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    "When it came to 1973 Dead, I was always drawn to the big second-set jams, 'Dark Star' or 'The Other One,' and all of the places those songs could go that year. One week during my initial stint with the Dead, Dick was spending a lot of time listening to 9/8/73, and he could not stop raving about it. He was very intent on pointing out that despite the absence of the 'Big Two' from 1973, every song, every solo, every moment was out-of-this-world excellent. He played me the first set, giving a play-by-play of each song and what made it special. In those listening sessions, Dick taught me a lot about how to listen critically and objectively. Of course, the subjective self always creeps in, those moments when you whoop and holler at how good a performance is, but that objective listening is critical. After many days of listening, Dick moved to other eras, as was his wont, since he carried the responsibility of selecting the best Dead shows from all eras to represent the Dead’s recorded legacy. But he made it clear and inarguable that he felt 9/8/73 was one of the best-played shows from one of the Dead’s best years." - David Lemieux

    Despite the gloriously blustering artwork above, the forecast for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 38: NASSAU VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUM, UNIONDALE, NY, 9/8/73 is blazing hot! With a double endorsement from archivists Dick Latvala and David Lemieux, you know it's a MUST HAVE. This one's got inspired playing from start to finish, with soon-to-be-minted Wake Of The Flood classics, a first-ever "Weather Report Suite," Keith polishing his chops on "Let Me Sing Your Blues Away," Jerry tapping into era-defining sound with his Wolf guitar, and we'd be remiss if we didn't mention Bob's exquisite playing too.

    Among our 2021 Dave's Picks subscribers? The subscribers-only bonus disc featuring nearly an hour and a half from 9/7/73 is coming your way too. (P.S. there's 35 minutes of 9/7/73 on Dave's Picks Vol. 38, to boot)

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 38: NASSAU VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUM, UNIONDALE, NY, 9/8/73 was recorded by Kidd Candelaro and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

    Didn't subscribe? You'll want to jump on this one now as it is guaranteed to sell out.

     *2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Edible stories....

    ....I just consumed two gummies. I'll fill in the details later.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    9 3 85

    Nice lil show

    Anyone here attend that one?

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Can't resist an edibles story, Crow

    Flashback to 1973... I'm 15... like Crow, gifted with an enormous bag of unsmokeable produce, baked it into brownie mix (think about the name, Betty Crocker...) and I get the munchies and so consume half the pan while my two bros share the rest. We're in Vermont, hitchhiking to a trailhead. Car pulls over, my two bros get in up front, then pack the three backpacks and me into the hatchback area. Drive of unknown duration ensues, then the driver pulls over to let us out. They pull the backpacks out and, left slumped over, basically unconscious, is my 15-yr-old long-haired dead ass, just laying there. All I heard was "Say, is that g-g-guy gonna b-b-b-e a-l-l-l-r-r-r-ight??!!" My buddies just laughed and literally dragged my body over the hatchback rim onto the ground, where I gathered myself as the driver peeled out. Thing was, we put on our backpacks and climbed a mountain. No biggie! Ah, the resiliency of youth.

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Don't Eat the Green Brownies

    Edibles. Everybody has an edibles story, right? Mine involves a hippie grower named Zemo who gifted me a grocery bag of shake trimmings, which turned out to be practically unsmokeable, and were therefore crumbled into a box of Betty Crocker brownie mix, which turned out to be surprisingly tasty, given their rather unappetizing hue, and surprisingly potent. Suffice to say the day got weird, and I had to resort to counting railroad ties, a la Cowboy Neal, for about four hours in order to get my mind back in my body. Nearly died of cottonmouth. Ah, good times.

    I remember buying an early copy of Live at Leeds, and somewhere in the deluxe packaging (that poster of Townsend was on my wall for years) there was a notice that the scratchy sounds were not a defect, but were put on the record intentionally as part of the whole gimmick of making the “official” album seem like one of the bootlegs the hipsters were exchanging in those days. Now, my turntable in those days was made out of rocks and it had a bird beak for a stylus, so didn’t really notice. But still seems like a weird thing to do.

    Then again, there weren’t really no rules whatsomever in ‘60s rock y roll. A lot of bands didn’t even play on their studio records, so nobody was going to sweat a few studio overdubs on a supposedly “live” recording. Lots of bands (even some good ones) issued “live” albums that were nothing but studio recordings with audience screams dubbed on. And lots of live albums (even some good ones) were just issued because the band owed the record company another album and didn’t have any new songs. S&R, by contrast, had a bunch of new tunes, at least, and it wasn’t really being sold as a “live” record anyway—at least not in the way Live Dead was. So who cared about the mysterious piano at the end of Wharf Rat?

    I love this concept of Mt. Rushmore shows! But my knowledge is pretty much limited to the official releases, so I can’t drop any science on yall. I agree that at least one show from Europe 72 could be carved in stone, and at least one show from May 77 should probably there. There’d have to be a show from 69. Beyond that? The only show I would insist on is Veneta. That is just a sacred document AFAIC. Here’s the Dead, playing for free, for friends, and playing their hearts out for three-plus hours in the blistering sun, and it doesn’t get much better.

  • DeadVikes
    Joined:
    Billy the Kid

    Done. Sent.

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Deadvikes

    Deadvikes, Thank you so much for the offfer, that is extremely kind of you. I think I'll pass for now, I have pretty much what I want. I do have a Grateful Dead item you might be interested in, pm me your email address and I'll fill you in. Again, Thank you so much.

  • DeadVikes
    Joined:
    Billy the Kid

    Check your PM.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Billy the Kid and Stuff

    I saw that and instantly thought of the Python skit Archaeology Today. The next list will list 12 things, then the next 16, finally the award going to the man who had the record Jerry recorded in an arcade booth when he was seven! For years rumor had it was China Cat Sunflower. But after closer inspection it was realized that song was two decades away. Then proof positive appeared, the record itself!!! It was Jerry doing "A - Your Adorable" a popular hit of the day by Jo Stafford and Gordon MacRae, Gordon of course went on to star in Oklahoma and Jo went on to sing about Spiders & Snakes. The owner would only play a recording of the record, not wanting to overplay the vinyl, the recording I'm told is adorable, but tracking fast.

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Grateful Dead box sets I own

    1. Fillmore West, 2. Europe 72, 3. Winterland 73, 4. GTSTL, 5. PNW 73/74, 6. July 1978, 7. June 1976, 8. Golden Road, Beyond Description, & So many Roads. My favorites are the first three, they get repeat listens all the time. I'm. really looking forward to the next one, hopefully it's 67 to 74.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Gifts

    My friend gave me a bunch more CDs last week

    85, 86, 87, 88

    I dont anticipate listening to the 87 and 88 stuff too much, but the 85 and 86...

    86 is an oddball year for the GD, fo' sho'

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3 years 8 months

"When it came to 1973 Dead, I was always drawn to the big second-set jams, 'Dark Star' or 'The Other One,' and all of the places those songs could go that year. One week during my initial stint with the Dead, Dick was spending a lot of time listening to 9/8/73, and he could not stop raving about it. He was very intent on pointing out that despite the absence of the 'Big Two' from 1973, every song, every solo, every moment was out-of-this-world excellent. He played me the first set, giving a play-by-play of each song and what made it special. In those listening sessions, Dick taught me a lot about how to listen critically and objectively. Of course, the subjective self always creeps in, those moments when you whoop and holler at how good a performance is, but that objective listening is critical. After many days of listening, Dick moved to other eras, as was his wont, since he carried the responsibility of selecting the best Dead shows from all eras to represent the Dead’s recorded legacy. But he made it clear and inarguable that he felt 9/8/73 was one of the best-played shows from one of the Dead’s best years." - David Lemieux

Despite the gloriously blustering artwork above, the forecast for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 38: NASSAU VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUM, UNIONDALE, NY, 9/8/73 is blazing hot! With a double endorsement from archivists Dick Latvala and David Lemieux, you know it's a MUST HAVE. This one's got inspired playing from start to finish, with soon-to-be-minted Wake Of The Flood classics, a first-ever "Weather Report Suite," Keith polishing his chops on "Let Me Sing Your Blues Away," Jerry tapping into era-defining sound with his Wolf guitar, and we'd be remiss if we didn't mention Bob's exquisite playing too.

Among our 2021 Dave's Picks subscribers? The subscribers-only bonus disc featuring nearly an hour and a half from 9/7/73 is coming your way too. (P.S. there's 35 minutes of 9/7/73 on Dave's Picks Vol. 38, to boot)

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 38: NASSAU VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUM, UNIONDALE, NY, 9/8/73 was recorded by Kidd Candelaro and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

Didn't subscribe? You'll want to jump on this one now as it is guaranteed to sell out.

 *2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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Interesting to me that all ( well, lets say most, to be on the safe side) of Robert Hunter's songs were definitively interpreted by other people, not himself. His own records always felt more like fringe benefits to me, rather than A1 records.
And of those that sang his songs, Jerry Garcia was surely the one who seemed most in tune with the words he was singing. In fact when he was singing them-at his peak - it seemed he was expressing his own world view in song, rather than someone else's. I guess that is the mark of all great interpretive singers.

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Gary, I always refer to the festival as Hollywood, Newcastle under Lyme, but all of your additions (aka) are also correct, they simply locate the space more specifically...(and Space is the place!)
But did the Dead play London directly afterwards? My understanding is that prior to72 they only played twice in Europe, the Chateaux in France and later Hollywood. I have read that they played in London, but I have always thought this to be incorrect ( wild horses wouldnt have kept me away if they were to play in my Hood!)
Did they actually play or was this a hastily cobbled together plan which fell through? An urban myth....? We know that the Lyceum shows in 72 were added as the tour progressed, and shows planned for the Rainbow/Finsbury Park Astoria fell through...perhaps Simonrob knows more?

Deadbase shows they Played 1970/05/25 in London with Fleetwood Mac. I think that is enlickely. I think they planned to go back to London for a couple of days. You know, make the long trip, might as well see the historical sights while there. I mean history of England, and history of the other psychedelic scene. Hunter says on the documentary (which I am going to watch again as I have it on my dvr) that the rest of the entourage went out for the day and left him with a case of wine in his room alone. While looking out on the bustling streets of London he felt a peaceful wave (my words) overcome him and the muse directed him to pen the lyrics to those three songs.

Therefore, I am guessing a promoter at the Hollywood Festival started talking to Jerry (or another) where it was explained they would be in London for some period. It might have only been 2-3 days tops. No one knows for sure. So I think this promoter was trying to set up an impromptu gig for the next day after Hollywood. Maybe it was too much work to get down and get announced and get ticket sales, so it fell through. My guess is the fellas were leaving next day on the 26th, so another date would not work. Workingman's was released within a few days of the Festival, in May.

Deadbase shows the first To Lay Me Down was on 1970/07/30. It only shows an accoustic set so I am assuming an electric set is lost. This show was at the Fillmore West (Avalon Ballroom???, cant remember if that was the previous name) with NRPS. The first Ripple and Brokedown were on 1970/08/18 with NRPS. This occurred at the Matrix, wow what a small venue for that show. Even better, accoustic Ripple into Brokedown.

I have never heard any of these shows. I think when Writing the Book of the Deadheads (Grushkin Basset, Grushken), they along withthe guys at Deadbase began going back to research shows. Who knows. As they went thru the archives of material they put together a lot of the non documented things. So I think these were the folks that probably stumbled on things that didnt have the right documentation. So Stand Lyceum London almost certainly did not happen. You say yourself, you would have made it for sure!!!

Hope that helps from the little bit of knowledge I have. Two England shows before E72. There is still so much to uncover with this band. Sometimes it makes my head swim.

G

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Hey Oro - How are efforts going to contain that wild fire just beyond your property? How many acres is it now, and are you near an evacuation situation? Stay safe, my friend!

AJS - Two good choices to build a team around. When Seattle comes in next season, like Vegas before them, they should have some premium guys to pick from for Season 1. When I head over to Vancouver to see my son who lives there, I’ll definitely coordinate it so I can make the trek down to Seattle to see the Kraken.

Do or die for the Isles tonight. Tampa Bay is a powerhouse, but the Isles are the proverbial flies at a picnic - pesky, and always in your face. Tomorrow, Vegas has the same challenge, but I keep thinking they are the far superior team, I feel like they just let the Habs get in their head.
Man, I love playoffs.

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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Oro be safe. Hate the west gets so many fires. Hoping for rain your way!

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I think you may have it backwards when you write that "Jerry Garcia ... seemed most in tune with the words he was singing... it seemed he was expressing his own world view in song, rather than someone else's. I guess that is the mark of all great interpretive singers."

Moment, please. No criticism, but a few thoughts... I would suggest that the effect you cite is actually proof of Hunter's songwriting genius: that he could pen the words that would sound like Jer's worldview when Jer sang them. I say this because Jer was Hunter's first "puppet singer" (coined a phrase!) and songwriting collaborator of any note. Hunter could write in a universal manner and, yes, Jer made the sentiments sound universal, but Hunter also wrote specifically for the man, Jerry Garcia, and from that man's view of the world. THAT is Hunter's genius and genesis, not Jer's. I mean Jer rightly gets his due, but at the spark of creation, the thoughts and words are Hunter's. I believe that, at times, Jer has said as much.

Maybe splitting hairs or turning things inside out, but these thoughts occurred to me as you indeed lauded Hunter.

And remember, Hunter essentially was a solo artist, versus Garcia, who had one band perennially surrounding him. Hunter, like Dylan, merely assembled the cast he needed each time he entered the studio, in order that each effort would sound unique.

That is all.

Cant wait for Gary and Dave and another great show I’ve not yet heard!

PF, sorry bud, of course only kidding, shamelessly always going for the laugh.
I know your a good sport so didn’t think you’d mind...

Gary & Mike, thanks. It’s about 10 miles from us. Not in danger currently, but close enough to get ya thinking. Saw flames reflecting off the clouds first night. Nearest closure is about half way. Think it’s only about 4K acres so far but shifting (waiting on updates)...they called in one of the best national teams and more big hardware. So far the winds been mostly good, but if it shifts, there’s a ton of fuel and a clear path back to town, so I think their getting more serious about it...possible rain tomorrow night and Friday, let’s hope!

NHL playoffs, crazy how fast things can change.
What ever happens there’s been some great games!

Ok, show time!

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Daverock - Great point. Jerry was a better interpreter of songs because he, unlike Hunter, has a melodic delivery. Hunter would write the overall structure but not always with the melody. Jerry is good with the melody.

Hunter and Dylan are similar that way - great songwriters, but others had a more melodic delivery on their work.

I remember and interview with Jerry about Dylan songs, said something like "Dylan's songs have great melodic sense but Dylan doesn't always sing it."

It’s the little things like Gallagher busting his ass down the ice to nullify an icing call that the casual fan may not appreciate.

Funny you mention seeing a game out west. Our family did the Seattle-Vancouver run last year. The Canucks were only in town for one night. It turns out that the Sea to Sky gondola had just reopened after being closed for a year due to vandalism. So we chose to head up to Squamish. It was spectacular and I am glad we made choice. Unfortunately, we made the additional drive up to Whistler since it was so close and missed the game. Just yesterday watching the game my daughter turns to me and says, “I really wish we saw a Canucks game. Whistler was too touristy.”

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Saw him perform once in early June 1984 at the Line Camp in Pojoaque , New Mexico when he was a member of the Dinosaurs. 🦕🦕🦕🦕. The liberty caps were just exactly perfect. The bass player Peter Albin and I talked some. He was interested if any communes were left. I remember Hunter sang Wild Bill (loves diamond Lil) . A few days later I went to Red Rocks for my first time. Three nights of good ol’ Grateful Dead. 1984 was a good year. Robert Hunter was the gnostic key of lyrical brilliance that made so much of the music of the Grateful Dead “glow with the gold of sunshine”.

Have you seen the movie Strange Brew with Bob and Doug McKenzie?

Bob drinks an entire tank of beer and then puts out a large fire by peeing on it.

Just saying……

Good luck!

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I did see a Canucks game when I visited my son shortly after he moved to Vancouver. It was a blast, I love seeing games in other towns. Seattle will make for a great double header with the Kraken, in that I can easily see a game in BC then head down to Seattle for a game.

Speaking of Squamish (pretty town) - the Dead were supposed to play a music festival there shortly after Woodstock, but bailed based on their performance at Woodstock. And your daughter is so right - Whistler is way way too touristy. Great for skiing, and mountain biking in the summer, but crazy expensive.

Oro - I’m glad to hear things are safe your way. I was reading you guys have been cursed with all kinds of wildfires, most appear to have been caused by lightning, so here is hoping for rain and lots of it, out your way.

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did anyone find anywhere, how many the purple vinyl set was "limited" to?

Hendrixfreak - yes, so you are saying that Robert Hunter wrote the lyrics with the foreknowledge that Jerry would be singing them-and this informed what he wrote? It does sound likely. Maybe the overall effect of listening to the songs is to witness the symbiosis-if that's the right word - of two great artists working in unison.

Thin - I have always sensed a similarity in approach between Robert Hunter and Dylan. I don't actually have that many Robert Hunter solo albums-Rumrunners is one I do have though, and that fits the bill. It has It Must Have Been The Roses on, of course-very different from the version on Garcia's solo album - Hunters version has a much rougher sound, as I remember it.

Regarding Robert Hunter live-I believe he came to England and played some solo shows-maybe around 1981.I think he may have played at Glastonbury-or maybe some London dates. Unfortunately I didn't find out about it until he had gone back, whatever happened.

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First, lets clear up a couple of points of confusion:

In England, there are two Newcastles, namely Newcastle upon Tyne and Newcastle-under-Lyme.
Newcastle upon Tyne is on the north east coast of England. The Grateful Dead played there on April 11, 1972 - the third show of their Europe '72 tour.
Newcastle-under-Lyme is in the English midlands, approximately mid way between Birmingham and Manchester. Leycett is a small place a few miles west of Newcastle-under-Lyme and is where the Hollywood Festival was held on May 23 & 24, 1970 The Grateful Dead played on May 24.

Regarding the alleged show at the Lyceum in London on May 25, 1970, a lot of the confusion over this show is almost certainly down to the fact that the Grateful Dead performed at the Lyceum on May 23, 24, 25 & 26, 1972 NOT 1970.

That cleared up, we can move on to the show on May 25, 1970. This show may have been tentatively planned but all the evidence suggests that it never took place. There is a website called concertarchives which lists shows at various venues including the esteemed Lyceum. There is no show listed at that venue on May 25, 1970 but the New Riders of the Purple Sage and the Grateful Dead are listed as playing there for 4 shows on May 23, 24, 25 & 26, 1972 which we all know and love as this was part of the Europe '72 tour. Furthermore, here on dead.net, under the show archive is a page dedicated to The Strand Lyceum, May 25, 1970 where doubt is expressed as to whether this show actually happened. 3 of 4 posters are pretty sure it didn't happen and the fourth confuses the date with May 25, 1972. D'oh. I am sure there are plenty of other sites that reference this show but I have seen nothing to suggest that it really did take place.

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Thanks Simon for succint clarification, said better, and with more knowledge, than I could. ( Im still chuckling to myself about badkamer!)

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England 1970....

Go to youtube.
Type this in the search box: Grateful Dead, China-Rider jam, England 1970

You'll find a ripping video clip, albeit brief, of The Dead performing live, outdoors in England.

There's also a Garcia interview, during the E72 tour, where Garcia discusses playing in England, in 1970....

This China jam from 1970 is a smoker. Check out Garcia's boots!! You will plainly see that is Garcia and the boys in 1970. Not 72... (plus Mickey is there)

Here's the full setlist

Casey Jones
China
Rider
Hard to Handle
Me and My Uncle
Cryptical
Drums
Other One
Cryptical
Attics
Good Lovin
Cold Rain
Dark Star
St. Stephen
NFA
GDTRFB
NFA
Lovelight

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Looks like the new release will be Johnny Cash at the Carousel Ballroom 04/24/1968.

Skull 'n Roses is on the way!

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Personally, I'm stoked to get the remastered S&R with the extra '71 material. Perhaps its appearance in our mailboxes will release Dave to announce the box. (Six shows from fall '72 or give me vintage Grease, please. Translation: spring '69.)

Then there's a Jer show coming out that I attended with friends in Nov. '91 at MSG.
Tedeschi-Trucks Band issue a live version of their take on Layla, 19 July.
'Course we don't yet know DP 39, which should drop at the end of July.
Remastered All Things Must Pass arrives in August.
Plus, I've got some old Dylan albums on order, which arrive any time.

Clearly, this leaves little time for working and crap like that....

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In reply to by bigbrownie

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Thanks Brownie for the Bear Update, will have to get that one. Saw the Man in Black a couple of times. Can't wait to hear that.

JSJay: Yep that is from the Hollywood Festival. Will have to look that up as I have not Seen it.

SimonRob - thanks for the update and the additional information. Knew we could count on you to shed additional light on the subject. Newcastle upon Tyne and Newcastle-Under-Lyme. They sound like two sisters from an old country song, down where I am located in Hicksville (j/k). Or maybe the name of one woman, depends how you See it. Kind of like "Yor Cheatin Heart." "I thought she was a Newcastle upon Tyne but turned to be a Newcastle-Under-Lyme." Of course Lyme or lime is what killers/murders use to dispose of their victim. "Don't Murder Me."

That old Tony BollWeevil mad a heck of a Shot.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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....My second Dave's 38 glass arrived today packed in bubble wrap intact!!
Thanks tptb for listening.
Plus, rumor has it that Vegas is starting Cody Glass toknight at center.
Bodes well, if I believed in coincidences.

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Both hit my Saint Paul mailbox today.

Dennis, you're welcome! We'll be broke (but happy) together. Similarly, HendrixFreak has me wondering if I need ANOTHER remaster of All Things Must Pass . . .

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I’ve had a good friend from there for many years. The Geordie accent is unique. Hell of man, salt of the Earth. Eric Burden is a native of there. He turned 80 May 11. I fricken love the Animals. Why he even mentioned the Grateful Dead in his song “Monterey”.
As much as I love All Things Must Pass, I do have the 30th anniversary remix. Brilliant beautiful album.
Johnny Cash at the Carousel Ballroom, thank you Bear, wherever you are or are not. Saw Johnny Cash with the Highwaymen in Las Cruces in 1990. Now that was a trip, while tripping. June Carter Cash was introduced from her seat between me and the stage. Her white chiffon dress and smile as bright as a lighthouse beacon as she stood up, turned around and waved is permanently etched in my memory.
The latest JJ installment of Good ol Grateful Deadcast was really interesting.

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Shattering news, VGuy!

(Sorry about that, Chief!). I’m glad the “other” glass came through.

Good luck tonight!

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The Owsley Stanley Foundation appears to have all (5) reels of the GD's show on 10 Dec '72 and at least one has been digitally transferred, so I hold out hope that the missing reel to 19 Sept '72 is with the OSF and they've told me they're keeping an eye out for it... So, yeah, the next installment of Bear's Sonic Journals is indeed Mr. Cash at the Carousel. I wonder if anyone had the cajones to dose him...

As for All Things Must Pass, I had the vinyl back when it came out and haven't purchased any CD versions/remasters in the intervening 51 years, so I thought I'd treat myself to the 50th rehash. Frankly, I hope they thinned out Spector's Wall of Sound so we can hear the damn thing clearly.

The new Harvey Brooks autobio just showed up with some Dylan backpages: Street Legal, Before the Flood and Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid.

There is a first print of Anthem over at the bay that has a buy now of $40. In case anyone is looking for that. I would buy it myself, but I have a lot of vinyl and I do have a turn table but it has been 35 years since it was actually hooked up. Once I went more digital I decided to not look back.

Strider - Gnosis key is a great phrase turner (gnosis being knowlege in Greek - or a deeper understanding is to aquire knowlege by experience or trial and error). There are others that take it deeper but I tend to use another greek word for that wisdom. I do believe Mr. Hunter had a much larger influence than many people realize. If memory serves, his first pen was Dark Star. You can tell he was a deep thinker and book reader, his understanding of the deeper things in life shines thru in so many ways.

Man in Black - the band I talk about sometimes, in 1994, I think, had the picture of Mr. Cash giving the finger on the back side of their tour laminates.

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9 years 2 months

In reply to by snafu

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Nice work Snafu.

I bought the movie on DVD years ago and still watch it once a year.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Have the VHS, need to see if I can stream it, been ages. Ooooo lockoo Koo, ka, coockoo koo, aaaaaa, or what ever that sing song sound they make lol, Take Off eh!
I’d post a you no what, but....ahem

Raining a little at last, phew, was thinking I might have to take Conekids advice ; )

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Still remember the Bob and Doug call from my teen years, and still use it when in a crowd or store or the woods to call my wife and kids.

....I love that movie. When they pour their dad's last beer from Hosehead's dog food bowl back into a glass has me rolling every time.
Alrighty then. Time to beat that pesky Canadian team. Onward!!!
Rained pretty heavy in Vegas today. It was a welcome sight.

Paris

Weird Weir almost or is non existent in the mix

Curious

Tie-dye curious?

Also listening to 6 21 71

9 9 74 decent
9 10 74 dixpix
9 11 74 yes
9 14 74 gotta hear it again
9 18 74 grrrreat
9 20 74 strong
9 21 74 pretty alright

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Now open the damn border, so I can go to Montreal.

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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I saw Johnny Cash in 1988, when he came to Manchester. He played Big River, which was the first time I had heard him sing it. A great, and for me at that time, unusual concert. He seemed to play his better known songs in the first half of the evening, with his band, and then for the second half he invited members of his family on stage to sing and dance. Vert different from the standard rock gig of the day.

Going on from Gary's observation that Robert Hunter was well read, the lyrics of Dark Star seem influenced by T.S.Eliot's " The Love Song Of J Alfred Prufrock." The first three lines of the poem are -
" Let us go then, you and I, / When the evening is spread out against the sky / Like a patient etherised upon a table;"

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Hey VGuy - Sorry for all the Get Smart references, but no need to cover the mirrors in the house and light candles, and only black clothing - your GK did great. One of the premier teams in the league, in such a short time. My Toronto Maple Duds have gone since the days New Potato Caboose was in regular rotation for Pigpen & the boys without winning the Cup. Our motto: There’s always next season.

Great series. Now, Isles, finish off the Bolts, and let’s put an end to this Habs madness.

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One of the all time greatest soundtracks ever. The movie is brilliant also.
Anthem of the Sun, first print, I was thinking the incredible art print from Bill Walker. I had to read the fine print. Vinyl. Now if I had bought two of every poster and album I ever owned from 1967 through 1971 and placed one of every mint copy in a time capsule I’d be driving a ........ and living in a .......... And if my aunt, never mind.
The time I saw the Highwaymen in Las (crudes) (sic- thank you Kinky Friedman) Johnny Cash sang Big River and Kris Kristofferson sang Me and Bobby McGee. Waylon and Willie were pretty dang bueno also.
Here in southwest New Mexico, Fire on the Mountain. And the last three nights, Mountains of the Moon.

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Daverock, great observation on Dark Star and Hunter's influences, your posts are always so intelligent and we'll thought out. Hunter and Garcia were both really smart guys and were influenced by lots of different sources. Your lucky you got to see Johnny Cash, he was definitely bigger then life, what a great musician.

My Garcia Live 16 has arrived from Crozet Va. I threw in a couple Tiger pint glasses for good measure.

Time to break out the Cone of Silence so I can enjoy my first listen uninterrupted...
I'm a struggling man
and I've got to move on....

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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I was thinking the same thing,,, the amount of stuff that is coming in right now!!!

Just ordered the Tim Buckley Owsley show,,,, don't know how that one got by me. Guess Johnny isn't ready for ordering.

My Mingus at Carnegie Hall came in the other day,,, very nice. Vinyl is next month.

Purple Zappa came yesterday!!

The Jerry show is coming via mail innovations,,,, who knows when ,,, says it's coming. Guess Jim paid off someone to get so quick!

And we should be hearing about DaP 39!

Like that old song,,,,,, It's raining music.....

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JIMINMD: I would like to hear your scouting report on the new Garcia 16, once you get a chance to listen to it. Mine generally sit at Customs for days, while the Mounties scan it for contraband.
Siegfried - “This is KAOS. We don’t Shush here!” (I actually saw Bernie Kopell in a small dinner theatre play (“Viagara Falls”) that the wife and I went to, and every time he spoke, I’m thinking “Get Smart”. Best show ever, and 99, hottest agent ever!

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I love vinyl, but I love good sound even more. People tend to assume that the first vinyl pressing is going to be the best-sounding version of a given release, but that’s not always the case, especially with older recordings. I’ve got lots of old Chess blues records that I collected decades ago, that I never listen to, because they don’t hold a candle to the CD reissues, fer example. With Anthem, I think the recent 50th anniversary thing sounds waaaay better than the original lp. Part of it, for me, is that I actually prefer Phil’s 1971 remix. (Most of the time.) If you just want to own Anthem as a physical object, sure, pay $40 (or more) for a first issue vinyl, which would be a bitchen THING to have. But if you want to hear the music, the CD’s better, IMHO, FWIW, YMMV, ROFL, yadda yadda.
Bob Hunter was truly one hep dude. One of the heppist. I’ve always loved the nod to Eliot in “Dark Star.” Also fun to note: in closing verse of “Attics,” we get the line “When the secrets all are told/and the petals all unfold.” Now, from what I’ve been told, “apocalypse,” in Greek, means “an uncovering,” and can be used to describe the unfolding of a flower, which is the kind of thing Robert Hunter would definitely have known. So this is a really really hip way to reference the end of time, I think. Just one example of why Hunter’s lyrics added such incredible depth and resonance to the Dead’s music.
It definitely is raining music these days. Having failed in my Record Store Day quest to acquire the Olympia vinyl set, I figured it’s only fair and karmicly correct that I blow the roughly $130 I did NOT spend there on other music, so I’ve recently acquired the ABB’s Fillmore West ’71 thing, and deluxe edition of their Bear’s Sonic Journals release. As if 7 discs worth of Duane-era ABB wasn’t enough to keep me busy, I also ordered fresh-from-the-vaults items from Neil (Down in the Rust Bucket) and Can (Live in Stuttgart). Oh yeah, also a couple Tedeschi Trucks concerts I ordered from nugs. So, if anybody needs me, I’ll in front of the stereo.

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I love it

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"Kaos used to be such a fun aw-ganization..." Schteigart on Get Smart, speaking in Brooklyn-ese!

Gents, I believe I paved the way with my "Moment, please" to Daverock.

Of course, I was one-upped by the "Craw, not Craw!" which is definitely not PC, but funny as hell. Thanks to Mel Brooks and Buck Henry.

Didn't know we had Smart-heads on this forum. And, um, yeah, 99 was THE hottest. And the Cone of Silence, especially the PORTABLE CoS, was the best ever.

GarciaLive 16 and S&K due here today... Time to break out the Cone! Er, headphones.

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....disappointed? Of course. But thats sports for ya. You know what you're signing up for.
Skull & Roses out for delivery.
Now excuse me. My shoe is ringing.

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But that clears the deck for a box announcement, well before # 39 gets trotted out.

Sorry Vguy, I dialed the wrong number. I was trying to get JimMD's kayak shoe. But it's busy.....

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