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    We're feelin' Philly 4/26/83 and its '80s highs. See what we're on about when you pick up DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 39: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 4/26/83, the final show of a three-week tour, played at the venue that the Dead played more than Madison Square Garden (there's your daily dose of Dead trivia). This one fires on all cylinders, with extremely well-played, high-energy tight sets featuring newbies "West L.A. Fadeway," "My Brother Esau," rarities like Brent's tune "Maybe You Know," precise medleys "Help>Slip>Franklin's," an inspired new pairing "Throwing Stones>Not Fade Away," and the Dave's Picks debut of "Shakedown Street."  And before you come down, we've got a prime slice of bonus material from the previous Spectrum show 4/25/83 and an extra dollop of '83 from the War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY 4/15/83 (featuring the Bobby rarity "Little Star").

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 39: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 4/26/83 was recorded by Dan Healy and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

    *2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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  • hendrixfreak
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    I Don't Live Today, eh, proudfoot??

    And Dennis, YES, I draw the line at Tiny Tim. I don't mind seeing the Owsley folks putting out that 12-LP vinyl set, I'm just not buying it....

    So we can agree, DP 40 is a total crap shoot!

    Meanwhile, the GD a cover band after the hiatus? That's the goofiest thing I've heard lately in this digital swamp. From '76 (a totally new band) to perhaps 80-81 the GD rocked the country without mercy.

  • Colin Gould
    Joined:
    Johnny Cash

    The UK Amazon site list two versions of the forthcoming Sonic Journal vinyl. One is described as a box set but they are both listed as 2 disc versions with the same number of tracks. There is no indication of any difference apart from the box set version costing around £30 more than the other one. They appear to be coming out in December unlike the cd which is due in September. Perhaps more info will appear soon

  • Dennis
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    Tried to edit, but....

    Tried to edit last message, but system wouldn't do it.

    I found a amazon page that listed the vinyl copy (limited). Had to do a search for limited vinyl and the amazon came up. I think I have cd and vinyl ordered from . Cd coming out end of October,,,, looks like vinyl not until December?

    Could not find how to order from Stanley

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Owsley Stanley & Johnny Cash

    Has anyone found where to order the Johnny Cash stuff? I see the cd and vinyl on sale at amazon, but the stanley/merch mountain site say a "deluxe" set is available but I don't see how to order?

    Anyone?

    UPDATE - I think I got it. Did a wild search and it pointed me towards amazon having the two lp limited copy,,,, didn't show up on normal amazon page,,,, was a different page. The Stanley site shows no way to order?!?!

    Was also odd the "limited" vinyl will not be issued until December, but cd coming end of October?

    I think I have all ordered,,, confidence high on the cd front, little lower on the vinyl :-)

  • daverock
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    The Last Time ?

    I first saw the Stones in 1973, and I can remember reading an article in a music paper at the time, which pointed out that Jagger was now 30, and maybe too old for all this. Although they weren't much younger, the heavy/glam rock brigade had moved in with updated outrageous behaviour. They were still being touted as possibly the best rock n' roll band in the world...but also maybe a bit of a museum piece.
    The next time I saw them was at Knebworth in 1976 - the worst show I ever saw by them, although my perception was affected by me having the strongest acid trip of my entire life. But anyway - we all thought that would have been it for The Stones. They looked and sounded like a spent force. When punk kicked in later that year, the writing was well and truly on the wall.
    So, I don't know about this being the last tour. I think as long as Mick Jagger is alive there will always be the possibility of another show.

  • JimInMD
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    68 - 70

    I'd love something in the 68 through 70 range. We are due...

    Dammit Dave, give us some Primal Dead already.. or we will be forced to storm the vault!

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    DaP 40

    I think we're so overdue for some 1969. They could pack up a pair of shows with some good set list variety on another one of those 4 disc releases. Is Thelma the last '69 release? That's insane.

  • JimInMD
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    8/9

    Every year during the day's between or more aptly 8/9 I watch the YouTube of So Many Roads performed on their last show at Soldiers Field. Such a beautiful song and such a sad moment.. it's bittersweet to me. It sometimes brings tears to my eyes.

    I cannot compare or imagine what you went through during those 27 months, or the years before that brought you to that first day. Good for you for turning the corner, somehow, someway. Thank god I stayed away from that stuff and the other two of the big three. We all have our demons I guess, but sometimes they get the better of us. A close family member of mine chose his own China Doll moment a couple weeks ago and Saturday we will gather and try to make sense out of that, an impossible task. A victim of covid fallout perhaps.

    I consider myself very fortunate. Never could reach it, just slips away but I try...

  • darobace
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    August 9 , 1995

    I haven’t heard or seen much mentioned about today
    Maybe I’m in the wrong section of the Deadnet site
    Why do I remember this day so vividly
    I became clean and sober one year earlier in 1994
    Where was I in 1995
    I was a resident of a Therapeutic community
    What is a therapeutic community?
    Basically in-patient drug treatment where I was for 27 months
    Why was I there?
    Heroin addiction……fun stuff
    Why do I remember the day
    My sister called me at the facility to tell me Jerry had transitioned from “ here to there”
    Honestly at that moment it had no real meaning .
    I was more concerned with getting my own existence together from the crash and burn life I was living……if you wanna call that living
    Anything Grateful Dead was not on the high priority list
    The last time I remember anything Grateful Dead was selling a ticket at the Giants stadium ( year????) because “need that cash to feed that jones”
    Sorry to say
    Some folks make it
    And some folks don’t
    How have managed 27 years later?
    Considering I’ve had my Black Peter moments over the last 10 months.
    Speaking of Black Peter
    I know this has been discussed on other forums
    But what does line 3
    “Annie Bonneau from St. Angel “ come from or it’s meaning
    Did Jerry or Robert Hunter ever explain what it means
    Anyway August 9 , 1994 still remains an important day in the span of 27 years of one day at a time
    And August 9, 1995 is just one of those
    Some folks “get it”
    And others “just don’t “

    The Rolling Stones
    No Charlie Watts
    Yeah I’m going to see them
    I’m 66
    There getting close to 80
    Saw em in 72
    And other years
    I figure “this may be the last time”
    I’m surprised they don’t do residency in Vegas or Atlantic City
    That being said I’m going to see em in Atlanta
    Gotta go one more time
    Unless of course
    The Covid rears it ugly head again
    Hopefully not

  • JimInMD
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    DaP 39

    I finally got my first uninterrupted listen to this Dave's Picks.

    The first set to me has a start and an ending bookmark and the rest to me was uneventful. The Shakedown Street has a nice groove and is played well the Let It Grow, again to me, simply cooks. I rearranged the play order to correspond with the show so the next sequence up was a hot Help on the Way > Slipknot! > Franklins Tower. Something like a half hour of some smokin' Grateful Dead. Jerry's playing, even if you don't care for his style in this period is phenomenal. There's a decent post space Morning New and those are the highlights. The whole show, opening to encore is perhaps not completely solid start to finish, but once they get cooking they hold their own. A really strong LIG through Slipknot! is alone is worth the price of admission. I had to re-listen to this segment two or three times just to figure out where exactly this balls to the wall guitar work bubbled up from. Suddenly he was blazing up and down the fretboard at a ferocious pace. Hard rock perhaps, but hey.. it's Jerry Garcia, isn't that Grateful Dead enough?

    This thread seemed pretty positive until recently and even then the era/keyboard centric discussion was quite cordial, almost polite with perhaps one small aberration.. which I really do appreciate. I understand 80's releases are not everyone's cup of tea and really it's all a bit subjective and personal anyway.. after all we like what we like. But I get that there is a large segment that doesn't like post 74 or 75. We should expect to see 80's and 90's shows get released from time to time. I think ConeKid said it best, w/ 25k copies per, you don't need to subscribe if you don't want too.. and we know the release schedule you can get the shows you want so long as you don't go on vacation or have internet outages at just the wrong time.

    Worst Dave's Picks ever? Hardly, at least to these aging ears. This is a pretty solid early 80's show, it's high energy and even if the whole show is not light the fuse and run away, overall the peaks seize the day. There are a few others I believe don't seem to quite rise to the occasion but again, it's all subjective. It's an above average recording for the period too, which compared to some of the other early 80's shows released speaks well comparatively.

    One last point, I have to politely disagree with the GD sounding like a cover band post hiatus. The Slipknot! in particular is, to me, classic GD and the whole show has a GD tribal boogie to it. I even think when they do covers.. they Grateful Deadize it, thinking of their interpretations of Dylan in particular. They don't sound like Dylan, they sound like G'Dylan. So I respectfully disagree with that analogy.. hope I did so without offending. They do sound more like a hard rock band than they did in say '72, I would agree with that. I would add my soft spot is clearly 68 through 74 but it's all Grateful Dead to me.. if I like the taste I will take a second bite.

    In the early 80's they were not the '69 psychedelic powerhouse nor the euphoric '72 nor the jazzy, free flowing 74 nor the practically perfect band of '77. They certainly had a hard rock edge but balanced with delicate ballads, drums space, etc.

    You really start to hear this change before Keith and Donna left, starting in mid '78 or so. Jerry, especially, started to rock it more and the vocals became more dramatic too, less delicate. Look at the Garcia Band during this period as well.. Deal took an edge, etc. I just don't see them as being a cover band nor this happening after Keith and Donna left. The Dark Stars became less frequent starting in '74 and songs like Passenger, Werewolves, etc. entered the fold. My point, this was a Jerry lead shift in direction that predates Keith and Donna leaving the band. I think there's an interview in late 78 or early 79 where Jerry quotes Punk and New Wave as recent influences.

    That's my take, probably not perfect but I do not see this as a reflection of personnel changes and I don't think they ever sounded like a cover band (although they did some great covers). Just my opinion, I could be wrong.

    Have a good day all.. hoping against all odds this comes across as intended, no harm no foul.

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We're feelin' Philly 4/26/83 and its '80s highs. See what we're on about when you pick up DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 39: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 4/26/83, the final show of a three-week tour, played at the venue that the Dead played more than Madison Square Garden (there's your daily dose of Dead trivia). This one fires on all cylinders, with extremely well-played, high-energy tight sets featuring newbies "West L.A. Fadeway," "My Brother Esau," rarities like Brent's tune "Maybe You Know," precise medleys "Help>Slip>Franklin's," an inspired new pairing "Throwing Stones>Not Fade Away," and the Dave's Picks debut of "Shakedown Street."  And before you come down, we've got a prime slice of bonus material from the previous Spectrum show 4/25/83 and an extra dollop of '83 from the War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, NY 4/15/83 (featuring the Bobby rarity "Little Star").

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 39: THE SPECTRUM, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 4/26/83 was recorded by Dan Healy and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

*2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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.... I like what they've done to the white.

Glass ordered!!! Yeah!!!

Bonus tracks were a nice surprise. Mine should be here Monday.

Once again, happy about my glass. (at least the axe people only had to buy one axe to complete the set!)

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I’m very excited for this releases. I decided to hear just around a minute of the few songs that were put up, and it sounds incredible, especially for the 80s. The setlist looks nice too, and the bonus tracks are good to have, glad to see Little Star and Maybe You Know get officially released.

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Looks really good for 83 but why would you go Drums > filler show on disc two and then pick up the space again on disc 3? Maybe there was a reason but that seems pretty disjointed?

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Moons?
Has that been the delay? Dave’ s on Mars!

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Not the biggest 80's fan but I trust Dave, so we know it will be good. Also, really appreciate the filler. In fact, filler for every show Dave from now.

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Psyched to have this drop out of nowhere; looks pretty sick on paper and Bakedown Opener.

Crystal ball says passenger pigeons will deliver tomorrow.
Happy Weekend All.

Sixtus

P.S. Crystal ball was WRONG; Shakedown Spinning now! Phil dropping bombs left and right. All is well in Deadland.

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Will it be here Tuesday as scheduled?

Well, well, well,

You can never tell!!!!

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The sound samples sound very good, well, to me anyway. I will thoroughly enjoy this while I eagerly await a September 1979 N.Y.C. MSG mini box or Fall 79 Monster-Box. Alaska 80 too!

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Took a long time to shakedown to the street.

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Looking forward to it. Tracking says arriving tomorrow.

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Shipping notice received. Likely the 2nd last DaP I’ll have coming in, so fingers crossed.

Beyond that, nothing to say, I just like to be one of the first guys to skate on a fresh ice surface! :)

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I know I heard Dave say he had a little tease for #40 but that was it? He never said a thing about it then went into the Jeffrey Norman and Plangent praise. He did say he'd be back, "in a month or two", for another seaside chat where I would guess another box or special collection may be announced as it would be too early for the #40 chat.
So glad to hear that #39 is a high energy and well played show (precise was the word I think). I don't have much '83.
Doing #38 today end to end for the first time. Sixty fourth birthday present to myself. Sorry hon, no TV this afternoon. Took me four listens to get through it when I got that one.
Cheers to all!

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Home of Sunisa Lee.

Lots of bonus material on here. :) Listening to Shakedown now; sound is quite good for an 80s tape, and the energy is high.

Happy Birthday, 1stSHOW!

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I received my copy today in NYC. Haven't listened to it yet, but it looks good. I saw a few shows from that tour including 4/12 83 in Binghamton; one of my all time favorites

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Appreciate that! Was going in to edit my previous as it is #37 I have cued up for the complete listen. '78 is my era and my first t-shirt and sticker were Shakedown Street. Wish they'd bring that artwork back. Who's that artist, Shelton? With the Zoot suit and swingin' a chain baby! I may not be that hip but I can do hipster doofus all day long (Kramer).
Cheers!

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Can't wait to get this one. Lately I have been listing to a lot of early 80s Dead. With every Daves Picks release I always wonder, Will we ever see a Deer Creek release? Buckeye lake? I hope. Cheers!

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to this one!!! Don't have much in this era in my collection...

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You have to set your alarm clock to catch these glasses as soon as they're announced.

I've got the first 2, now I have to make sure I'm ready to "buy" again on the morning of Oct 29 so I've got the complete set.

btw - I had set an alert months ago to be on standby for the announcement of the glass, which I successfully ordered today.

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4 discs, 2+ shows of 1967-68 material. In the video Dave says they wanna mix up the eras, how about that for shaking it up? Some primitive Dead, not even primal yet.

Got my glass as well. After finally finding the page where I could access it. That Sitemap button at the bottom of the home page is the only way I can find things sometimes. Especially old product that I'm thinking I may actually get if it's still there, as I did for RFK '89 around Thanksgiving last year with the discount. I don't have, nor do I plan to make room for, an 80s shelf, so wonder where this boxed glass shall be displayed.

ETA: there's some very odd things not allowed in a post, such as the word that describes a clickable text that sends one to a new website, or the hero of the Legend of Zelda...

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Dave might be right that it started as a show closer on this tour, but at my first show- 9/21/82 at MSG- which was an absolute smoker (e.g, opened w/ Playin'>Crazy Fingers- that's the first set, mind you)- the band came out of space into Throwin' Stones > NFA, then played Black Peter, then Good Lovin', w/ a US Blues encore.
That Throwin'>NFA, particularly NFA was hot, hot, hot! Check out the matrix recording available for this one.
Overall, an incredible show- DK if it's some ragged vocals, or a weak vault recording, but I have no idea why this one has never been an official release. It's an epic show for that era.

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50 years ago today……

July 31, 1971
Yale Bowl, New Haven, Connecticut

Set 1: Truckin'-Sugaree-Mr. Charlie-Mama Tried-Big Railroad Blues-Playing In The Band-Dark Star>Bird Song-El Paso-Hard To Handle-Loser-Me And Bobby McGee

Set 2: Bertha-Big Boss Man-Me And My Uncle-Deal-China Cat Sunflower >I Know You Rider-Sing Me Back Home-Sugar Magnolia-Casey Jones-Not Fade Away>Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad>”Darkness jam”>Not Fade Away

Encores: Uncle John's Band>Johnny B. Goode

Deadicated to Jeffrey Greenberg, Bob Messina, John Starks, and Rich Petlock…..

So, how did they do???

Actually, not bad at all. Solid if unspectacular show. Little bit of Pigpen, interesting first set Star, unusual Bobby McGee set closer, Sing Me Back Home, a Darkness jam, two song encore. What’s not to like about all that?

Coffee spilled on guitars, executive nannies, homicidal maniacs, rock and roll, Grateful Dead…………

Rock on!!

Doc
……unless we can play them well…..

Some releases from this run would be fun. I’ve been slowly digesting 9/17, which has a great Touch of Grey>Women Are Smarter. The version of High Time is also really beautiful, and it has a Throwin’>NFA. The Jim Wise audience source is very good, but a matrix is coming soon I think. I haven’t listened to the first set yet, but from the looks of it, it’s gonna be good. September 1982 seems overlooked, but the performances are spectacular.

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Looking forward to playing this tonight.

A cassette master, but Dave did say Plangent was used, and that it was already a good sounding Healey SBD.
According to the Plangent website their process is for reels, but maybe they built a device for cassettes, or just used their skills to clean up the digital files.

He also said “a couple of things yet in 2021”, which I take to be DaP40 and Black Friday RSD, along with the October release of the STL Box.
He was also enthusiastic about DaP40.

And as I type this the USPS truck just stopped at my mailbox. Woo Hoo, heading out to the driveway.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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The best sounding Brent DaP release so far.
The booklet credits Plangent for cassette wow and flutter correction, although the Plangent logo isn’t printed on the case.
I like the color scheme of the CD’s.

Playing Shakedown but then have to run errands and do yard work.
Will settle in with some beer tonight and play all the CD’s.

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Nice surprise, this.
My first show. I was 18.
Still remember how stoked I was that they played Help>Slip>Franklin since Blues for Allah was (and remains) my favorite studio album.
Guess I finally get to say "I was there, man" on an official release.
I don't particularly love 80s or 90s Dead. But I love that I got to see the Dead in the 80s and 90s.
May the four winds blow you all safely home.

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I think Dylan's latest came out late April but I didn't hear a thing about it until I was reading the article about Dylan and the new owners of his catalog winning a law suit over the co-writing of "Desire". Apparently this new album was co-written by Hunter (10 of the 11 songs) and they like writing together. Anyone heard this? Got to go looking for this material. Haven't bought a Dylan album since "Desire" was remastered. Might be time for some more!
Cheers!

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OK, I thought maybe this is the first one released in the Dave's Picks series but surely there must have been one in the Dick's Picks series. And don't call me Shirley, but I could not find one at first glance all the way through Dick's #25. My Dick's 26-36 are burned copies so it would take some time to Deadbase all of those shows. Any statisticians out there that know this stuff? Just seems impossible that it isn't on a release already.
My first Shakedown was THEIR first Shakedown Aug. 30-31, 1978 Red Rocks where they debuted 5 new songs after coming straight out of the studio and right back to their new favorite venue almost unannounced. Those two shows were not even sold out as it was a last minute decision that left mail order almost out of the loop. So I got on the bus on the wild last day of the tour, 7-8-78, then they come back to seal the deal at two of the most smooth and precise shows since '77. I know I've asked Dave for these two before but a two show release of Aug. 30-31, 1978 would be a nice counterpoint to the July '78 box. Thanks Dave for your time and diligent research.
Cheers all!

P.S. And while we are checking stats, what other times had they finished a tour then started the next tour at the same venue? Should be some, maybe home turf California shows?

....shake the hand, that shook the hand.
"I don't particularly love 80s or 90s Dead. But I love that I got to see the Dead in the 80s and 90s."
That is a conundrum. Interesting.
Hey 1stshow. There is a Shakedown on Dicks 27. Oakland 12.16.92.
There is a Shakedown on RT 3.4 Cornell 5.7.80. And one on RT 4.4 Spectrum 4.6.82.
But yeah. Few and far between. Unfortunate, because I have never met ANYONE who didn't enjoy that song.
Even non-heads. Even my mom likes it.

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I knew someone on here would know. I missed DiP 5 too.
Colin, you're the fellow birder. I saw a life list bird this week. Least Flycatcher (likely migrating) at about 8000 ft. here in Western Colorado. My 290th life-lister. Only 111 species sighted this year (drought, pandemic). Started in 1982 and average maybe 100-150 species a year is all, as we don't travel all that far; AZ, NM, UT, WY and two trips to the Eastern US in the 80's. Retiring soon and planning a 2022 Pacific NW tour and a TX Gulf tour after that. Bird on!
Cheers!

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A couple in the Road Trips series as well.

This one from Philly looks nice and hefty. Too bad mail innovations tracking botched the delivery time. The routing was problematic before the slowdown. Oh well, arriving Monday instead of today.

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In reply to by SPACEBROTHER

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....Shakedown is now the official name for the parking lot scene in general. Even non-jam band bands. Says something.
I recall seeing Slayer a few years ago, and even the fans in the lot called it Shakedown 🤘Just gotta poke around.

1stshow You should get a lot of life birds when you get to Texas. We (wife an I) have only spent two weeks in the US,in 1989, and saw 275 species in Texas. Most of our birding has been in the UK where we’ve seen a little over 500 species. Over the past 10 years or so we’ve travelled mainly in the Western Palearctic ( Europe, North Africa and Middle East) and have seen c. 790 species there. We had hoped to be over 800 but we haven’t been anywhere in the past 18 months. Of course, this is a minor inconvenience compared to the suffering of so many in this pandemic and we’re grateful to be relatively healthy

Edit My 39 is probably still in the US but I notice the alternative tracking number ends in CH so I wonder if it is heading to Switzerland prior to heading for the UK

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My first Shakedown, was 10/20/78 at Winterland, it sounded just like it did on the album Shakedown Street. What a great tune, a song that got better as the years went by.

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Had a barrel full of fun listening this afternoon. Back when entering college in 1991, the 80's shows were the ones circulating more than anything. Maybe they sounded better on those old boom boxes and portable stereos? I do miss graphic equalizers. Anyway, I remember sitting down one evening to copy a batch of tapes and the deadhead I was with, a little more versed than I at the time, mentioned 'that classic grateful dead sound' while listening to a show around this time period. So that's what I think of when I hear top quality early 80's: 'classic grateful dead sound'. For me at least. Love how Jerry made his axe chime.

For random thoughts on this particular show, agreement here on it being the best sounding of all the Brent releases in the DaP series so far. Was thinking how Esau would have been a great fit for second sets, similar to how Easy Answers was worked in during the 90s. I wonder how many more notes Jerry would play in a single show in '83 compared to any 70's show? Throwing Stones will be listened to again later tonight. That spaciness of the jam.... both lustrous and fantastic. I'll also pull up an AUD recording to get a better idea what those Phil bombs were like at the end of Truckin'. Great stuff and a welcome change from the 70s materials I have otherwise been listening to lately.

Yep. Despite prognostications to the contrary, I'm still kicking.
Seems my inherent stubbornness operates on a cellular level as well.
One day at a time...

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Don't post much, but love that we have filler from not one but two other shows. I think the 80's cassette masters kinda demand that, if for no other reason than to fill out three CDs. Thanks, Dave and team!

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Nice detail with the guy in the door of the camper wearing probably Ed Donahue’s most coveted Grateful Dead t-shirt design! Love it!!

Istshow70878 - an excellent album, in my estimation and well worth checking out. I always think of it as one of Dylan's great albums released between 2001-2012. The others are " Love and Theft", " Modern Times" and "Tempest." Worth buying the set in fact.

They played Shakedown to open the second set, I think, when I saw them in London in March 1981. Top stuff.

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Has anyone deciphered the conversation that occurs in the 35 seconds before Help On The Way on disc 2?? I haven’t used headphones yet, but I obviously need to.

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I'm in agreement. This is a great sounding early 80s show. Several shows before 1985 in the Dave's series sound just awful. I am very pleasantly surprised with this one and DaP 35.

Shakedown Street and Help-Slipknot-Franklin are terrific. It is nice to hear Throwing Stones in it's early form

Fivebranch, I am surprised that you hear Jerry played more notes in the 80s, especially because this show I thought the exact opposite. If I understood you correctly. He plays some great solos with lots of notes in Franklin's Tower on this '83 concert but a lot of songs he doesn't play nearly as much. When I heard songs on DaP 39 such as Me & My Uncle and Truckin' I noticed he's not anywhere near as active. On DaP 38 he's playing a mile a minute beginning to end. On songs that he does let loose on he sounds as good as ever but he seems to me to reserve himself for certain moments. Almost like he's pacing himself. I don't know I just thought it was strange that I thought the exact opposite. Same with Morning Dew.

Happy Sunday

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3 years 8 months
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Can’t wait to get this one. My copy has been sitting in Morrow, GA since Thursday.

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13 years 4 months

In reply to by Colin Gould

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Having watched all these release videos / seaside / riverside chats.. I have come to the conclusion that Dave is in fact a centaur.

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3 years 11 months
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I’m listening as I write this, I’ll probably edit this once I’m finished with the show. First off, the show sounds incredible. Everyone can be heard pretty clearly, especially Phil. The first set was very good. The vocal jam in Shakedown was very fun, and Jerry, Phil, and Brent push the jam to new places. The Minglewood is also a highlight for me. Jerry, Bob, and Brent are on fire. I generally enjoy some of the harsher sounding Bob solos, but here the sound isn’t as intrusive as other recordings(I’m thinking of 9/2/83). I think it’s great, not as grating as some others. The West L.A. is great too, with Jerry’s raunchy solos coming off great. Let It Grow is also superb. It’s very fast, which, during the 80s, could lead to complete train wrecks(see some versions of Eyes), but Jerry and the boys pull it together very nicely.
I’m about half way through the second set right now. The Help>Slip!>Franklin’s is one of the best from this era. The transition between Help and Slipknot! is played perfectly. The Franklin’s Tower is insane, probably my favorite of ‘83 so far. The peaks are wonderful. The Man Smart, Woman Smarter is a highlight as well. The vocals from Bob and Brent are great, and the solos are well played as well. Drums during this era, at least for me, don’t excite me very much, but I’ve never heard a bad Drums. On the 3rd disk, the Space is insane. I thought Phil was the one who initiated it, but instead it was Jerry using some fantastic guitar effects. After a few minutes of Jerry noodling, Bob comes in with some half-psychedelic, half-hilarious slide work. The back half is the best though. Brent comes in with some synths and him and Jerry noodle around. It’s similar to 11/30/80 in that way. The Truckin is definitely post-Space highlight, with nice group vocals and a fun Nobody’s Jam. The Dew after is great as well. It’s very mellow until the last 3 minutes or so, when it starts to blow up and Phil starts dropping bombs. There seems to be either a small tape flip or other disturbance once the jam heats up, but it’s not an issue. The Throwin>NFA is good as well. These early versions of Throwin Stones are always fun and unpredictable during the jam, and the NFA is always welcome. It’s very fun to hear the crowd chant during the small encore break. Phil comes in barreling for U.S Blues, and Jerry starts the verse right away. This version is very energetic; a perfect way to send everyone home.

When I listen to these I generally save any bonus material after I listen to the main show in its entirety, but the bonus stuff looks real nice. Excited about that Little Star. This is a great release, probably the best of the year for me, maybe even the best ever(at least from all the Dave’s I have, and I’m kind of a sucker for 83-85). Good stuff.

Also, happy birthday Jerry, thanks for everything!

If I knew the way, I would take you home…

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