• 1,829 replies
    clayv
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    Sweet liberty! We're venturing into the depths of 80s Dead with the complete show from 4/20/84 at the Philadelphia Civic Center and we're placing bets you'll think this one is more than fine. A strong contender for our mega 30 TRIPS AROUND THE SUN boxed set, 4/20/84 missed the cut by virtue of its setlist being a wee bit too similar to the years before and after. As DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 35, it's found its time to shine. The first set delivers yin yang harmony between Jerry and Bobby songs, yielding driven and powerful takes on tracks like "Feel Like A Stranger," "Cold Rain And Snow," and "Brown-Eyed Women." The second set begs the question - will we ever stop peaking? - with a monumental "Scarlet>Fire," a ripping "Samson and Delilah," a "Space" that pulls shapes that know no names, and that "Morning Dew" - get.in.to.it! And because this one might have ended just a little too soon, we've packed disc 2 and 3 with knock-your-socks-off bonus material from most of the second set from the previous night, 4/19/84. Grab ahold while you can!

    Limited to 22,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL.35: PHILADELPHIA CIVIC CENTER, PHILADELPHIA 4/20/84 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and is guaranteed to sell out. 

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

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    PSA. Data breach at WMA....

    ....i got a letter in the mail yesterday notifying me of a cybersecurity incident involving a number of e-commerce websites operated by Warner Music Group.
    Quote...." On August 5, 2020, we learned that an unauthorized third party had compromised a number of US-based e-commerce websites WMG operates but that are hosted and supported by an external service provider. This allowed the unauthorized third-party to potentially acquire a copy of the personal information you entered into one or more of the affected website(s) between April 25, 2020 and August 5, 2020.
    While we cannot definitely confirm that your personal information was affected, it is possible that it might have been as your transaction(s) occurred during the period of compromise. If it was, this might have exposed you to a risk of fraudulent transactions being carried out using your details."
    Does say later that payments made through PayPal were not affected.
    I use PayPal.
    Anyone else get this letter??

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Rolling Stones

    To many Double IPAs

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Rolling Stones. Voodoo Lounge tour

    I've only seen the Rolling Stones play live one time, it was 1994 at the Voodoo Lounge tour. I really enjoyed the show. They opened the show with Not Fade Away. Apparently, they had a place there for famous people called the Voodoo Lounge, and I read that Garcia and Weir were both in there during the show. Anyways, I thought the Stones sounded great.

  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Goats Head Stones

    I love the Rolling Stones. I had my old man's eight tracks in the early seventies... I remember when Some Girls came out and we would continually be snatching the house copy of it back and forth from each other. I was 10.

    Seen them live several times, most recently last summer at Mile High Stadium. I have never felt that the Stones were a great live band. They're all over the goddamn place... they never sound much like their records. Which is neither here nor there, depending on what you're looking for, but they went from the raw (Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!) to the aforementioned late 70's / early 80's affairs with sped up tempos, to the glossed over machine they became on Steel Wheels to date.

    Point being, I didn't buy the Brussels Affair when it came out as I already have so many live Stones albums and rarely play them - except for Twenty Flight Rock and Going To A Go-Go off Still Life.

    I bit on the iTunes version of this. The audio is cleaned up nicely, there are a number of unearthed gems and it is a great Mick Taylor live show. I've been playing it for two days now. I think it was like twenty bucks and change. For anyone on the fence, I say, go for it.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Something else I didn't know...

    Keith - that Waiting For A Friend dates from 1973. Yes, that should have been included with the extras for sure.

    Probably because I kept on seeing them - the last time was 2007, I think, I do like some of their live recordings from the 1990s up to about 2007. One thing I would highly recommend...to anyone reading this with soul...is the live versions of Gimme Shelter featuring Lisa Fischer. She truly soars through the heavens on this song. I last heard it on the blu ray Bridges to Beunos Ares, bought last week, ( which also features Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger duetting on Like A Rolling Stone - shambolic!), and it is truly amazing. Another great version is on the Totally Stripped box set- from Amsterdam 1995. The sound is incredible on this-Keith Richards sounds as though he is in the room with you - which might or might not be a good thing. One of the remarkable things about the Bridges to Beunos Ares blu ray is the massive crowd, which goes absolutely bananas from the first song.

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Morning Daverock

    What I wouldn't give to have seen them with Mick Taylor! Yes they were outstanding onstage in those days, and to be honest, I never would have known it if I hadn't stumbled on the "Ladies and Gentlemen the Rolling Stones" movie concert a year or two before they released Brussels Affair.

    I was watching VH-1 or AXS (one of those music TV stations), and wham, he'll right in the middle of the opener, Brown Sugar. The thing they caught me first was that Mick Jagger was actually singing, not huffing and puffing out the lyrics. Up until that time I had only heard live albums from the Ron Wood era: Love You Live, Still Life, and Flashpoint, all of which pretty much featured a band whizzing through songs, sloppy as can be. I assumed Mick Jagger was simply just a studio singer, and pretty much the same of Keith as a guitar player. I enjoyed the Hits From The Ron Wood years, but certainly not the live content.

    I had been a fan of the Brian Jones and especially the Mick Taylor years for quite some time without ever hearing the band play live from '71 - '73. Then along came the movie concert from '72 on TV, and whoa - Mick was singing! Actually singing. Keith was at his legendary best, which I had also taken as myth, and Mick Taylor was everything and more on stage (he quietly sat back and played his ass off loudly, and with all the virtuoso we hear from him in the studio). Keith (by his own admission) once famously spent a couple of hours in the studio improvising a bridge or solo, or something, and was really just at his wits end trying to land the right notes. Taylor wasn't there, but he eventually showed up, listened for a couple of minutes, picked up his guitar and played exactly what Keith was struggling for. This was close to the end of Mick's tenure with the band; Keith turned to him and only half-jokingly said, "that's why I hate you man." Mick was light years ahead of the rest of the band musically.

    The Goats Head box would be worth it for any casual to serious Stones fan who doesn't already own The Brussels Affair. My commentary on that show was strictly in comparison to the '72 Ladies and Gentlemen release. If I didn't already have Brussels, I would snatch up the box on release day. It would have been nice for them to have included the embryonic Waiting on a Friend. I was also hoping for the rumored extended version of Dancing with Mr D.

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Morning Daverock

    What I wouldn't give to have seen them with Mick Taylor! Yes they were outstanding onstage in those days, and to be honest, I never would have known it if I hadn't stumbled on the "Ladies and Gentlemen the Rolling Stones" movie concert a year or two before they released Brussels Affair.

    I was watching VH-1 or AXS (one of those music TV stations), and wham, he'll right in the middle of the opener, Brown Sugar. The thing they caught me first was that Mick Jagger was actually singing, not huffing and puffing out the lyrics. Up until that time I had only heard live albums from the Ron Wood era: Love You Live, Still Life, and Flashpoint, all of which pretty much featured a band whizzing through songs, sloppy as can be. I assumed Mick Jagger was simply just a studio singer, and pretty much the same of Keith as a guitar player. I enjoyed the Hits From The Ron Wood years, but certainly not the live content.

    I had been a fan of the Brian Jones and especially the Mick Taylor years for quite some time without ever hearing the band play live from '71 - '73. Then along came the movie concert from '72 on TV, and whoa - Mick was singing! Actually singing. Keith was at his legendary best, which I had also taken as myth, and Mick Taylor was everything and more on stage (he quietly sat back and played his ass off loudly, and with all the virtuoso we hear from him in the studio). Keith (by his own admission) once famously spent a couple of hours in the studio improvising a bridge or solo, or something, and was really just at his wits end trying to land the right notes. Taylor wasn't there, but he eventually showed up, listened for a couple of minutes, picked up his guitar and played exactly what Keith was struggling for. This was close to the end of Mick's tenure with the band; Keith turned to him and only half-jokingly said, "that's why I hate you man." Mick was light years ahead of the rest of the band musically.

    The Goats Head box would be worth it for any casual to serious Stones fan who doesn't already own The Brussels Affair. My commentary on that show was strictly in comparison to the '72 Ladies and Gentlemen release. If I didn't already have Brussels, I would snatch up the box on release day. It would have been nice for them to have included the embryonic Waiting on a Friend. I was also hoping for the rumored extended version of Dancing with Mr D.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Blues with a feeling

    Billly the Kid - excellent cut by Little Walter. I have never heard anyone who made a harmonica sound so expressive-wonderful tone. Having said that, apart from Charlie Musslewhite ( and even there, I am not familiar with his music) I have never even heard of the other harp players you refer to. Some checking out to do, I think.

    Keith - I enjoyed reading your thoughts on Goats Head Soup. I was 16 when that came out, and as I had a ticket to see them the month it came out-September 1973 - I thought I'd buy it to get some idea of what they sounded like. It was the first Stones album I got - I just had a vague memory of their singles at this point. In comparison with contemporaneous offerings by David Bowie, Black Sabbath Hawkwind etc it sounded quite middle of the road. The only track that really rocked was Starfucker. I can remember the press making much of the fact that Mick Jagger was now 30, and whether he was now too pooped to pop ( seemingly unaware that many of the new glam breed were about the same age).
    But live...they were amazing !-a fantastic night. Suddenly, Goats Head Soup shot up in my estimation and I began buying all their other albums. Today, I rank it with the 4 others from Beggars Banquet onwards-although most people rate it less highly than the 4 that came before it.

    This new edition looks like the rip off of the year. As you say, Brussels Affair has already been released as a download. The price of it is ridiculous, too. It all meant so much to me at the time though, that I am still sort of tempted.

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Sad Hours/ Little Walter/ Dave Rock

    . https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5xj7gwFOvcM. Send this one out to Dave Rock , over in England. I also dedicate this to Charlie Musselwhite, Gary Smith, Mark Ford and Rick Estrin, the greatest blues harmonica players alive.

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Goats Head Bummer

    Thanks for posting this article. Every six months or so I check to see if there are any plans for the type of reissue of this album that Sticky Fingers and Exile received. Those two records had fantastic unreleaseded live tracks and studio outtakes.

    What a disappointment to hear they're simply re-releasing The Brussels Affair as the companion piece. I already own the digital copy that was on the Rolling Stones website 8 years ago. It would be like reissuing American Beauty with the Download Series show from October '71. No sense in re-spending money on that - it's already been engineered and mastered professionally. Strike 1.

    The author of the article is correct in saying that the two standout tracks from The Brussels affair are You Can't Always Get What You Want and Midnight Rambler. Probably the two best live versions of those songs. Beyond that, the album is a starfucker less than Ladies and Gentlemen The Rolling Stones (this was the movie from the Exile on Main St tour that was in movie theaters shortly after the Exile tour, and then shelved for 30 years; eventually it was released on Blu-ray and then later on CD). Brussels is a great live show, don't misunderstand me, but Ladies and Gentlemen is from a year earlier, has almost the exact same setlist, and is played a little bit tighter and sung a little bit better). The primary difference is more Goats Head songs that don't measure up to the songs they replace from the Exile concert (which itself is the best of four shows). Beyond Doo x5 (Heartbreaker) and Dancing with Mr. D, the live Goats Head tracks don't really do much for me. Did I mention they already released this almost 10 years ago? Strike 2.

    The author of the article stated he could "imagine how much of a bummer Goats Head Soup must have felt in the moment. But for those of us who came along later, and without the generational baggage, Goats Head Soup has an incredible, melancholic beauty".
    I was a year-and-a-half-old when this record came out, and I have to disagree with him on this point. It has three great songs on it and a whole lot of missed opportunities that separate it from the previous four albums. It was so close to greatness too (Can You Hear The Music, Hide Your Love, and 100 Years Ago almost caught it) - bloody shame. By and large it does not rock, it does not transition mood easily or frequently enough, and as the author also pointed out, there are too many guest musicians (it feels very un-Stonesy). If it rocked more they could have gotten away with it; but it is primarily a morose downer, as the author implied. If I wanted melancholy I would listen to The Cure. Strike 3.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

6 years 9 months

Sweet liberty! We're venturing into the depths of 80s Dead with the complete show from 4/20/84 at the Philadelphia Civic Center and we're placing bets you'll think this one is more than fine. A strong contender for our mega 30 TRIPS AROUND THE SUN boxed set, 4/20/84 missed the cut by virtue of its setlist being a wee bit too similar to the years before and after. As DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 35, it's found its time to shine. The first set delivers yin yang harmony between Jerry and Bobby songs, yielding driven and powerful takes on tracks like "Feel Like A Stranger," "Cold Rain And Snow," and "Brown-Eyed Women." The second set begs the question - will we ever stop peaking? - with a monumental "Scarlet>Fire," a ripping "Samson and Delilah," a "Space" that pulls shapes that know no names, and that "Morning Dew" - get.in.to.it! And because this one might have ended just a little too soon, we've packed disc 2 and 3 with knock-your-socks-off bonus material from most of the second set from the previous night, 4/19/84. Grab ahold while you can!

Limited to 22,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL.35: PHILADELPHIA CIVIC CENTER, PHILADELPHIA 4/20/84 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and is guaranteed to sell out. 

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

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

He is popular in the strangest of places. In 1988 I was backpacking around the north and west of China. In those days the western world seemed not to have reached that part of the world. In three months I encountered just 3 people who could speak reasonable English and I only saw one sign in English. But on several occasions people asked me in broken English if I could sing "Country roads" or more accurately "Countlee loads". I never did find out how or why this particular artifact of western culture had managed to penetrate the bamboo curtain to reach some really remote places but it just goes to show how really weird things can get.

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Meet the Beatles and The Beatles' Second Album in summer 1964. They were in bins at the checkout counter of either a general merchandise store or grocery store -- my mom definitely did not take me to a record store. I had to have these and had never asked for anything (that being frowned on by parents who came up in the Depression). So I think because of that, she relented.

My folks had an ancient record player and an open back-tube amplifier/radio that fed into a large rectangular piece of furniture that sported a well-screened, mono 12" speaker. My dad called it "Lenin's Tomb." It had lamps and plants on top of it.

I'd put on the Beatles, turn it up just loud enough to hear, and sit in front of it, rocking out as a 6-7 year-old. I didn't want to bother anyone by playing it loud and rocking out with the Beatles was like my secret life. In school, I was a total nerd until about 8th/9th grade when I "got into" girls. Then I recall snuggling with my girlfriend to Tea for the Tillerman, which musta been about age 13-14.

From there it was only a year or so til I was transported into the world of the Grateful Dead. My school record club had tried to turn me onto Live/Dead but when I put on Dark Star, I simply didn't get it. Electric Ladyland was my thing, even before I turned on. But when my older brother brought home American Beauty, we played it endlessly and it rocked. Then Skull and Roses, then my first show.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by hendrixfreak

Permalink

.....1979. Bought Wish You Were, John Lennon's Imagine and Rubber Soul. Still have them.
Posting without a point. Join the club hendrixfreak.

user picture

Member for

7 years 10 months
Permalink

Dude, we drove through Bloomer on our way up to our resort space on Cornell Lake. Every Saturday morning we'd stop at the Bloomer Bakery for donuts and Long Johns/Bismarks (long, custard filled chocolate donuts). Still the best I've ever had. Bloomer, the Rope Jump Capital Of The World!

Small world. Rural Wisco is a hoot. People like to boat, snowmobile, watch the Packers and drink drink drink.

Be well friends, your posts are excellent.

user picture

Member for

5 years 1 month
Permalink

I got Europe 72 and Gypsy Cowboy for Christmas of 1972.

user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

First 45. Terry Jacks - Seasons in the Sun. It was almost Island Girl by Elton John, but my friend Tommy who was trying to sell it to me played it so often that I lost interest.

First LP. K-Tel’s Gold Rock 1975. I was a product of advertising. Nevertheless, Jefferson Airplane became my favorite band at the age of eleven.

user picture

Member for

9 years 2 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

Permalink

Looney Tunes. Don’t know which volume, but it had Witch Doctor.

2nd and 3rd were Steve Martin ‘Wild and Crazy Guy’ and Blues Brothers ‘Briefcase Full Of Blues’ (which I currently have on CD, I recommend it if you don’t have it).
I got those from my older brother who got them from Columbia House.

When I started buying music as a teenager everything was on cassette.

user picture

Member for

9 years 2 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

Spinning 2-18-71

Phil: “well, this isn’t driving a train but it’s almost as good”.

user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months

In reply to by RobbZ

Permalink

Dibs on the banana seat bike.

First three albums, Kiss Alive II (was 10), Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath.

In the house, we had a plethora of mediocrity and a few gems. Sister Mary Elephant, Steve Martin, George Carlin we definitely had some John Denver and Elton John, the Jackson Five, Partridges, Captain and Toenail.. typical early to mid 70's stuff.. then my brother discovered pot, acid and Hendrix.. four years later I was on it add in the Grateful Dead.

user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

A week or so ago somebody brought up Fox on the Run by (The) Sweet. Memories of 7th grade, when girls first entered the scene. To this day, I still love that song. Along with Little Willy. And I say that proudly.

Very weird outcomes in the playoffs this year. Both the AVs and the Stars are highly unlikeable. Oddly, I was somewhat glad to see the Stars win. But then again, I was 15 rows back from Brett Hull’s foot in the crease goal. So by law, even though it was a stupid rule, I must hate them until the end of time.

....Motley Crue went straight to the point.
The Av's goalie is down and out.
This is all a dream we dreamed one afternoon long ago.
I love you all, and wish you wonders beyond compare.
Unless you bogart the joint, then all bets are off.

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months
Permalink

I started listening this morning, and have got up to Let It Grow on the first cd. Reading the sleeve notes, Dave Lemieux inadvertently highlights a major problem for me, when he reprints the quote, "Its not what they play, its how they play it". The quote for me is spot on. What I like about the Dead is the way the core players interact, not the actual songs they play. At peak shows in their career you can listen to the whole, or the contributions of any one of the players, and be totally absorbed. There is so much going on. At this show, though, up to the point I have got, there doesn't seen to be any interaction at all. Jerry plays attractive lead lines, but the rest of them just plod along in the background. They sound like a pick up band that Jerry has never played with before, just comping rather than jamming.

Good day at the cricket yesterday. Not sure how Pakistan can recover, but it should be a good days play if the weather holds up and a cloud doesn't go in front of the sun.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 9 months

In reply to by frankparry

Permalink

my first lp was also best of the Beach Boys vol 1, first single was Daydream, Lovin Spoonfull, then Troggs Wild Thing, then Summer in the City, then Troggs with a girl like you ( is there a pattern emerging here?,) then Ike and Tina, River deep, then Beach boys, God only knows....bought my first records rack, and I was already in over my head.....

user picture

Member for

14 years 11 months
Permalink

When I was five or six my first album purchase was Destroyer, because of the cover and because of Kiss trading cards. (I had never heard the band) I bought it in the grocery store, then played it on that large wooden rectangular piece of furniture someone else mentioned, or played it on the toy record player I used for Disney Listen-Along records.

Didn't buy too much after that for a long time, but did end up purchasing Barry Manilow's Greatest Hits on cassette at some point. I repurchased that on CD many years ago, and it still sounds delightful, as does the classic single, "Little Willy". No shame, people. As others mentioned, I might put on Mahler, then Little River Band, then Dizzy, then Tony Rice, then . . .

And it's physical product for me, all the way! Memories (of what's stored) and hard drives fade away, but the physical product lives forever . . . (or until the kids sell, toss, or donate it . . . )

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

The Petards? Is that the band that's constantly hoisting itself ... upon itself?

Rim shot!

Yes, I've sunken that low....

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by hendrixfreak

Permalink

sorry, I don't understand what you are saying, probably a language issue.
G.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by gratefulgerd

Permalink

....one of the most depressing movies I have ever seen. Excellent movie though.
Thinking of watching it on psychedelics gives me chills.

user picture

Member for

7 years 10 months
Permalink

Requiem For A Dream is one long, dark trip. I wouldn't go there ever again. It was based on the book by Hubert Selby, Jr. An older friend of mine used to drink with Selby at Barney's Beanery in West Hollywood. Apparently, he was quite the character. I read a collection of stories by Selby called Last Exit To Brooklyn and I ain't ever going back there, either. While extremely well-written and engaging, it's the kind of stuff you feel almost compelled to wash off afterward.

I had a similar experience with some friends in Boulder. We all took some very strong ecstasy, I think it was probably laced with H as it was incredibly powerful, dreamy and narcotic. Someone made the bad call of choosing the movie, "Sleepers." Again, horrible, dark subject matter and why anyone would choose to watch this stuff in an altered state is beyond me.

Cheers!

user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months

In reply to by LedDed

Permalink

Agree on Requiem.. the only cure is a good, I mean really good comedy.

Ok.. that new CD smell has worn off. When do we get the next release.. Did someone say 1972?

user picture

Member for

15 years 3 months

In reply to by gratefulgerd

Permalink

GERD
‘Hoist by ones own petard’ is an old saying in English. These days it means to be caught in your own trap. Originally it meant to be blown up by your own bomb since a petard was a small explosive charge.

user picture

Member for

13 years 1 month
Permalink

This is a very good show! Dave said Vol. 36 will be big, he always says that! How about a 9/70 show! Fall 72 box is needed also! as for hockey: Go Flyers!!!!! Take care folks, stay safe!!!!

user picture

Member for

5 years 1 month
Permalink

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2nENlcXIipE. In 1977 , we went up to Candlestick Park to see the S.F. Giants opening game. The mayor of S.F. came out and gave a short speech and boos came cascading down from the stands. The mayor left the field, then out of the Giants dugout came Jackie Gleason to throw out the first pitch and the place exploded in cheers, a standing ovation! Jackie Gleason, what an incredible talent.

....today I learned. Thanks people!
Holy cow. Moses Quasar!! Hey man!
Laughed at explaining jokes comment.

user picture

Member for

9 years 2 months

In reply to by Vguy72

Permalink

Last night after hockey I watched,

John Lennon Imagine DVD

A Night At The Family Dog. Love that DVD. We need more video footage from the early days.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

....Fleury's agent posted a tweet showing Marc-Andre with a sword in his back with the coaches name engraved on the blade. Took it down today at Fleury's request.
Not the time or place for bullshit like that.

...bravo my friend! Indeed!
“If Music be
The food of Love,
Play on”
- Shakespeare
🙏❤️💀🌹

...I’ve been stuck inside Dicks Picks #28 for 3 days & Im beginning to believe I might stay another 2 nites, it’s only Monday! Lol
Have a grateful day everyone, rock on my brothers and sisters! Tomorrow I’ll be spinning Buffalo 77 , looking forward to some primo audio!

user picture

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

I, too, collected KISS trading cards without ever having heard the band. I was 4 at the time, and after church my dad would take my brother and I to the quickie mart and let us pick out one pack of cards. The extent of my parents' music collection was Ferrante & Teicher (schmaltzy show tune piano duets) and one Elvis 45 (Love Me Tender b/w Any Way You Want Me). So I guess this was an early form of rebellion?

I remember looking at that blood-dripping demonic visage and thinking "my gosh, this has to be the most loud, nasty music ever." And then when I later heard the poppy bounce of "Rock and Roll All Night" for the first time my jaw dropped in disappointment and I thought "THIS is KISS???" My world view was shattered.

I went on a few years later to make my first LP purchases of Rick Springfield's "Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet" and Styx' "Kilroy Was Here." I wanted to get AC/DC's "Back in Black" (again, without ever having heard AC/DC) just because I thought the all-black cover and the logo looked badass, but my parents refused. I also couldn't get Van Halen's "1984" (smoking angel baby) or J. Geils' "Freeze Frame" (because of the song "Piss on the Wall"). Yeah, my parents were pretty strict.

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months

In reply to by sjbutler

Permalink

Kiss came to England about 1976, and I duly went along. They didn't seem anything special to me really. More The Sweet than Iggy and the Stooges, unfortunately. But to this day the only record I have heard by them is one called "Beth", so maybe I misjudged them.
The other two American rock bands I saw in the mid 70s were Black Oak Arkansas-who supported Black Sabbath circa 1974, and Ted Nugent. Of those two, Black Oak Arkansas were the most entertaining, with their lead singer Jim Dandy. In fact they covered the song," Jim Dandy", too- a hit in the 60s for La Verne Baker, I think.
LMG - yup, that's the stuff!

user picture

Member for

11 years 11 months

In reply to by daverock

Permalink

The family business was records...after my Pop closed his first record shop he went to work as the shipping clerk at California Music which was both a retail and wholesale entity...salesmen from various labels would come by weekly and leave various promo items that the staff would divvy up and bring home...every other week or so my Pop would bring home an LP box with 15 to 25 LP's in it...the big score for me was The Chipmunks Christmas Album (Gold foil cover and red vinyl) when I was about nine, loved it...there would be a ton of Reprise Records stuff so lots of Sinatra & Dean Martin...from all of the Reprise stuff though the stand out was "Trouble In Mind" by Texas artist Mance Lipscomb...I got that when I was 10 years old and it blew me and my buddy John away...also we had a head start on the British Blues Explosion of the mid 60's because my Pop had tons of 45's and 78's stored in our garage and John and I soon discovered all the Chess and Chess related labels he had...we were about 12 when we started exploring the garage cache...since we had all these freebies I'm thinking it wasn't until '66 or so that I bought my first 45's...Sonny & Cher and probably The Seeds...first LP's were later, BB King "From The Beginning" and the first Canned Heat and Taj Mahal albums I think...such fun...

I was going to respond: not so much a "language" thing, as a "mental health" thing...

YES, JimMD, Nineteen seventy-two rides again for DaP 36, if only in our minds!

Actually, I'm still playing Bird Song from 2-21-71... And actually hoping there's no box this fall.

Nap-Man - you still have all that vinyl?

Wasn't much in my house growing up, those things cost money and we didn't have any. Mom had a 78 collection from before she got married. They were varying pop hits of the day. (late 40's, early 50) I got a 78 of Sinatra doing the coffee song. Also, the ever popular Woody Woodpecker Song, and who could forget "with her red silk stockings and green perfume". We had a meager collection of 33 lp's, mostly copies of real people. We had a Nat King Cole album,,,, the Greatest Hits of Nat King Cole. Didn't realize until I grew up, the album was label in big text, "The Greatest Hits of NAT KING COLE",,,, then in little tiny print underneath,,,, …."as sung by Charlie Francis".
Truth be told,,, he sounded like Nat.

Mom bought us kids albums when I was little and those 45 size 78 speed yellow kids records,,, I remember "Hi Diddle Dee an Actor's life for me" was one. Unfortunately none of kids 78 survived.

Up to this point all we had as kids were little "record players", open lid, play record. When I was 13 I got my first "stereo" for Christmas (best thing I'd ever gotten,,,, think Red Ryder BB Gun) The thing was a 50 dollar department store stereo, bet it only had 6 watts, but STEREO!!!

The first two (grown up) albums I got that Christmas was a Ray Stevens album Gitarzan and Johnny Cash at San Quentin. Many years later I would laugh that my first two albums were both live shows! First album I bought myself, Andy Williams Greatest Hits. Got it at a local department store (JM Fields), for 3 bucks.

This links back to early conversations about our early musical loves. I tell people all the time, "never be apologetic for early musical loves", we all had to start somewhere :-)

Went to a parent teacher conference once for my kid when he was in 4th grade. (this is in 97), teacher says Blake is the only kid walking down the hall singing "Danke Schoen"

Our musical background is what brings us where we are today.

user picture

Member for

11 years 11 months

In reply to by Dennis

Permalink

"This links back to early conversations about our early musical loves. I tell people all the time, "never be apologetic for early musical loves", we all had to start somewhere :-)"

As I always say...Some of my early loves may be crap...but THEY'RE MY CRAP!!!

Oh and no...I don't have any of that vinyl anymore...probably lost sight of it with all the moves I made from '69 - '73

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months

In reply to by Dennis

Permalink

The mention of NKC makes me think of how my father was hip to box sets way back when - I remember him buying a 3 LP set of Nat King Cole. He played the grooves out of that thing! Along with the Andy Williams and Ray Conniff Albums, this box set got serious air time, he loved it, both my parents did. I would hear Ramblin’ Rose in my sleep. A golden voice that Mr Cole.

user picture

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

rolling up some and getting the popcorn ready for day one of the funniest thing on tv this year tonight and the next 4 nights. Let the hate fest begin. One things for sure, the stand up comics will have a lot of material to use once this bunch are done. Assclown has all ready said that it's all a plot to get him. You can't make this stuff up
Give us more 72 for 36 Dave, you know you want to.

user picture

Member for

12 years 2 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

Back in my youth I went bar to bar with my shoe shine box, hawking shines for a quarter. The one bar I went to was ALWAYS playing Ramblin' Rose and all the boys there at the bar would sing along.

It was an odd thing, but different bars had different songs. One bar (Chappy's) served Sunday breakfast of Kielbasa and Kraut. Husband dropped the wives off for church and the men went to Chappy's for breakfast. They had a organ and on Sunday the constantly repeated song was Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue.

Dennis, that Ramblin’ Rose song was one of those ear worms you just couldn’t shake! You heard it in the morning, you’d be humming it in the evening. After swim class, my friends would form their A capella group - The Chlorines - and sing that darn song in the showers, because the acoustics were so good, the ladies would hear it over in their change room!!
I wonder what the Dead could have done with a song like that...

user picture

Member for

12 years 4 months

In reply to by Cousins Of The…

Permalink

My mom was a country music fan. Patsy Cline, Hank Williams. My dad was a big band fan. Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey. Then they had the compromise things they both listened to - Elvis, Englebert Humperdinck, Eddy Arnold. They both liked Bread, they had one 8 track called the Best of Bread.

My first album i bought with my own money was Rare Earth - One World. My cousin, who was a few years older than me and was into Sabbath, Uriah Heep, Pink Floyd, used to really let me have it about that one. The second one was Traffic - John Barleycorn Must Die. I got a little more respect for that choice.

user picture

Member for

17 years 7 months
Permalink

You may not have to vote because NASA has determined that America could suffer an asteroid impact just one day before election day. Bring it on! You couldn't make this stuff up. ☄️

product sku
081227909321
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/music/dave-s-picks/dave-s-picks-vol-35.html