1967 - 1974. Not sure if the first and only from 12/13/67 is in the Vault. The only thing left from '74 is Chicago and the complete Jai-Alai Fronton performance. So the meat and potatoes would be '72 - '73. I'd be totally cool with releasing the rest of the '71s as well. I think in fairness and marketing sensibility, 5 shows (max) from the '80s & '90s, assuming good quality audio.

* Black box with stars and skeletons (no beards - in fact bring back the Bertha skeleton and her buddy from the 1980s posters of The Warfield, Radio City, and that other place.....maybe as constellations)
* Include an awesome book with Dark Star essays.
* Tons of rare / unseen photos (in a book).
* Some kind of mini book too, with fan descriptions of what Dark Star means / does / feels to them.
* When you open the box up, an there is an audio chip inside that plays that clip from Sunshine Daydream of the dude tripping (almost over): "That Sun Should Have Gone Down Hours Ago....Let's Get The Kids And Get Out Of Here....Awwwwww Sing It To Me!" And then the opening notes into a fadeout.
* Jeffrey Norman....Plangent....

Release the Dark Stars Smithers!

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16 years 8 months

In reply to by Vguy72

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While I didn't see the 79 Dead show I did see JGB and Bobby and the midnights June 82. The absolute worst place I've ever seen a show. In additional to being a metal building it was hot and humid. By the time Bobby came on it was raining inside the building. And it wasn't open air....very nasty

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Figured out all the clues, every detail just exactly perfect.

Only thing you forgot to mention is the ceiling astral map projection featuring a Jerry hologram darting around the constellations in a Delorean.

See, that wasn't so hard!!

It’s powerful at times. Format is awkward - every other song turns into a Broadway musical style production with hundreds of people marching and dancing in perfect choreography - just the way we all know life to be ...
But oh the music!

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I'm thinkin:
1. I Got You Babe (Sonny and Cher)
2. So Far Away (Carole King)
3. It's Too Late (Carole King)
4. Top of the World (Carpenters)
5. Close to You (Carpenters)
6. Bad Bad Leroy Brown (Croce)
7. Operator (Croce)
8. Bennie and the Jets (Elton)
9. Daniel (Elton)
10. Seasons in the Sun (Terry Jacks- Ooftah! worst song ever)

These were everywhere when I was growing up in the early 70's. Meanwhile, the Dead were off touring the world and quietly making the greatest music ever...

no more giant boxsets. 3 show minis or 5 show runs would be great, but the big ones put too much of a strain on minimal finances. I'm probably gonna miss this year's offering...and it's a painful bummer.
Oh well. Still glad the music is being pumped out.

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Elvis doing Hound Dog in '56. I was 3 and could sing the chorus.
What can I say? I am OLD! But I still rock every day, so there.

Rock on

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In reply to by hbob1995

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indeed my brother!
No way I know first songs....I grew up with all kinds of music playing. I especially remeber crawlin around the kitchen floor (ground zero for fun in those early days 😃), and my mom would have the AM radio on. So alll those great mid to late 60’s AM hits just infused in my being. Years later I had a gig in a sorta open mic band. We backed up who Evers turn it was. Also just great jams of local pros just coming round to jam! Anyway, 25 years later and I could just play any of that stuff, can’t explain it. No prep at all, “this ones in E”, boom.... As long as I sorta knew the melody I could do it. Crazy how music is ingrained in us, especially when we’re young! Of course most of that stuff is beyond simple.
I do know that my first 45 when I was ? probably around 10, was Paul Reveer and the Raiders: Cherokee People!
Man I’d play that over and over, just loved the drums. Always wanted to be a drummer, but, mom was no dummy, who wanted to listen to all that racket! Lol Makes me think of that story Bill tells about the neighbor beating on the garage wall 😀 yea, so she gave in and got me a guitar, which was ok, but deep down always wanted drums.
And perhaps Cherokee People was the catalyst for the rest?

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First song memories Vguy are from when I was 4/5 yrs old '76/'77. Neighbor across the street worked for RCA so he was always bringing by 45s.

Simon & Garfunkel - Cecilia
Elton John - Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
Little Willy - Sweet
Detroit Rock City - KISS
Afternoon Delight

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9 years 2 months

In reply to by jrf68@hotmail.com

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‘The Witch Doctor’ on the Looney Tunes album.

I remember some of those that Gollum posted, along with Afternoon Delight and, don’t know the name - “I can see clearly now, the rain is gone”.

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That's a tough one. Icecrmcnkd, I think the song you are referring to at the end of your post is I Can See Clearly Now by Johnny Nash, although others may have done it as well. Some of the earliest songs I can remember hearing would probably include
Beatles - Yellow Submarine
Dulcinea - from a Man of La Mancha soundtrack
Soulful Strut - Young Holt Unlimited
Tommy (whole album) - The Who, I just thought the album was "Tommy the Who" and really dug the parts with the French Horn
Leroy Brown and You Don't Mess Around with Jim - Jim Croce
Scarborough Fair/Canticle, 7 O'clock News/Silent Night, Punky's Dilemna, The Boxer, I am a Rock, America - Simon and Garfunkel
Song Sung Blue, Sweet Caroline, Cracklin' Rosie - Neil Diamond

Probably gonna be thinking of more early songs all night. Definitely also remember I'm Not In Love by 10cc from later on, not a first song by any stretch, but a song that stuck in my head.

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Charlie, I believe your right, and that is an awesome version, but I’ve always dug Jimmy Cliffs version the best. Amazing range and emotion over an authentic reggae beat. Gotta love Jimmy! Dam, wish the table was working, would spin up Give Thanks with that great version of Bongo Man!

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When my kids point out my various flaws, I point out that they are going to turn into me.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAO7vs_Q9is

and the silly songs like Witch Doctor of course... I turned ten years old in 1960...my Pop worked at a record retailer/wholesaler store called California music in West LA so I got tons of freebies i wish I still had

here's a list of what charted top ten in 1960
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Billboard_Hot_100_top-ten_singles…

Ones that really really stand out are Theme From A Summer Place by Percy Faith and Across The Sea by Bobby Darin....but even though I was a bit younger my absolute faves were Don't You Just Know It by Huey "Piano" Smith and The Clowns and Sea Cruise by Frankie Ford...Earl Palmer rules!!!

First, you guys crack me up 😁
Had to take a step outta the whole seventies scene for a bit, cleanse the palate etc., so 29 years ago this very evening, my first night/show in the promised land after like 12 or 13 years on the bus, finally, and it was awesome!
Jerry’s preaching “cause I mean what I’m saying!”
I know some of y’all don’t dig the Ex, but man I loved it. Great shape for sound. Awesome field. Not too big, not too small. General Admission so you could go were you wanted, or roam freely, of course that meant front of sound board for us. Anchor fucking beer instead of the usual east coast corporate swill....Bill Graham starting it all off, “yaddi, yaddi, yadda”. The band still riding that wave they had going, ole Brentski not fully showing signs of worry, hell who thought he’d be gone in less than 2 months? Sigh. Yes sir Ex at the Ex, one of the last hurrahs before I started sliding into the geezer zone!
Crazy how fast it all blows by. From crawling around that kitchen floor in the mid sixties to soldier field at the last one....what a long strange trip indeed!

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8 years 2 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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Icecreamconekid,

I hope you are right. Schwing!

Had a dream a few nights ago that the Box was 73 CDs. I love 1980.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Ah, decent Bird Song, little spacey part. Then they start to go for Promised Land, which would of been awesome, considering, but then nope, smoke break! Uncle john coming on now. “Oh oh what I wanna know...”

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Knock, knocking on the Golden door!

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Outta Foolish Heart.....good shite mate...neat midi stuff, almost a Fire feeling jam, then I swear just the slightest tease, like just a few notes, but a Saint Steve vibe, then more midi space, and Bob with like 2, 3 cords of Women Are right before the rhythm devils transition? God, love these drums/spaces, honestly if I never hear a straight drum solo again I’d be ok. One of many reasons why I dig this shit....to me, I like my Dead the weirder the better 😎 woo-who...
Riding, sliding off that wave on the Wheel, smooth.....

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Miracle>>nice Black Pete>> Pounding, rockish mags, (compared to the smooth, rollicking early mags), with a U.S Ba-Looooooooose, “summer time coming on my oh my” indeed! I think we’re finally/hopefully done with winter up here in the Mnts.? So yea, then back to the hotel to get naked with my new, 20 year old east coast “California Girl” and frolick in the pool.....sweet, very little lighting, so stars shining, palm trees all around.....what? Hey, eyes over here, get your mind outta the gutter, I said FROLIC! Ahem. CALIFORNIA! It was damn near everything I always dreamed it’d be.
“Such a Night” RIP Mac.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Once we got in, it was fantastic.

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17 years 6 months
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The first song I can remember listening to was "Apache" by The Shadows in 1961. Hank Marvin - looked nerdy but sure could play guitar.

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I'd like a 20 year old girlfriend to frolick in the hot tub with. I just feel like my wife might not approve, what do you think?

Early wake up on the East Coast here, kids slept out in a tent in the backyard. That left me 30 feet away on the screened-in porch with my .22 cal, just in case any animals hop the fence. I just listened to the Dark Star from the Fox 10/18/72, followed by the Seattle Bird Song from 7/22/72. It's always melancholy if you catch one of the announcements concerning Pigpen being home sick. On this one, Phil said Pig was actually in the hospital, but that he would be back in 6 months.

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...good morning to all my brothers & sisters out in Dead Land, I hope everyone is having a grateful weekend filled with love, laughter, blessings and some Primo music! 😉
I have so much I want to write & share but today is not the day, I have three beautiful children, one each wrapped around my legs and my youngest daughter in my loving arms, Lovin every moment!!! A very grateful daddy I am. 🙏❤️
...I would have to say, Walt Disney, played a large part of my first musical experiences. All the classics. And the Movie, The Wizard of Oz musical/film soundtrack ! Amazing music.
Will share more soon.
Everyone enjoy the rest of your grateful Sunday, peace be with you all my friends, god bless! 🙏❤️😎
PS - the 50th Anniversary has been getting some major listening this weekend. My uncle, who introduced me to the Grateful Dead has been loving them all and has been sharing many stories about the concerts he attended over his lifetime. I’d like to share those with the board if anyone is interested, please post if it’s ok to post his memories... thank you everyone, ciao’. ✌️🤠

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by KeithFan2112

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KF, that was a looong 29 years ago. I was like 28 or 29....so
A) I think if I got naked in a hotel pool now I’d be given capital punishment, and god forbid the permanent scarring I could cause a kid if they got a look, “the horror”
B) we’re so old now my wife probably would say if I could actually get a hot 20 year old to get naked with to go for it! First, she knows that ain’t gonna happen and if it did, she’d be like “thank god your not bothering me”, and “put that damn bucket of grease away for @#&*&#$ sake” LOL 😂

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it takes a fast car to keep up with a 20 yr old. I had one for a while, after all was said and done, she was not a very good conversationalist. ie Candy from 2 and a half men :)
First songs I can remember, were mostly classical as I came around before rock and roll, and it was banned in my parents house (devil music it was called). I do remember flat foot floozie and the floy floy and Peter and the Wolf, Zippity doo dah, mostly other Disney children's songs as Disney was the go to for children back in the 50's and 60's and being raised by republicans, there was no rock in our house. Kicks Red rubber ball the Circles, wipe out by the Ventures, get off of my cloud rolling stones, do the twist by chubby checker mostly am radio until I finally got a stereo that had FM, then it was all rock from then on. First rock songs were the Animals, Paul Revere, Beatles, Buddy Holly and Bobby Fuller, others too, just too many to list. I wore out that little transistor radio that I kept under my pillow at night so I could listen to the banned rock music. I will always remember my old man yelling at the top of his lungs "turn that shit down!!!" He hated Jimi Hendrix lol

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14 years 11 months

In reply to by unkle sam

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That place is run by...clowns/no one/cluelesd buffoons.

Just a maaaaasssssssss of people dripping like an iv thorough lil gates and metal detectors (hey man i dont have my metalluca cds with me haha). My wife was getting unglued.

Again once inside, beautiful.

Some rise, some fall, climb, some crawl
to get to Terrapin

....you'd think it was rocket science. All I know is that strip of grass in between the floor and the actual lawn is prime property. Saw Phish there three times and we always made a mad dash to grab that spot. Worth it 💯%.
Also noticed that the camping area was grass. It was always dirt when I went. Cool.
Speaking of wives becoming unglued. Took Mrs Vguy there in '98. She made fun as my friend Joe and l ran out of the gate. So fast I lost a Birkenstock. Once she caught up, she realized why we did what we did. She picked up my sandal btw and said, "You lost something Vinnie. But I got you. Nice spot." I then proceeded to bust out some fungus, so yeah....

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Visited a 20 something yr old today at a near by establishment. She was so pretty and gentle...sigh.

"The Ugly Bug Ball" by Burl Ives is the first song I can remember hearing. It was in a film- I think it was a Disney, but it wasn't a cartoon- although thinking back , maybe there were bits of animation in it. If they could do things like that then-about 1962. Hayley Mills was also in it as a child.

Took forever to get in tonight, past all those robot tests. Given the content of the post, it hardly seems worth it!

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by daverock

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....The Parent Trap actress, correct? One of the first movies I remember as well. One of my first crushes right there.

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