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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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  • SWR
    Joined:
    No shipping update

    I got the email Wednesday that my copy had shipped but UPS and USPS haven’t updated anything yet. What happens if I never receive it? Will dead.net ship me another? I always get the yearly sub but never had any trouble before.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Dead Nuggets and Fab Feb

    There are several songs on the Deads first album that would have sounded great on Nuggets. Any of those hyper breakdowns played at ( and on) great speed - plus Pigpens organ sound. Pure garage psych.

    One of those bands I really liked of that ilk were The Chocolate Watchband. The one to get is probably the compilation " Melts in Your Brain.. Not On Your Wrist". It includes their ultra trippy Inner Mystique album. Half the tracks on that weren't even played by the band, but were instrumentals played by studio musicians. It sounds like it would be crap- but its waaaay out there.

    A February Dead show I dug out this morning was 2/26/77, better known as Dave's Picks 29. It may not be quite up there with 68,69,70 or 74 Feb shows, but it's still a great listen. I love the way it opens with Terrapin Station - a perfect way to open a show. I'm surprised they didn't open with this more often-it seems much more appropriate there than in the second set, where it usually appeared.

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    So far...

    no shipping notice, no product...but that's cool...time is on my side...

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    The Seeds and Other Heady Nuggs

    You could probably make a valid argument that the Seeds invented punk rock. Check out 'Pushin Too Hard": two chords, lyrics so dumb they would make Dee Dee Ramone blush, a drummer who sounds like he hasn't yet discovered that he has cymbals. It's great! And it came out in November1965, months before the first Velvet Underground album and waaaay before the Stooges first album, which is often credited as the first punk record.

    I think I remember hearing the song on the radio as a little kid, but I definitely remember getting the Nuggets compilation in the '70s, Lenny Kaye (then a Rolling Stone writer, later guitarist for the Patti Smith Group) selected all the cuts, and he kind of sold everybody on an idea that no one had really considered up to that point: that a lot of the countless one-hit-wonder garage bands in the '60s had certain similarities--simplicity, an emphasis on raw emotion over polished musicianship, anti-authoritarian attitude, etc--and that eventually fueled the wave of punk bands that came out in the late '70s, I think.

    Anyway, Nuggets prompted me to check out a few albums by the some of the bands that had singles on the compilation. Alas, most of them didn't have the versatility to be interesting for more than a song or two. But the Seeds "Web of Sound" album is actually pretty good, in a twisted psych punk kind of way. And the first album by the Remains is actually great: excellent songs, good playing, good recording. Not sure why they weren't hugely popular. And Heads will know all about the 13th Floor Elevators, whose albums are also pretty pretty good.

    The Dead are almost never mentioned in the same breath as the Nuggets bands, which seems a little odd given that they come from the same period, and given that the Dead's earliest music would've fit right in on Nuggets. "Can't Come Down," "Alice D. Millionaire," "Cream Puff War," any of those songs would've fit right in. I suppose Lenny couldn't include the Dead (who he liked, wrote a positive review of Live Dead, in fact) because they weren't one-hit wonders, and by the time Nuggets came out they had already long since outgrown their psych punk roots. But those roots are there.

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Not sold out yet

    Either 25,000 is the right amount, or a lot of people don’t like April ‘78, which has been affirmed by some posts below.

    Maybe DaP 38 will go faster.

    UPS claims to have handed mine off to USPS, but it must be sitting on the loading dock because USPS hasn’t scanned it in yet.

  • deadtony
    Joined:
    Sjbutler

    In the same boat as you man.. Tracking notice that doesn't work no matter what I try

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Deaduary

    2/9/73
    2/15/73

    plus a whole lot more, as written by GOGD below

    Just because...I am listening to 1/13/80 at the moment. Not a Feb show, and one I am not very familiar with (had on cassette way back..had some oddball bias against it.) I think it was a benefit show, not a full blown GD show.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Mr Farmer let me harvest your crops

    I have two CDs of the Seeds

    Travel With Your Mind (compilation), purchased years back. "Chocolate River", "Travel With Your Mind", "The Flower Lady and Her Assistant", etc.
    First Album, linked via the courtesy of Carlo below

    early psychedelia

  • The Good Ole G…
    Joined:
    A Great Month

    BTK - I like where this conversation is going.

    And not just because of your nice complement ;)

    71 Capitol Theatre Run
    73 February shows are wonderful IMO 2/9, 2/15, 2/19, 2/26, 2/28 in particular
    74 Winterland shows are hot
    77 Swing Auditorium
    78 Dane County
    79 Keith & Donna’s Final Show is a ripper
    81 Uptown (I might need to listen to these again…)
    82 Pauley shows I think I dig those.

    And then you get a lot of shows at the HJK & Oakland Coliseum after that (Not consistently great playing, but great times!)
    And it’s worth noting 2/21/95 is the only official release from ’95.
    Did I leave any out?

    But really the shows you mentioned in 68, 69 & 70, for me are in the Pantheon of the most epic moments in GD Music History.

    Funny.. cause Playing In The Band is my fave and if I’m not mistaken, the first example of it’s origins, The Main Ten is from 2/19/69 Celestial Synapse… So that does it.

    February is magic.

    Edit: I see Doc was pointing some of these out too, and I didn’t go and read where this conversation started either so I’m just butting in here.
    Shit, I’m not ever sure where I am.
    Where am I?

  • sjbutler
    Joined:
    Was super geeked when I got…

    Was super geeked when I got my shipping notice last Wednesday, but here I am on Monday and the UPS tracking doesn't even show that that they have received it...the dreaded "UPS could not locate the shipment details for this tracking number." Anyone else experiencing this?

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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.

Thanks, THAT MIKE! Yes, very much agreed. I owned many of his albums on CD, but the CDs have long since deteriorated and my mp3 backup copies were mostly lost in computer crashes. Live 1990 is great, love hearing his Box of Rain in particular.

Other magical moments that come to mind, but certainly not all of them:

Tiger Rose - "Cruel White Water" and "Yellow Moon" (not to be confused with the Neville Brothers tune, which is also great)
Liberty - personally I dig "The Song Goes On," full of references to Krazy Kat & Ignatz, a great old comic strip, and "Come and Get It"
Rock Columbia - IMO every track on this album is stellar. "Eva," "Aim at the Heart," "What'll You Raise," and "Who , Baby, Who?" are probably my favorites from this batch but like I said they're all great.

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Paris 5/3/72 and JGB "30th anniversary" release. Also of note, Jefferson Airplane "Acid, Incense and Balloons"...the cover is a trip, literally(100+ of them actually)

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In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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Curious choice? I like every show on this tour, but some I have no memory of - and 5/3 is one of those. The Dark Star from 5/4 came out on vinyl on few years ago, so it makes a companion piece.

I never got many Robert Hunter albums, so I would welcome a reissue programme for them. I used to play Tales of the Great Rum Runners a lot in the vinyl days, and I had one called Liberty on vinyl too. Apart from those, and Armagellan Street on cd thats it.

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Hmmm . . . Utepils Springbok . . . Summit Oatmeal Stout . . . seems like it should be American beer, at least today . . . ?

Isn’t that every day?

Cheers folks!
Working on a 16oz Bell’s Oberon.

Interesting that the GD announcement of RSD, and the Rhino website, says 10000 copies, whereas the RSD drop list says 6700.
3300 being sent directly to internet resellers?

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April 7th, 1972, Wembley Empire Pool, London, England. Ah, my favorite part of the year. The kickoff date for the anniversary of the E72 tour. Every year I set out to listen to each show on it's anniversary date....and every year I go off the rails around Hamburg or Paris. Well, I got it down the first year since acquiring all the shows...

Some of the best banter ever on this tour:

Bobby: "Begging your indulgence, we're going to play on with another tune that's uh.......What the fuck are we doing?"

Jerry: "What indeed...."

Or there's Jerry when the acid kicked in: " look that guy's got a trailer!"

Good stuff. Great kick-off with Greatest Story Ever Told. Possibly my favorite of the tour. I really like done is half-scream on the "cool clear water well you can't ever tell" verse. Sometimes you got it once in the song sometimes twice. On this one you got it twice.

I really like the 8 minute part two of The Other One into Wharf Rat. I consider these this tour's 5 Wharf Rats my favorites ever. Dig Donna, but prefer Wharf Rat pre-hiatus when she doesn't sing on it.

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when the acid kicked in

Anybody ever shoot hoops "While electric?" :-)

It has been eons for me.

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In reply to by wilfredtjones

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But we used to do so while playing softball..we’d get a keg and go to the little league fields on like a Sunday when no one was there.

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Frisbee?
Yes

4-5 people on each side spread across a big grass area, tossing 4-5 frisbees at the same time. The trick is to get all the frisbees on one side, then throw them all at the same time at one person.

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50 years ago today…..

April 8, 1971
Boston Music Hall, Boston, Massachusetts

Set 1: Truckin'-Bertha-Next Time You See Me-Playing In The Band-Loser-Beat It On Down The Line-Second That Emotion-Sugar Magnolia-China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider-Casey Jones

Set 2: Dark Star>St. Stephen>Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Not Fade Away-Sing Me Back Home-Cumberland Blues-Greatest Story Ever Told>Johnny B. Goode

Encore: Good Lovin'

O, thou art fairer than the evening air clad in the beauty of a thousand stars……

Here the Dead treat the faithful in Boston to a fine, and in historical hindsight, very underrated show. Both sets start high. Mix with minimal amounts of grease and absolutely no country-Weir-and-western, throw in some Garcia-soul, rock and roll, and jamming and voila!!! Quirky April 1971 gooey goodness!!!

Interesting and unusual positioning of both the Dark Star and the Good Lovin’. And, pray tell, where did Second That Emotion come from?

Please, my friends, check it out!! You won’t regret it!!

Rock on!

Doc
Set your course by the stars, not by the lights of every passing ship…..

Nobody can beat Dock Ellis for sports accomplishments while dosed. Pitching a perfect game is one for the books. How he even saw home plate 60’+ away still amazes...
“Ellis D”, indeed.

That Doc Ellis feat is one to behold. I watched a documentary on that incident a few years back and was blown away. I could see how he could've honed in on home plate to atomic proportions given his headspace. That accomplishment is definitely one for The Books.

KeithFan, always awesome to be on the receiving end of your giddy Europe '72 shout outs; you provide the timbers to fuel that fire in my head and I go seeking the gems that haven't had ears on them in some time.

This goes for Doc, too, the '71 offerings are a continued treat. I've realized I need to check out today's droppage too.

Be Well People!
Sixtus

P.S. When the psychedelics kick-in, play GD - LOUD!

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In reply to by wilfredtjones

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Back in the 80's I had a job polishing the tops of airplanes. After a number of weekday shows I went from show to work. It's quite an experience walking on top of a 747, dc8 etc while sparking

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In another lifetime, in a galaxy far far away, certain individuals were known to indulge in a little “magic coffee” before skiing. (The recipe for magic coffee: take one thermos of coffee, add 1-2 purple microdots, shake vigorously. Serves 2-4.) Benefits of magic coffee included increased energy and improved ability to “trust your body.” Side effects included pink or purple snow and uncontrollable giggling.

As a side note, I only ever played music twice while, uh, feeling cosmic. The first time, I felt like Jimi Hendrix. All I had to do was think a musical thought, and the notes went flying effortlessly out into the universe as I, a mere spectator, stood in slack jawed wonder at the spectacularly cool shit coming outta my amp. The second time, I couldn’t get in tune, my hands felt like oven mitts, couldn’t remember any of the songs, and couldn’t wait for it to be over. So there was no third time. (Yet.)

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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....better pack my party favors.
Phishs summer tour is still up and running. I got my second shot yesterday.
I'm ready.
Gonna check on Ween. Still have my 3.19.20 unused tix.

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Mary Jane; (the ski area added to Winter Park, not the herb) First chair to last chair of the day. At least 23 runs as I recall. Couldn't conceive of eating on the lunch break. Needlepoint mescaline gave incredible focus and boundless energy. My only experience with that. Moguls on long skis with 6" of fresh. Great fun with the Park St. crew. Cheers mates!

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Does Trap shooting while tripping count as sport? Best score I ever had. Clay pigeons had tracers...couldn't miss.
Also, and maybe some of you have done this, jumping off the rocks at Ric's Cafe in Negril after downing some of Miss Brown's special tea.

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Saw your call out - always nice to hear from you man. I hope it's all good in Sixstusville.

Vguy - you spoke what I've often wondered - how on earth they kept it together tripping onstage. I also wonder how they procured while overseas during E72 tour. I guess that was Cutler's job.

Dead Storm Britain! 4/8/72. Lotta energy from Jerry on this one. Lots of fills between chords and solos. I guess I would say it's aggressive playing in general. Aggressive for Jerry anyway. He's always working on this one. I noticed it in Bertha a while back, and I've always dug some cool stuff he does in this Good Lovin'. Yesterday's run through made me realize he's doing it in just about every song. Tennessee Jed - smokin' solo.

Bobby: "We're going to start this set off once again just like last night with a song that rose straight to the top of charts in Turlock, California. This was number one, Numero Uno...."

Jerry (laughing): "That's just like you did last night man!"

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50 years ago today……

April 10, 1971
Mayser Gymnasium, Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster Pennsylvania

Set 1: Casey Jones-Me And Bobby McGee-Next Time You See Me-Loser-Beat It On Down The Line-Hard To Handle-Bertha-Playing In The Band-Deal-Good Lovin'

Set 2: Truckin'-Sing Me Back Home-Me And My Uncle-China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider-Cumberland Blues-Sugar Magnolia-Midnight Hour-Uncle John’s Band

If there must be “standard” or (heaven forbid, lol) “average” April 1971 shows, let it be like this.

For many, this show “suffers” for lack of a big jam. Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, can’t we all just enjoy some well played rock and roll Dead? As previously, both sets start high, the grease and country/western is back, you get a rare Good Lovin’ to close the first set, and a rarer still Midnight Hour. What’s not to like---or even love---about all that???

Unknown, unheralded, gathering only the faintest of whispers from 1971 aficionados, lost in the glare of what came after, yet still worth a listen!!

Rock on!!!

Doc
Sometimes there is no darker place than our thoughts, the moonless midnight of the mind

An interesting set list, Doc, and as always, you provide a great synopsis. I’ve had the NRPS in rotation lately, so this set list (with the “country/Weir” as you like to say) compliments that nicely.

The Grateful Dead could play concerts high on LSD because they practiced high on LSD.

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In reply to by mhammond12

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I seem to remember reading that Jerry once said that one of the pleasures of playing the acid tests was having the freedom not to play if he didn't feel like it. Maybe after 1966 they took lower doses to avoid feeling they had to play music when they felt too high to do so. Pure conjecture, of course.

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Is there a SBD recording of 4/29/77? Possibly a primo Charlie Miller remaster? If so, could one of you kind heads point me in the right direction? Shoring up the few remaining gaps in my collection.

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In reply to by SkullTrip

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I don't have a soundboard of this show and I am not seeing one on the Archive. It could be this one either doesn't exist or doesn't circulate for some reason.

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I've searched high and low for a soundboard of this one. Not so much because I need another 1977 show, but I've been wanting a good copy of the last remaining Help / Slip / Franklin from 1977. They only played it seven times that year, and the Slipknots were really really good.

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...A Touch of Grey & Built To Last come to my mind as I sit here writing with a saddened with a wounded heart & Spirit my 91 Year Old Aunt Passed thru the Pearly gates yesterday night. She will be truly missed by a very large family that extends into the history of the Grateful Dead believe it or not. I’m writing a book for quit some time and she plays a huge part & character from the past with a guest list of entertainers artists musicians any part of the arts consider it done snd has passed thru her stories and history. Her name , she was known most as Tiger-lily, she cast a vast spider like web in the NYC Lower east side arts section & more as the times scenes changed she never seemed to let go! May she Rest In Peace! Man, I have hundreds of stories I could share, I bet everyone here would just Smile smile smile!
Here’s to my Aunt , May she dance together forever with her greatest lover, her late Husband! Love is real not fade away!...Have a grateful weekend everyone, peace be with you all, be safe be kind! 🙏❤️💀🌹

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In reply to by JimInMD

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I see 3 songs tagged on to the end of the disc 3 from that date. Assume there's a SB somewhere. ("Sugaree" - 14:18, "Scarlet Begonias" - 9:45, "Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad"- 10:17)

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I have the mp3 played on Taper's Section. It's 192 Kbps only though.

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I, too, have not been able to find quality recordings of these shows, except for the Download Series #1 from 4/30. And that's a good one. I recall not seeing any tapers at my first show on 5/1, although there is a mid quality recording out there, probably from the balcony. My guess is that taping was verboten for this run. Somebody mentioned a wish for a Palladium Box not too long ago...YES PLEASE!

back...YES PLEASE!

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Right on. That's my primary motivation for finding it as well. Blues For Allah was my first Dead album, and remains my favorite studio recording. Any performance of H>S>F that I can lay hands and ears on, I will. That's why I was stoked when 9/28/75 made official release. Thanks again for that one, btw.

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I have a fairly good copy I downloaded years ago (over15) from the archive. Not sure of it's origins since I didn't make any notes on who remastered it. I do know that I most of my downloads were CM remasters, also If you look Charlie was on a roll remastering that
run

Was reading about searches for 4/29/77.

SBD does not currently circulate.
That being said, DL has played a number of tracks on Taper's Section in addition to the 3 tracks released on Download Series as follows:

Set 1 - Taper's Section tracks:
1. Help On The Way > Slipknot > Franklin's Tower
2. New Minglewood Blues
3. Cassidy

Set 2 - Taper's Section tracks:
1. Samson & Delilah, Sugaree > El Paso, Brown Eyed Women
2. Scarlet Begonias > GDTRFB (Download Series Volume 1 Filler)
3. Drums > The Wheel > Wharf Rat > Around n Around, Uncle John's Band

Them there are the SBD tracks I've been able to track down.
LMK if anybody has any of the other missing tracks.
You've got 5 songs missing from end of Set 1 and Estimated & Drums missing from Set 2.
There's an audience tape that includes those tracks in circulation.

Hope that helps somebody find some music they want to hear :)

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Anyone who thinks they expand or open doors to being a better artist is...ah...on drugs

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50 years ago today…..

April 12, 1971
Civic Arena, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Set 1: Cold Rain And Snow-Me And My Uncle-Bertha-Next Time You See Me-Playing In The Band-Loser-Cumberland Blues-Hard To Handle-Greatest Story Ever Told>Johnny B. Goode

Set 2: Truckin'>drums>The Other One>Wharf Rat-Me And Bobby McGee-Casey Jones-Sugar Magnolia-Deal-Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Turn On Your Love Light

A very solid show that one rarely, if ever, hears about. Why is that? Because it was Pittsburgh?

Truth be told, the folks in the steel city got a real treat and seriously good show that night. Hard rockin’ mix of rock & roll, grease, and Bobby. Big jam to open the second set and a Lovelight in the classic show-closing position.
Underrated and worthy of your consideration!

I have turned lots of people on to this show, no complaints so far!!

Rock on!

Doc
Be grateful for luck. Pay the thunder no mind - listen to the birds. And don't hate nobody….

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For better and worse, some drugs seem to transform people into more extreme versions of what they already are.

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