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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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  • adedhed68
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    Deadvikes

    Thank you so much for your PM. I responded back to you.....

  • hendrixfreak
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    I had no idea...

    That cassette decks were installed in 2005..... shows ya what I know. And after three Subaru Outbacks, which I abused the hell out of, both on-road and in the slickrock jungles of Utah -- the "best" one (i.e., longest lived) had over 300,000 miles on it -- I finally got a real vehicle: a Toyota Tacoma. Two-seater cab with suicide doors to trundle seats, 6-foot bed, with camper shell. High clearance, low 4. So I can go virtually anywhere there's a two-track. I spend a couple months each year (8-9 days at a time) in the backcountry of NE Utah, NW Colorado and if I sleep diagonally, I can get my 6' 1" frame comfortable when the weather hits the fan. It's got a CD deck and I make copies of my collection of the rocking-est music for the long highway hauls. Toss in a relatively inexpensive Martin guitar and a few stashes and I'm good to go.

    Though I shed most of my cassettes, I still have a handful of GD tapes and there's a dual cassette deck in my living room stereo setup.

    Last time I had a cassette deck in one of the Subarus, it was parked in my driveway one winter night and some thieves actually crowbarred the deck out of the dashboard -- for what? A $5 rock or something? Problem was, I took the insurance check and spent it on my mortgage. Then got an el-cheapo repair job that left a conspicuous crater in the center of the dash. You shoulda heard me doing the two-step as I attempted to explain away this anomaly to women I was pursuing. "Oh it's nothing darling, just a gaping hole in the dashboard -- doesn't your vehicle have one? Hey, look at the squirrel....." Today (or, er, pre-covid) it's a different story. I show up to pick up my date in a pickup truck with a camper shell with tinted windows.... but at least I get the old beer cans out and vaccuum it before playing my version of a poor man's Casanova.

    (Apropos of nothing) Isn't rock 'n roll effin' great??

  • Albany Head
    Joined:
    Brown Eyed Rhythm

    Thin, thanks for confirming the strange beat on BEW. It is jarring and not exactly pleasant to listen to. Thought it was just me. A small complaint in an otherwise great first set. Haven't got to the 2nd and 3rd discs yet, but so far so good.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Not Chick too?

    Remembering him at his best. RTF at Ebbett's Field (small bar venue) in downtown Denver early 1976 I think. Fusion was the new thing. Four of the hottest musicians of their day. Talk about speed; Lenny White, Al Di Meola, Stanley Clark all daring to keep up with Chick's amazing improvisation. I went out after that and bought everything I could find from all of them at The Finest Records store in Ft. Collins. Cheap cutouts direct from L.A. and new inventory every week. Got my collection up to 400 LPs at one point. The roommate had 700+ as he had a better paying job! Two turntables always spinning at our house parties. Still have about 15 LPs with RTF or solo projects. R.I.P. Chick.
    Nitecat and other F/Mac posters: Danny nails that ethereal sound on Woman of 1000 Years, Dust, and many others. His writing is multi- faceted and really what holds together all those early albums. I feel smarter after listening to his poetic lyrics. Just got an LP copy of Future Games broken out of the multi-LP release from a few years ago, as mine was getting worn out, which started the retro review recently. Great 140g vinyl with flawless sound. Cheers!

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    cassettes

    my main ride is a 2005 prius...still going strong. has a functioning CD player and cassette player. Jealous? :)))

    Also, we have a something-something Toyota Tacoma (wife bought it in auction...why? dunno. but I drive it occasionally). it has a CD player and cassette player, too, but apparently the CD player doesn't work. Never bothered to find out. but the cassette player works fine.

    if anyone has an extra million $$$ to donate to my GoFundMe account for a new car, please let me know.

  • hendrixfreak
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    Cassettes in the car??

    Wow, Proudfoot, you are driving a museum piece. When I began the cassette era, I was SO careful with every tape, but that was way before I had a vehicle. Didn't have wheels until I was 29. By the end of the cassette era, they were getting tossed around like potato chips.

    I don't go in for the "camps" of the band followers, though Butch Trucks had made some stupid remarks about the GD's drummers -- that's easy to do in interviews, but the two bands themselves were pretty amiable amongst themselves (til Jer's remark that Gregg was a "narc") so it goes both ways.

    Back to the music... My three favorite rock bands of all time are The Band, The ABB and The GD, not in any order. And, unlike so many other great bands that I revere, I got to see/hear a shit ton of these three bands at their peak, though not, sadly, Duane-era ABB.

    Rock on!

  • DeadVikes
    Joined:
    Dicks Picks #8 and #23

    Hey, for those of you that have missed these in the past, Dick's #8 and #23 are now being offered again by real gone music. These are both top tier shows.

    And ADEDHED68, check your PM.

  • stones73
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    Customer Service

    I hear ya, I've still not received my tracking number, emailed customer service 2/4 got a lame reply once its shipped you will get a tracking number, replied back on 2/6 asking why delay, and shipping date, got nothing back. called 800-546-3670 left v/m and now emailing the address on the recording deadpriorityservice@wmgcustomerservice.com (odd address, what ever) if someone don't reply or call me by EOB today, i'll contest the 100.00 yearly subscription cost and be done with dead.net. i've ordered many items from different site in last year nothing compares to this piss poor service ! When you can go on EBAY and see over 20 copies of DP37 listed for sale, something is wrong somewhere ! PISSED OFF CUSTOMER !

  • Deadheadbrewer
    Joined:
    Doc and Mac and Chick and Rob

    Happy belated Birthday, Doc, and my condolences to you and your wife.

    Love to hear about Fleetwood Mac; as I mentioned about ten pages back, now that I subscribe to two streaming services, I've been going through every FM album from the beginning. Just finished Bare Trees as I caught up on this chat; if I ever knew that they did "Sentimental Lady," well . . . I forgot, so that was a fun re-surprise! I've had the Boston Box and Rumours forever, but know nothing of the 1970-1975 era.

    Now We Sob, indeed. R.I.P. Chick. You are one cool cat.

    Donation to Rob Eaton's Go Fund Me made. He's certainly given us a hand in many ways over the years; now it's our turn.

    Love the literature conversation and jokes! I'm writing down many of each. The best book I've read lately is The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy.

    I think the drummers got off the beat on BEW on this release, and were unable to find their way back; I thought my CD player was skipping! A number of the songs from 4/15 get a little bit off-kilter to my ears.

    Be Kind. Rewind.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    ABB

    used to be a big fan back in the 70s (ABB focus, then the Clash in the early 80s, then the GD starting in 82)

    lost interest when the Clash became my primary interest (except for an ABB show at the Gorge in 91)

    especially when I read about dissing from various ABB members toward the GD...that made me lose interest even more

    reGARDless...

    I started re-listening to 2/11/70 yesterday in the car (on cassette, mind you). I haven't gotten to the part with the ABB members, but I know it's hot. Long ago...in an apartment not so far, far away...I was lysergic, and listened to that. Lotsa fun.

    Oh, and don't forget 6/10/73, 7/28/73, and 7/16/72. ABB seasoning in parts of those shows which I love.

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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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Hello, some help required, please... I have the wonderful Dave's Picks Volume 37, but I can't for the life of me get disc 2 and 3 to rip on my computer..? Any ideas/suggestions/guidance/resolutions welcomed. Thanks.

George was I/Me/Mine too.

Quick Harrison anecdote: A gal I went to high school with in the early 70s made it her mission to meet all the Beatles. Met Ringo, peace & love, Lennon was very kind, and she hit it off with McCartney (she had a pic as proof it wasn’t a “fishing” story). She goes to meet Harrison, I assume at Hyde Park, and it was “SLAM!!!”
You can’t always get what you want...

sometimes rip to hard drive as wav file works, then rip the wav file to mp3.

sometimes I think software converter clashes with rip data off cd.

If you can't get help or it working,,,, PM me.

4 winds-yes, I played 2/22 and 2/23/74 recently, and agree-they would make excellent releases. The Dead at a real peak.
Deadvikes-that's fighting talk, asking people to consider what they think were lacklustre releases! Sticking with 1974-one of my favourite years-I would say 3/23/74 is a bit of a disappointment - Dicks Picks 24. It's come out on vinyl, too, so it must be highly rated-but its my least favourite of all the 1974 shows I've got. It was the first "Wall of Sound" show, I think. But as far as 1974 was concerned-like they used to say after episode one of Batman in the 60s-"The best is yet to come!"

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I'm all for releases from under-represented years. I like the '79 release, and the 80's ones are interesting, if not my favs.

And count me as one person who thinks the October Winterland '74 shows are overrated - or more specifically, inconsistent. So many other shows/runs from '74 far surpass it, IMO. I think it gets hyped duet to the "last shows?" retirement chatter and movie affiliation. The video tracks from the Movie box set are good, not great, overall.

And just keeping score... I've now received six (6) e-mails from dead.net saying "That GD item is going fast!", prompting me to buy DaP 37, which has now been sold out for 4 weeks. (cue eye-roll....)

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And now add an absolutely pristine sounding high time, also from 9/25/80. That shows got to be coming our way one way or another.

Playing a bit of ketchup

PGHAS1 - I am pretty sure I listened to that version of High Time on SiriusXM today on a long drive to and from... it even sucks to travel by car in the life and times of covid.. thank God for the Grateful Dead Channel and High Time(s).

Lackluster '74. Blasphemy I say, Smithers.. release the hounds! (kidding of course)

1974, The Good The Bad and the Ugly: Funny.. I had a similar early impression of 3/24 but the last time I listened to it.. it grabbed me. Was it the weed? Naa.. I was just naturally in the mood and attentive. Well, maybe it was the weed.

Lions, Tigers and Beetles, oh my! Harrison is perhaps my favorite Beatle too, but.. well, a contributing factor might be that he was slotted inadequate song writing space per album - band politics. It's really hard for me ignore the power of their collective song writing body of work. Has anyone out there listened to each Beatles album sequentially? The amount of growth between albums can be startling at times.. these guys could write music, George included. I think I like him most primarily because he was the underdog and had to fight for album time (I think this is correct??).. He was also a great song writer and a very talented and underrated guitarist. ..but how can you ignore the 800 lb. insect in the room that was Lennon/McCartney. Like I said, collectively they were incredible writers of music, including Harrison.

Hatchets and Glass.. I am a sucker for certain things GD. I love my probably 20 year old Morning Brew coffee mug, I like the stoneware mugs too.. the music of course. I can look at some of this as marketing hyperbolcrap and dismiss it.. but when the Workingman's Hatchet came out, I saw it for what it was.. cool as shit, and after some thought.. I manufactured some slack assed justification for the expense and got one just before it sold out. I got the DaP glass too, but it just arrived, haven't opened it yet. Yes, a sucker.. it's nothing I need, but I can say in complete honesty that no one has tried to break into my house or rape my wife and children since the hatchet arrived. Coincidence, I think not.. that thing is bad ass.

Lackluster releases? Certain ones don't speak to me (just a few), but like others have discussed sometimes it takes some time to resonate. Most of these releases have at least one segment that either completely kicks ass or has a moment that evokes a personal emotional response. Much of this music speaks to me, those pieces that either make time stand still or move at the speed of light sometimes simultaneously. If there is one 'moment' just one moment on one of these releases, it's worth the price of admission to me.

As for Feb Winterland '74, I am still scratching my head as to why they did not give this the Box Set Treatment.

Swinging an axe, splittin' the firewood, all to "Easy Wind" in my head? Currently the #1 requested dissertation topic at the Department of Psychology, Harvard. Even the nations top shrinks are concerned about this dangerous mindset.

great video

eat that backstage cream cheese only if you aren't busy for the next month (borrowed from a film)

Hey sorry Bluecrow. Just one man's opinion. I always thought there were better shows to choose from. But, you were there! What did you think you that Terrapin Station?

I always felt 12/28/79, RT3.1 was so good, so my expectations were really high for #31.

Hey, but I also think Dick's Picks #24 is great.

And if they ever released the full October 74 Winterland run with video, it would take the site down, similar to the day they released GSTL.

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DeadVikes - no problema, really just joshing. i do think it's really strong show, but of course I carry my having-been-there-and-enjoyed-it perspective into that. for sure, some releases don't click with me right off, and some subsequent listen, maybe years later, in the right frame of mind and its like oh yeah now i get it, this is amazing . . . . and admittedly there's still a "couple" of releases that i still haven't found that spot yet. hopefully there's a listen in your not to distant future that has you "there" in the Uptown. I was streaming a good part of it on relisten today (don't have discs with me) and it sounded really sweet. so I had a great time but clear memories are few and my "listening" was not all that refined compared to later years and especially to now. Somewhere in my vault are scrawled notes from that night (many years since I've seen them, hope I still have them). I seem to remember having written TERRAPIN!!! several times with the exclamation marks etc and no doubt the whistle was screaming. A brother had scored the ticket and went with him and his buddies. We took the L (elevated train) to and from the show, it runs right by the Uptown, and remember a lot of happy dead heads singing loud in chorus (Shakedown Street?) on the way back north! the killer Shakedown came night 3.

edit/addendum: been awhile since I listened to RT3.1. but yeah I remember that the Terrapin > Playing, especially the jam into drums was super cool. One thing that might make a small difference is that I think 12/3 is a Healy cassette and the late December Oakland run are Betty reels maybe? I don't mind dipping into a matrix and there's a nice Usborne matrix of 12/3 that I think brings some added atmosphere to the show.

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Harrison played with economy and supremely tasteful note choice. He did not, "wail." The lads enlisted one Eric Clapton to burn all over "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," because George's guitar usually "Made Concise Statements From The Corner."

Sorry, George, Something and Here Comes The Sun are brilliant and so was All Things Must Pass, but you're a thin third over Ringo after John and Paul.

John was the Alpha, the Elvis of the group as the boys duly admitted.

Paul was the most musical, the most accessible and the most melodic. Wings is fucking awesome.

I love Ringo, as well. Recently saw "The Spy Who Loved Me" for the millionth time. Barbara Bach? My God.

Will never be another bunch like them. Can't wait for the Peter Jackson!!

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/peter-jackson-beatles-sne…

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Don't forget to get Your Swing On today, one of the many fantastic reasons to celebrate a GD anniversary.

This is one of my all-time favorite Dave's Picks, so glad it got the full treatment. I am extremely partial to the Eyes > Dancin', but this whole thing is a Monster. I recall getting this tape back at the start of my junior year at UVM; it was late August and I was building a wooden platform in my bedroom (nay, it was literally the old kitchen pantry that was somehow converted into the smallest excuse for a bedroom as possible)...and I distinctly recall this Music Never Stopped come on, and I was totally enveloped in Keith's pie-aner as he comes in an out during that closing jam. I just remember standing there jaw agape as the climax kept on building up to the payoff on that one. Funny how one can expertly recall these seemingly miniscule moments of our lives from decades past yet I struggle to recall what I had for dinner last night.

Happy Friday Deadfreaks and Keep On Choppin'!

Sixtus

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That loop of "Easy Wind" is playing in MY head. Ya know, the place where Pigpen lives.

Just watched Festival Express again last night. It's a loving tribute to Janis. And Richard Manuel. RIP. What incredible musicians. And for a cat like Buddy Guy to get on that train? Either he had no idea or he had a very good idea...

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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HendrixFreak, Festival Express was such an eye opener - what an amazing moment in history that was. Gives me appreciation for 'Might As Well' beyond face value, I probably would have wanted to write a song to emblazon that event into history as well...although not so eloquently is my assumption.

Sixtus

9/25/80: I am not seeing High Time on the setlist for this date. No Let It Grow either; wasn't that another one you heard PGHAS1? By the way, I am not trying to pick on you, I really love 1980 and so want there to be more multi-tracks to come down the road so I am following your comments with interest.

Swinging into Dancin: Love the Eyes into Dancin transition too - right down to the well timed audience whistle when they fully break into it. I think Keith is the MVP of that particular moment. I was reminded of how good that transition is when listening to the Scarlet into Dancin transition of this latest release. I hoped for much more Swingishness for that one but alas it is more of a shut it down and regroup kind of transition despite Bob's hinting at the licks earlier in the Scarlet jam.

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Youre' right - the first cut I heard was Jack Straw and Sirius definitely had it labeled as 9/25/80 and it was played that night, but neither Let It Grow nor High Time were and they were also both labeled that way. My guess is Sirius just mislabeled the cuts and they are actually those Dead Set bonus tracks. Oh well, a guy can dream.

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I was thinking about downloading a Dead and Company show. Anybody familiar enough with their catalog to suggest one show over another?

Many thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I would think you should have it by now. I'd begin the process of trying to figure out what happed to yours. They need to offer lojack protection on these things....

So it's MaryE, Doc Rhino or Customer Service. Sending good vibes and good luck your way.

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In reply to by stillwaters

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I'll bite....hard to resist offering one of the best I've seen at Fenway Park in 2017, just a killer second set:
https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/dead-and-company/2017/fenway-park-boston…

Also this show from Sunrise, FL was really good too:
https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/dead-and-company/2018/bbandt-center-sunr…

There are others, but those might be a decent start!

Sixtus

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#1. Cryptical Envelopment 3/1/69 Fillmore West. # 2 Casey Jones. 2/14/70. Fillmore East. # 3. Easy Wind. 9/30/70. KQED Studios

Robert Hunter did not go on the Festival Express, he just wrote cool song lyrics about it for Jer to sing.

Considering that every on-camera interviewee assured the viewer that "no one slept" on that one-week ride, it amazes me that the bands played so well. Janis and Richard M's performances stuck in my mind, but now I recall -- I did over-prepare just a tad -- great performances by Jer and Pigpen as well. Then there is the curious scene where Jer is trotted out to "say something" to the hordes demanding free admittance to one of the shows. He musta been mighty uncomfortable in that role, but he basically says the musicians are there to play and create something groovy and he hopes the people can dig it. But lots of late '60s, early '70s arguing over ... whether this, that or something else is righteous enough, etc. -- perhaps the slightly immature side of white youth culture emerging at that time. A level of earnestness, perhaps, that exceeds sophistication. Then there's John Dawson of the New Riders looking like the cat who ate the canary, sitting next to Janis, who he was boffing on that trip. Oh! And Rick Danko, drunk off his ass, singing "Ain't No More Cane on the Brazos," mostly to Janis. And a clip of The Band doing a song. That flick is packed with great scenes.

Meanwhile, waiting for Dave to announce this year's fall '72 box and 10-21-68 on CD for RSD. If I've said it once, I've said it (at least) a thousand times. The fact that I'm completely unmoored from reality should surprise no one.

Tonight? TGIF, along with fresh produce, powerful stout and video of Jimi doing two sets at Maui. Oh yeah. Hendrixfreak is my name and being a Hendrix freak is my game!

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Maybe not the best Terrapin, but the best 'Lady with a Fan' to my ears. Love that subtle twang. And what an invocation for a wonderful show.

So Far has the runner up.

Any other time GD played Lady without the Terrapin? I dunno.

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In reply to by FiveBranch

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how about Morning Dew 6/10/73, which should a Dave's like, RIGHT NOW.

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Or is it, "Beatle-esque?"

Electric Light Orchestra.

I love ELO. Grew up on it on 1970's am radio in the car.

Jeff Lynne's melodies are the closest thing to the Beatles this side of Abbey Road.

Top 5 ELO songs:

Strange Magic
Evil Woman
Turn To Stone
Sweet Talkin' Woman
Don't Bring Me Down
Do Ya
Showdown
10538 Overture

\m/

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In reply to by LedDed

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....saw them in Cal Expo '89 when they opened with a Saturday Night. That was pretty cool.

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Favorite openers I've seen, 6/17/75 Winterland, Crazy Fingers, 7/30/83 Ventura, China Cat Sunflower.

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I always liked Feel Like a Stranger. It has that "when is the lysergic going to kick in" feel to it.
Bertha, Jack Straw, Cold Rain and Snow are fun. Let the Good Times Roll worked most of the time. Can't imagine them opening with Morning Dew in the modern era, wonder when they did that last? Lots of great openers, I am sure I left off a great many.

The most fun opener I ever got to see was Casey Jones. They only opened up with this once post hiatus. Man was that fun and rockin'.

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....what if they opened with a Miracle?

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In reply to by Vguy72

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I'd prefer a Dew or a Cumberland. :D

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In reply to by JimInMD

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Nice Jim, you were at 10/2/77. Sweet, that is my favorite Casey Jones, just rocks.
And I think it was an extended version
due to Jerry missing the lyrics. Great show and I hope it gets released at some point. Part of the returned Rex/Betty's.

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Check out 5/22/77, Pembroke Pines. Jerry goes from Wharf Rat into Terrapin sans Lady with a Fan. The full show is really good.

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....need more Cumberland openers.
I found 1.24.70, 2.2.70, 2.6.70.
Need a Make Good Money Five Dollars A Day boxxxx.

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Ever since the Cars were brought up I've been visiting YouTube daily. As hot as the first album was, I think Let's Go and It's All I Can Do are my two favorites.

Here are a couple versions of Let's Go. The first one is from 2011 after Benjamin died, with Ric doing a great job on vocals. And are those dueling SGs?? I think so.

2nd one is from '79 I believe, with Benjamin in his prime.

https://youtu.be/vmSQcYVhrPw

https://youtu.be/rpA3NVafsdo

On the Dead side, I've barely listened to anything other than this April release from Dave's Picks 37. Dave really rounded it off nicely with the bonus tracks. I must have 20 complete listens in.

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I’ve been in contact with customer service. They swear they delivered it to the post office. The post office swears they’ve never received it. If this keeps up I’ll be the one swearing.

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I saw the Dead open the 2nd set with Morning Dew, at the Greek on 6/14/85, I don't think they did that a whole lot in the post retirement era. This show would make a great release, and should certainly be part of a Greek Box set. I hope they have the tapes for the 1981 shows at the Greek in the vault, and they were not lost or erased.

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In reply to by billy the kid

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I like Help On The Way-Slipknot-Franklins as an opening - it worked well in that slot, and seemed the harbinger of good things to come. I'm not sure how common it was - but two that come immediately to mind are 5/9/77 and 10/31/90. I was at the latter show, which may be why I like it here, there or everywhere.

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In reply to by daverock

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Yes to Help on the Way. Not sure how I missed that, one of my favorite openers and I caught a few.

Good catch on the Greek Morning Dew BTK. I guessed there might be one or two.. Would have loved to have been at that one.

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10 years 6 months
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Closest I ever got at a small venue, maybe fifth row, a little to the right. We'd been awaiting the band's return to performing and bam! We got it. And there's a second set opening, Might As Well, speakinig of Festival Express.

06/19/76
Capitol Theater - Passaic, NJ
Set 1:
Help On The Way
Slipknot!
Franklin's Tower
The Music Never Stopped
Brown-Eyed Women
Cassidy
They Love Each Other
Looks Like Rain
Tennessee Jed
Playin' In The Band
Set 2:
Might As Well
Samson And Delilah
High Time
Let It Grow
Drums
Let It Grow
Dancin' In The Streets
Cosmic Charlie
Around And Around
Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad
One More Saturday Night
Encore:
Not Fade Away

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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8XS_1f9nRtA. 52 years ago today the Dead started this historic run of shows. The Dark Star is my favorite Dark Star. This run of shows has to be considered one of the best runs of Dead shows of alltime. I can listen to these shows and never get tired of them. Hopefully, 3/1/69 will come out on vinyl soon.

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