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    clayv
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    "To my ears, the best Dead shows are those that not only fit the criteria that make them amongst the best of a year, but that are also completely unique for their era—shows that fit perfectly into their year of performance, but also fall somewhat outside of the norm for that year. Harpur College, Veneta, Cornell, Cape Cod, and Augusta are all shows that are objectively excellent, and if they are not the best from their respective years of performance, they are certainly unique. Miami 6/23/74 falls into that category: not only one of the very best shows from this outstanding year, but also one of the most interesting and unique. It’s certainly worthy of many, many deep listens." - David Lemieux

    ¡Ándale, ándale! ¡Arriba, arriba! We're back with a hot one from Miami, F-L-A. DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 34 features the complete show from the Jai Alai Fronton, 6/23/74, one with unparalleled sound quality due in equal parts to the Wall Of Sound and the beautiful sonic clarity of Kidd Candelario's tapes. The first set is chock full of dynamite takes on classics like "Ramble On Rose," "Mississippi Half-Step," and "Cumberland Blues." The second set delivers on the JAMS - one leading into a gorgeous "Ship Of Fools," one rare instrumental version of "Dark Star," and a "Spanish Jam," this is Miami after all! The show also offers up a "first" and an "only" - the former, a Seastones set featuring Phil and Ned Lagin and the latter, the sole Grateful Dead performance of Chuck Berry's "Let It Rock."

    Limited to 22,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL.34: JAI ALAI FRONTON, MIAMI, FL 6/23/74 has been mastered from the 7.5 IPS reel-to-reel tapes to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman. ¡Agarrarlo mientras esta calientito! (Get it while it's hot!)

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

    Subscribed to Dave's Picks? With this release, you'll also get a bonus disc with selections from Miami 6/22/74. Excellente!

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  • Colin Gould
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    Mike Wilhelm

    OKIEDOKE13
    Is that the ‘Me and My Uncle’ on the ‘Wilhelm’ album that was put out on the Zigzag label by the much missed magazine of the same name? It was the first version I heard and I agree with it being the best I’ve heard. I have to say that it must be several decades since I last heard it because I haven’t had a record deck set up in a long time. I keep saying that I’ll buy a phone stage and dig out the player.

    On a sadder note RIP Tony Allen a great drummer and afrobeat pioneer with Fela Kuti.

  • okiedoke13
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    Listening to Me and My Uncle again?

    Yes, you need to hear it just one more time. The ultimate, definitive and most rewarding Me and My Uncle version of all time was by … Mike Wilhelm! Go find it and give a listen. You'll finally realize what the song could provide, complete with sound effects and a string quartet that appears out of knowhere as it downshifts and the story heads toward the final grim resolution. He turned it into an audio movie.

    But once I start thinking about ultimate cover versions of mindbendingly great songs, I just remind myself of the finest version of Highway 61 by … Dave Alvin! Or Ray Manzarek doing Downbound Train (Tony Williams on drums, if my memory serves) … or Havana Moon by Geoff Muldaur.

    It's May Day folks. You've got your Dylan, Phillips, Berry treats for the day. Happy hunting and listening.

  • Deadheadbrewer
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    Genesis

    I just listened to, and wouldn't want to be without, their Duke/Abacab/Genesis trifecta.

    It would have been great to hear where they might have gone had Peter Gabriel remained in the group. Gabriel could have "toughened up" Phil's and Mike's songs, while Phil could have reminded Gabriel that it isn't enough to just make interesting sounds; a great song has to start with a great melody. Sometimes Phil's music got a bit simplistic (even with a thoughtful melody), while sometimes Gabriel's music focused too much on sounding ethereal at the expense of melody.

  • hendrixfreak
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    Festivals...

    Shortest festival story ever told:

    Friday, July 27, 1973: laying on our sleeping bags, heads propped up gallon jugs of water, 30 feet from the stage in front of Jerry, passing joints as the GD delivered a nearly two hour show on a perfect summer evening.

    Saturday, July 28, 1973: after a four-hour GD show that started at noon(!), it poured and poured with lightning and thunder during The Band's set and they had to stop playing while we endured the mud.

    First and last festival ever.

  • mustin321
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    SIMONROB

    Thanks for sharing that! Great notes! It'll be nice to think about all that when I listen again, which will have to be soon now.
    Supposedly Elvis Costello saw GD at Bickershaw and decided then to start a band. Forget where I heard that...

  • Colin Gould
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    Festivals etc

    Despite, at the time, living in Liverpool which is pretty close to Bickershaw the thought of going would never have entered my head. After a golden period 70 - early 72 when I saw several bands a cash shortage between 72 - 75 severely curtailed my concert going apart from a weekly outing to a Folk club in a town centre hotel. Had I gone it would have been to see Captain Beefheart since while I was aware of the GD they hadn’t gotten under my skin yet. Many years later I did work with someone who had gone and had suffered through the cold and mud, perhaps blasphemously, he had little memory of the GD set.
    The only festival I attended was in 1978 in Roskilde, Denmark. Saw the Terje Rypdal band in one of the smaller tents, Elvis Costello being bottled off stage ( the local newspaper described him as a charlatan??) although he seemed pretty good to us. The headline act was Bob Marley and The Wailers, this tour made up the recordings released on ‘Babylon by Bus’. We were getting into the show when my eventual brother in law insisted we leave because had to get back to see the tv news! This was one of only three times I left a concert early.

    Dave Rock mentioned in an earlier post remembering the albums he sold rather than those he bought with the proceeds. I have to admit the only time I sold albums was when I was desperate for cash and the 50 - 60 that I sold don’t live in my memory. However, I have given away many albums over the years and have lived to regret several of these. The one that sticks in my mind is an early copy of ‘Led Zeppelin II’ which was a paler brown than later issues and mislabelled one track as ‘Living, loving wreck’. Of course, if I had never given away LPs and CDs I would probably be unable to move in the house. You have to let go sometimes.

    Genesis - not a group that I ever liked. Unfortunately, in earlier years I had the misfortune to look very similar to Mike Rutherford when he had long hair. Several times I was mistaken for him, once in the Virgin Records Megastore in London and again at a Steve Hillage concert, luckily my, then, strong Scouse accent soon convinced people they were wrong.

    Keep well everyone.

  • Nick1234
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    FrankParry I'd have gone…

    FrankParry I'd have gone home after TalkTalk played, fantastic band. I could never stand Genesis.

    I loathed festivals, mud or no mud, gave up after a couple.

    God I sound so negative, sorry.

  • Roguedeadguy
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    E72

    just a (hopefully) helpful note about those releases . . .

    If you want them, and dont want to pay exorbitant reseller prices, almost all of them are available for download on nugs.net. You can get lossless copies that will be indistinguishable from the CDs for around $25-30 dollars and even less for mp3 which is what you would get from Spotify.

    The only catch is that a few of them are the old school version instead of the latest box set version. They have the original Hundred Year Hall, Rockin the Rhein, and Steppin Out releases only for those shows.

    Same goes for Dicks Picks which can get expensive on the secondary CD market. Lossless downloads are a nice way to fill in the gaps in your collection.

    Did everyone see that tonights Shakedown Stream is Closing of Winterland? Nice.

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Reading Festivals

    I used to regularly attend Reading Festivals in the early and mid 1970's. The earlier events were the hippy trippy stoned events that were so prevalent in those times but at a particular moment the festival changed into a heavy metal fest which attracted a completely different set of people. Times had changed, and the crowds and the music reflected that. As Daverock so succinctly said "it became very unhip to be tolerant of anything". I never went again.

  • daverock
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    Transportation business

    Good quote for Mickey. That's what attracted me to them. An infinite number of bands can, could and will rock the joint. As indeed, could the Dead. But it was that other thing they did that got me.

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"To my ears, the best Dead shows are those that not only fit the criteria that make them amongst the best of a year, but that are also completely unique for their era—shows that fit perfectly into their year of performance, but also fall somewhat outside of the norm for that year. Harpur College, Veneta, Cornell, Cape Cod, and Augusta are all shows that are objectively excellent, and if they are not the best from their respective years of performance, they are certainly unique. Miami 6/23/74 falls into that category: not only one of the very best shows from this outstanding year, but also one of the most interesting and unique. It’s certainly worthy of many, many deep listens." - David Lemieux

¡Ándale, ándale! ¡Arriba, arriba! We're back with a hot one from Miami, F-L-A. DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 34 features the complete show from the Jai Alai Fronton, 6/23/74, one with unparalleled sound quality due in equal parts to the Wall Of Sound and the beautiful sonic clarity of Kidd Candelario's tapes. The first set is chock full of dynamite takes on classics like "Ramble On Rose," "Mississippi Half-Step," and "Cumberland Blues." The second set delivers on the JAMS - one leading into a gorgeous "Ship Of Fools," one rare instrumental version of "Dark Star," and a "Spanish Jam," this is Miami after all! The show also offers up a "first" and an "only" - the former, a Seastones set featuring Phil and Ned Lagin and the latter, the sole Grateful Dead performance of Chuck Berry's "Let It Rock."

Limited to 22,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL.34: JAI ALAI FRONTON, MIAMI, FL 6/23/74 has been mastered from the 7.5 IPS reel-to-reel tapes to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman. ¡Agarrarlo mientras esta calientito! (Get it while it's hot!)

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

Subscribed to Dave's Picks? With this release, you'll also get a bonus disc with selections from Miami 6/22/74. Excellente!

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Yesterday I blamed over my non-delivered Daves 34 ... after 47 days in limbo somewhere between US and my adress and no idea about its wherabouts. Just 4 minutes after posting my message I got a sms from Swedish postal service asking my paying an additional 17 dollar in tax for getting it delivered. Coincidence? So after 47 days and 4 minutes it finally looks like it will find its way home. Thanks for responses Daverock and hope you also will get your copy soon Gratefulgerd!

I picked up the Ralph Gleason book for nothing in a dusty store in Bangkok in 1997. A good read.

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There is no such thing as a coincidence...let us know when it lands. :-)

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I’ll cheat a bit and do some of my favourite combos

Mountains of the Moon - Dark Star
Scarlet Begonias - Fire on the Mountain
Playing in the Band (original from Ace though I like most live)
Cassidy (as above)
Help on the Way - Slipknot - Franklin’s Tower
Estimated Prophet - Eyes of the World
The Wheel
Weather Red Report Suite
The Other One
Uncle John’s Band

Like many, this will probably update by the day!

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That's probably my favorite of all of them, in a bittersweet kind of way. To me, it rings the truest, but also slightly tarnishes my Pollyannish vision of the group. The GD family dislikes that book because it relates some less-than-flattering tales, but in the books by the band members I smell some revisionist history that I don't in Scully's.

I second HEADS by Jesse Jarnow that's one of my favorites so far although not specific to the Dead they weave throughout the book.

I'm liking No Simple Highway

And was surprised by Fare Thee Well

But dammit now I want Ralph Gleason's The Jefferson Airplance & The San Francisco Sound.

Aaaarghh...

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You can get it right on ebay, there are several copies on there. Depends how much you want it, and how much you are willing to pay. Some of the prices don't seem that outrageous to me if I really wanted it. IHeck, I would pay a thousand bucks for an unopened copy of the Fillmore West box set with the bonus disc , ( just an example I already have it) but I wouldn't pay anymore then the original asking price for the Winterland 1977 box set. It just depends on what you like and are willing to pay for it.

Gotta take a swing here, gonna cheat and do some combos:

1) Help > Slip > Franklin's
2) Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain
3) Dark Star > St. Stephen > Eleven
4) Althea
5) Eyes of the World
6) Comes a Time
7) Mission in the Rain
8) Music Never Stopped
9) Ripple
10) Unbroken Chain

Wow, really hard. No room for Sugar Mag, Other One, Wharf Rat, SOTM, Truckin, Stella Blue, Estimated, Terrapin, Box of Rain, Black Muddy, Attics, Weather Report, New Speedway, Cumberland, or Easy Wind.

Did I say top 25?

Yeah, I did a quick search and seems like going rate is around $50 used.
Unfortunately it wasn't avail at the library.

I'll add it to my list of books that I want for sure.

Have you read it? If so, worth it?

I wonder if any of that content is published somewhere else..

Thanks Man!

BTW - How come you all didn't make the 3rd show at the Greek in '85?
I've always dug that Set 2 and Cryptical break out and wish I woulda seen it, curious how you felt about it..
6/15 was ringing my bell the other day, you mentioned liking 6/14 best. Was it the company or the music?
Anyway I like em all, and always like trying to complete the set;)

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Cool that this tune has made a lot of top 10 lists.

I always look for Brokedown Palace, Comes a Time and Crazy Fingers when i'm looking to listen to a show.

One of the reasons the '76 Road Trips is so great is you get a Crazy Fingers and a Comes a Time on the same release (though not the same show). And a Mission in the Rain as a nice bonus.

The greatest version of Comes a Time appears in the Orpheum Dave's Picks from a few years ago though. Wow, what a jam.

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My brother has the book, I'm interested in the Garcia interview only. I see that there is an interview on you tube that Gleason does with Garcia on 4/8/67, I'm not sure if this is what's in the book, check it out it's very cool.. Seems to me there was also an interview with Mike Bloomfield in the book and he is not to complimentary about the Dead, could be another book. I'm a huge Mike Bloomfield fan, not a big Jefferson Airplane fan, saw them play once at the Fillmore in the 1980s and I wasn't knocked out. Anyways check out that 4/8/67 Garcia interview, it's cool.

BTK - Yeah, that interview has some good stuff for sure!

Like you said, I just want the Garcia stuff, so I'm curious if that stuff is reprinted somewhere else or if I already have the interview.

It's been added to the want list, but of lower importance.

Most of the fun of Collecting is the journey.. been at it 35 years, I'm not in a big rush :)

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I just read the Top 10 lists and it got me to post for the first time in awhile. I put on the Spectrum 82 Road Trips for my commute this morning just to hear a Shakedown Street, which I will listen to on the way home (first set tunes for the morning commute). I got to thinking-- we have had 34 Dave's Picks now and he has yet to put out a Shakedown Street. This needs to be corrected in the near future. Top 10 list is impossible. I started and then realized I wasn't even past the obvious:

Dark Star
Eleven
Playin in the Band
Scarlet-Fire
Estimated
Eyes
Ripple
Easy Wind
UJB
Throwing Stones
Shakedown Street

Forget about it...impossible.

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I used to go to poster shows every year when I was a kid, bought a lot of nice Dead posters. I used to go to Village Music in Mill Valley and John Goddard had everything as far as records, photos, magazines. I used to go there for blues records, and Dead related items, he had one of John Chipollina's guitars hanging up on the wall. We used to get pizza and beer across the street, then we would go across the Richmond San Rafeal bridge to Down Home Music in El Cerrito great blues, country, bluegrass music and so much more, it's still open. I don't collect anymore, but I am interested in this limited edition of the Anthem of the Sun print done by the artist Bill Walker. There are only 300 available, it's a little pricey. Check out Anthem prints .com, he gives the whole story of how he created the Anthem of the Sun cover. "There's nothing you can hold for very long" .

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New Speedway Boogie

My first favorite Dead song, way back in junior high. Never got enough love live, imho.

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Check your PMs.

Also, since no one else wants to take a stab at it, I would love it if Dave’s 35 was 8/31/80.
Or anything from ‘67-70.

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How about 10/9/82 Frost, 4/27/85 Frost, 7/13/84 Greek, or 12/28/83 S. F. Civic all killer shows! Or, put them all together and have a West Coast box set.

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In reply to by billy the kid

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....how no one mentioned the Annotated Lyrics by David Dodd is amazing. Tbh, I only looked back until this morning. Maybe someone already did?

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I agree with you 100%!

At least we have had some stellar Shakedowns in the RT series and box sets.

But I do think we will see an 1980s release for #35. What year, I have no idea. Just going with my gut.

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LMG inside info guy posted DaP 35 would be Alaska 1980.

If I don't count the songs with jams (this includes the regulars people have been talking a about including Here Comes Sunshine and Truckin').

One drummer songs 71-74

Bertha
Me and My Uncle
Lovelight
Cumberland Blues
Promised Land
Cold Rain and Snow
Bird Song
Greatest Story Ever Told
Brokedown Palace
Black Throated Wind
Jack Straw
Attics of my Life
Empty Pages
Uncle John's Band
Sugar Magnolia
Wharf Rat
St. Stephen

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Go to San Francisco oh woh!

Who are the Grateful Dead

And why do they keep following me

The beat goes on

What did Delaware to the party

Idaho, Alaska

Her New Jersey

You’all are blowing my mind

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....Music Never Stopped. Thats six.
This game is weird. Right up my alley. 🤪

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....but I'm in my comfort zone here, so what the hell. If the world 🌎 listened to more of this band beyond description, it would be a better place. I get IT. Y'all get IT. GET IT!! When it clicks, it will grab you, and never let you go.

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your picks are great and surprisingly enough I pulled out the 10-09-82 today out my magic bag of Charlie Miller remasters...great show and it was my 2nd time to the Frost...what a great facility....I had to rip my CD-R's of the show so i could drop it into my digital player for my ride into town on Friday

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Charlie Miller there are a bunch of new '87 remasters making their way around the usual bit torrent sites...

Billy the Kid..that shop sounds more like a place of worship.

Played 7/3/66 from 30 Trips yesterday- a real breath of fresh air. Great version of Tastebud, and stratospheric guitar on Viola Lee Blues. Another highlight is the always welcome Cream Puff War. Probably not on anyone's radar as a greatest song, but great nonetheless.

Skulltrip -New Speedway Boogie is a favourite of mine, too. Something of a lost classic in terms of its jamming potential.

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Hello everyone in DeadHead land, hope you all are well on this beautiful day in June;) what will Dave’s 35performance be?! How about the Grateful Dead’s performance on August 3rd, 1982 in Kansas City, at the“Starlight Theater”!
Complete Set-list is below! in my opinion, it has a PRIMO Setlist & The Band we’re playing very well as was Jerry who just happened to celebrated his birthday the day before!

Set 1:
1- Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo ->
2 - Franklin's Tower ->
3- New Minglewood Blues
4- Peggy-O
5- El Paso ->
6- Cumberland Blues
7 - Althea
8- Cassidy
9- Big Railroad Blues ->
10- Man Smart (Woman Smarter)
11- Might As Well

Set 2:
12- Shakedown Street ->
13- Samson And Delilah
14- To Lay Me Down
15- Let It Grow ->
16 - Drums ->
17- Space ->
18- He's Gone ->
19 - The Other One ->
20- Stella Blue ->
21 - Sugar Magnolia
Encore:
Casey Jones

*** https://archive.org/details/gd1982-08-03.sbd.miller.77196.sbeok.flac16/
Excellent performances of
‘Althea’
‘Cassidy’
‘The Women are Smarter’
‘To Lay Me Down’
‘Let It Grow’
‘He’s Gone’
‘That’s it For The Other One’
‘Stella Blue’ & more!
If you haven’t heard this Show I would give it a spin! It’s filled with surprises! 💀🌹
Have a grateful day You’All! 🙏❤️

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Oh LMG I thought I read a post from you saying DaP 35 was Alaska 80. My bad.

After 1974 Top10 would be (list does not include The Other One, Scarlet-Fire, Estimated-Eyes, or Help-Slipknot-Franklin)

Feel Like a Stranger
Terrapin Station
The Wheel
Samson and Delilah
Touch of Grey
Need a Miracle
Stagger Lee
Cassidy
Althea
Foolish Heart
From the Heart of Me
Blow Away
Music Never Stopped
Shakedown Street
Throwing Stones

I've been waiting for DaP 35 with expectations of Alaska 80. That no longer seems to be the what's happening, my best guess is something from November 1969. That period feels due.

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DaveRock, for record collectors or just music collectors in general, Village Music was a place of worship. Type in to your computer Village Music Mill Valley and it should come up. You can see pictures of it and there is a story about it and owner John Goddard. David Grisman's kids did a documentary about the place. The owner, John Goddard knew that I collected Grateful Dead stuff, he asked me one day if I had a copy of the 45, Don't Ease Me In, because Justin Kreutzman was looking for a copy, I told him I did , so he took my phone # to give to Kreutzman. Kreutzman never called me, I would have given him the 45, make a trade for some copies of tapes out of the vault, but it never happened. Anyways, check it out, it was the place. It closed in 2007.

Between the years Dave has Picked for release, 1969-1983, every year is represented except 1982.
Strong year and some strong shows in the vault.

That being said, I’d love to hear some uncirculated gem freshly restored from once thought missing reels vs a highly circulated bootleg from a master cassette any day.

But I like the brewing excitement…

When are we gonna know more?

Whose got the inside tip, the scoop, the rumors?

BTW: BILLY THE KID keep the stories coming! I wanna see the Grisman kids documentary now.
And thanks for that Anthem Art tip.. that is dope, if I had a random $4K laying around and nothing else to spend it on I would snatch one ;)

Damn!

Also since I digressed into expensive collectibles, in regards to Favorite Books, I love Volume 1-3 of the Taper’s Compendium, they’re worth seeking out if you can get them for a reasonable price. I think they retailed for around $35 bucks BITD, but are a bit pricey now so I wasn't gonna bring them up, but they should get some love. They're amazing.

Anybody got the Taping Addendum?

Man, I want to read that.

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Just noticed that my copy cost $0.95. Yep, 95¢. In America, if you bought it mail order from the publisher then postage was a additional 5¢. Not bad for a 380 page book.

That is the original price printed on the cover and the mail order details are inside. I got my copy in England in the early '70s. I can't remember what it cost but it was easy to order from my local bookshop as it was still in print at that time.

Based on the below I think we’ll get either Workingman’s Era or Brent Era Dead for Volume 35.

I’m pulling for the Workingman’s Era to celebrate the 50th Anniversary.

During Seaside Chat: Dave’s Picks 2020 Subscriptions on 10/29/19 Dave states and I quote:

“I like to look back on the previous year and I love this year, I love the 2019 as much as I’ve ever loved any of the years we’ve done. I really do, I think that the variety is quite perfect, it’s never gonna be absolutely perfect for everybody but I do feel that we hit every distinct era, not every distinct era, we hit most of the distinct eras in Grateful Dead history.. yada yada.. so I think we nailed a lot of things with this year."

“Looking at what we have planned for 2020… it’s gonna be an exceptionally exciting year.”

Goes on to describe eras and compare 2020 to 2019 (see below for sum up).

So Dave doesn’t come right out and say it, but IMO he implies that the 2020 release schedule will be very similar to that “perfect” format.

2019 - Eras
1977-02-26 - Volume 29 - Keith & Donna 2 Drummer Era
1970-01-02 - Volume 30 with Bonus - Workingman’s Era
1979-12-03 - Volume 31 - Brent Era
1973-03-24 - Volume 32 - Keith & Donna 1 Drummer Era

2020 - Eras
1977-10-29 - Volume 33 - Keith & Donna 2 Drummer Era
1974-06-23 - Volume 34 - Keith & Donna 1 Drummer Era
Volume 35 - Workingman’s Era?
Volume 36 - Brent Era?

I guess we’ll see.. getting pumped.

RE: SIMONROB - Lucky! $0.95 plus $0.05 for shipping. That’s not bad, not bad at all.

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I played the Ovary Lodge album on the Ogun label when I heard of the death of Keith Tippet.
Having no music by Vera Lynn I can only share a joke taken from a cartoon in a recent issue of Private Eye magazine. Two people are looking at a billboard advertising a meeting of the Vera Lynn Appreciation Society. Venue: Don’t know where. Time: Don’t know when.
If you get the joke you are probably British or quite old. She was a great morale booster for people in the UK during the 2nd World War.

remember how she said that we would meet again, some sunny day...

Here's a raise of the glass to Ms. Lynn. 103!

love the joke about the VL appreciation society, Colin

her song was used to great effect at the end of "Dr. Strangelove".

and I'm a middle-aged Yank.

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I'll be honest I was shocked she was still alive and made 103.

How can you not have some Vera in your stuff AND be a Pink Floyd fan?

Listening to the 1940 cut of We'll Meet Again. Next up Till There Was You.

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No mention of "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" by Tom Wolfe?

C'mon people! That one's foundational.

"Growing Up Dead" by Peter Conners (author of Cornell '77) was a fun read personally, given that I grew up in the same area as the author and saw many of the shows referenced in the book. If you know what scum jumping is, you"ll like this one.

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Garcia & John Kahn 27 Jan. '86 The Ritz, New York City (1CD). Early pre-orders from Garcia Family Provisions get a free bonus disc of the next night's show 28 Jan. '86 from the same venue.

Billy the Kid - yes, I have just had a look, and it looks great. The kind of place I could have lost myself in for hours. Very impressive guests photographed playing there as well-Jerry/Elvis Costello and John Lee Hooker/Ry Cooder among them.

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I just ordered two copies, one for me and one for my brother . Garcia acoustic, all day , everyday. Get your oreders in quick if you want that free disc.

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But I did lose my mind a bit on Dear Prudence yesterday, when Jerry and Clarence start following each other up this frenetic ascending spiral.

There has always been that idea that Keith started mimicking Jerry in the late 70's, but I've never heard it in the music. I think it was Billy who kept saying that, but then in his autobiography Billy ALSO mentions that Vince mimicked Jerry's licks toward the end, and I've also never heard that. I think Keith and Vince are getting unfairly criticized.

Keith Tippett--I didn't know he was with King Crimson, but I do have a solo free music disc of his--The Dartington Concert. Guess I'll have to put that on. R.I.P., Keith.

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Soundtrack at the end of Dr. Strangelove. Riveting! Vera Lyn, 103 wow!
Strange, yesterday I’m thinking about the cover of Anthem of the Sun and then I read Billy the Kids post. Then a few minutes ago I get the email for Jerry Garcia 14 with bonus and I order two. Then I log on here and see Y’all talking about it. Must be from laying off the pot for a few weeks. Strange dreams and moments of clairvoyance.
I must have been at some of the same Grateful Dead concerts as some of you. Sharing auric space.
Hey just thought of good Weird Al Yankovich style line. “Well I like it a lot , cause I’m on the pot”. Not to worry. Had to quit drinking over 17 years ago because it was making me real ugly. Not a drop, without AA even. Will power baby. And I like taking extended periods of time off from smoking the sacred herb. Like the time I bucked the trend and didn’t smoke ganja or even drink beer or any alcohol from December 1998 until January 2000, partly because of the Prince song . Gonna party like its 1999. Now Sheila E the timbale player for Prince was hot on all levels. The niece of Coke Escovedo of Santana fame. By the way Jorge Santana , Carlos’ younger brother died a few weeks back. Saw Jorge play with the Santana band in 1992 in Las Cruces during the Supernatural tour. Jorge was a major part of the Bay Area band Malo.

Peace out, not piece out

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Strider, great to see some love here for Ms Vera Lynn and that oh, so perfect cinematic pairing from Stanley Kubrick's twisted genius mind. And she was immortalized again by Roger Waters and Pink Floyd on The Wall:
Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn?
Remember how she said that
We would meet again
Some sunny day?
Vera, Vera
What has become of you
Does anybody else in here
Feel the way I do?

Amazing all that she lived through, and that she had a number one album not that long ago, and another top 10 album celebrating her 100th birthday.

Congrats on the avoidance of the liquor! I myself discovered that alcoholism ran in my family, and that I had it not long after I turned 21, so I actually quit drinking about 6 weeks after. I had been able to buy liquor without being ID'd when I was 18, so I got a few years in, and found not a need for it, but if I was gonna drink, it was gonna be epic. About ten years after I quit, I drank one bottle of Crown Royal and one bottle of Goldschlager over like a week or so. And just literal sips for toasts, ceremonies, etc. I didn't need AA, either, but I was lucky to see the pattern in the family and got out before I ever grew to like it. Sort of like with beer; never could take the taste of it, said that to my dad once, he said you gotta acquire a taste for it, I told him I'd rather not acquire a taste for piss. (Hence my complete absence from the beer talks that went on, knowing nothing about them apart from my dislike.)

Thanks for the heads up on Jerry 14, and bonus! That assures my early bird buying. Wonder if there's any tribute to the Challenger on the bonus night? Probably not, as Jerry wasn't big for topical events and downers. I remember watching it live and won't ever forget it. I found out a few years ago that my grandparents attended the launch, and my grandma had photos she had taken. She never showed them to us, I only found them after my dad passed.

Need to relisten to this DaP and bonus again, did just finish a relisten to DaP 7/31/74, and wow, I forgot what a great show that is!

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AMC theaters are opening 600 movie theaters around the U.S. july 15th, so they say, which means muatm August 1st.

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In reply to by carlo13

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....strider knows his stuff. Hot indeed.
I've never heard of Jack Hardy until now. You guys are amazing.

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