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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
    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
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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
    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
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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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Hey Nappy, on your north rim adventure, did you take the 75-mile dirt road out of Pink Coral State Park, Utah, south past Vulcan's Throne to the campground with the awesome organic toilets?? I've got a great Vulcan's Throne story for you...

Angry One, ah the good old daze, which imprinted more at the time than we could appreciate. And there's nothing like looking back 48 years later to make the old daze seem like the "good old daze," eh? I mean, they definitely were, but it was rugged at the time... the paradox of time...

Vguy, you're KILLING ME!! Dancing to the GD with a shrimp cocktail in your hand.... man, when we were little kids at our first GD shows, we grew wary of the Hum Zone (aka Phil Zone), which was the first 20-30 feet back from the stage where everyone was tripping madly and packed in tight. You show up there with a shrimp cocktail, circa 1972, and you'd a been without shrimp cocktail in seconds! Why they'd a taken the flesh right off your bones!! Yeeehhhiiiii! What a great image, though.

Yeah, that "luxury box" thing is, I think, only for events you don't give a hoot about. If it's a show you want, you go down to the floor and get some. And being barred from smoking, toking, vaping?? Nah, give me KAOS on the floor (with Siegfried) instead!

Oh, and I did enjoy DaP 39, especially West LA Fadeaway, which made me curious to hear a few of the '80s shows from the Rocks, just to hear what I saw... We were impudent young scalliwags back then, old enough to know better but too young to quit.

I gotta stop reading this forum, cuz I keep ordering CDs that I suddenly "need," including Coltrane '65. Will you guys cut it out for, say, 30 days??

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That was the whole point of the story.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....duly noted. I agreed.
And I love shrimp cocktails.
Luxury boxes are stagnant and boring imo. Had a box during a hockey game. Was fun for ten minutes, then I got bored and left.
Found a seat in the lower bowl. Much better.
Even if I was rich, which I am not, I would still mingle with the "unfortunate souls".

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Absolutely.

A bunch of us husbands have season football tickets just so we can hang out, catch up on old times and drink a few beers. Our seats, by choice, are in the very last row. With the “commoners” as you put it. We have a blast.

Invariably, at every game, one of the attorneys in the group invites us to his firm’s luxury box. No thanks is the universal response. We’re fine right here.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....you don't need to be concerned about some asshole behind you trying to start shit. YouTube sports fans fighting in the stands. Back row is a safe spot.
I'm proud to be a humble knave.

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Just got home after a week on a Greek island. There it was 34° (93° F) with endless sunshine whereas here it is 17° (63° F) and grey, overcast and raining. What a shit summer it has been here in north west Europe. It was easy adjusting to lashings of Greek food and litres of ice cold Mythos beer. Now I'm home I'm wondering why I didn't stay there. At least it helped to pass the time while waiting for the box set.

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The thing I always liked about uphill seats, no security!!!

You could have a damn bong up and smoking and no one was gonna come up to get you. Even if they did you had an unobstructed view of those coming up!!

Always somebody I intended to listen to, but sadly never did. That goes for Jamaican and dub music as a whole really. It was very popular in mid-late 70s England - I can still remember a poster of the cover Peter Tosh's album "Legalize It" in the window of a shop opposite where I lived circa 1977. I've got that, Bob Marley's "Catch a Fire" and a smattering of compilations from Studio 1 - which I think pre-dated reggae slightly.
So much to get into, so little time !

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In reply to by daverock

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Don't tell it again. Get lost, whoever the (n(^ you are.

addendum 2 hours later...

Thank you for getting rid of that interloper, GD/Marye

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...no I didn't take that route...I live on the South Rim so I just drove east out of the park to Cameron...then north to the 89A cutoff, over Navajo Bridge on the Colorado River to Jacob Lake and then south to the rim...Might have to look up the route you're talking about, sounds delightful....I almost took the road to Point Sublime but after a few miles of the road steadily worsening I did a quick U and headed back to paved roads...I had about another 15 miles to go...

...just looked it up on google maps...Vulcan's Throne looks awfully close to the Toroweap Overlook which suggests the campground you're talking about is the Tuweep Campground....

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Nappy, sounds about right. Man, we hammered down that dirt road, which was pretty well maintained. I had Bonnie Raitt blasting and did some hoovering of Peruvian marching dust along the way. My buddy was in another vehicle, so as fellow lunatics we raced each other at times, passing in bad places. So, to Vulcan's Throne... we parked just off the road and, immediately, I noticed a large, dessicated rattle from a diamondback sitting on the ground. It's still on my desk, probably ~25 years later. So we proceed to clamber down a do-able outcrop and make our way across a valley to Vulcan's Throne. Ahead of me, my buddy yelps really loudly and I look up to see him catapulting through the air, impressively high off the ground. I was just getting off on the shrooms so I laughed really hard. He looked so funny! When we caught up he pointed out an absurdly large diamondback, fat as your forearm and maybe 6-8 feet long. A sobering sight, but not for long, as the shrooms did their magic. So we climb to the summit of Vulcan's Throne; it's a cinder cone, formerly a volcano (its flows formed Lava Falls on the Colorado River below, sometime in the last 2 million years), so sight lines were good. We're on the summit, peaking, and I said casually, for effect (not believing it myself), "You know, there could be large snakes under any one of these rocks," pointing to a handful of summit rocks maybe 2-3 feet high and 5-6 feet wide. We'd sat on one after reaching the summit. I point my walking stick at the nearest rock and we look underneath: there's another fat diamondback wrapped around the underside, staying warm. We looked at several other rocks: diamondbacks under nearly every single one. We were aghast: we'd just been sitting on one of those rocks. We managed not to panic, but we decided rather swiftly to exit the area, and to do so very carefully. My entire being is now fully programmed for visual identification of diamondbacks. My buddy tried to get conversation going as we hiked back to the car but I told him to stop because I didn't want sound to interfere with my visual scan of the terrain ahead. We encountered a few more rattlers in the valley, but if undisturbed, they're harmless. The key concept here being "if undisturbed." Here in Colorado we have small prairie rattlers (which can still put you in the hospital) and nocturnal faded midget rattlers (diamondbacks only in Las Animas County on the NM border), but the size of your neighbors, Nappy -- truly fat diamondbacks -- definitely intimidated me and I'll never hike the North Rim again without paying FULL attention to every single step. (Good practice anywhere.) We spent 5-6 days out there, truly stupendous country. (The Tuweep toilets were a marvel of Scandanavian design; love me a good outhouse!) Managed to locate some very primitive rock art nearby that suggested they were more than 1,000 years old -- crude symbols with lots of patina.

That's the easy answer as to why cowboys wear cowboy boots, I can say that. And I'll say this: the road trip from Grand Canyon to Grand Junction is one loooong drive. As you probably already know, keep your eyes peeled when you're on foot in northern AZ!

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Sometimes I wish there was a consumer protection law that would require that classic rock bands have to include at least 51% of their original members if they’re going to perform under their original name. Kind of like how Taco Bell has to have a certain percentage of its ground beef if they’re going to call it ground beef.

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In reply to by nappyrags

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....my thoughts. But homemade tacos can't be beat. Jerry's quote wouldn't work regarding....
"Not everyone loves licorice, but the ones that do really loves licorice."
Everyone loves tacos.....

Believe it or not, but google ShaNaNa law, a suit that was started in NJ where none of the original members of the band performed under that name. Now there must be at least one surviving member in the band of it to call themselves that. Like at Queen. They have only two original members. Sorry I used to work as a booking agent ans that was part of our licensing test.

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Got the new email for th download for Playing In Ther Band from the St Louis Box Set but it isn't working...not just me but others too...no problems with the first two that were made available...this kinda stuff is getting really really old fast...

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I had the same problem trying to download my FLAC of PITB. I hope TPTB are on this.

While we wait, maybe somebody can explain to me why they don't just make your downloads available as soon as you buy the box set? What's the point of releasing one song, and then waiting a month, and releasing another, and then waiting another month for the next one? Maybe it's kind of like kindergarten, where sometimes they just want you to practice waiting for things?

Glad to hear about the Sha Na Na law law law, but we would have to agree that's a pretty sad standard: you only need one of the original 12 members? What's that, a mere 8%? I expect more beef in the burrito.

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In reply to by Crow Told Me

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It's good to have a house
It's good to have food
It's good to have intellect
It's good to have a job
It's good to work in a school
It's good to have the GD
It's good to have this little outpost of the internet
It's good to have Listen To The River arriving soon
It's good to have health

"rejoice, rejoice, we have no choice but to carry on"

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How about the one on the way to Taos High Bridge:

"Do Not Throw Litter"

Of course, it's perfectly okay to carefully place toxic waste on the ground, just don't THROW it?

Or my fav from Alaska: "At Your Own Risk Road." We did not go down that one.

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The saddest part will be when the whole band is gone, is it just tributes then? ESP since we are now at a point where the first rock and rollers are going faster and more often. Copeland just died and how Mick and Keith outlasted him is beyond me. Jagger just had a hip replacement and his youngest SON just turned 4. He is also a greatgrand father!!!

A contribution to best sign,
Reported in UK Guardian many years ago.
Sign in an otherwise empty field reading ' do not throw stones at this sign'.

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Sotheby's is auctioning off some of the wall of sound, including a McIntosh amplifier with a rolling parts box. The other items include owlsleys LSD original chemistry set given to 'ramrod' before bear went to the kink. The chem set is estimated to go for $10.000-15,000. Let's start a collection for that chemistry set, guys.

King Crimson have only had one original member playing on stage with them since they split up at the end of 1969. Lyricist and sound mixer Peter Sinfield stayed on board up until 1972.
Hawkwind have only had one original member with them since 1976, and Gong have literally none, although they had the blessing from founder Daevid Allen before he slipped this mortal coil.
All three bands still performing live under their original name.

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:Dogon, that's a classic example of a sign that will invite stones to be thrown.

Out here in the American West, it's practically any sign that is riddled with bullet holes, large and small. Except, thankfully, on the Interstate.

One sign that is fairly ubiquitous is: "Speed monitored by aircraft"! Yeah, right! Maybe that was true for like 15 minutes 40 years ago, when the cops "realized" that that was not cost effective, now they're just a punchline.

O-kay, t-minus 29 days and counting... yes, I know I'm on the wrong thread. Story of my life..............

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Thanks to D. for hooking me up with the RTR show. What a show.

Reminds me of the school of thought that suggests that legislating against something often makes the thing being legislated against more attractive than it would otherwise have been.

Dogon - I think you referred to Help Yourself as being a bit like Quicksilver in a recent post, and I have just noticed that a new box set by them has been released of their complete studio recordings. I have never heard them, myself, but they sound worth checking out. If that makes sense.

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A fine, fine band. Certainly worth anyone's time and effort to check out their music. The new 6 CD box set anthology has to be considered essential.

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12 years 4 months
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I saw that there is a vinyl box set that is or has been released that will include Wake of the Flood, From the Mars Hotel, Blues for Allah and Steal Your Face in a slip case. It's called Box of Dead Gems.

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In reply to by simonrob

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Good enough for me. Maybe not today, but definitley before the night draws in.

that I was in a record store and found some GD bootlegs (true bootlegs) with weird nonsense song titles. I think they were from 76.

On the drive to work I checked to see if my "no GD right now" rut was still in place. First two tracks of 11/30/79 rocked nicely. So, hopefully that rut is over.

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Ordered a while back, but Richard Thompson's Mirror Blue, in limited CLEAR vinyl came in today.

The clear is really cool!!!

Forgot they were limited to 1200!

Anyone else get this one?

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The highs are really high, and the rest is good stuff for an end of tour show in the bustling metropolis of Binghamton on November 6, 1977. I particularly enjoyed the St Stephen> Not Fade Away> Wharf Rat> St Stephen Truckin' segment much more this time 'round. The ending of the Truckin' is really strong, and they really nail the ending, and I swear for a moment in the ending, it sounded like Jerry wanted to reprise St Stephen, perhaps forgetting they had already done that after Wharf Rat, which admittedly had rocky lyrical moments. Jerry was also forgetful on Scarlet Begonias, but that's only part of why I've never connected with this Scarlet> Fire, and still didn't this time. Dire Wolf was also an excellent choice in the 1st set, and somewhere I thought I heard Jerry teasing the Dire Wolf lick, maybe Truckin'. Clearly from the tape, they were having fun in the last shows for almost 2 months.

Dave's 26 (11/17/71 & 12/14/71) came up next and I went with it to prepare to Listen to the River in a month's time. Remarkable how different, yet also the same, Truckin' was in those intervening 6 years. And they had to restart Sugaree, and Jerry begs the crowd's forgiveness seeing as "We're new around here", alluding to their New Mexico debut. I listen to The Other One from this show every few months and usually the absolutely incredible Not Fade Away> GDTRFB> NFA. Billy's intro on the drums is just exquisite. First time in New Mexico and they destroy it where Buddy Holly recorded it and Dan Petty gave himself a co-writing credit for producing.

10/18/72 is coming...

My last listen was Dicks 31-the compilation of tracks from 8/4/74-8/6/74. Incredible sky high jams that seem to leave the songs they grow out of behind.
Earlier in the day I finished off 6/9/77, which is also great - very bright and breezy. Skims across the surface a bit compared to the 74 shows. The Help-Slipknot-Franklins is the centre piece of this one for me.

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In reply to by daverock

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Has always been a favorite of mine, as well, Dave. The only flaw being the shows are incomplete. But we definitely get the meat. Arby's has nothing on that Playin - Scarlet - Playing on CD 4. (As a brit, DaveRock, you likely don't get that joke, unless Arby's has made it's way across the pond. And if so, on behalf of all Americans, I'm truly sorry.)

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David Crosby is releasing IICORMN which will include outtakes from the session. Do believe Jerry was involved big time with this release and some new unreleased gems will be included in this 2 cd set. The second cd will be all out takes and demos and some new unheard tunes. Always loved this lp and I need to add it to the list of cd's to pick up when it is released in Oct.
Would love some 1970 for Dave's 40.

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In reply to by carlo13

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as regards Owlsleys LSD original chemistry set...I wonder how much they'd charge to just lick it?

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Just finished listening to this again. I must say, I liked it much better the second time around.
That is all.
Have a wonderful Saturday!!

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by lebowski99

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Lebowski99 - no, I'm afraid I don't get it. But I can tell by the tone of your post that there is nothing to apologose for!

Sam - yes, that's a classic album by David Crosby - one more reissue to look out for.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by daverock

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....until my first concert since Iron Maiden in September 2019.
Billy Strings in on tap.
Such a long long time to be gone, but a short time to be there.

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7 years 5 months
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It’s amazing to me how fantastic some of these releases sound after putting them on the shelf FOR YEARS!! We used to discuss having time to go back and listen to the “oldies”, but I certainly haven’t spent much time doing that lately.
The Dark Star>Sitting’ ’ On Top>Dark Star is a gem to me, given it’s mere 17 minute length. The places the boys go in that first 14 minute section are time travel to me. On to Dave’s Vol.5!!
I do wish all a safe and healthy Labor Day weekend.
Music is the Best!!

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