• 1,665 replies
    clayv
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    Hear ye, hear ye, hear ye! Gentle mistresses and most distinguished gentlemen, we have come upon the release of the DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 37, from the Fifteenth of April in the year Nineteen Seventy-Eight, at ye olde College Of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. Cast your waistcoats and your bonnets aside, the Grateful Dead are on steady gallop from the opening high-kick of "Mississippi Half-Step" into a where are we going? where have we been? "Passenger," followed by full-on versions of "Friend Of The Devil," "El Paso," "Brown-Eyed Women," and a double-barreled "Let It Grow>Deal." Catch your breath and straighten out your tricorne because the 2nd set shows no bounds with delightful takes ("Bertha>Good Lovin'," "One More Saturday Night") and introspection ("Candyman," "Playing In The Band"). Then - great fifes and drums - it's 15 minutes of "Rhythm Devils," with band and crew gathered round to amplify the merriment before delivering a rare incantation of "Not Fade Away>Morning Dew" that sets the soul alight. Pure jollification!

    The town crier's addendum:

    Three bags full! Lest you feel 4/15/78 beginneth and endeth too quickly, we've selected highlights from Civic Arena, Pittsburgh, PA, 4/18/78 to satisfy your fancy.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 37: WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA 4/15/78 was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman. It is guaranteed to sell out - often within hours.

    *2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Gary Farseer
    Joined:
    Sixtus

    I still have your original write up as a file on an older computer. I also think One Man did some extensive work/documentation on E72 and other tours.

    But all of this is heady stuff to me, just hard to keep up with this old brain...and I think I remember DHB's beer documentary.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    E72

    Didn’t Deadhead brewer do a deep dive a couple years ago?
    Or maybe I’m thinking of Sixtus?
    I know DHB did listening with specially pared beers...

  • daverock
    Joined:
    72

    Sixtus - good post. I seem to have missed your posts on this year in the past - so apologies for that. You clearly have a lot to offer yourself in terms of write ups for 1972.

  • JoshByTheBay
    Joined:
    Shipping Notice Received!

    Just got my shipping notice, hopefully everyone else who pre-ordered will get their tracking # before the end of today. Thank you also to Sixtus for that wonderful E72 Dark Star write up. I hope everyone here has a fantastic day :) much love ✌️

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    E72

    I know I am not up to the task.. it took me a couple months to get through my first listen all those years ago. I think I'd still be on it if I took notes, rewinding.. taking copious notes, editing down the notes, reslistening then tossing my notes and starting over..

    I do like this writeup from the Internet Archive on the topic. There is a write-up for each show that is pretty close to my impression. I believe it was done before the box came out, so some of the recordings used were not nearly so stellar. Some good light GD listening.

    https://archive.org/post/304297/europe-72-notebook

    Funny.. I took a brief pause from my 71 stream of consciousness yesterday and picked up Lille France. What a great little show.. A+ in my book. Phil's comment is just about perfect, "it felt like he was playing in the midst of a French impressionist painting"

  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    re: E '72 Write Ups / KeithFan

    I concur. if there is anyone 'round here who purports a vast knowledge of the Europe 72 jaunt, it's KeithFan. It's quite an endeavor, and I know a bit from experience, as I had done this for each of the Dark Stars several years back as I awaited Boxzilla. Likely many have seen this before, but in the spirit of being a team player, I offer an encore sharing of these efforts while we now await word from KF on his uptake for the balance of the tour:

    Here goes....

    4/8/1972 - Wembly Empire Pool, London - 32 mins; intense/fast paced first leg up til about 10 mins then returns to DS theme for 1st verse; spacey post-verse til ~17 min, then pace picks up for a few minutes, followed by a brief meltdown; additional spaciness around 24 mins followed by another full meltdown; interesting groove established around 28 min that has hints of Sugar Mag (into which it segues, flawlessly). No second verse.

    4/14/1972 - Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, DK - 29 mins; loose first 10 mins not overly spacey; gets spacey around 11 mins; interesting groove establishes around 16 min to head into first verse w/interesting beat; heads off into intense nearly 7-minute jam inclusive of a very tight and fast Feelin Groovy jam; final 3 minutes are a meltdown. No second verse.

    4/17/1972 - Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, DK - 31 mins; spacey opening to about 7:30 when first DS theme emerges leading to 1st verse at 9:45. Spacey post-2nd verse tries to take off but melts further around 19 min; returns to a partial groove around 24:30 and closes out with spaceyness in the last 2 mins. No second verse.

    4/24/1972 - Rheinhalle, Dusseldorf, Germany - Split by Me & My Uncle; 26 mins 1st half, 14:30 second half. Spacey opening until about 8:45 where it coalesces and falls into first DS theme around 10:15 followed shortly by 1st verse with slow, sparse notes. Spacey feedback following verse until 15:45 and then picks up into an intense, fast paced jam for just under 2 minutes before it becomes dissonant again leading to major meltdown which eventually heads into Me & My Uncle with ease. Second half: spacey reintroduction persists until about 7 mins, where Keith leads-in with some piano phrasing and then the band follows into a tight fast paced jam where Jerry plays some lines back and forth as if in conversation with himself and then maintains an intense level effortlessly segueing into Wharf Rat. No second verse.

    4/29/1972 - Musikhalle, Hamburg, Denmark - 30 mins; spacey opening for ~5 mins, then enters a groove and Phil hints at the Feeling Groovy jam until it finally is joined by Jerry a minute later until about 8:00, then the floor drops out into space. DS theme appears at 14 min which leads to first verse. Spacey post-verse noodling leads to major meltdown, settling in at 22 mins with a fat, fast-paced Keith-led groove. Final 4 mins are spacey & lead to major melt #2, dropping into Sugar Mag as DS finally melts away. No second verse.

    5/4/1972 - Olympia Theatre, Paris - Split by drums; 19 mins 1st half; 17:34 2nd half. Spacey opening til about 6 mins when fast paced jam kicks in until 11:20, slowing down then resurrecting the DS theme into the first verse. 4 mins of space leads into drums. Second half post-drums is very spacey until 7 mins, then kicks into overdrive with a very high energy jam leading to a phenominal Feelin Groovy Jam for several minutes before settling into the second verse. DS dissipates into the Sugar Mag from E'72.

    5/7/1972 - Bickershaw Festival, Wigan, UK - 19:49 mins; decent, coherent jamming for the first several minutes that congeals nicely around 8 minutes. Bottom falls out around 10 mins and leads to some light noodling, cymbal fills and space. DS theme emerges at 14:23 and heads into 1st verse. Space fills the air through the remainder of the song until it totally breaks down into drums. No second verse.

    5/11/1972 - Rotterdam Civic Hall, Netherlands - Split by drums; 13:45 mins 1st half; 30:34 mins 2nd half; Opens with a light, airy jam that persists to congeal into a decent groove as it treads in and out of spacey phrasing. This settles into a mysterious sounding jam that grows with intensity without a return to the DS theme before dissolving into drums. Emerging from drums, Phil and Billy duel for 2 minutes before Jerry joins back in with some complimentary thoughts; the DS theme appears around 5 min followed by 1st verse. A few moments of spacey feedback give way to spacey noodling that devolves into a full blow chaotic meltdown, only to emerge around 19:30 into a very nice, fast paced groove that hints at Caution and PITB jams. This eventually dissolves and a light, sparse outro ends the song as it heads off into Sugar Mag. No second verse.

    5/18/1972 - Kongressaal, Muenchen, Denmark - 28:20 mins; almost 2 mins of noodling before opening notes from Phil; a loose jam ensues around the DS theme for the next several minutes and then decays. At ~9 min an interesting jam emerges, which eventually settles back into the DS theme and 1st verse around 14:30. The remainder of this DS is borderline chaos as it treads in and out of varying degrees of a meltdown until it settles into Morning Dew. No second verse.

    5/23/1972 - The Strand Lyceum, London - 30 mins; Spacey opening minutes lead to tight fast paced jam commencing around 3:30 for two minutes and then it settles into another spacey jam digressing to almost…nothing. Billy and Phil then have a small duel until ~13:30 when the rest of the band fills back into a delicate groove which grows to into a jam reminiscent of the post-Truckin' foray from E'72 until about 17 mins, when they drop into the DS theme and 1st verse. Ensuing is additional delicate spaciness that transgresses into a frenzied meltdown madness, and eventually settles into Morning Dew. No second verse.

    5/25/1972 - The Strand Lyceum, London - 34 mins, out of Wharf Rat. Strong opening with a groove almost from the beginning, no noodling around here in the first 7 minutes. Then turns very spacey until 15 mins when DS theme appears, and heads off into 1st verse. Post-verse finds a Billy, Phil, and Keith duel for several minutes. At 21 mins, Phil institutes a mellow Feeling Groovy jam, soon joined by the rest of the band until ~25 mins. Final minutes are dominated by space and then a monumental meltdown before heading off into Sugar Mag. No second verse.
    ____________________________________________

    Be Well People!
    Sixtus

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Wilfred - 72

    Keithfan seems like the man.

  • Forensicdoceleven
    Joined:
    It is not even the beginning of the end..............

    50 years ago today…………

    April 29, 1971
    Fillmore East, New York City, New York

    Set 1: Truckin'-Bertha-It Hurts Me Too-Cumberland Blues>Me And My Uncle-Bird Song-Playing In The Band-Loser-Dark Hollow-Hard To Handle-Ripple-Me And Bobby McGee-Casey Jones

    Set 2: Morning Dew-Minglewood Blues-Sugar Magnolia-Black Peter-Beat It On Down The Line-Second That Emotion-Alligator>drums>jam>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Cold Rain And Snow-China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider-Greatest Story Ever Told-Johnny B. Goode

    Encore: Uncle John's Band-Midnight Hour-And We Bid You Goodnight

    Don’t get me wrong, this is a very fine show, with more than its fair share of oddities and rarities. I enjoy the quirky goodness of any show that has a Dark Hollow and a Ripple, the Black Peter is wonderful, the Dew is powerful, and who doesn’t love an Alligator? And I sure do savor the CR&S coming out of GDTRFB, and the three song encore was the only time that happened all year.

    All that being said, almost without fail, this show was rated the best show of 1971 in Deadbase polls, which I never understood. Solid show—absolutely. Great last Fillmore East show by the Dead---you bet. Even so, maybe a teeny tiny microscopic step down from the previous night……………

    Rock on!!!

    Doc
    But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning……

  • wilfredtjones
    Joined:
    Who’s going to write up 72?

    My vote would be Keith Fan. But it could also be a team effort. Anyway how about the liner notes to E72. Haven't they already been written up? teehee. H.A.D. waiting for this release. TMI?

    P.S. I'm not a robot.

  • carlo13
    Joined:
    Smoking

    The first disk smokes, especially LIG. It's very structured like a studio album but in a good way. If that is the right word.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

6 years 9 months

Hear ye, hear ye, hear ye! Gentle mistresses and most distinguished gentlemen, we have come upon the release of the DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 37, from the Fifteenth of April in the year Nineteen Seventy-Eight, at ye olde College Of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. Cast your waistcoats and your bonnets aside, the Grateful Dead are on steady gallop from the opening high-kick of "Mississippi Half-Step" into a where are we going? where have we been? "Passenger," followed by full-on versions of "Friend Of The Devil," "El Paso," "Brown-Eyed Women," and a double-barreled "Let It Grow>Deal." Catch your breath and straighten out your tricorne because the 2nd set shows no bounds with delightful takes ("Bertha>Good Lovin'," "One More Saturday Night") and introspection ("Candyman," "Playing In The Band"). Then - great fifes and drums - it's 15 minutes of "Rhythm Devils," with band and crew gathered round to amplify the merriment before delivering a rare incantation of "Not Fade Away>Morning Dew" that sets the soul alight. Pure jollification!

The town crier's addendum:

Three bags full! Lest you feel 4/15/78 beginneth and endeth too quickly, we've selected highlights from Civic Arena, Pittsburgh, PA, 4/18/78 to satisfy your fancy.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 37: WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA 4/15/78 was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman. It is guaranteed to sell out - often within hours.

*2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years
Permalink

it looks like 25,000 is the magic number. It's Thursday DeadLand Play dead play DEAD loud.

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

UPS just this morning is recognizing my order.

Estimated delivery is this coming Monday.

Last year I think I was one of the first to have the releases in hand. So I wonder if I'll be on the tail end for them all this year. No mind, though. As long as they are received.

user picture

Member for

3 years 10 months
Permalink

My email with the tracking number was on January 27th, and it didn’t update until this morning. I was getting worried it was lost, but it looks like it’s on its way now!

user picture

Member for

8 years 1 month

In reply to by JimInMD

Permalink

Thanks Bluecrow, enjoy it.

Not sure why some of us here receive these so much later than others.

This process just boggles my mind. Four times a year they have to ship now 25,000 CDs. You would think someone would be in charge of this process, making sure it happens and the buyers actually receive the product. And now they put in a new kicker for subscribers, that they will be the first ones to receive the Picks. Doesn't look like that is happening either.

And my favorite part, you have a problem and try to contact "customer service" and you will be lucky if you ever receive a response. Okay, rant over and last post on the shipping, unless I end up going stark raving mad!

user picture

Member for

7 years 5 months
Permalink

DAVEROCK, I am confident that I will like the discs. It's fantastic that you mentioned the SF Nuggets box. I frequently contemplated buying that years ago, but since I already had close to 50% of the material, I never pulled the trigger. The LA companion box however, "Where The Action Is" Is something I did want to get, but never had the money to purchase it, as there was always something higher on the list that took the money first!!
It's going for $139.00 on Amazon now, whereas the SF box can still be had for $89.00.
When I get rich(likely not until my NEXT lifetime,) I will buy both!!

Thanks for the recommendation, I will post a review upon receipt.

user picture

Member for

12 years 1 month
Permalink

Everyone always posting "last 5" things, I seldom will have a list like that.

Today I pulled an odd bird out,,,,, Lorne Greene's Greatest Hits!!!!!

Anyone got odder!?

user picture

Member for

10 years 1 month

In reply to by Dennis

Permalink

I have Mitchum’s “Calypso...is like so...” album. I bought it a year or two ago, and surprisingly, not half bad for when you just gotta hear something different.

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

Dennis, I frequently listen to music that sends my wife to the other side of the house, does that count?? I truly enjoy odd sounds and "music" that is without harmony, melody, or even notes!! I have listened(all the way through 22+ minutes) to the John & Yoko Wedding Album(Side 1) three times, albeit that took a 40+ year span to do so. Side 2 is (a little) more listenable. Why do I do this?? I do not know, other than that since they recorded it, curiosity got the best of me. I also have Partridge Family, Cowsills(great stuff actually), and a Munsters cd, among too many others to mention.
I'm currently listening to 12/30/78(Pauley Pavilion)-the band obviously toked some REALLY good hash prior to playing. Looking forward to #37, although I'm in no hurry. I am confident that it will (eventually) show up.

user picture

Member for

15 years 3 months
Permalink

I haven’t listened to it in decades and I won't willingly do so again but I do own a vinyl copy of ‘America, Why I love her’ by John Wayne. It is as bad as it sounds.

user picture

Member for

15 years

In reply to by Colin Gould

Permalink

Leonard Nimoy singing about Bilbo Baggins
William Shatner's rendition of "Rocket Man"

Both can be found on YouTube. Both are dreadful.

user picture

Member for

3 years 11 months

In reply to by DeadVikes

Permalink

Shipping delays have been a major problem across the record industry for more than a year now. It has to do with the major labels trying to save money and use a third party distributor that didn’t know what they were doing. Some companies have been able to fix things by now, others have not, I’m not sure where WEA (the company that always sends me my Dead.net items) falls but it’s a problem that isn’t exclusive to this site. I own a small indie record store and we’ve been plagued with problems from all record labels all last year. And of course we get the blame from customers, not the distributors. Here’s an article in Rolling Stone about the problem.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/cd-vinyl-distribution…

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 11 months
Permalink

Usps came today excitedly ran to the mailbox I saw the mailman put a yellow envelope in the mailbox. Like a five year old rushing to get his Christmas presents from under the tree a ran FULL sprint through the snowy street to find a package containing my room mates foot cream. has anyone received it from ups? Because I'm sitting on pins and needles. About ready to just listen to the show on Relisten. How I long for the sweet sound of the Mississippi half step I've been hearing so much about for days.

user picture

Member for

4 years 4 months

In reply to by woodieslazylighting

Permalink

yes, dreadful

someone took the video of the bilbo song and put Bad Brains' "Pay to Cum" over it.

that, my friends, is cool.

user picture

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

WTF....UUH Beavis do you think your number 711 sounds better than my number 712? Uh huh, huh, huh, eeh huh. I have not received my copy yet either. UPS is slow, it's a pretty well know fact and is a result of this pandemic thing they call COVID. Chillax and have faith it will be there. Did you try checking the tracking number?

My Dave's 37 arrived in UK today - no faulty discs i'm pleased to say - number 11109 - about half way
I remember Patti Smith forgetting the words to Hard Rain when she accepted Bob Dylan's Nobel Prize
Made her seem all the more human

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

Permalink

It seems a bit disrespectful to the artists concerned to refer to them as odd shit but...they did things differently in the 50s, and that's for sure. I got a few of these dvds in the sale at Bear Family, and they feature country and rock n'roll acts. The picture isn't too good, and the sound is variable, to say the least. The best come across as incredible-Eddie Cochran, Wanda Jackson, Merle Travis-Johnny Cash looks and sounds like the boss here. The Collins Kids-what about them? But some of the lesser acts... the comedy hasn't worn too well. The whole shows look as though they are being being beamed down from another planet. And they are...its called "the past".

Mr Ones...I will be interested to read your views on The Chocolate Watchband. That L.A. box you mentioned " Where The Action Is" is also great-especially the first cd.

user picture

Member for

12 years 1 month
Permalink

Leonard Nimoy.....

Have original Dot label of the album, "two sides of leonard nimoy",,,, one side songs by Leonard,,,, the other songs by Spock. Also have the cd!

But I still smile when I hear about the other things people have. You made me look on the Mitchum,,,, thought I had it. My wife grew up with the Cowsills greatest hit.

John Wayne,,, America,,, let me tellya why I love her....

In the end you had me reaching for the knife over the mention of the john & oko wedding stuff, god that must be retched. I'd take a copy if one was available,,,, don't think I have it!

I think I have some of that Nimoy/Shatner stuff on a disc called - appropriately- “Spaced Out”. It’s ripe.
I used to have that great box set “Where The Action Is”, but in a brain cramp moment I unloaded to a used CD shop, for maybe $40 value. They saw me coming, but I still downloaded the music, but a great box set if you can get it.

Mitchum always had that kinda cool vibe, getting busted with weed in the 40s along with his dame, and his work in Cape Fear etc. Knowing the gravelly voice he had, I thought this thing would be a dud, but actually it is playable. Once a year.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by dmcvt

Permalink

“That must be retched. I’d take a copy if one was available”

user picture

Member for

7 years 5 months
Permalink

Dennis, you’re selling the Cowsills short. They had a least 4 “hits”. The Rain, The Park & Other Things, Indian Lake, Hair & Silver Threads & Golden Needles. Indian Lake & Hair being my faves. There was a European release that had songs from II X II & Captain Sad & His Ship of Fools. I forget the title(remember a day??), but it has some “light pop psychedelia” that is fun on occasion. Wow, I know a little too much about the Cowsills! 😱🤯

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

Well done Mr D!
Never been a huge 78 fan (so far). Which is weird cause that’s (1978) what I was marinated in, when I was being indoctrinated as a yoot?.
So I didn’t have any real expectations except it would be at least a good show that I would enjoy, with the question often being how often...like most Dave’s in other words. I think for most folks certain shows have greater shelf life’s...

Full frontal assault, this one...I kept thinking of those old sorta mini coasters: The Wild Mouse. The way you couldn’t get enough of being slammed around and then woop! down, then start up, cut, and wooooo to the top, then jammed around again, LOL.
Man I loved the Wild Mouse up in Crystal Beach in Canada eh! Good Times! And that’s kinda how I felt first time through with this one. Grinning like a kid on the Wild Mouse...
Half Step deserves the hype and holy crap, listen to the spectacular ascending scale Keith throws in during the end coda, that JG quickly picks up on. Man that’s like the rocket car hitting the nitro at just the right moment!
I didn’t get the ”off the rails” vibe so much with Passenger? Definitely a good miss as I think JG was thinking bridge and Donna and Company was thinking Chorus? Have to give that more attention? Nice energetic style FOTD...Brown Eyed I think the whole rhythm section is trying to do something new, but they don’t all entrain, or they haven’t figured out just exactly what yet lol. Don’t know much about other Spring 78 shows so have no reference to compare (yet). Not great, but not terrible, cool look at them messing with stuff...
Great Let It Grow and Deal,...personally not usually a fan of the never ending choruses, think: 70s Franklins etc, but so far this one wasn’t too bad, time will tell.
Sorta standard second set 1, 2 opening, with a nice Candyman. A song I’ve yet to get burnt on. Good version if slightly less relaxed and subtle then perhaps peak period versions. Then curiously another nice mellow song: Sunrise. Actually it builds and gets loud by the end, one of the DG things I’ve always liked and this is a good version. The Playing is pretty interesting as advertised, though I wouldn’t say it made think DS etc, but I look forward to another spin here. Nice decent into spacey mellow and yes, rhythm devils verses drums, with a typical for the times boisterous NFA, complete with fun little modulation early on, (need to look at that for clue of perhaps a different direction that was overuled?). This all progresses nicely and slides down into the big Dew, which on first take seemed a little unique?
Ace brings it all up and away with the 1, 2 closers (A&A is another of the songs I always liked DG on).
Really dug the sound on this for the most part. I have a weird room/bass node I haven’t gotten around to ironing out yet, and consequently many Phil centric performances can be a problem. Usually a little roll off helps, but since my C40 pre-amp dosent have parametric eq I usually can’t just find the exact culprit and notch it out, so it can be annoying sometimes, especially on stuff from the Mickey Godchaux era....i.e., big booming bass drums and bass...
So cool I did not have any of that with this release. Pretty clean too, very comfortable riding about 90 db, with peaks around 95 or so and yet didn’t seem that loud, little to no tape/level distortion and the aforementioned smooth bass. Wonder if this is due to the tape/recording ala Badass Beatty, and/or the Norminazation?
The Geek in me is curious, but the Head in me is just pleased with whatever happened!
Well on to Pittsburgh in round 2...
Hope y’all get yours soon!

user picture

Member for

12 years 1 month

In reply to by Mr. Ones

Permalink

my whole album of "bubblegum" hits. Goes over well with the kids at the store, I can get the meth heads doing the pony to "hitchin' a ride".

A thumb goes up, a car goes by.

user picture

Member for

10 years 11 months
Permalink

According to UPS. Label was created 1/29/21 @ 10:25 am, allowing dead.net to put the status on my order as shipped. No email as yet. But UPS shows that it finally started its journey yesterday just before 5 pm, and will take another week to traverse the states, unless it happens to end up in Warrendale, PA, where my mail has been going to hang out for 5-10 days since December. Still no DaP 36, and at least no movement on the extra 37 and glass and shirt. If those a la carte purchases had shipped out before the subscriptions I'd be pretty pissed given the supposed change in shipping subscriptions first. I sub'd on 10/26/20, and tomorrow marks a week after release date, so I'd like to see that change actually be implemented, so far, the rollout has not achieved the goal. And I'd like my DaP 36 as well. And a response to my most recent email would be nice. But I guess I'm just a fool for expecting better at this point.

user picture

Member for

4 years 4 months

In reply to by alvarhanso

Permalink

If it's any consolation (and I know it isn't)...

getting replies from anyone in "services" is truly hard. I have a couple professional emails out since last week that...crickets, but no cicadas...

"customer service" is a facade on the front of an empty room

truly, why are some people not receiving their orders? and why have "customer service" if nothing is going to be done?

an ancient SNL reference...Lily Tomlin is doing her operator shtick..."Whoops! we just lost Peoria!" "we're the phone company. we don't care; we don't have to"

some day, every Dave's subscriber will get their product on time, and we can say goodbye to the shipping blues.

user picture

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

I was wondering if anyone can recommend a good, but not too expensive, external disc drive. I just got a new laptop, and the darn thing doesn't have one! How will I burn my Dave's Picks (and the upcoming boxset) to my hard drive? Having one that can play DVDs/BluRays would be nice too.

I'm enjoying Dave's 21 right now on the big boy stereo, along with some Pick of the Day folks. This is one hell of a release... I think 2nd only to Dave's 5 in terms of 73 releases in the series so far, and that's saying something!

Thank you, and have a Grate night!

Peace

How people in Europe are receiving this before I am in NY..sounds shitty to say.. Subscribed right off the bat this year too. I know I'll get it eventually..just sucks. No offense to our brethren across the pond. After a week of ups saying they had no info on the tracking, mine too finally updated. Still sitting in California. Says expected Monday the 8th...I guess I'm just not patient...🙃

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by Thats_Otis

Permalink

I've been using one for going on a year, burning and listening - it's called Rooful. Costs 23.99. I go through these things fast, but not this one.

user picture

Member for

6 years 2 months
Permalink

I was at all the first leg of the Spring '78 shows from VPI, 4/14, through Illinois State, 4/24/78. Most were very high quality with only one dud (Columbus, 4/19 . . . lotsa cops - it wasn't at Ohio State so the "off-campus" site may have been part of the neg vibe). For me, the highlight personally was Lexington, 4/21/78, which is my hometown and where I was in college at the time. In my view both then and today re-listening to them all from my old Bettys and AUDS, I agree that the clear stellar shows from the Spring Tour are what have been released via Dicks, Daves and Road Trips (no 78 in Download Series): Nashville, 4/22 and Illinois State, 4/24. The second leg Spring 78 is well-repped too with the 5/10, 11 shows in New Haven & Springfield. 1978 was just a weird year with, as we know now, the toll of opioids beginning to have more of a direct impact on Keith and Jerry . . . and the inconsistency, even within a single show, was apparent to Heads then and now - particularly after the sustained utter brilliance of nearly all of 1977. I remember lots of older Heads talking all during 1977 that the Dead were finally back from the retirement and playing at the high levels of 73-74.

My argument for Lexington over Pittsburgh as the bonus stuff.

The first set of Lex suffers some issues, though the stage-audience chatter was some of the best I've ever heard and the boys+girl kicked ass with a super latter segment of the first set that begins with Row Jimmy and ending with a rollicking MNS. The second set, however, . . . Lawdy, Lawdy!

I've always felt this set was worthy of release. Pittsburgh was quite good, but for my money, Lexington outshines with a very unusual "Stayin Alive" Jam at the end of Drumz, a rocking Trucking and perhaps the all-time killer Stella (which is why it appeared on the first Dead Box, So Many Roads). I asked David Gans at one of his shows why they picked the Lex version for the Box, he said (and this is a pretty direct quote) "I ran into some old Head in the late 80s who gave me the tape of the Lexington show, which I already had, and said 'Man, this is the best ever Stella. Play it on the GD Hour. Trust me.' So, when it came time to pick the cuts for the Box I remembered that encounter - we all listened to it several times, and agreed it deserved to be on the release." I've never heard the second encore US Blues on any tape, SDBD or AUD, but I can tell you it both rocked in a very raw, sloppy way AND was totally unexpected . . . particularly after the treat of Werewolves (the first encore, and only second time played - this was pre-internet, so if you weren't at the Columbus show the night before or didn't talk to anyone, then this would have been a mindblower since "werewolves" was a huge hit then on Warren Zevon's breakthrough album).

Pittsburgh was a very good show, but similar to Lexington in that it isn't from beginning to end so stellar as to deserve its own release and is lesser than Lex. Definite highlights, but nothing really to make it "special" for release . . . unlike Lexington with its stunning second set and double encore. Checkout the review of the show in Deadbase - its only one of two of the first leg Spring 78 shows reviewed (Springfield is the other).

So, cannot wait for my copy to get out of the Louisville Shipping Center Dungeon (a mere 78 miles from my house!) as I am most ready to dig on one great show and memory - and happy to hear from Dave's Seaside Chat that I shared the space with Bruce Hornsby. Wonder if we was near me and we shared a joint?

user picture

Member for

6 years 2 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

I hear you, but at least we are well past trading analog tapes when it might be 5-8 weeks before your new" stuff came in!

user picture

Member for

9 years 2 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

What about that old raggedy thing along I-70 in Denver? Badger?
I think that it has been torn down.
I never rode it but drove past it many times driving between Stapleton/DIA and skiing.

user picture

Member for

10 years 11 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

Sorry for the griping, just feeling a little more salty about it seeing it takes 5 days to go from a shipping label's creation to going out the door in a professional shipping department. And I've had a few responses since the whole debacle with DaP 36 started, so that's left me hopeful that that avenue is still partially open.

But, as they say, we will get by, we will survive. Touch was my favorite part of DaP 36. Such an infectious song, and Jerry is really feeling it. That's one track where the matrix really enhances things. Oh, and I only know how it sounds because I bought one off ebay. Hoping for a digital copy of 37 to tide me over so I don't have to waste more money on multiple purchases.

Time for WMG/Rhino to accept defeat, throw in the towel, and ask Uncle Bezos to help them with distribution.

Current releases come from Fontana, CA.

Previously from Franklin, IN.

Before that La Vergne, TN.

And who can forget Crozet, VA?

Yes, a who’s who of incompetent distributors.

WMG/Rhino has hopped around the distribution whores like a free love hippie before the arrival of HIV/AIDS.

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month
Permalink

So we're getting a '78 show, and a '73. I'm hoping it's not a full 70's streak this year and I'm hoping for at least a 69 show, but I was pleased with the two consecutive '80's shows.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

another great show with an added bonus from 18th once again the packaging including wonderful liner notes reach truly great art the consistency over the whole series is to be congratulated and as a european head my i say thanks for keeping the postage charges down cheers phh

user picture

Member for

15 years 3 months
Permalink

Love the Cowsills! Talented bunch, the We Can Fly album is classic Sunshine Pop/Psych. Sadly their dad was a tyrant and an abuser, he fired brother Bill(the main sonwgwriter) for smoking weed.
Other fun sunshine pop bands fun: the White Plains, Edison Lighthouse, Vanity Fare, Butterscotch

user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month
Permalink

This is a very good show, incredibly well recorded and really well played. Thanks Dave and all the team.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

My copy has just been delivered here in the Netherlands, just in time for the weekend. Now I know what I'm going to be doing. I certainly won't be going out as dire weather is forecast - loads of snow, a strong, icy, easterly wind out of Russia and temperatures well below freezing day and night. Nothing better than settling down in front of a warm hi-fi system and playing some new (to me) Grateful Dead. Plenty of beer and whisky in house too. Bring it on!

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 1 month
Permalink

After 6 years of no issue, the shipping gremlins finally descend on me.

I subscribed early last year. Neither UPS or USPS can recognize the tracking number provided even though it's shown as shipped. From reading this post....looks like the CD was shipped out from Fontana, CA? Welp, that's about 25 miles away from where I live.

Anyone care to guess of what's 39, and 40 will be? Now that we ventured well into the 80's, why not some '91 shows? More 80's are still welcomed as well!

user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

I haven't checked the shipping updates, but do run to the mailbox every day as the truck pulls away. I'm not surprised that it's taking a while; it recently took nine days for a small package I sent from Saint Paul to reach La Crosse, WI (a very large town), which is all of 150 miles (240 km) away!

Dylan--I often listen to Empire Burlesque and Infidels, two of his overlooked 80s albums. To me, those are the ones to have from the post-Blood On the Tracks years. Someone asked about Dylan's best--Freewheelin'? Bringing It All Back Home? Tough call--he has about 12 discs I would never want to be without.

Finally tried some streaming services (Tidal Hi-Fi and Qobuz), and have been surprised at how much I'm enjoying them. Whenever someone mentions bands/albums/songs on here, I can quickly pull up a CD-quality (or better) version of the mentioned music on the streaming service and investigate. And I've been doing investigations, such as working through every Fleetwood Mac album in order, without having to go purchase a ton of CDs. I got the family subscription to Tidal, so now my wife, kids, and father are streaming a bunch as well, all from their laptops. Beats trying to get a CD player and receiver/amp in each room. I wouldn't purchase a laptop without a disc drive, but it's getting difficult to find those these days, and I'm the only one in the family with one.

DaP 38 and 39? I'm hoping for 1968 and 1991.

Be kind, rewind.

user picture

Member for

7 years 5 months
Permalink

There's another category that my buddies at the record store and I used to bring up-the Guilty Pleasure, this being an album you liked some time ago(usually as a child) that you still like to listen to occasionally, but don't like to admit it.
This would be one of my examples: ABBA's Arrival L.P. Anyone else have a guilty pleasure?

SIMONROB-glad to hear you got your #37 before me. Like MDJIM, I feel bad about how long our European Heads have to wait sometimes, not to mention VAT. And I'm happy that at least once, some overseas folks are enjoying before me. It's not like I am lacking something to listen to. I'm thinking it may be a week or more here on the East Coast, but I'm not in a hurry.

Stay safe all, better times are coming!!

Dave told me this year the box would contain all the shows played on my birthday. So it's going to be a 9 show birthday box in the shape of a cake it is highly recommended that you lick the icing. Looking very much forward to it!

user picture

Member for

10 years 6 months
Permalink

My copy is getting close (I think). . . A while back I snagged Helen Kennedy's artwork from someplace when 37 was first announced (maybe the dead,net artist page?). It’s hi res, and from before the printer got hold of it. Nice, because I didn't have to do anything but add the jpg to the rest of Dave's Picks (and Bonus) covers on DropBox. Everything's in chronological order, so scroll down:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qx5j9ydoc7bzm8z/AAD8yK_vCv_kQ-oLkLJQVCEla?dl…

(Save me a piece of that cake, Jim)

Onward.

product sku
081227891695
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/music/dave-s-picks/dave-s-picks-vol-37.html