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    clayv
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    "Cause it's always like that with the Dead, you know - it's always the whole thing." - News Journal

    As we close out the 2019 Dave Pick's series, we deliver on our promise to give you the "whole thing" with the complete performance from The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA 3/24/73 and what a show it was! An upstanding "musical eulogy" to the recently departed Pigpen, the Grateful Dead conducted a potent study in contrasts on this bittersweet night. They found easy balance between tidy jams like "They Love Each Other," "Wave That Flag," "Playing In The Band," and introspective moments on "Stella Blue," "Sing Me Back Home," and a poignant "He's Gone." It was all laid down with a discipline and a polish unheard of in any of the truly exceptional shows that had come before it. Yes, you might say, they cleaned up nice to carry on the legacy as Pig would have wanted.

    Limited to 20,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 32: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA 3/24/73 has been mastered to HDCD specs from the 7" and 10" reels by Jeffrey Norman.

    GET IT WHILE YOU CAN

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

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  • Lovemygirl
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    Listen’ & Film

    ...the fantastic Richie Havens from Woodstock 1969 performance 🙏❤️😎have a grateful day everyone! Rock on!
    Also playing Daves Pick #12
    Daves pick #23 & lastly daves Picks #25 💀🌹💀🌹👍🏼Love it all!

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PIu9-CJ9FlI

  • JimInMD
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    Agree w/ St. Stephen

    I agree St. Stephen was most at home during the Live Dead era. It could be that they never fully worked out the new arrangements, perhaps it never sounded right when Jerry put down his '69 Gibson SG.. or perhaps it simply worked best played by the powerhouse septet that made it famous.

    To me, Eyes is a different beast and none of he Pigpen songs really sounded right after his passing. I remember when I first started seeing shows, my most listened to tapes were from '74 so I thought Eyes sounded speedy and weak I walked away disappointed the first few times I saw it. But there are a few really good versions out there that I came to enjoy quite a lot. Englishtown being perhaps the most prolific but I really like the versions on the July 78 box too. By the mid 80's I began to very much look forward to hearing it played.

    There is one uniquely Grateful Dead factor in all this, however, and that is seeing some of these songs live.. the mind blown factor. I danced around the last era of live St. Stephens, I was seeing shows in 83 when they played it and just missed it more than once.. If I would have seen it performed, I am sure my opinions would be different. Part of the seeing shows was catching that break out or rarity.. 'That' Morning Dew, the electric Ripple at the Cap Centre, a St. Stephen, a Dark Star.. I happened to catch an Attics, a DS break out and perhaps most importantly a Death Don't Have No Mercy in the same show and although none of these performances go down as best ever (or even close) part of what made the GD so great was that they were able to reach deep into their quiver and pull something off that left people scratching their heads in awe walking back to their cars wondering what the hell just happened.

    In other words I am still pissed I never got to see a St. Stephen and will never forgive them for it! :D

  • daverock
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    St Stephen takes a break

    Great though it is, to me it never sounded right taken out of its original context/timespan. Which was surely 1968-1970.
    Other songs which fall into the category of being initially great and then diminished when they are revived at a later date are post 74 Dark Stars (except 12/31/78), post 74 Eyes of the World and post Pigpen Lovelights. Purely subjective, of course.

  • Vguy72
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    In and Out of the Garden He Goes....

    ....St. Stephen is a quenisential psychedelic experience. This is well known.

  • stoltzfus
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    Mr. Know it all sez...

    Jerry called st stephen "our musical cop"

    Challenging to perform

  • carlo13
    Joined:
    Jai alai beer

    I found this ipa beer in a 12 pack in the package store next door and wondered if its any good. You guys have been talking about it alot.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Dogs and Beer

    They make a special beer for dogs..

    https://bowserbeer.com/

    What will they think of next.

    When is the #33 reveal and seaside distraction?

  • carlo13
    Joined:
    St Stephen

    I wonder why the dead held back on the st.stephen on tour? Anyone have any idea.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Beer talk. Now Dog talk....

    ....good thing one can't post pics here, or I would overdose you all with mine.

  • CaseyJanes
    Joined:
    The Pup

    Is Bailey the Beagle. An early Xmas gift to my daughter and about 4 months old now. She has very quickly grown out of that Jersey, and has now decided that she would like to chew up any of my nice shit she can find....ugh! That said, I love dogs and she is a sweetie. I also have a 9 year old golden that has been the subject of my avatars and of the puppy’s abuse lately, God love him...they are learning to be friends but he’s an old fart.

    Jim...we now have avatars in common...have no idea if the jersey is “official” but I bought it from the pet store, so one would assume. I do think TPTB would be served well by starting a pet line. My golden has worn a Stealie collar for the last couple of years and he loves it!!!

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"Cause it's always like that with the Dead, you know - it's always the whole thing." - News Journal

As we close out the 2019 Dave Pick's series, we deliver on our promise to give you the "whole thing" with the complete performance from The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA 3/24/73 and what a show it was! An upstanding "musical eulogy" to the recently departed Pigpen, the Grateful Dead conducted a potent study in contrasts on this bittersweet night. They found easy balance between tidy jams like "They Love Each Other," "Wave That Flag," "Playing In The Band," and introspective moments on "Stella Blue," "Sing Me Back Home," and a poignant "He's Gone." It was all laid down with a discipline and a polish unheard of in any of the truly exceptional shows that had come before it. Yes, you might say, they cleaned up nice to carry on the legacy as Pig would have wanted.

Limited to 20,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 32: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA 3/24/73 has been mastered to HDCD specs from the 7" and 10" reels by Jeffrey Norman.

GET IT WHILE YOU CAN

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

I believe they all have American Indian heritage and they have all been in my kitchen (at the same time noless). Jimi really liked my Etouffee and Gumbo.

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I think a bunch of us should put our collections together and open a museum. Share the music with all who care. Jim Pepper cd Pepper's Pow Wow cost me $60.00, but was worth every penny.
Dennis, I'm just talking about the Coltrane "new release" Blue World, which are all newly released recordings (some of songs 'Trane already recorded). It's only 1 or 2 new songs, but any unheard Coltrane music, I need. It's only a single disc, but my local cd store sells "used" (read promo copies), for $8 or $9 bucks, so I'd rather pay that than $13-$15 dollars, since it's not something I have to hear RIGHT NOW.
Y'all can prolly figure out why my lovely bride thinks I'm sick. She may be right, I may be crazy, but it just may be a lunatic she's looking for!!

P.S. Now listening to London-5/26/'72......Sooooo good!!

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In reply to by Mr. Ones

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I recently was exposed to him (within the last five years or so). They played Witchi Tai To a couple times on SiriusXM, probably Deep Tracks.. I was so intrigued.. had never heard anything like it and it captivated me. So I did a little research and explored more of his music.. I know most of you know this.. but if it you don't it's got such an interesting history. Witchi Tai To is a traditional Native American Peyote chanting song that he learned from his Grandfather, who was a Native American. I think it was a spiritual song, similar to a church song in their culture.

Anyway.. cool story, cool song, great artist who left this world way too young. Cross a great Jazz saxophonist with some family history and a traditional Native American Mescaline Church Chanting Song, stir it up in a pot and that's what you get.

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

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Nice Billy Joel reference Mr. Ones, I actually just listened to the Glass Houses album recently for the first time in a while. Gave Turnstiles a spin as well, sometimes I just want to hear New York State of Mind. Love all the wide ranging musical references on these threads, really a great reference for things to consider checking out.

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Jerry Weed. No. No. No. Just no.

I thought I had a problem, what with 2000 CDs, and more arriving almost daily lately. This December splurging has made the collection outgrow the 1500-disc rack that sits in the living room. (there are about 300 GD CDs in their own special "shrine" rack, plus a few dozen box sets of various artists that can't reside on the 1500-disc rack)

Last Five--
Grieg: Lyric Pieces (Emil Gilels)
The Smith Quartet--Ghost Stories (AMAZING collection of eerie and evocative modern string quartet pieces)
Tal Farlow--Best Of
Barbara Dennerlein--Hot Stuff (German jazz Hammond player)
Cassandra Wilson--Blue Light 'Til Dawn

Recent Dead: Dick's Picks 28 (2/26 & 28/73). Wow.
Giants Box; 7/10/89. First time through, and loving it! This box is soooo Grate! The SOUND . . .!! I'm enjoying many of the post-Keith shows more than I'm enjoying some 70's shows.

Speaking of sound, the other day I ran a digital optical cable from the Denon 2910 disc spinner to the Maverick D2 Tube Magic DAC, then A/B'd between that and the analogue out from the Denon. Whoa. I thought there was good sound before, but the optical through the DAC opened up the soundstage about 15%.

The Denon has been rejecting a disc or two here and there, including D3 of Garcia Live Vol. 6 (7/5/73--listening to get in the mood for Vol. 12--any day), which sometimes means a failing laser. So I broke down and purchased a new Marantz HD-CD1, which should arrive any day. (two places had it severely discounted for a few days, but no longer) No, the new player does not have HDCD, but I've found that my ears don't hear any difference between that and the Redbook layer, nor do my ears hear any difference between the SACD and redbook layer on hybrid discs. Today's DACs are so good that I think the hi-rez formats have no purpose, if they ever did. When I listened to 7/10/89 via the Denon's HDCD decoder through the analogue out, it wasn't as good to me as the non-HDCD version pumping through the DAC. (the DAC does not utilize HDCD decoding) YMMV.

Jerry Christmas and a Happy New Weir to all!

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Glenn Miller, he was pretty durn good. I dig on some of that old swing music.

Never heard of Jim Pepper.

Jerry Garcia weed doesn't bother me at all. Snoop Dogg and Willie Nelson and God knows who else have their own strains. Is it really any worse than Cherry Garcia ice cream? I mean, Garcia heroin might be in slight bad taste, but to each his own. Ever since The Who started sponsoring their tours and selling their songs to car commercials, nothing has been sacred.

Last five:

GD Complete Live Rarities Collection (ok, most of it over the past 24 hours)
GD To Terrapin 5/28/77 Hartford, CT
ZZ Top Live In Germany 1980
Wes Montgomery Echoes Of Indiana Avenue
AC/DC Let There Be Rock

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I'm gonna guess that they put their name on a strain some botanist bred over a period of multiple generations. Undoubtedly grown, trimmed and cured without any real contribution by the celebrity name on the strain.

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Perhaps.. Mountain Girl was quite the grower back in the day.. even authored and coauthored a couple books on the subject.

Here's one.
https://books.google.com/books?id=ujwJULUMtzkC&printsec=frontcover&sour…

I can see Leds point.. but something about it just doesn't feel right. Anyway.. not super important, it beats the alternative where nobody is growing and it's still illegal.

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I read one of Mountain Girl's Primo Plant books back in the mid-eighties, interesting to see your reference. No real skin off my back what someone calls their weed, but I can't help think of the scene in Pineapple express where the main dealer was coming up with random strain names for the products he had in stock. Spanish Trampoline anyone?

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Apparently the Daniels family is now calling their Tennessee (Jed) whiskey Jack Daniels.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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James Joyce. Never read any of his books, but I understand they are quite the grind.

This summer I started Moby Dick. Got about 50 pages in. Brought it to the pool one day and a woman walked up and said it was the most boring book she ever read. Stopped reading it right there.

Currently about 80 pages into The Brothers Karamazov. It’s a bit of a struggle, but I understand it is worth it. Crime and Punishment is one of the best books I have ever read.

Other books that can be a bear, but are totally worth it - A Prayer for Owen Meany and A Gentleman in Moscow.

Merry Christmas to all.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Charlie, Glass Houses from Billy Joel, wow!
That was my first concert. Went to see Billy Joel at the St. Paul Civic Center in 1980 or 81. My Dad took me and a buddy. I think we were in fourth grade. I remember my Dad commenting on some guys near us were smoking pot. Crazy memory.
Deadheadbrewer-
I am interested in your thoughts on that Marantz CD player you just bought. I was looking at that one as well and thought, will it really give me better sound than I have now?? Interesting to me also that you do not notice any better sound with your HDCD player. I keep thinking I need to find one to get that additional 4 bits.

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LMG admit it. The jig is up. The waist is in the pants. The plain has left the station. If the foo shits, wear it, as my dentist says. Or was it something about my teeth? In any event, when this many people call you out your best bet is to fade away, and run your monte on the other side of the tracks for a while. Sell your grilled cheese at the other exit as it were. But who am I to give advice? Just a guy on the internet. Mighty swell be a bot, or a russian. Lots of russkies around these days. Just not in major events they tell me.

I tried Ulysses years ago, and failed. Vowed when I turned 40 I'd try it again, and finish. So it was. A few months ago I got through it. Can't say I understood more than 35% or so. But its part of the can(n)on, right? A few phrases that stuck with me:

What's a pier? A disappointed bridge.

God made food, the devil the cooks.

Whichever way the cat jumps.

Short story long Ulysses is worth the effort, although if I read it again i'll read the Odyssey first. Leopold's stream of conscious is where it's at. A readers' guide definitely helps, no shame here. Plenty are available online. For the best authors the real nut is in the re-read, which deadheads should be familiar with. Same with Pynchon, who I consider to be the master of 20th century literature. I can't wait to read Mason & Dixon again.

Still waiting for that '84 halloween dead sweatshirt I ordered in early October. Warehouse issues they say. Who am I to argue? I don't need amazon style broken bone high stakes empty pool high wire Larry Darrell razor's edge envelope pushing without a net highest ladder step can of corn Randy Johnson fastball sort of delivery. When somebody has a minute just slap a barcode on it and toss it in the van with the next Dave's, right?

Not totally stoked about another '77 show as the gemstone of next year's series, but I do consider 2019 to be perhaps the best year of Dave's . I did miss year one.

I'm on board with Gainesville needing to be released. Love to see that as a Dave's. And a '71 Cap Theater box would be fantastic for the new decade.

Sorry for rambling. No offense meant to anyone, I love this place. Good times good music good vibes. Now where is that traffic light? This should be easy for a bot.

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In reply to by Slow Dog Noodle

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....Stephen King churns out books faster than I can read them. Vonnegut is good, as is Poe and Lovecraft.
VGK lost in OT, yet currently tied for first in the Pacific. Points add up.
Slave To The Traffic Light - Phish. That's for you slow dog. Ramble On - Led Zep.
Look at us old timers on the net of dead.

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I KNEW there was one more thing I was going to say in my previous post. I started it (for the first time) about four years ago, then abandoned it about 200 pages in. Two years ago I started it again, but only made it about 150 pages in. This fall I re-started it again, determined that the third time would be the charm. This time I'm allowing myself to skip the chapters where Melville describes whale anatomy and the chapters where he references every ancient myth and text known to humans. This time I'll make it.

Purchased (and loved) A Prayer for Owen Meany from a recommendation from this chat group. A while back I also picked up a copy of V by Pynchon because of someone here mentioning it, but I haven't started that one. I own Ulysses, and will try it one of these days . . .

Great book? Cry, the Beloved Country. Sula by Toni Morrison. Birds Without Wings. The Things They Carried. Steppenwolf. (don't get me started . . . )

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In reply to by JimInMD

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Is it still socially acceptable, then, to smoke weed in the States where it has been legalized ? It must have a very different image for a 16year old living in such a State to the one it had for me back in Oldham in 1973.

Maybe with naming strains or naming anything else, come to that, it makes a difference if the individual associated is still alive to give their consent to having their name used.

I haven't read either Ulysses or Moby Dick, I am ashamed to say. Two I have on the go at the moment are Rob Young's excellent "Electric Eden : Unearthing Britain's Visionary Music," and " Fiends in the Furrows ", and anthology of folk horror short stories that has just been published.

Oh, yes...I listened to The Dead this morning. Dave's Picks 6, to be precise - the 12/20/69 show. You have to be careful, because the excellent second set is on the second half of the second cd, followed by the first set on the 3rd. There is also a Lovelight which kicks off the 3rd cd which is only marginally shorter than Moby Dick.

That one about that Waldo guy.
You had to find him.
I gave up after a page or two.
It was several orders of magnitude harder than finding reCRAPTCHA traffic lights.

:)
Happy Friday Deadland.

Last day of work before a week and a half off.
Woo Hoo!

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14 years 11 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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...............................................................

on a happier note:

3/18/77 is phenomenal. listened to disc three, 3/20/77's Scarlet, and some of disc 2 of 4/2/73 on a rainy, sloggy drive to Tacoma last evening.

March 77 Winterland...YO DAVEnPALS...how about giving this run the full Norman?

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My 5-cents......Any book written by Nick Hornby is well worth reading. You can start with Fever Pitch(even if you're a Liverpool fan), and go from there, but really, you can start anywhere. If you love humor, great writing, and music(!!),
you can't go wrong. For the music fan, perhaps start with "Juliet, Naked", and go from there.

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7 years 7 months
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Read Bram stokers dracula. It's a scary and great read. Also the Oddesy is a great one too. Peace.

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15 years 3 months

In reply to by carlo13

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I read Ulysses. Just so I could say that in a public setting. Thanks for the opportunity.

Re: AJS. Dostoevsky is my favorite author. Demons is hilarious, terrifying, and perhaps the most prophetic novel ever.

"Call me Ishmael." Greatest first line in literature.

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The "new" Garcia release dropped into my mailbox this week, 1/23/73 from The Boarding House in SF. It's decent, much better than what I felt was a low-energy and disappointing Eel set. This one is funky and has great live sound.

After awhile, I go back to and prefer actual Grateful Dead over Garcia band, primarily because the music is more diverse and interesting. JGB is always the same, in a way, like jazz: first they play the head, then everyone in the band solos, then they reel it back in and finish off what was a three minute pop song in, like, 13 minutes. It doesn't suck, but it feels like it was just an excuse for Jerry to go out and get paid to play every night.

The Garcia family will obviously keep releasing these shows as long as they sell. It's not much different than what the Hendrix family does. I see Tom Petty's wife and daughters just reconciled over financial issues relating to his estate. And Chris Cornell's wife is suing Soundgarden.

It's always the same, and I suppose not unlike when the head of a well-to-do family passes on without a proper will and all the siblings fight over it, with half the money going to lawyers. Not a good look for anyone, but hardly a surprise.

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I generally like cheap action, I like good to win and bad to lose, and bad should lose.... badly. Kill the wife deserves a beating and a head shot. Kill the kid and maybe a good impaling. Kill the dog,,,, impaling, while being feed into a furnace.

Any of the real literature is generally too depressing, that's why I read the newspaper.

In real literature, I like Phillip Roth. I Married a Communist was my fave. I liked Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged. W Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge.

Real reader in family is my wife and she only reads real literature, no supermarket authors for her! Her monster book was Infinite Jest, said the footnotes were as long as the book.

And as some said about Moby Dick, my brother-in-law also complained about how much raw detail there was on cutting up whales!

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Hey, 3/18/77 isn't released is it? You wrote that you were listening to disc three. Same with 3/20/77. Thanks

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I thought it was funny how killing the dog gets a worse punishment than killing the kid and your crime drama novels

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

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Great author. I love High Fidelity. Both the book and the movie.

I will now sell five copies of "The Three EPs" by the Beta Band.

Ian McEwan is another author that comes to mind. Atonement was a fantastic book.

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14 years 11 months

In reply to by Mind-Left-Body

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I have unofficial copies of March 77 Winterland from my "source", a very generous soul.

writing about Winterland as Metallica describes being "trapped under ice".

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In reply to by stoltzfus

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Those lucky folks in the legal states are always talking about their sources and strains.. :D

I think they should keep the March '77 Winterland Shows together are release as box.. much like they SHOULD have done with Winterland 74 (and Berkeley 72 for that matter).

If anyone wants the Winterland Spring run.. I am happy to send them your way. Just figure out a way to either PM me or have a friend PM me.. Until they fix PMs this whole contact thing is kinda awkward.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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does that go for June 77 Winterland as well?

I might take you up on that

didn't have the $$$ back when that was available

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Charlie Musselwhite - Louisiana Fog Muddy Waters - Best of Muddy Waters. Little Walter - Hate to see you go Anthem of The Sun - expanded version Working Mans Dead - expanded version

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In reply to by JimInMD

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I'd love to get the Winterland March 77 run.

Not sure how to do it...

So I use iTunes for my digital listening because a)-It's easy to access and use , and b)-because I can burn discs from it.
I downloaded a show from etree just now but cannot access it via iTunes. I can only listen to it on windows media or some other app I never use.
Is iTunes non-compatible with flacs or torrents or whatever the hell is going on here?

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Just getting into it...I love to hear Jerry play that geetar.....

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In reply to by KRIYAS

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....was addictive the second time I heard it. The first time, a coworker tried to turn me on. I was deep into Slayer and Death Angel and such, and waved it on by.
Then I heard Europe 72....😲

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I had early listening background slayer....angel of death yes don't see that often but ultra violence and frolic were huge back in those days...maybe some nuclear assault?? hehe anyhow...sarah fulchers' solo efforts get old quick to me.. just first listen...did see slayer with manson in denver one time....it takes a train......

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Go pens playin tough know you luv we luv the flower

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i know even though, might not hear, i let them know that in my heart head and soul no artist musically i have heard does what Jerry Garcia did, and when you'd see those moments to Phil, or Brent. or Bruce or you when he'd smile and you knew he was on it just making it happen with that guitar and his sweet delivery...yes GARCIA

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Blows me away that comments can talk about tech set-ups and phaser arrays and stereo link photon links add nauseum....but I get no help with what apparently is a simple music download.

Fuck It. Think I'll go read SET Magazine now...

I also use itunes, and no, I don't think it plays flac, only wav, mp3, and a variety of apple formats. I am pretty sure you need to first convert the flac to wav then you can let itunes convert the wav to some format it likes.
On another note, does anybody really, really like Drums and Space? I mean is it a super popular part of the shows? I was listening to it on the drive home last night and wondering why they played it so often; maybe it was something they really enjoyed playing and looked forward to, even if it meant bathroom break for a good part of the audience.

CJM...drums and space don't alway sound so much to me on recordings, but listening to a recording of Wembley 11/1/90, I was reminded that when I was actually there, lost in the soup of time, drums and space were the sections of the show I enjoyed most. Its not now, listening at home- but to be there- the power of it, and the way it seemed to ricochet round the stadium at incredible volume and velocity. So maybe, to fully get into it, you had to be there, lost somewhere in the middle of it.

Billy the Kid...tip of the hat for mentioning Muddy Waters and Little Walter in your last 5. Last month I bought a killer cd credited to Muddy Waters called "Rollin' Stone : The Golden Anniversary" . This features all the recordings made between 1948 to half way through 1952. Many, many tracks with Little Walter on harp...stunning sound...stunning music.

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JRF-there is a free program that you can download called XLD that will covert your FLAC files to ALAC. I have used it frequently however my system automatically purges it every time I run a general software update on my computer so I have to redownload it every time. You can probably find a link advertised in the back of Set magazine, or uuu can just google it, thus avoiding herpes if that’s not your thing!

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Hey man, curious if you had the chance to try the Absinthe yesterday? Was thinking about ordering some myself, and wondering what you thought??

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12 years 1 month
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My buddy JUST sent me a program called "FlacSquisher", free online somewhere (or he wouldn't have gotten it!).

Thing works very nice, very quick. I have been converting a massive amount of flac to mp3 and this little guy has cut my conversion time by 70% over the method I was using. Will preserve the id tag info also!

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DaveRock, thank you for the tip of the hat. Muddy Waters recordings from the 1940s & 1950s are pure gold. I saw Muddy Waters play in 1977 at the 1839 Theatre in S.F., John Hammond opened the show. Lots of great videos on you tube of Muddy, Howlin Wolf, Sonny Boy Williamson from the 1960s over in Europe. When Little Walter played in S.F. on 8/9/66 , at The Matrix Club, he was backed by The Quicksilver Messager Service. Walter stayed out at Quicksilvers place and they invited Pig Pen to come out and hang out with him. Pig Pen being a drinker , they felt he would get along with Walter

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Just part of the adventure

Hey yall

4 27 77
There is video

Another fine 77 show

product sku
081227924294
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/music/dave-s-picks/dave-s-picks-vol-32-1.html