• 945 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    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
    Joined:
    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
    Joined:
    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
    Joined:
    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
    Joined:
    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
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    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
    Joined:
    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.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 8 months

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.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

My guess on the disc 2 running order would have something to do with disc capacity limits and set time. Set II of 4/26 wouldn't fit on 1 disc according to my back of the napkin timing. I may be right or wrong but that's my guess. Have a Grateful Day all! :-)

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

Nice Dark Star at Woodstock last night. That's not a joke, by the way.

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months
Permalink

What do you call a Hobbit party? A little get together.
When do you kick a Hobbit in the balls? If he's standing next to your wife saying her hair smells nice.
Why don't you ask Hobbits for money? Because they're always a little short.
What do you call a kid who can't find his snap-together Death Star toy?Lego-Loss.
Why was Gandalf always smoking that pipe? Because he had a bad Hobbit.
What do they call Gandalf at the local tavern? The White Whizzer.
I had a college professor named Gandalf once. Needless to say he didn't let me pass.
I would make another Lord Of the Rings joke, but all the good ones Aragorn.

user picture

Member for

3 years 4 months
Permalink

Any guesses? Any requests.

user picture

Member for

15 years 3 months
Permalink

Nanci Griffith - Lone Star State of Mind
Iris Dement - Infamous Angel
Gillian Welch - Revival
Jeb Loy Nichols - Just What Time It Is
MV & EE - Green Blues

Stellar shows from November that year, both acoustic and electric. I wouldn't care if the sound quality was substandard, the power is irrepressible - like a force of nature. Those shows are my last 5, along with
Green Steve Hillage
Jug of Love Mighty Baby
Zoom Club Frankfurt 4/14/71 King Crimson

Man what I wouldn't give to have the Fall of 1970 masters (all of 1970 really).

I haven't listened to the Warehouse shows in New Orleans for a while.

Still, I'm guessing 69 or maybe 91.

user picture

Member for

8 years 1 month

In reply to by billy the kidd

Permalink

Hey, what kind of beer is that?

91 Shoreline would be great. A lot of really good shows to pick from Shoreline. Let's get them out.

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

Malo-Malo
Hardin & York-Worlds Smallest Big Band
John Sebastian-John B Sebastian
Dead-5/17/77(Thanks Dennis!!)
Monterey Pop Festival-Disc 2

Music is the Best!!

user picture

Member for

3 years 4 months
Permalink

Deadvikes,, the beer in the photo is an Old Rasputin, (Russian Imperial Stout,), one of my favorites.

user picture

Member for

7 years 5 months
Permalink

You imagine me sipping champagne from your boot
or a taste of your elegant pot

Seriously!!

clever. quite clever and worthy of guffaws.

i also enjoyed the myriad hobbit jokes for what's its worth.
oh yeah, my Dave's glass arrived too, all in one piece!

be well people!
Sixtus

user picture

Member for

12 years 1 month

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

Guffaws!!! Had a terrible case once,, but one shot cleared it up!

FYI - Mosaic's Joe Henderson in the house!! Sounding great.

FYI 2 - If anyone has an interest. They're releasing a vinyl Richard Thompson Mirror Blue. If this sort of thing interest you.

user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

I was at a river picnic Sunday for someone's birthday; lots of swimming and Bocce . . .

Started talking to the husband of one of the invitees, and he mentioned living in S.F. for twenty years, from 1973-1993. I said, "Well, being a huge DeadHead, I HAVE to ask if you are into them . . . " His eyes lit up, and he enthusiastically said, "Yes! I saw them something like 150 times!" So we chatted.

Eventually I asked when his FIRST show was, and he started thinking, then told me it was in the winter of '72 in Michigan. I said, "Was it perhaps 12/14/71 at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor?" I thought he was going to swallow his tongue, he was so surprised! (partially because he could likely tell that I was one year old at the time) He decided that THAT was actually the year, NOT 1972, and then he shouted to his wife, "Honey, you're not going to believe this!"

I mentioned that he might want to check out a new box set that had music from the two shows just prior to his first . . . Now I'm getting his e-dress from the birthday friend, so that I can send him an amalgam of 12/14/71, from the official release and some high-quality boots.

user picture

Member for

13 years 5 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

My favorite lyric misquote is something I heard for the first time here from one of you kind folks.. Wake up to find out that you are disguised as a squirrel.

I also enjoyed the hobbit and star wars jokes and enjoyed a four pack or two of Old Rasputin, so much tastier than their new IPA Young VladPutin. I have heard from many people the great, great grandson of RasPutin.

I do think I am going to squeak in one more listen to #39 before it gets retired for a while. Perhaps not the whole thing but at least the highlights....

Happy Wednesday all..

user picture

Member for

11 years 6 months
Permalink

OK, so I'm a pretty conservative looking dude. Short hair, finance industry, glasses… I do NOT look like a deadhead - just ask Sixtus. Last week a buddy of mine invited me to golf with a friend of his who very clearly looked like a Deadhead.

Over beers after golf, the conversation turned to live music and he mentioned that he was a big dead fan. I mentioned that I also am really into the Dead, and he gave me a look as if to say "Right...." Not rude, but he was clearly not taking me seriously. He then said that he saw a great show in Denver soon after Brent died with Bruce Hornsby. "I think it was 1988" he said. I piped up "Actually, pretty sure that was 1990. Brent died summer of '90". He says "No, 1988." I again, politely but confidently, said "No really, it was 1990. I have the recordings. The Dec. 12th was a great show with a China>Rider and a Dark Star." He still was looking at me funny, not taking me seriously.

Then he mentions his favorite show was at Englishtown, NJ. "I think 1978?" I said "Actually 1977 - Sept 3." He eyeballs me suspiciously again like I'm making shit up. He then says "It was a great show, the warm-up act was..." and I say "Marshall Tucker". Suddenly he looks at me and smiles and says "Holy Shit you really do know this show." I say "Yep - One of my first bootlegs since I lived locally and it was an FM simulcast - killer Peggy-O, Half Step, Eyes, and an amazing Truckin' > He's Gone > NFA". I then mentioned all the tractor-trailers used as fencing, first show of the summer due to Mickey's broken arm, Raceway Park, the John Scher intro... he just looked at me like he was being punk'd. One moment he's vaguely recalling a random concert from 44 years ago, and suddenly I was rattling off minute details like it was yesterday.

Another thing happened 2 years ago when a woman told me and a few folks that her first Dead show was in Des Moines, Iowa before she was even born - she was still in her Mommy's tummy. She said she was born soon after the show, in 1974. I said "Oh, that was June 16, State Fairgrounds - your first was a GREAT show - one of my favorite 'Eyes'!!!". Everyone looked at me like I was a witch.

Not trying to brag. It's easy to come off as condescending on this stuff, and I try to not be obnoxious about it. But it IS kinda like having a cool magic trick up your sleeve when you can blow people's minds like that.

Corroborated.
I believe it's safe to say, we all have our looks I suppose; we just all happen to have our ability to be enchanted, too - a nice overlap. And those are fun encounters, to find out we're all part of the same awesome Venn diagram. The associated kindness and authenticity of those whom I have had the pleasure of meeting in person is consistently awesome.

Had a very similar experience a few weeks ago; met a guy out of the blue who lives in my town, we were watching a Phish show on my buddy's poolside outdoor screen, and I come to learn this total stranger's first show was back in '79 and he saw Keith and Donna and I was like whoa......hold on. Let's put this one in reverse and start over. He's seen like 115 Dead shows....enjoys Phish too. Now I have a cool new best bud from my town...same Venn diagram.
What are the odds? Indeed, we are everywhere.

Peace and Grateful Dead to All.
Sixtus

user picture

Member for

13 years 5 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

If you put me in a police lineup.. I'd be the one that looks like a narc with a receding hairline. Thankfully.. it isn't true.. (..my hairline's not thinning.. is it?? reaching for a mirror, gasp!!)

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months
Permalink

When I go out wearing Dead t-shirts I'll often get a "like the t-shirt" comment from strangers at stores or wherever. So I started doing the same thing. First question I usually ask is if they have an E72 steamer trunk they don't need anymore.

Englishtown is that show that everyone's bumped into somebody who attended. For me it was a guy at work. Dude's funny. Huge ABB fan, has all their releases, but says he doesn't have the attention span to listen to music anymore. He gets in the car for his 40 minute commute and ends up listening to talk radio. Bizarre.

Was just at the beer store and got 3 cases of Oberon. Will go back for 3 more cases in a day or two, have to stock up before it’s gone.
That store had Octoberfest about 2 weeks ago but I didn’t get any, not a big enough fan that I need a 6-pack. When it first came out years ago I drank a lot of it, don’t know why I don’t really like it now.

user picture

Member for

4 years 8 months
Permalink

...So I’m an older newcomer to the Dead. I missed some of their early 70’s performances. Example - I was going to the Capital Theatre in Port Chester to see the Allman Bros., Traffic, Delaney & Bonnie, Edgar Winter, etc. and remember seeing the Grateful Dead on the marquee but nothing ever clicked.

Fast forward…now I live in Denver. I see of few in the forum reside here too. Do you ever get together for a beer…or two?

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by jp1119

Permalink

....a pain I know all too well.
I also do what keithfan does. When I was in California recently, I saw a guy with a dead shirt at the Santa Monica Pier. Told him "cool shirt!"
He answered with, "cool taste!"

user picture

Member for

10 years 11 months

In reply to by KeithFan2112

Permalink

You give me a 40 min commute every day, and I'd get through a ton more shows. I might even get a second listen to some of the 30 Trips that got just the one spin. Or give all of Europe '72 a third full listen. I'd probably broaden my listening habits again, rather than get in my fixation periods of days/weeks/months. As it is, my typical commute is about 10 min, 8 if I catch every light just right. It does accentuate the experience when I have to go to another office when I'm guaranteed at least 20 min of listening. And I'll usually take the Lazy River Road route home giving me maybe enough time for the 11/18/72 Playing in the Band (just shy of 26 min). You give me that much time listening to talk radio, and I'd probably snap after a week.

user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

I told this here a few years ago, which was back when it happened, but in that same circle of people I was with the other day, I had a similar experience two years back. A guy I knew somewhat, a guy who is about fifteen years my elder, was wearing a Dead shirt or hat or something. I commented on it, he mentioned that he liked them a lot, but only got to see them for two or three shows in one run, some time in the early 70s, maybe in Boston . . . he wasn't quite sure. I looked at him and said, "Was it November 30th, and December 1st and 2nd, 1973?" His eyes bugged out of his head, and he stammered something about how that HAD to be it, because that WAS the fall he lived out there . . . I explained that I had just been listening to the official Dick's Pick release of those shows, and that if he was only going to get to three shows, that those were pretty good ones to get to. Like with this guy from Sunday, I'm sure that part of his shock stemmed from the fact that I was three when he saw those Boston shows.

I should get his e-dress from our mutual friends and get him copies of THOSE shows, now that I think about it . . .

user picture

Member for

12 years 1 month
Permalink

Went I went to work at the head shop, the first day a kid asked if I really was a cop! (say no more!)

Thin, where did you grow up? I went to school in Old Bridge NJ,,, Englishtown was around the corner from our high school. (the race track is gone, btw)

My wife was at Englishtown show,,, their car was towed and had to call her parents to come get her. Apparently a LOT of cars were towed away.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

10 years 1 month
Permalink

30 years ago five shows were played between 8/13/91 & 8/18/91, without repeating a song. (almost 6 shows if not for Promised Land on 8/12).
This seems like a real anomaly. Anyone know of another stretch of shows with such diversity?
I don't log in here much, but this seems so unusual I wanted to ask. Thanks, take care.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

Great story, Thin. Being a Brit and only having seen shows in Europe I should remember each occasion as well as you but I’m afraid advancing years means I have to look up the set lists more often than not! I do remember the ambience and sense of seeing something special, though.

user picture

Member for

16 years 6 months
Permalink

Yo rockers!!

Happily married Doc here. Seventh anniversary, four days off, dogs are walked, awesome coffee, life is good!! My wife, Faith, is definitely NOT a Deadhead (she kinda sorta grudgingly sometimes likes Touch of Gray LOL), but she is the best thing to ever happen to me!! So Faith, eternal thanks for your love and support!!!

I have been working on the "1971 Challenge" asked of me. Compare and contrast (and post the "results") for two awesome December 1971 shows. Interesting challenge, tougher than I thought it would be. Don't wanna post a totally premature spoiler, but check back in around the end of November, and anybody who wishes to offer input, criticisms, comments, etc, feel free to pm me.

Rock on rockers!!!

Doc
True love cannot be found where it does not exist, nor can it be denied where it does.....

user picture

Member for

11 years 6 months
Permalink

To answer the question directed at me, I grew up in Connecticut, not far from New York City. I was only 10 years old when Englishtown happened, but it was my older brothers first show. As I said, it was one of my first bootlegs because it was one of his first bootlegs. Heard all the stories about the show from my brother, I've read all the reviews in the base and the tapers compendium, then the liner notes from the actual release of that show. So yeah, I remember more about the show than some people who were there, LOL!

And Brewer, I now live in the Boston area and have had many similar conversations about 70s Boston shows.. "I think I saw them and 73, (or 76, or 77...."). Depending on the venue, it's usually pretty easy to pinpoint when they saw them, identify key songs from the Setlist... Wall of Sound?.....

user picture

Member for

11 years 6 months
Permalink

This was discussed years ago on this thread, but it never ceases to amaze me how so many people have so much history with the dead, and have so many memories of the scene, yet they don't follow the new releases or even listen to the dead themselves at all anymore. I understand it, because I sometimes go long spells without listening to the dead (like, for the last three years I have hardly listen to them at all until new releases come out, then I'll only listen to it once or twice.). I am only just getting back into it after three years of pretty much focusing on locally performed music and small venues - Boston is thick with talent.

The older brother I mentioned who went to Englishtown? He never listens to the dead anymore, could care less about the Dave's Picks releases and prefers Dave Matthews Band these days. Last week he actually started kind of shaming me for not listening to Dave Matthews Band, and he got very indignant when I said "sure, they're good, but not really my bag". He got very defensive - like I just told him his kids are ugly. He will come back to the dead eventually, but I guess my point is that peoples' passion for Jerry and the boys can come and go, and that's I like a lot of things in life, I suppose.

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

In England, I think you would have been more likely to have been stopped and searched by the police in the 70's for wearing a Dead shirt than have anyone complement you on your sartorial elegance. I can't remember people wearing them much when I saw them in 1981, either - but in Fall 1990 the London Underground was swamped with colour. And that was the Deadheads.

user picture

Member for

8 years 1 month

In reply to by daverock

Permalink

You should have just told him your name was Thin.

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

I didn't "Almost Cut My Hair," I DID cut my hair... after getting nailed on five felonies, all related to cultivation, in '85. So I chopped off the ponytail for the judge, kept the beard. Long story short, I mostly got "off" the rap. But after living in the wooded mountains for years by the Colo-N.M. border, I had tired of long hair so I never grew it back. Last ten years or so have kept it short, so comfy for (non-cultivation) backcountry exploits. I do have a certain look in my eye... But I used to run into young guys with dreads or ponytails who eventually asked me if I'd "ever heard of the Grateful Dead?" The question always makes me look off into the distance as myriad scenes crowd my mind, but all I can manage is "Um, yeah. Hot band." Same with cannabis. Been a cultivator since '79 and the kids in Colorado have no idea that people used to dodge felony raps for, well, terracing a hillside in the back of beyond.

Kids these days......... Good thing my office window overlooks my front lawn so I can tell 'em to get off it!

user picture

Member for

12 years 2 months
Permalink

Prior to the time of Covid, I would schedule my meetings in NYC to coincide the Phil & Friends shows at the Cap. The theater would be mostly full of folks wearing the traditional gear, but with a good number of people still in their suits, swaying to the music with a drink in one hand, joint in the other, reliving the days of old. You can never tell.

On weekends we would often go to Mario Batali’s fancy restaurant prior to the show, sit at the marble bar in our tye-dye shirts, enjoy some nice wine and a fine meal. Invariably the wait staff were friendly and engaging. I would pleasantly remind them that if it were 30 years ago, you wouldn’t even let us use the bathroom. You can never tell.

user picture

Member for

11 years 4 months
Permalink

Englishtown was about 4 miles down the road from me in Monroe. I was too young at 11 years old (barely) to see the Englishtown show but my Dad was in the local First Aid squad back then (first responders you would call them now) and he had to assist in helping "hippies" that were having "issues" with their current state of health/mind. I remember seeing them camped out everywhere for miles away from the racetrack. At the time I thought it was so cool and little did I know that I would be one of them several years later.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I took a scan through the setlists of the run from 8-12 to 8-18 1991. Interestingly enough, although maybe no repeats as you mentioned, unless I misread, no Shakedown Street either. With as large enough a repertoire as the Dead had that they could go a stretch like that for a week with no repeats and not even touch upon a fairly often enough played tune like Shakedown is exceptional. Thanks for bringing that stretch up. I might tune into some of that stuff now.

P.S. BTW, no Cumberland Blues either...!

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by wilfredtjones

Permalink

....my disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined.
Edit. Phish once played 13 shows in a row with no repeats. Fan or not, impressive feat.

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

....now, where did I leave it again?
Another edit. Revisiting 39. First time checking out the 4.25.83 bonus on disc two. Has anyone posted how cool The Wheel transition into Playin' Reprise is yet?? If not, you should.
If you're stuck on pre-hiatus love, you would have missed The Wheel. Among others. Off the cuff statement that I'll probably regret later. Whatever.
Cheers.
Edit. There is a lil Run For The Roses tease when GDTRFB goes into Sugar Magnolia. I hit rewind just to be sure. Yup. Jerry did.

I think you're talking MSG shows, the baker's dozen.

If I remember right, past no repeats, which is incredible, There were songs they started one night and finished off a few nights later. NOW, that is "into" power (->). A multi night sandwich!

Quite likely The Stones never played two consecutive shows in their career without repeating songs..ever. I'm not going to check, but it wouldn't surprise me if they played songs from the 1969 tour of America in the last show they played some 50 years later. And played them at every show in the intervening years in that timespan, too. Still great, of course.

user picture

Member for

3 years 4 months
Permalink

I'm not a big Phish fan, but a huge fan of the Rollling Stones.

...indeed was 13 shows, a total of 237 unrepeated songs played; and yep the final "Is this still Lawn boy?" question that was asked by Page McConnell (Phish's virtuoso pie-anner player who happens to sing that song, Lounger-Singer Style).....self-replied, "It is.". So this Lawn Boy sammich spanned the 4th show until the end of the 13th show; the only repeat they did was that reprise of Lawn Boy (which, btw, on the album is two-and-a-half minute affair, while this version (on Jam Donut night, no less) morphed into a 30-minute behemoth, some of the most magical improvisation I've personally ever witnessed. I'd post the You Tube locale, but alas. It's worth it to check out.

Now back to your regularly scheduled Dark Star St. Stephen The Eleven Turn On Your Lovelight.

Sixtus

product sku
081227891718
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/dave-s-picks-vol-39.html