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    clayv
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    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.

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  • boblopes
    Joined:
    @VGuy

    What's 50% on Fremont Street like? Don't think I'll be visiting this year. Hoping May 2022!

  • boblopes
    Joined:
    Wow Blueskye what a moving video…

    Wow Blueskye what a moving article/video. Makes me want to get a mylar balloon filled with helium and give it a go. I was always impressed when I think it was Dead & Co had space for the visual impaired to enjoy the shows.

  • boblopes
    Joined:
    @1stshow70878 - the guy with neon tape stripes is Tom Hamilton

    Hey 1stshow70878 - The guy with the neon tape stripes on his guitar is Tom Hamilton from Joe Russo's Almost Dead. Joe Russo is the drummer staring into the camera. If you have not seen "Joe Russo's Almost Dead" or JRAD, it's closest to the wow factor of seeing live Dead probably since Phil and Friends of the late 90's. They really go off than any of the other bands since Jerry's passing. They do a ripping Catfish John and their other guitar player is very good too. I almost didn't recognize Tom with the grizzly beard, but I did recognize his guitar. The guy with the Teal SG is Jackie Greene who did the simultaneous singing/playing with that side by side double zoom session. Mike Gordon from Phish was on bass. Grahame Lesh (Phil's son) is the singer /guitarist that starts off and David Crosby's son Jason is the singer (almost looks and sounds like him). The other guitarist that starts the song with Lesh's son is Ross James with the light blue Strat looking guitar. Stanley Jordan is the guitarist using both hands on the frets. Holly Bowling played the baby grand piano. She does both Phish and Grateful Dead tunes and is a very talented pianist. Karl Denson is on flute. I am not familiar with the other musicians but boy is that an impressive rendition. I think I've listened to it 10 times. I'm going to give a listen on headphones, hopefully it's mixed well.

  • bolo24
    Joined:
    I'm pleased to be the first to announce...

    ...that Grateful Dead item is going fast!

  • dmcvt
    Joined:
    Altec Lansing power

    Believe those AL speakers were powered by a pair of Macintosh tube amps... this was at Chip's (parents) Bethesda MD house, he converted his attic room into a listening space. Thinking about it, seem to recall he was bi- or tri- amping those speakers... they had 15" woofers. Audiophile, an amazing system for the time. Few high school kids had equipment or parents that would allow serious volume at home. For a while, Are You Experienced seemed to create the before and after, who knew anyone could play like that. Next bulletin from how to make a guitar do anything you ever wanted was Jeff Beck's "Truth", 1968. Thanks for posting a link to Phil's birthday treat, Unbroken Chain, very sweet.

  • DeadVikes
    Joined:
    Last Year's Box

    Was announced on 2/13/2020 and as you said PF released on 3/20/2020. Actual delivery date of course varied.

    Maybe we get some news soon??

  • BlueSkye
    Joined:
    Heartwarming story and video

    Just read about this in Stereophile. I just had to share after watching it.

    https://www.stereophile.com/content/listening-video-tribute-art-dudley
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNrcb-9Gi8c

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Once You Go FLAC

    I've been wondering about something for some time, and now Alvarhanso brought it up, so I'll ask: why not offer subscribers the opportunity to download a copy of their DaPs? It seems like a very simply way to alleviate the complaints about late shipments and defective CDs.

    Alvarhanso suggested mp3s, but I think ideally we could choose to get FLACs or some other lossless format. It would still suck if your discs didn't ship, but at least you could hear the shows while you waited. Lots of record companies will give you a download code when purchase physical format music. Even Amazon does it for some records and CDs.

    I assume this has come up before, so maybe somebody knows why they don't pursue this simple solution. Maybe they're concerned about file sharing? I've got news for you: that's already happening. Maybe they're worried the availability of digital versions would devalue the limited edition CDs? All I can tell is that some of the early Dave Picks are on Youtube right now, and physical copies still sell on ebay and discogs for hundreds of dollars. If Rhino did something like made a download part of the subscription package, and then offered to sell downloads to the public after each limited edition sold out, wouldn't that be a win-win?

    What am I missing here? Besides, you know, a DaP 37 disc one that doesn't skip?

  • alvarhanso
    Joined:
    Unsolved Mysteries UPDATE re:DiP 36 DaP 36

    Got an email from dead.net the other day (3/12) that my DaP 36 was on its way. My third such email, but this one at least had correct addresses on the email in both spots, and the tracking at least did get the correct destination city and state. But then nothing until it shipped yesterday, and should reach Saturday if Louis DeJoy doesn't add to his collection of purloined DaP 36s. But the kicker is that I just received DiP 36 on vinyl from another company that licensed it. They only put it out there that it was going to be released around 2/1, then word was it was delayed until at least 2/14, but they would email when it was ready. I got the email on 3/2, placed my order in the nick of time, and it was actually delivered yesterday, 3/15, but just picked it up.

    Too big to fail, or too big to succeed? I criticize as a consumer who has done quite a bit of business with this site, and has had very few problems. The problems I have had, have, however, been massive. My copies of DaP 30 never left the warehouse, then supposedly got refused at my house or some bs that never happened, and 4 months and change later, I finally did get my 2 copies with bonus disc. I didn't and don't care that those and the 2 DaP 36s will be from a small other batch, I just want my stuff. And I don't see why 4 months seems like a decent fix to an easy problem. And here I will make a suggestion that would have mellowed me out for months without worrying so much about when they were going to send me my stuff: send those of us waiting for it an mp3 download link, so we can at least listen to it! How hard would that be? If you screw up 300 orders and don't want 300 irate customers, toss them a bone. Don't make us feel like we're hounding you via email. Dr Rhino was called in late in the game on that DaP 30 fiasco, and he's the one that got me my stuff, and it seems like he made it happen in less than a month. I cc'd him very early in this one, and it seemed events were controlling him with the warehouse not seeming answerable to anyone. I know COVID has made all facets of life exceedingly difficult for everyone except hermits who live in caves, and the USPS has disgraced its former glory (the very fact you could send shit across the country for literally pennies and have it there in a few months to a few weeks to a few days made people think it's easy to do it, but they knew how to do it so efficiently that people only notice when something is late or lost), but other companies are able to fulfill their orders in a timely fashion even despite all of those factors. And I will also note having received 3 orders from dead.net placed since DaP 36's release, one from the Thanksgiving sale, DaP 37, and the DaP 37 glass and shirt. So, they could take and fulfill some orders, but not DaP 36, and couldn't give an actual update. If it's gonna be 4 months to get a new smaller batch made and sealed up and shipped out, so be it. Tell me and I'm good with that. If not quite "good", more I can deal with that a lot better than getting shined on. And perhaps in juxtaposition to my query at the beginning of this long paragraph, this is why the stuff that is unlimited and dead.net sends to Uncle Jeff, I will happily procure from Uncle Jeff, get free shipping, get it closer to release date, and lock in probably a cheaper price. Because somehow Uncle Jeff can fulfill not only that order, but millions of others. I just want a happy medium...

    Rant over. Oh, and ironically DaP 30 was the last listen to Dead. Moved from that to String Cheese 3/15/00 with the one and only Joe Craven guesting all over it, and killing it as Joe Craven does on a variety of instruments. Seeing him play Lonesome Fiddle Blues with Vassar Clements and Larry Keel and David Via and Curtis Burch was one of my top musical moments. The guy can fiddle as well as anybody, plays mandolin as well or better than his former bandleader, the Dawg himself, and is one of the most inventive percussionists out there. Cheese let him just do his thing for half the show. Incredible. That 1/2-3/70 was damn good, too. :)

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    in the clearing stands a box...errr....

    when was June 76 announced? release date was 3/20/20, according to Wikipedia.

    there are many things to do, consider, think about in this life and world

    but what I really wanna know is...

    what's in the new box???

    if I at least knew the year...or years...

    the suspense is killing me (so to speak. isn't there a snippet of Jerry saying that at the end of So Many Roads release?)

    Meanwhile, 5/10/78 plays

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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.

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Spammer message below has been deleted--my Pink City post no longer makes sense.

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Seriously - you didn’t think this was a joke, did you!? Where else would an escort walk into!?

Hey, first listen of DaP 37 is two thumbs up! The job that Jeffrey Norman and team does mixing and mastering these releases is first rate.

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Only time I was ever a target for pick-pockets. Out of my front pocket! They got my wallet with a few pesos, driver’s license. But failed to get my passport, visa and travelers checks further down in the same pocket. That was back in the first half of the 90s. Back when I had more sense, back before I got any credit cards.
Mexico City is still my favorite city after San Francisco. Read Jack Kerouac, “Mexico City Blues” and “Tristessa”.

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Hey how about shipping my Dave’s picks? I live 30 minutes drive from Carlsbad, and people in England have theirs and I don’t. The shipping method is stupid a d ridiculous. This happens EVERY DAMN TIME.

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Do not stop on tracks. 2/4/68 San Miguel de Allende

So I wake up today (always a good start) and in my normal Sunday morning routine after the coffee is brewed I check my normal music BT sites and there are three new Charlie Miller offerings of a three day Winterland run from Feb 22, 23 & 24, 1974...jumped on those puppies, dropped them into my Hi Res player and am preparing for a listen on my headphones...But first I will serve my Honey her Valentine's Day lunch request...yesterday I slow stewed a brisket in garlic, onions, oregano, beef base & cumin in my enameled cast iron pot for about four hours...I take the meat out and set aside...I then run the broth through my blender adding red chile powder...I put the broth back in the pot and bring to a simer to let the powdered chile cook in it...i shred the brisket and add back to the simmering stock for about another 30 minutes...Voila, you have killer Chile Colorado to do with as you please...will serve it for lunch with a side of thin sliced fried potatoes, pico de gallo that i made and some tortillas that unfortunately I did not make...and then Winterland '74!!! PS I know DP 13 is 2-24 but does anyone know if the other two dates were officially released?

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In reply to by nappyrags

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....always a good start." - nappyrags.
Indeed.
It may have taken awhile, but I'm finally dipping my toes into the expansive catalog that is Frank Zappa. Started with Shut Up And Play Yer Guitar and expanding out from there in either direction. Where has this been all my life! (right in front of you vguy. You just never paid attention).

Shut Up And Play Your Guitar is very good. Some people forget that Zappa did not just do that naughty and lyrically funny stuff but also played fantastic instrumentals with improvisation. Rat Tomago is a great one from Sheik Yerbouti. It is worth a listen.
I am a fan of Dweezil's Zappa Plays Zappa and if we are ever allowed to go to a concert again they are worth the price of admission.

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13 years 9 months

In reply to by deadegad

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I've been watching Roy Buchanan videos on YouTube. Jerry was quite an RB fan. There are some good RB technique tutorials on YT too.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Freakout!
Absolutely Free
We're only in it for the money
Uncle Meat
Hot Rats
Burnt weeny sandwich
Weasels ripped my flesh

Listen to these IN ORDER.

After that, explore.

Oh. One more...
You cant do that onstage anymore vol 2 disc one.

One of the greatest discs EVER. by anyone not GD, that is

....that record blew my mind deadegad. My eyebrows were all over the place.
I started with that record. Did I fuck up?
I did listen to Hot Rats years ago. Didn't get it. Guess it wasn't my time yet...
Playing ketchup now.
I will follow Proudfoots Playlist. I have faith.

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Live at Town Hall 1974 and American Axe 1974, two great CD releases of recent years.

They'll blow your sox off.......

I live in the San Francisco Bay Area. No disc, no email confirming it's been sent, no nothing. I dropped customer service a line here, but based on the comments others have made I won't be holding my breath waiting for a response.

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5 years 6 months

In reply to by Born Cross Eye…

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Order is there. The location of my copy of 37 remains an utter mystery. Emailed customer service. Can't wait for the form letter response.

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17 years 4 months
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Been listening to Perlita Leon and her sister Angelita from Ayacucho, Peru.
So a couple hours ago I glanced at my bulletin board and noticed my ticket from Grateful Dead 35 years ago today. So looks like its a sign I better download it from relisten and check in with 2/14/86.

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Oliver twist is right. I happen to be reading it and remember when I first read the story in high school and always had that saying in my head for years. It's funny how you remember stupid things from a long time ago.

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7 years 6 months
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My glass arrived at my alternate address and will pick it up tomorrow. So they will be arriving soon for you. I hope.

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by carlo13

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Carlo13 - just what I was thinking. I haven't seen "Oliver" since I saw it with my parents when it came out - about 1968 - yet I remembered where that line came from when you asked.

Something of a lost art, pick pocketting. That's one of the problems with the internet - its taken the personal touch out of petty crime.

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In reply to by Strider 808808

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Caution indeed. None of us in this crazy bunch would be exactly who we are today without good 'ole Cowboy Neal at the wheel.
Thanks for stopping to pick me up Neal.
:O)

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Thanks for the info...BTW these shows sound great

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10 years 3 months
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Glad to see you're back to the red dice on green felt. You had that for so long it was like an extension of your name.

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9 years 3 months
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Great show would have liked to be there, nice lush, analog sound (at least so when playing back HDCD). Mickey and Bill on fire! Love the syncopated shuffle opening and during Brown-Eyed Women, the way they drive Jerry rhythmically during his solo, and then bring the whole thing together (rhythmically again) at the lyric Tumble down shack in Bigfoot county etc. This goes on throughout as I am listening for the second time. The percussionists are driving the music.

Also, of Mickey/Billy note, the drums section I thought was exceptional.

Speaking of rhythm devils, maybe someone with more detailed knowledge than I can give me a reference. I went to a couple of shows sometime in 1978 or 1979 where an Egyptian percussionist jammed with Mickey/Billy for the Rhythm Devils. Anyone know, were any of those concerts released officially? Thanks!

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In reply to by jrf68@hotmail.com

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I think it was more the people who wrote about, and mythologised Neal Cassady that had the most influence. More in fact, than did the man himself. Nobody would have known who he was without Jack Kerouac and Tom Wolfe. And as a possible point of entry...The Dead.

I like that quote from "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" - "When legend becomes fact, print the legend."

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I met a Mexicana in the plaza of Real Catorce in the state of San Luis Potosí in November of 1993. She taught English in Monterey (Mexico) . Her insight on the Mexican Revolution was telling. And I paraphrase; “The mythology surrounding the history of the revolution may be greater than the actual event. “ And I do not wish to diminish the amazing history of Mexico. Emiliano Zapata was a man of great conviction. Read “Zapata and the Mexican Revolution” by John Womack Jr.
Pancho Villa?, read “Insurgent Mexico” by John Reed.

The mythology surrounding the old Haight Ashbury may very well far overshadow the actual short lived fluorescence of the time. But I do believe it was a cultural revolution in its own write. And connected to other paradigm shifts that started in the 50s.
Read Dennis McNally “On Highway 61”.

So many books, not enough time. The same can be said of recordings of the Grateful Dead. But I’m gratified there is so much knowledge, literature, art and music at our fingertips. “As well to count the angel’s dancing on a pin.”

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Thanks for the suggestions. I look forward to hearing them.

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In reply to by Strider 808808

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Strider - I have to say that American books and music of the 1950s and 60s were enormously inspiring to me. I read a Kerouac biography before I read any by the actual author-it was written by Ann Charters, and I found it in a second hand book shop, about 1982. I was completely taken over by what I had read, and went out of my way to read as many books by Kerouac that I could find. It was a very positive influence in that it led me to look into things that he wrote about-from Buddhism to Charlie Parker. One of the books I was most pleased to get was this one I have here " As Ever - The Collected Correspondence of Allen Ginsberg and Neal Cassady". Treasured particularly because this copy is signed by Carolyn Cassady. Amazing to think that she once enjoyed the same physical space in relation to this book that I myself am lucky enough to enjoy now, this minute.

Interesting also that the writing about a historical event changes the way that event is perceived. In some way, it re-creates it.

Billy - great minds - I was only listening to Little Walter this morning. An old double album called "Chess Masters" that has no information about who is playing on it. But it sounds like Muddy Waters and his band, and includes Juke. Another great instrumental is one called "Rollercoaster".

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Not sure who mentioned the FM box set with remastered music from the early days of the Mac, but thanks for the tip! I already have most of those cds, but couldn't resist remastered versions of these Mac classics, all the bonus material, and the added cd of a live show right before Bob Welch left the band. I was listening to Future Games yesterday, and I must say, that is nearly a perfect album, every song is top notch.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Thanks for the Europe tips, keithfan. I am also making my way through the luggage box for the third time. Just listened to the Beat Club Truckin' >Drums>TOO. Pretty funny how they screwed up the beginning and started over again. The very end of TOO is very spacey and psychedelic.

I hear it was hot that weekend...

GD sets that day
Ramble
Minglewood
Roses
Baby Blue with Dylan
Desolation Row with Dylan

That's set one
5 songs

Set two Garcia feeling a little....off
but enough sparkles through
He leaves the stage at least once I think

Satisfaction is awesome

The highlight of the show is the encore
That happens sometimes with the GD (7 13 84)

the Deadbase reviewer calls it "a night to cherish"

It came close to being THE Last One

Luckily it wasn't

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Upon further review, I stand by my earlier opinions. This is a super fine show, and I was quite pleased(and a little surprised) at just how fine it is. I would make comments on certain tracks, but I love ‘em all. Bonus disc is just a little less tasty, but grateful to have ‘em.

DAVEROCK-I got my Chocolate Watchband cd, and it is fantastic. Have been through this one twice also. The liner notes are copious and fascinating. I had no real knowledge at all about this band, but it was great to read about them during the first listen, and then to just concentrate and LISTEN the second run through. Thanks for a great suggestion, I owe you one(or 2, Mighty Baby also).

Stay well all, it’s just a shout away.

Mr Ones - great - having recommended it, I am glad you like it! Unbelievably they actually played a gig in London about 2005, supported by The Fuzztones. It was part of an indoor festival in London, held every Easter called "Le Beat Bespoke ", which featured psychedelic bands old and new. I also saw Arthur Lee and Johnny Echols front Love there, as well lost legends The Misunderstood, July, The Pretty Things and Arthur Brown-who is still going strong.

It was a pretty good festival, actually. A bit kitsch, maybe...people used to dress up in 60s gear, like Syd Barret or Julie Christie might have done in 1967. They had great lightshows and had Go Go dancers performing on raised podiums while the bands played. Fantastic records were played between sets, too, and there were indoor markets selling vintage records and clothing. Heck....I wish I was going there tonight!!

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In reply to by proudfoot

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....My boss said to me, “You’re the worst train driver ever. How many have you derailed this year?”
I said, “I’m not sure; it’s hard to keep track.”
My feeble attempt at a Casey jones dad joke.

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Greetings all! Dipping into ‘86. Forgive me if I’m a little late to the party. 12-15-86 is a historic show. Jerry’s first show back after being in a coma for months. The audience recording on the archive is the one to queue up. The heads are juiced right out of the gate as they start with Touch of Grey. When the chorus comes around and Jerry belts out the line: “I will get by, I will survive” all you can hear is this thunderous roar erupt from the crowd. It nearly drowns out the audio. Heavy shit; goosebumps. There’s another moment equally as heavy during Candyman. Absolutely sublime version. The part when Jerry gets down to “....pass me my old guitar, pass the whiskey round,...” it is now difficult to hear Jerry screaming the lyrics over the raucous roaring ovation. Moves me to tears everytime. Even just thinking of it.

Cheers rockers!

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A couple years ago I re-read a lot of the Beat books for the first time in 20 years. They made a much bigger impression on me in my 20's, but they do stand the test of time and remain excellent. I'm getting ready to re-read Junky by Burroughs this week. If you're looking for more about Neal, he has an auto-biography named The First Third, which is surprisingly good. My wife's favorite is Off the Road by Carolyn and is well worth your time. Happy reading and listening.

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In reply to by itsburnsy

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"William Burroughs-A Life" by Barry Miles is worth reading if you have read any of his novels. Or if you haven't, come to that.

It also works very well listening to him read his work. I used to have a few cassettes of him reading "Junky". I was less keen on tapes I had of him reading over a musical background-there are a few of him backed by 1990s style electronic music, which detracted from his delivery a bit. But he had a great voice.

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So since Dead.net/Rhino still hasn't hooked me up with DaP36 I took the liberty of "getting" my hands on digital copy until mine arrives (so shoot me - woulda been nice if Rhino offered that, given the shjt$how in DaP36 fulfillment, and that I prob won't get my copy for a long time still, but they didn't).

Anyway, the China> Rider is crazy good, partially due to the smile-inducing crowd reaction throughout the song. The band blows the roof off the place moment after glorious moment, and the crowd goes apeshit. Also possibly the best "Esau" that's been released. Can't recall if those observations were similar to everyone else's, given this came out three months ago and I can't recall what everyone else said (awkward). But that's what stood out to me. Great release overall, though I'm not asking for more '87... For some reason the year just doesn't thrill me overall.

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