• https://www.dead.net/features/jam-week/november-25-december-1-0
    Blair’s Golden Road Blog - Goodbye to My Cassettes

    If you see me wandering around Berkeley and Oakland wearing a black arm band and weeping uncontrollably, it may be because I have finally decided it is time for me to part with my large collection of Grateful Dead cassette tapes. This is not a decision I have arrived at lightly. These cassettes provided me with thousands of hours of pleasure (and occasional pain and puzzlement) since I started collecting Dead tapes around 1977. (Before that, I owned only a handful—can’t even recall how I obtained them—as well as a number of live bootleg LPs.) But it’s time to face facts: I never listen to tapes anymore, my Sony dubbing deck was put out to pasture many years ago, and the cassettes are just taking up space in my already cluttered storage room. Most are still sitting, collecting dust, on the mounted shelves I bought long ago through an ad in The Golden Road. One of the wall units crashed to the floor recently, sending cassettes flying on top of the other junk and keepsakes that sit in chaotic piles below them. I took that as an omen. Other cassettes fill unmarked bags and boxes, the sorting significance of each long since forgotten.

    I was never a truly serious tape collector—maybe a 7 on a scale of 1 to 10. In the early years of amassing tapes, I relied completely on the kindness of friends, and my friends’ friends, to hip me to shows I “should” have and to make me copies. Honestly, until I started The Golden Road in 1984, I did not follow the Dead’s tours night to night, so I would never know whether the 5/9/79 Binghamton show was better than the one in Amherst three nights later. In fact, I might not have even known the Dead were on the East Coast at that time. But tapes would sort of dribble down to me from a variety of friends and acquaintances who were serious tape collectors, and the more I listened to them, the more I wanted. (“Must … get … more!”) For many years I had considered myself a Dead Head, but I quickly learned there were vast gaps in my knowledge of the group’s musical evolution, and collecting tapes brought me up to speed.

    It was always exciting to get a new batch of tapes, and I’d pray that the quality was OK. Each year seemed to bring more and better soundboard recordings (“How do those get out of the Vault?” I wondered), but much of what came my way were audience tapes of varying audio fidelity, and that was fine, too. There were a few that sounded really, really bad—as if they were recorded from the inside of a garbage can in the alley behind the venue. But in some cases I kept them because the show was so good or it had some particular historical or sentimental value (like the hideous tape of the Gaelic Park ’71 show I’d attended). I rarely played tapes around my non-Dead Head friends, but when I did I was careful to limit it to soundboard copies. “Regular” people could not abide a hissy, distant audience tape.

    Ah, yes—remember that first second when you put on a new tape for the first time and discovered whether it had a lot of hiss or some other audio flaw? Although I did have a few fairly well-connected friends making me tapes, I was still down the chain a few links, so I rarely got pristine copies in my early days of collecting. It’s when I started looking for “upgrades” that I knew my little hobby had gone to another level.

    After I started The Golden Road in the winter of 1984, passing myself off as some kind of authority on the band (the nerve!), I decided that if I was going to write intelligently about the scene, I should probably make an attempt to hear every show the band played. This proved to be more daunting than I’d expected, as it required reaching out to many different tapers (or friends who knew who had taped which shows), and the first year there were several shows I just couldn’t find. By the end of ’85, however, a steady stream of soundboard and audience tapes—some arriving many weeks after the shows—found their way to the Golden Road mailbox. “Oh, goody! New stuff to listen to!”

    I dutifully listened to each one, kept the ones I liked and recorded over the rest. Really, there was no reason to hear that Boreal show again. Being there was bad enough. Occasionally there would be a bonanza that would get everyone excited: “Have you gotten the ‘Betty Boards’ yet?”

    As my collection grew, I joined the legions of folks who used custom J-cards. Mine had a discreet “Stealie” (without the lightning bolt) on the left-hand side of the spine, and I developed a color-coding system based on the band’s different eras, using fine-tipped felt markers: ’65-’70 tapes had a red Stealie and writing; ’71-’75 were dark blue; ’76-early ’79 (when Keith and Donna left) were purple; the Brent era from April ’79 until Jerry’s meltdown in ’86 were green; post-coma until Brent’s death were turquoise; and the Bruce and Vince era had a red Stealie but blue writing. When I started my J-card system, I didn’t know that within 10 years the purple on the spine of the late ’70s shows would almost completely disappear, for some reason, and a few years later the green ones started heading towards invisibility.

    I organized my shelves chronologically (by color; I was never anal enough to do it by date within each color). Unfortunately, though, my unpredictable listening habits meant that tapes might disappear under the seat of one of our cars, or in the living room or office in my house, or get loaned out to a friend who might or might not remember to give it back to me. I wasn’t real good at keeping track. Over the months, I’d get lazy about returning tapes to their proper region on my shelves, and instead just plunk them wherever; often on top of what was once a neat row of organized tapes. Cases would break or vanish (like socks in the laundry), and suddenly I had some cassettes with labels but no cases piling up in odd places, and cases with no cassettes. Every couple of years I’d try to marry the errant cassettes with the empty cases, but it never worked out completely right, one-to-one.

    As usual with all things technological, I was way behind the curve when people started converting their tapes to digital and putting shows on CDs. I never had a setup of my own to do that and I found it incredibly daunting to try to replace all my tapes with CDs by once again begging from friends. Where do I start? Nevertheless, I much preferred the CD format to tapes (“Hey, it’s easy to skip ‘Little Red Rooster’ or zip right to that ‘Morning Dew’!”) and I did manage to acquire a few choice nuggets on CD. But I never pursued it with the zeal of my tape quests, so to this day I don’t have very many shows on CD.

    If I had been savvy or determined enough, I could have joined the many thousands of Heads who downloaded hundreds of SBDs from Archive.org while that practice was permitted (now SBDs can only be streamed), but I wasn’t and I didn’t. Still, that website has allowed me to hear any Dead show I care to, and has been an invaluable aid to the research I’ve had to do for books, stories or liner notes I’ve written though the years. The quality is better than on my old cassettes, and it’s right there at my fingertips! Of course, the cool fools now have everything on hard drives; CDs are passé. I’d do that, too, if someone would just hand me an already filled one; too much work otherwise. Still lazy after all these years.

    And so, the ol’ cassettes have no value to me anymore. Do I toss ’em and let them become more landfill? That’s seems kind of wasteful and un-green. Try to find a home for them with someone who still collects and plays cassettes? I don’t want to box ’em up and send them somewhere; too hard. It’s a quandary. I’ve taken some off the shelves and put them in bags and boxes, and others are still up on the wall. Sometimes I’ll look over and see the date on the spine and think, “Oh, I love the ‘Scarlet-Fire’ from that show!” I’m getting wistful in my old age.

    But I know I’m never gonna listen to that tape again. Its time has passed. Its gotta go.

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    steveythelip
    13 years 1 month ago
    7/13/84?
    I have fantastic tapes of 7/13-14-15/84 that are yours for the taking, along with many others including some given to me by the esteemed Mr. Jackson (Everyone always assumed that those would be of outrageously pristine quality; now we find out he didn't even own a Nakamichi Dragon! Sheeeesh!) Email me: mrweevy@yahoo.com and we can work something out. Don't make me throw them in the trash! Please help me!
  • Default Avatar
    blairj
    13 years 1 month ago
    No, Johnny...
    ...bad karma to SELL tapes! I'm taking in the various suggestions I'm seeing here and trying to figure out a way to proceed. Y'all have convinced me that throwing them out is definitely the wrong way to go, though... Mmmm... 3/18/77 audience tape... a fave of mine, too!
  • jtalifer
    13 years 1 month ago
    I want them~~~
    Hi Blair! Johnny here in Morrison CO! I would love to buy your collection. I am starting to put together my Grateful Dead basement. I have been collecting all things Dead for a long time and I am putting together somewhat of a man cave! Let me know what you want for them. jtalifer30@yahoo.com Thanks and much love! Johnny
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15 years 7 months

If you see me wandering around Berkeley and Oakland wearing a black arm band and weeping uncontrollably, it may be because I have finally decided it is time for me to part with my large collection of Grateful Dead cassette tapes. This is not a decision I have arrived at lightly. These cassettes provided me with thousands of hours of pleasure (and occasional pain and puzzlement) since I started collecting Dead tapes around 1977. (Before that, I owned only a handful—can’t even recall how I obtained them—as well as a number of live bootleg LPs.) But it’s time to face facts: I never listen to tapes anymore, my Sony dubbing deck was put out to pasture many years ago, and the cassettes are just taking up space in my already cluttered storage room. Most are still sitting, collecting dust, on the mounted shelves I bought long ago through an ad in The Golden Road. One of the wall units crashed to the floor recently, sending cassettes flying on top of the other junk and keepsakes that sit in chaotic piles below them. I took that as an omen. Other cassettes fill unmarked bags and boxes, the sorting significance of each long since forgotten.

I was never a truly serious tape collector—maybe a 7 on a scale of 1 to 10. In the early years of amassing tapes, I relied completely on the kindness of friends, and my friends’ friends, to hip me to shows I “should” have and to make me copies. Honestly, until I started The Golden Road in 1984, I did not follow the Dead’s tours night to night, so I would never know whether the 5/9/79 Binghamton show was better than the one in Amherst three nights later. In fact, I might not have even known the Dead were on the East Coast at that time. But tapes would sort of dribble down to me from a variety of friends and acquaintances who were serious tape collectors, and the more I listened to them, the more I wanted. (“Must … get … more!”) For many years I had considered myself a Dead Head, but I quickly learned there were vast gaps in my knowledge of the group’s musical evolution, and collecting tapes brought me up to speed.

It was always exciting to get a new batch of tapes, and I’d pray that the quality was OK. Each year seemed to bring more and better soundboard recordings (“How do those get out of the Vault?” I wondered), but much of what came my way were audience tapes of varying audio fidelity, and that was fine, too. There were a few that sounded really, really bad—as if they were recorded from the inside of a garbage can in the alley behind the venue. But in some cases I kept them because the show was so good or it had some particular historical or sentimental value (like the hideous tape of the Gaelic Park ’71 show I’d attended). I rarely played tapes around my non-Dead Head friends, but when I did I was careful to limit it to soundboard copies. “Regular” people could not abide a hissy, distant audience tape.

Ah, yes—remember that first second when you put on a new tape for the first time and discovered whether it had a lot of hiss or some other audio flaw? Although I did have a few fairly well-connected friends making me tapes, I was still down the chain a few links, so I rarely got pristine copies in my early days of collecting. It’s when I started looking for “upgrades” that I knew my little hobby had gone to another level.

After I started The Golden Road in the winter of 1984, passing myself off as some kind of authority on the band (the nerve!), I decided that if I was going to write intelligently about the scene, I should probably make an attempt to hear every show the band played. This proved to be more daunting than I’d expected, as it required reaching out to many different tapers (or friends who knew who had taped which shows), and the first year there were several shows I just couldn’t find. By the end of ’85, however, a steady stream of soundboard and audience tapes—some arriving many weeks after the shows—found their way to the Golden Road mailbox. “Oh, goody! New stuff to listen to!”

I dutifully listened to each one, kept the ones I liked and recorded over the rest. Really, there was no reason to hear that Boreal show again. Being there was bad enough. Occasionally there would be a bonanza that would get everyone excited: “Have you gotten the ‘Betty Boards’ yet?”

As my collection grew, I joined the legions of folks who used custom J-cards. Mine had a discreet “Stealie” (without the lightning bolt) on the left-hand side of the spine, and I developed a color-coding system based on the band’s different eras, using fine-tipped felt markers: ’65-’70 tapes had a red Stealie and writing; ’71-’75 were dark blue; ’76-early ’79 (when Keith and Donna left) were purple; the Brent era from April ’79 until Jerry’s meltdown in ’86 were green; post-coma until Brent’s death were turquoise; and the Bruce and Vince era had a red Stealie but blue writing. When I started my J-card system, I didn’t know that within 10 years the purple on the spine of the late ’70s shows would almost completely disappear, for some reason, and a few years later the green ones started heading towards invisibility.

I organized my shelves chronologically (by color; I was never anal enough to do it by date within each color). Unfortunately, though, my unpredictable listening habits meant that tapes might disappear under the seat of one of our cars, or in the living room or office in my house, or get loaned out to a friend who might or might not remember to give it back to me. I wasn’t real good at keeping track. Over the months, I’d get lazy about returning tapes to their proper region on my shelves, and instead just plunk them wherever; often on top of what was once a neat row of organized tapes. Cases would break or vanish (like socks in the laundry), and suddenly I had some cassettes with labels but no cases piling up in odd places, and cases with no cassettes. Every couple of years I’d try to marry the errant cassettes with the empty cases, but it never worked out completely right, one-to-one.

As usual with all things technological, I was way behind the curve when people started converting their tapes to digital and putting shows on CDs. I never had a setup of my own to do that and I found it incredibly daunting to try to replace all my tapes with CDs by once again begging from friends. Where do I start? Nevertheless, I much preferred the CD format to tapes (“Hey, it’s easy to skip ‘Little Red Rooster’ or zip right to that ‘Morning Dew’!”) and I did manage to acquire a few choice nuggets on CD. But I never pursued it with the zeal of my tape quests, so to this day I don’t have very many shows on CD.

If I had been savvy or determined enough, I could have joined the many thousands of Heads who downloaded hundreds of SBDs from Archive.org while that practice was permitted (now SBDs can only be streamed), but I wasn’t and I didn’t. Still, that website has allowed me to hear any Dead show I care to, and has been an invaluable aid to the research I’ve had to do for books, stories or liner notes I’ve written though the years. The quality is better than on my old cassettes, and it’s right there at my fingertips! Of course, the cool fools now have everything on hard drives; CDs are passé. I’d do that, too, if someone would just hand me an already filled one; too much work otherwise. Still lazy after all these years.

And so, the ol’ cassettes have no value to me anymore. Do I toss ’em and let them become more landfill? That’s seems kind of wasteful and un-green. Try to find a home for them with someone who still collects and plays cassettes? I don’t want to box ’em up and send them somewhere; too hard. It’s a quandary. I’ve taken some off the shelves and put them in bags and boxes, and others are still up on the wall. Sometimes I’ll look over and see the date on the spine and think, “Oh, I love the ‘Scarlet-Fire’ from that show!” I’m getting wistful in my old age.

But I know I’m never gonna listen to that tape again. Its time has passed. Its gotta go.

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If you see me wandering around Berkeley and Oakland wearing a black arm band and weeping uncontrollably, it may be because I have finally decided it is time for me to part with my large collection of Grateful Dead cassette tapes. This is not a decision I have arrived at lightly.

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...that 4-18-82 set II tape is the exact tape I chose to listen to when I went to pick up my wife in her car this evening. What synchronicity! Her car only has am/fm radio and cassette (no cd, ha!) and I had offered to take the car in for service today. So, on the way to pick her up from work tonight I had the chance to spin one of my beloved cassettes which (honestly) I don't listen to much anymore either. I was grimmin' to hear that tape again (Phil's Earthquake Space!) for a while and here was my chance.After thinning my (formerly large) collection once before, I vowed not to ever again let my tapes go. I was too regretful of some of the tapes I let go. Damn, 8-14 and 15-71?! It'll be hard to let my tapes go again. Maybe someday, but honestly haven't thought about it much. The only attrition now comes from when I get a duplicate from a cd release. Oh and the sound? Plum awful, the wow and flutter and the pitch was terrible! Guess I'm too spoiled now.
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16 years 9 months
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I actually have a Scarlet Fire on a tape and I have no idea from what show it came, but it's the best I've ever heard....and I don't have a freakin' tape player anymore... Appreciate these nuggets, Blair. Marc
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16 years 6 months
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I hear ya Blair!!! Do not have an "immense" collection of tapes by any means, but certainly were my precious jewels at one point! Basement got flooded recently with Hurricane Irene - yep, the cassettes were there!!! Water damage to some. :-( So have them all out & about now. Belive it or not, i Do have a little tape player thats on the backside of a CD player I use!! hahaha. Popped one in - what terrible sound quality!! not one of the better ones, hahaha. and was thinking to myslelf today as well - what to do with those tapes???
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17 years 5 months
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Dearest Blair, I will drive up to your neck of the woods to bring them all home. Home is where the heart is & if you have reached the end of the line with those wonderful tapes, then all ya gotta do is give the word & I shall be happy to safeguard them. I'm registered here. If, in the meantime, you find a more suitable home for Les Cassettes, then by all means, go for it, Bro. Thanx......................
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Hey Blair, You should mail them to fans that will give them a new home. I'm serious. Tapes are a genuine piece of history, as well as my youth! I'm sure fans would send you a self addressed package, etc and you could send them a few tapes, from different eras. Tapes are something to pass onto the next generation, in my book. Give the idea some thought :) PS - if you have a 7/13/84....I'll take it!! :)
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17 years 3 months
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Really nice read, Blair! Ah, the cassettes....
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Just because you may never listen to a specific tape anymore,does not mean that it does not have value. They are worth a great deal just for the memories and thoughts that specific tapes evoke. You said this yourself... > Sometimes I’ll look over and see the date on the spine > and think, “Oh, I love the ‘Scarlet-Fire’ from that show!” > I’m getting wistful in my old age The tapes have served as an integral tool that you used to bring yourself to your current position as an extraordinary GD journalist. And they continue to awaken such emotion! And what about your legacy? And what about the insight and assistance to future Blair historians that the tapes could provide? And what about your estate to be passed down to your decedents? I do not see a good reason for you to part with your tape collection Ed
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... but some of them I will certainly keep until they are being released on CD, preferably HDCD. But then again, I will probably keep some just out ot nostalgia reasons. Before I read your book "The Music Never Stopped" I didn't know about tape trading. In the late 1970's I used to get every issue of the English magazine/fanzine Dark Star but I never saw anything on tape trading. Perhaps there were tape trader ads but I probably never thought of a tape trader tradition and therefore never looked through the ads in general. In the early 1980's I began to see people who offered to sell Dead tapes through ads in Rolling Stone magazine and once sent a check of about $25.00 to someone in, I think, Arizona. As it turned out I was being ripped of. I never got any tapes. I tried to trace the guy but recieved notes, perhaps through the American Embassy (??), that he had taken precautions and used a post box with a false name. After recieving my first issue of The Golden Road (issue #4), I decided to place an ad in issue #5. It read: "HELP! Have no tapes! Want hi qual GD 64-85 (esp. 12-28-69, 2-11/13/14-70, 3-71, 10-20-74, 8-13-75, 10-10-76, 3-28-81, 12-31-84). Grateful thanks!" It took a copule of weeks and then I recived two tapes of the complete 8-13-75 show, with a filler consisting of some studio music by John Cipollina and others (among the songs was Ghost Riders in the Sky). The nice Frenchmen who sent the tapes didin't wanted anything in return, certainly not money!! I also recieved an offer from a feloow Dead Head in Austria who wanted to trade. I would send him 12 tapes and he sent me 10 tapes back - no money involved there either. Then I also got a contact in the Bay Area, a guy who was taping shows himself. Since I had no tapes to offer, I simply said I would send him the cost of about ten tapes in money. He wasn't pleased about the arrangement but agreed to it. So I sent him $25.00 but recieved tapes to a value of $50.00!! Of course I was stunned by everyone's kindness ... Well, in the end I never became an avid tape trader. All in all, I just traded about twenty tapes an year, from 1985 to about 1990. I was more of an avid record collector and have always been. But I do still have certain tapes, that might be of poor quality but which I still hold very dear to me. Micke Östlund, Växjö, Sweden
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I never have collected tapes...and I have friend to "blame" for it. He laid a half-dozen tapes on me in the early 80s, including tapes of my first two shows, at a time when I was unaware that such things even existed. All of them were probably 4th or 5th generation tapes, all sounded as if they were recorded in the parking lot down the street from the venue. I remember that one had a recording level so low that I needed to crank the volume up ALL the way just to make out what songs were playing. My response was, "What's the big deal with this? These suck!" And I never went back. I guess the upside is that I don't have a room full of cassettes with the "keep or toss" decision to make (those original 6 hung around unplayed until I tossed them during a move seven years later). If not for the Archive...
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17 years 1 month
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Put them on craiglist for the first comer to pick and take off your hands. In fact I'll volunteer myself!!! I know some people would still treasure them and I'd hate to see all that time and passion just put out to pasture! Let the tapes play and live on!!!!
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14 years
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I still have about a thousand tapes in my basement collecting dust. I just can't get myself to part with them. I can still look at certain tapes and know when I received them, who I traded with, etc. Also, all the "hard" work put into my custom cards. I know I will never listen to them but just having them makes me feel young again and reminds of a simpler time when I anxiously popped in the tapes for the first time. You also learned which tapers A+ were really A+ whose weren't. Times were simpler then. Now we have worry about when our remastered, pristine copies of the entire Europe 72 tour are going to arrive! :)
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Dear Blair, Thanks for your blog entry, and for all your great work over the years on The Golden Road, which I read and collected avidly. Thanks too for your essays and liner notes, which are informative and enjoyable. Most of all, thanks for your superb work in writing Garcia: An American Life and The Music Never Stopped, rewarding works I consult frequently and with perennial appreciation for your pellucid prose. Before you discard your cassettes, please note that not everything circulates in lossless digital format. I have just about everything from '65-'84 in lossless digital, but some sources have remained elusive even after all these years. I personally know of, and am transcribing, certain uncirculated audience sources (masters and dubs) that currently exist only on cassette. Would you please take a look through your estimable collection (probably many low-generation audience and soundboard dubs in there) for the following ten items? If you have any of these sources, I'll pay the freight to have you mail or ship the cassettes to me here on the East Coast (no profiteering, of course) so I can transcribe them and get the music into circulation. Here's the list: 04/26/70 York Farm, Poynette, WI (red Stealie with black writing) 01/21/71 Freeborn Hall, U. Cal. Davis (dark blue) 11/01/73 McGaw Mem. Hall, Northwestern U., Evanston, IL (first set only) 09/23/76 Cameron Indoor Stadium, Duke U., Durham, NC (audience) (purple) 03/18/77 Winterland, S.F., CA (Bertrando: Sony ECM-270's → Sony TC-152-SD) 01/21/79 Masonic Temple, Detroit, MI (audience upgrade needed) 02/06/79 Fairgrounds Pavilion, Tulsa, OK (tapers were spotted) 10/18/80 Saenger Perf. Arts Center, New Orleans, LA (soundboard) (green) 10/19/80 Saenger Perf. Arts Center, New Orleans, LA (soundboard) 04/19/83 Alfond Arena, U. Maine, Orono (soundboard upgrade needed). Thanks for considering this request. If you wish to reply, feel free to leave me a message in my account on this site. Again, I appreciate all your scholarly and journalistic contributions through the years. Best to all, deadhead66
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A friend of mine once told me, if I listen to my tapes backwards, while standing upside down, I'll hear "Paul is dead. Paul is dead." But seriously, I have boxes of tapes in a storage room and can't part with them, not yet anyways. They play too big a part of my own personal history. I did buy a recorder years ago and transferred some of my favorite (and greatest sounding) tapes to cd. Maybe one day I'll let go of them- or let go enough to only keep 50 to 100 of my favorites.
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You don't want your tapes any moreYou don't have much on CD You don't have much digitally stored You don't indulge in the digital age thrill of grabbing the latest Charlie Miller upgrade or Hunter Seamons matrix. So apart from the official releases, from now on you're going to rely on archive.org to store all that music you love ? Are you really ready to put such faith in the internet? All that great stuff hanging out in the cloud somewhere? Nothing you can actually lay your hands on? One global crash and you are bereft. Would you do the same with your diaries, writings, notes, projects etc??? Have you really thought this through? Really? Great piece by the way, thanks.
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Digitizing - Is that the word? A few years ago I started trying to put cassettes into my hard drive via the free program Audacity. It worked OK but I had problems with marking separations between songs and other things. Oh, and I am technologically challenged, to be kind to myself. Just wondering, what program do people recommend for this? And thanks.
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Hi Blair,It's so cool that you posted the insert from 2/15/73 Dane County Coliseum. That's a great show...it has Donna singing (in the first set, I think) "You Ain't Woman Enough (To Take My Man.) I'm sure Keith had to enjoy that. I can just see Donna on the edge of the stage giving the evil eye to some hippie chick who was fixated on Donna's man. But the best thing about this tape is the Dark Star. There's one part in there during the jam where Jerry plays....this....chord. That's all it is. One chord. It's completely mind-bending and mind-blowing, and I'm sure that people in the coliseum that night who were properly tuned in just melted. I've suggested this one as part of a Road Trip release...Midwest '73 road trip. Great post Blair....I've been thinking about what to do with my tapes...I actually still have my tape deck plugged in and I do listen occasionally....to things like 3/15/73.
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I own an imac and all you have to do is loop the audio out to the audio in and record to GarageBand and burn cds as a back-up. Your Welcome.
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14 years 8 months
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I'm not sure if this will help you, but anyways...Years ago when I wanted to transfer my tapes to cd I bought a machine made my Tascam which features a cd recorder and tape deck together. It's very user friendly, though kind of pricey. I'm not sure about computer programs which accomplish the same task as this.
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16 years 11 months
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Everybody's been there or going there. One marker that I noticed on J-Cards was whether people wrote "Grateful Dead" on the card or not. I always did. I'm not sure what the sociobiological differences were between those who wrote "Grateful Dead-Fillmore 12-19-69" vs "Fillmore 12-19-69" but it was one of those strange little variables.
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I just recently parted with most of my cassettes. The hardest thing was 'Who do I give them to?' I mean you can't just randomly give them away. I mean, think about how much time was spent writing out "J" cards, and dubbing tapes from whoever I could. Of course nowadays, you could burn 50 or 60 cd's a day easily. It would take weeks to dub that many tapes. anyway, I gave them to a really good friend and told her to keep what she wanted, and pass them on to people that she knew would appreciate them. It wasn't to difficult to do once I found the right person to pass them on to. I only had about 300 or so Dead tapes. All said and done, I ended up giving away about 1000 tapes all together. I used archive.org to replace most of the tapes first. I did keep a handfull of really good audience masters. Those I will transfer onto cd as soon as I am able. For those you out there who are looking for a good program to use, Sony has a good one called Soundforge Audio studio. It works really good, and fairly easy to use. I had no workind tape deck for a couple of years before I let them go. I was going to get another tape deck, but it wasn't worth it. Cd's are much better. Most of the tapes that I had didn't sound all that great anyway, so I can't say that I will miss them.
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I know I'm in the tiny minority here, but I still listen to my tapes pretty regularly - or, I did up until about 2 weeks ago when I got a "new" car (funny that my 94 Honda had a tape deck, while my '84 veedub bus has a cd player)! I even still make tapes, streaming SBDs from Archive onto my Nakamichi deck for listening in the car.Though I don't do it much anymore, my J-Card "trademark" was to write DEAD in the Egypt style on the spine, with the date and the venue, and I have a little stealie stamp that's perfect for the front in the center of the tracklist. Needless to say, my wife thinks I'm crazy. (Do we even need to write that anymore? Seems almost obligatory on these threads.) My only problem is the stash of some 50+ Phish tapes my neighbor gave me when he moved away a few years ago. I just kinda said "OK, I'll find something to do with 'em" but I still haven't... I tried listening to a few but they really just don't do much for me y'know? Any takers?
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that 2/15/73 was one of my first tapes. That Dark Star>Eyes>China Doll = some of the most mindbending and GORGEOUS music ever committed to tape.
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Actually the Quoth the Raven Nevermore was the next night (appropriately enough, Baltimore). San Francisco in ruins is the (inappropriately enough?) Hartford quote you're looking for. Right? Anyway. I've always been more drawn to the Hartford show. I don't know why. I think they're both good.
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Right you are- The Raven Space. I was just having fun with it- Both classic shows!!!
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keeping the rest. Every so often they are very welcome. cassettes also prevent having to search out something on disc (I don't do downloads and such...I have a friend who does that and then makes me CDs...thank you Craig). For example, 7/14/76. cassettes also are good when you go from the car to indoors or vice versa. you just push play. no need to keep track of "I was 4 minutes 20 seconds into that playin' jam...". EUGENE TOMORROW!!! :))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
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I truly sympathize with your situation. I rarely listen to cassettes anymore but I have the luxury of a closet dedicated to them, along with CD's (Dead and many others) and my LP's. The thing is they're old friends like the albums are. I still have the tape I made of the Live/Dead album, all pieces segued pretty well together, that I took on a cross country trip. I remember driving across the salt flats at midnight with Dark Star playing out of the crappy little battery powered player I had borrowed since the car only had an AM radio. Gotta keep it. I also have an audience of 3-18-77 and you can FEEL the reaction of the crowd to one of the first Terrapins. A 5-25-77 that crackles with energy that the SBD lacks. My tapes are the only versions I have ever found and I suppose I should get them on CD's or something. In any case someday I may be forced to part with them...but not all. Do what you gotta do.
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Hi Blair! Johnny here in Morrison CO! I would love to buy your collection. I am starting to put together my Grateful Dead basement. I have been collecting all things Dead for a long time and I am putting together somewhat of a man cave! Let me know what you want for them. jtalifer30@yahoo.com Thanks and much love! Johnny
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...bad karma to SELL tapes! I'm taking in the various suggestions I'm seeing here and trying to figure out a way to proceed. Y'all have convinced me that throwing them out is definitely the wrong way to go, though... Mmmm... 3/18/77 audience tape... a fave of mine, too!
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I have fantastic tapes of 7/13-14-15/84 that are yours for the taking, along with many others including some given to me by the esteemed Mr. Jackson (Everyone always assumed that those would be of outrageously pristine quality; now we find out he didn't even own a Nakamichi Dragon! Sheeeesh!) Email me: mrweevy@yahoo.com and we can work something out. Don't make me throw them in the trash! Please help me!
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I have beautiful tapes of 7/13-14-15/84 that are yours for the taking, as well as many others including some I was given by the redoubtable Mr. Jackson (everyone always assumed that those tapes would be of outrageously pristine quality, and now we discover that he didn't even own a Nakamichi Dragon! Sheeeeesh!) email me at: mrweevy@yahoo.com and we can work something out. Please don't make me toss them in the trash! Help me!
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If selling them is bad karma, then throwing them out would be even worse. Every Thanksgiving, my large family would meet at Grandma's house in Ventura. I had an older cousin who was at Stanford at the time. He would bring me tapes and we would sit by the fire talking about the Dead. I have started to keep special things for my nephews, so that they can experience the same joy I felt. Those tapes that were passed down to me were and still are like bars of sweet sweet gold. Johnny
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They are hard to say goodbye to. I parted with my cassettes a couple of years ago, but I kept a couple for keepsakes. I am vexed by the concept of managing local copies of shows; I just wanna listen. Nowadays, because of the shows on archive.org I am considering reclaiming the space on my external HD by dumping those files. So the wheel goes 'round. Thank you for sharing your sweet story.
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what about donating them to UCAL @ Davis..........They could be added to the Grateful Dead project. Years from now, perserved under glass a rare J-card from 5/8/77. or Library of Congress Attn: Curator Mickey Hart I'll have a hard time getting rid of my tapes. While I know most is available via Etree, Sugarmegs and Archive. I'll miss that girls comment on my 3/27/93 Albany tape. Its right at the end of Comes A Time as they go into Corrina.....You hear her say "Maybe it will be better this time" What is to be done with all my old Dupree Diamond News, Unbroken Chain, Relix magazines. I'm keeping the Golden Roads ( Of Course ).
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Will all of Europe '72 be pulled from the Internet, once its officially released? It seems in the past that certain shows have been pulled due to the commercial release. If so, thats a heck of alot of great music, no longer available to those who only "archive" through the web.
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The shows are already pulled from Archive.org and from the vineyard on this site. Many tapers are going digital, first by checking out the avialable digital versions, comparing them to their tapes and only ditching the tape if it is inferior. This saves a lot of unnecessary and time consuming digitisation of tapes when something better is easily obtained.. As previosuly mentioned it can and does also lead to some new discoveries.among those piles of tapes. But digital is not secure, Hard Drives fail. Back everything up on a second drive or on DVDs
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13 years 6 months
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Oh, man. The post from jaydoublu reminds me of a Garcia acoustic tape from Boston where he sings the line from "Gomorrah" that goes "I heard a voice telling me to flee" and right then there is an altercation near the taper and someone says, "Get the f**k out of here!" Talk about synchronicity...
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Keep all of your J-cards for the memories and recycle the tapes themselves as the music is readily accessable at higher levels of quality.Maybe keep a few of em as fun artifacts, first tape, last tape....somethin like that. :) Love the blogs man
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that's the thing about tapes, the oddball moments on the side that they record forever. Somewhere in my extremely chaotic pile o' tapes is one of a Jerry Garcia Band show at the Keystone Berkeley, circa 1983, which is notable for an extremely hot 'n' spacy Don't Let Go, the solo of which went on for about 10 minutes and caused Billy Kreutzmann, who happened to be drumming that night, to be more or less looking at Jer wondering what planet he was on and trying madly to keep up for most of the duration. I was on the rail and saw the whole thing. On the tape, just as the whole thing is going into hyperspace, the taper gets into a shouting match with the bouncer who's just spotted his gear.
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were not taper friendly, even though everyone knew perfectly well what was going on. I used to bring in various bits of people's taping gear in with my photo equipment because it blended in better.
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... there gotta be an exellent crisp soundboard tape out there somewhere of that magical night in 1983 ... ^_ ^ Micke Östlund, Växjö, Sweden
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Funny, I too was at that show. And it was the first GD show I received on tape, 8 Track tape ! My older sister brought it home that fall (Thanksgiving ?) from college for me. It had nice GD art work on the lable, but the sound was not the best. But still it was cool to listen to in the car with my Dead Head friends while enjoying a smoke. Ahh! the good old days.
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Great blog as usual, Blair. I haven't gotten rid of my tapes yet, and probably never will get rid of the best ones. I still have a functioning deck and listen sometimes. One particular favorite: a tape with nothing on it but the Dark Star encore from July 13, 1984 at the Berkeley Greek. It sounds awesome, and since I was there, brings back great memories. It was one of those "peak at the Greek" moments.
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I remember my first years, no cassettes, (cassettes suck, they break, they ruin your player, have to listen to the whole thing or spend time rewinding) but the Dead are only available on Cassette so I started 'collecting the occasional show'. I had 40 tapes before I bought a player. Then rerecorded the ones I could on the new player. I have about 400 or so tape 62(SleepyHollowHogStompers) to early 80's when I started (5/13/83) and then most of the shows I attended and a few choice nuggets from friends (3/27/90 Branford on Eyes) but since 2000 I have not listened to one tape only cd's and I am still behind on the cds, and now with the Europe'72 stuff, it's just backlog but hey that's what I live for, music music music, Just got the new Flecktones, new EC and Wynton, Willie and Wynton, Corea, Clarke, White, and the new Superheavy and the new YES so. got my ears on.
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Is that new Wynton and Clapton as good as the Wynton and Willie Nelson one (which I loved)? I'm intrigued but haven't heard a note of it...
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Wynton and Clapton is fantastic. The Layla as sort of a New Orleans funeral march is worth the price alone. But it doesn't have to be. Just listen to the teaser on Amazon. That was enough to get me to buy it on the release date. On priceless moments on tape: Santa Fe Downs 1982: "Oh no, not Althea" "Shut the F@#* up." "Oh, sorry man." I haven't seen those guys in eons but picture them every time I hear (or think of) that tape and that show.
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13 years 5 months
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Hey Blair..I always enjoy your blogs, and this one hit close to home. I am doing the same cassette purge. Though my plan is to somehow get some of my cassettes on my computer, and maybe eventually to some sort of cloud. With so much available " out there " it just gets overwhelming to deal with these things physically. Honestly, I never play cassettes. Thanks for the blog !!!
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13 years 8 months
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A week before Blair posted this topic, a friend told me that he had run out of storage space and it was time to get rid of his tapes. I told him to put them in a box (or many boxes). After all, there is no need to take such a hasty and drastic action. This is a matter that has to be carefully pondered. I have my own serious storage problem, but I still record my own stuff on audio cassettes on a regular basis. The only drawback is that the good quality blank tapes are harder to find nowadays. Aside from the historical value of tapes, they are analog. (Here comes the analog versus digital debate.) Some of us can deal with the extraneous sounds--like the friend who wanted to keep talking even though you were recording. I think of some of the really old blues recordings, like those of Charley Patton. They are so scratchy that they sound like they got kicked around on a beach or gravel road. I can listen beyond that. Nowadays, we have the advantage of listening to music that is 'pristine', and that's cool, too; but, there is something irreplaceable about the 'warmth' of analog recordings, in spite of their flaws.