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    18,000 happy Dead Heads could not be wrong. Deer Creek, my how you deliver.

    We're closing the books on DAVE'S PICKS 2021 with not one but two - nearly - complete shows from Noblesville, IN 7/18/90 & 7/19/90. Yes, we've packed it all on four CDs, save for that second night encore which we promise you'll get to hear in the very near future. Sometimes there really is just too much good stuff.

    For now, we'll invite you to cozy up with two exceptional back-to-back shows, shows with precision and clarity, shows with more than a lion's share of exploratory jams, and most importantly, shows that were simply a damn good time for all. Highlights from night one include the bookends of a spectacular "Help>Slip!>Franklin's" and an epically intricate "Morning Dew" followed by a classic cover of "The Weight." Night two, is the sleeper hit, with flawless playing from start to finish, the set list inviting you to find new favorites in top-notch renditions of "Foolish Heart" or "Victim Or The Crime," and if that's not one of the finest versions of "Desolation Row" Bobby ever did do! We would be remiss if we didn't mention that these shows were among Brent's last and they are some of his finest of the era at that.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL. 40: DEER CREEK MUSIC CENTER, NOBLESVILLE, IN 7/18 & 19/90 was recorded by Dan Healy and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

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  • Atron
    Joined:
    DaP 40 (7185) makes it to the maritimes.

    Pretty much a week ahead of schedule as per the other releases this year, on a day off no less. Had a full spin and a half through. This is my first subscription and I have to say I am very impressed, a few in and out of the box picks, filling in some holes in my collection. Different flavours, a great selections of tunes. Maybe too early to make an informed call but #40 might be my favourite. Glad they kept the DrumsSpaces intact, I love all the MIDI madness.

    How would you folks rank the 2021 picks?

    Looking forward to 2022.

    Take care.

  • unkle sam
    Joined:
    pheew loud

    Seen a lot of them
    Loudest, can't say, Black Sabbath loud and heavy, like a barbell on your ears
    Foghat, believe it or not, these guys could rock and rock, down front, nothing but sweat and sweet loudness
    Thin Lizzy, started the show with Jailbreak, 4th note blew out the fuses 20 mins later back but not as loud
    The Who, very loud, even in a stadium but not ear shattering
    Saw a band recently who opened for Captain Beyond, can't recall their name but everyone, everyone, even me and I'm almost deaf, left the venue, just ear bleeding loud that almost made you barf, Captain Beyond was great, Bobby Caldwell is still out there playing those great songs.
    Ted Nugent, he sucked but it was sooo loud, nasty loud Brownsville Station opened that day, then Mahogany Rush, then Cheap Trick, then Ted, everybody was better than nugent. Talk about the neighborhood complaining, not only was it loud, it was nugent
    Saw a band named Nektar back in the 70's, loud but clear as a bell, great light show all though the sound may have been compromised by the venue, basically a tuna can.
    Agree about the good old Dead, they were loud but really good loud, and clear as a bell, love that Mac sound even today. Zero distortion
    Spirit in 1974 at the Peabody Auditorium in Daytona Beach, Loud Spirit of 76 and then Kaptain Kopter music, raunchy in your pants loud.
    Uriah Heep in 1970 very loud competing with Deep Purple that wah-wah on Gypsy was incredibly loud, still remember the front rows being literally pushed back by the sound
    Im sure there are more, just the ones I can remember right now loud seemed to be "in" back in the 70's

  • hbob1995
    Joined:
    Loudest

    '79 - Saw Twisted Sister in the Gemini, a bar on the west side of the Hudson River. Stood right in front of the right hand side speaker stack. Could not hear much for the better part of a week
    Rock on

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Poor sound

    I couldn't objectively verify it, but I would think the quality of the sound was quite poor for all those loud British hard rock bands I saw in the mid 70s. Maybe I just got used to it, but I saw quite a few punk bands around 1976-1977, and I can't remember ever thinking they were particularly loud. Similarly with the next wave of bands - Echo and The Bunnymen for example - I never came out deaf like I did in 1973.

    The Dead weren't noticeably loud in 1981 - loud enough and a very clear sound. I saw both Black Sabbath and Deep Purple in 2017 after a 40 odd year gap, and again, I didnt think about ther sound at all - it was probabaly much better than it was in the 70's.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Loud

    Late as always, lost internet!!!!

    I'm always amazed at peoples memory. I couldn't think of a 'loudest" show. Dead show were always "loud", but as HF points out there's a difference between loud noise and loud clarity. Dead were always top shelf for my years (80's) in the sound system department. Saw Peter Gaberial for his tour in 83? Outdoor amphitheater, we were maybe in the 20th row about middle,,,,, GREAT sound, full and clear, sounded just like the live album turned up.

    Anyway, last night I remember a show, and the damn thing wasn't that long ago, but that memory.......

    Lockn a few years back finished one night with My Morning Jacket. They came out ear blistering loud, that level of loud you'd swear had blood coming out your ears. The crowd thin fast. I just stood there and faced the music as it were. Now I'm pretty green at this point, but I get a focus on the sound and to me it was this HUGE cloud of distortion, LOUD, but then I finally hear at the heart of this cloud of white, this guy playing a clean guitar line, that is crystal clear and a bright light at the center of white and this cloud is huge, in my mind it's a 60' high sphere.

    And while he's climaxes in the jam, the sound sucked down to a human size piano and him playing (crystal clear, no distortion field), I like to teach the world to sing......

    THAT was a moment, that was loud.

    Maybe it was the green!!

    I learned the song was "steam -> Teach the world to sing"

    A couple of years later on some college station, I heard he was touring again with the "distortion" tour, but without the distortion,,,, called it clarity or some such. I thought maybe it wasn't all green :-)

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Ol' Man Jenkins is currently listening to...

    Metallica's "Justice" on my phone.

    I feel the energy without PAIN.

    My lawn is mighty green...

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    My conclusion

    Okay, so high volume goes with rock and electric blues, yet there's a crucial difference. As John Hammond Jr. once told me about seeing Hendrix after the latter's career had taken off, "too loud is too loud." The bands long ago indulged in it and, not knowing any better as a young person, I went along for the ride. But over the years (yes, I'm old now -- but only if you're young) it's become clear that loudness alone can really spoil the music. If you can't hear what's going on, or the volume is so high that it becomes an issue in itself, then the musical artistry is lost and pointless. I see this in local venues that are known for being "loud." The volume is simply too high to relax and enjoy the music; the volume becomes an issue in itself. And, to be sure, I like loud music. So I was always, er, grateful, that my favorite bands -- the GD, ABB and The Band -- back in the day were into quality sound systems, though that didn't necessarily account for the venues and their acoustics. Among them, as far as I know, the GD were the only ones who plowed significant resources, constantly, into the science of their amplification medium to achieve the cleanest live sound they could get. That to me says alot about this band.

    And the thing is, "too loud is too loud" was true when I was young. I was just too young and too stupid to move when it was an issue.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    again from ol' man Jenkins

    I like rock n roll
    I like the energy
    I like the grooves
    I like the riffs

    But if I want to attend a show by a band, I do not want my eardrums ASSAULTED. (I just flashed on the sequence in 2001 where Bowman is shaking in his helmet).

    I never experienced PAIN and "eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee" during or after a GD show.

    I'll just listen to my stuff on my front lawn...stay off, you punks!

    JENKINS NATION!

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Loudest Band

    Couple ways if looking at it in my mind, and I am biased due to my stake in this discussion: 1) the bands are loud because they love it loud and they hit a dB mark that happens to distinguish them; and 2) same as #1, except they're aware of the "bad-assery" of being the loudest band, so they kick it up a few dBs to take the crown.

    I've been a major Who fan since I was 10 yrs old, hence my stake in this discussion. I heard along the way that The Who were renowned for being in the Guinness Book of World Records as the loudest band in the world. That was some bad-assery I passed on to many a Who nonbeliever.

    Maybe this is commented on already - I haven't read far enough back in the posts to see where the discussion began. The history of it is, Deep Purple, who I believe falls into category #1, set the record originally, I guess in the early 70s.

    The Who had been a notoriously loud band throughout the 60s and 70s, and were commonly regarded as the loudest band in the world, if only because Pete Townsend said so (and had the hearing loss to prove it). Eventually Guinness sought them out and caught them at the end of their 1976 tour at Charlton. They broke Deep Purple's record and held it for the rest of their pre-Farewell Tour career.

    Sometime after that I believe things get sketchy, because bands were falling into category number two, where they kicked it up a few notches to gain the notoriety of being the loudest band in the world. I could be wrong, but I don't think anyone held the record as long as The Who, and because there was a shot at making Guinness, I think there were bands who didn't really come by it honestly. So I'm going with The Who :D

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    The loudest band in the world... Allegedly.

    Grand Funk Railroad headlined a free concert in Hyde Park in July 1971. They were advertised as being the loudest band in the world. It would have made no sense to try and promote them on the basis of their musical prowess. Almost nobody in England had any idea who they were. Heads, Hands and Feet were the opening act who I remember nothing about, unfortunately. Maybe I arrived too late and missed them. Second up was Humble Pie with one Peter Frampton on guitar. A great performance, they ensured that GFR would never be able to top that and indeed they didn't. An endless selection of standard riffs seemed to be all they were capable of. The world's loudest? Hard to say because it was outdoors in a park.

    I think I only saw Deep Purple once and mercifully that was also outdoors so my ears were spared. I remember little about it due to being chemically compromised at the time. It was either 1970 or 1971.

    The loudest band I ever heard (indoors, naturally) was Black Sabbath in May 1970. People living miles away complained about the noise which gives an idea of the volume levels involved.

    There were other gigs that resulted in hearing problems the following day but I can't remember them all.

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18,000 happy Dead Heads could not be wrong. Deer Creek, my how you deliver.

We're closing the books on DAVE'S PICKS 2021 with not one but two - nearly - complete shows from Noblesville, IN 7/18/90 & 7/19/90. Yes, we've packed it all on four CDs, save for that second night encore which we promise you'll get to hear in the very near future. Sometimes there really is just too much good stuff.

For now, we'll invite you to cozy up with two exceptional back-to-back shows, shows with precision and clarity, shows with more than a lion's share of exploratory jams, and most importantly, shows that were simply a damn good time for all. Highlights from night one include the bookends of a spectacular "Help>Slip!>Franklin's" and an epically intricate "Morning Dew" followed by a classic cover of "The Weight." Night two, is the sleeper hit, with flawless playing from start to finish, the set list inviting you to find new favorites in top-notch renditions of "Foolish Heart" or "Victim Or The Crime," and if that's not one of the finest versions of "Desolation Row" Bobby ever did do! We would be remiss if we didn't mention that these shows were among Brent's last and they are some of his finest of the era at that.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOL. 40: DEER CREEK MUSIC CENTER, NOBLESVILLE, IN 7/18 & 19/90 was recorded by Dan Healy and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

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I'll admit that I'm always late to the party, but has someone already asked why the set lists aren't listed above in the usual manner? I've looked them up of course courtesy of Mr. Google, but I prefer to be able to quickly jump to the lists on this site when someone here mentions a specific song or sequence of songs.

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So is it one complete show and most of the other night or Two incomplete shows? They mention its almost complete. So what do you leave off?
Subscription offer for 2022 should be soon.

This is 10 minutes down the road from where i live. I regularly go past the gates but have never been the other side. If Jiminmd pops over my way I'm sure Olivia could be 'persuaded' to sell up

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50 years ago today…..

October 22, 1971
Auditorium Theater, Chicago, Illinois

Set 1: Bertha-Me and My Uncle-Tennessee Jed-Jack Straw-Loser-Playing in the Band-Sugaree-Beat It On Down the Line-Black Peter-Mexicali Blues-Cold Rain and Snow-Me and Bobby McGee-Comes a Time-One More Saturday Night

Set 2: Ramble On Rose-Cumberland Blues-That's It for the Other One>Deal-Sugar Magnolia-Casey Jones-Johnny B. Goode

Deadicated to Gainesville, leedesj, drpryan, andoverdeadhead, estimated-eyes, fourwindsblow, Thin, JeffSmith, DeadVikes, and Mr. Ones, because why not?

As writers and readers, as sinners and citizens, our realism and our aesthetic sense make us wary of crediting the positive note……

No wariness here. This is a relatively unknown but very positive show. A show of apparent contrasts---a solid, fourteen song first set, followed by a seemingly short second set…..

However, with that being said, if you’d like to hear a really fine late 71 Other One, here you go!!

LOL, one of my October 71 guilty pleasures. The other, we’ll discuss on the 29th……….

Rock on!!!

Doc
Many of the insights of the saint stem from their experience as sinners…..

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5/5/78 was shared in it's entirety back when Taper's Section permitted downloading. So, the 1st set board does indeed float about. Alas, they were 192 kbps mp3s.

-edit- Oh, you really mean actual tape! I see it's on archive already, too. haha lol

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US Blues encore from 2nd night.

I always thought Victim was a cool song. Caught one of the early versions at Buckeye Lake in 1988. The crowd reaction was priceless. This song actually frightened people. Not every song has to be light and joyful like Sugar Magnolia or Touch of Grey. It was dark and sinister and was a great point of tension and release in the setlist show pacing.

The only songs I never really warmed up to were Wave To The Wind, I Fought The Law (I caught the 1st and it was the booby prize of the cancelled 1st night blizzard show) and Samba In The Rain which Jerry never nailed.

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In reply to by docmarty

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I'm on my way. Please tell Olivia I should make tea time and I'm interested in one or more of her garden gnomes.

Honestly.. after reading up, this has got to be one of the coolest places.

Edit: Oh, tell her not to worry, I am fully vaxed and quite harmless. :D

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Was over at the Jerry site and surprised that the JGB album being released in vinyl isn't sold out yet. I KNOW if I got up at 5 in the morning to stand in line on RSD, it be sold out by the time I got to the front of the line!!

I really need to see how the "box set is wrapped with textured paper". What could that texture be???

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I don't know.. I plan to study it then lick one of the corners.. then wait an hour and see what happens.

Didn't they release this on 180 gram already like 5 or 6 years ago or something?

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One is a pathetic ripoff the other, the boys making up for lost cash with an ok presentation
Sorry as Mick said in ‘89 when Bill left “ oh if Charlie left that would be the end “

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50 years ago today…..

October 23, 1971
Eastown Theater, Detroit, Michigan

Set 1: Bertha-Playing In The Band-Loser-Mexicali Blues-Sugaree-Jack Straw-Big Railroad Blues-El Paso-Ramble On Rose-Me And Bobby McGee-Cumberland Blues-Brokedown Palace-One More Saturday Night

Set 2: Casey Jones-Me And My Uncle-Tennessee Jed-Sugar Magnolia-Comes A Time-Truckin'-Brown-Eyed Women-Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Not Fade Away

This is deadicated to Jay Carstens…..

“The word tonight is easy going, you know how it is………….”

And easy going it was. While there’s no “big jam”, it’s still a fine and enjoyable show. The new material is nicely on display, a very Bakersfield kind of show, relatively unknown and underappreciated, definitely worthy of a listen, and with no hint of what would be unleashed the following evening……

Rock on!!

Doc
…..but it also turned out to be hell……

I was at the live show included . They were going even faster than I was. Bit frigging expensive, though.

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I ordered the 10 lp collection of Joni Mitchell's archive set. Suppose to come around end of month. Got an email pushed back to 2/15/22,,, okay. Yesterday I get an email saying it has been shipped,,,, wow i think. Then I examine the email closer,,,, not the lp's coming but 7x7 inch poster which comes with the box set!!!

Really,,, they're doing a separate mailing for the "art print"!!!!!

You just have to shake your head at somethings that happen :-)

But Jerry is still on track!!! (they had the textured paper in stock)

I do love a box set, but some of them do include an awful lot of tat. Art prints, posters-worst of all fascimiles of tickets from long gone gigs you never went to. I'm not 15 years old for chrissake. No disrespect intended to 15 year olds who may be reading
And not meaning necessarily to diss you're art print, Dennis, which might be an exception to the rule.

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tried it, says it is the wrong numb er and to get in touch with the sender, so, ..... when will this be shipped? when was it suppose to be shipped? is there shipping going on in here, shipping I say shipping so shipping is by ups not usps, will it be delivered to my mail box or to front door? just wondering if I will ever see this release.

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Did you get a shipping notice from dead.net or a UPS notification?

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50 years ago today………….

Skullfuck aka The Skull Album aka Skull & Roses was released………..

Bertha [4/27/71]-Mama Tried [4/26/71]-Big Railroad Blues [4/5/71]-Playing In The Band [4/6/71]-The Other One [4/28/71]-Me & My Uncle [4/29/71]-Big Boss Man [4/26/71]-Me & Bobby McGee [4/27/71]-Johnny B. Goode [3/24/71]-Wharf Rat [4/26/71]-Not Fade Away/Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad [4/5/71]

The expanded version released in 2003 includes “Oh Boy” and “Hog For You Baby” from the Manhattan Center show of April 6, 1971, as well as a short radio spot. Organ overdubs performed by Merl Saunders were used on Bertha, Playing In The Band, and Wharf Rat. Recording by Betty Cantor and Bob Matthews, artwork by Alton Kelly, photography by Bob Seidemann. It was the first Grateful Dead album to be certified “Gold” by the RIAA.

IMHO, a very fine live album, which we loved dearly and played the ever-loving sh*t out of. But, as fine as it was and is, could it have been better? Maybe. Could’ve done without the drum solo. Why no Hard To Handle? Where was the Morning Dew? And could you imagine IF this has been a 3 record set? That would have been crazy, man, crazy!!!!

A remastered 50th anniversary edition was released on June 25, 2021. It did not include the bonus tracks that were found on the 2003 re-issue. However, it did include a bonus disc with material from the July 2, 1971 Fillmore West show. GREAT BIG THANKS!!!

This was the first 1971 live Dead we ever heard, and it sounded mighty fine! And yes, rockers, I still listen to it, it’s been part of the soundtrack to my entire adult life…………

Rock on!!

Doc
Erudition - dust shaken out of a book into an empty skull…..

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50 years ago today…..

October 24, 1971
Eastown Theater, Detroit, Michigan

Set 1: Sugar Magnolia-Deal-El Paso-Tennessee Jed-Jack Straw-China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider-Playing In The Band-Black Peter-Candyman-One More Saturday Night-Casey Jones

Set 2: Truckin'-Ramble On Rose-Mexicali Blues-Dark Star>Me And Bobby McGee-Cumberland Blues-St. Stephen-Johnny B. Goode

Deadicated to FLH, DarklordBerto, dewajack, docmarty, m-skjellyfetti, Cousins Of The Pioneers, simonrob, lycanthrope51, snafu, and otheronerat, because it was a day of rest……..

Super rare Sugar Mags to kick it off. Fine mid first set China/Rider. Unusual, two back-to-back Garcia songs in the first set. Solid Truckin’ to open the second set. Excellent 71 Dark Star, possibly Latvala’s favorite of the year (10/24/71 Dark Star: Killer. “He loved this Dark Star and thought it was out of place for 1971, feeling more like 1969.”).

You don’t hear a lot about this show, but there’s certainly a lot to like here…….

What is the good of your stars and trees, your sunrise and the wind, if they do not enter into our daily lives?

Rock on!!

Doc
And he that strives to touch the stars,
Oft stumbles at a straw…..

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Doc, I agree with you, it is really a great live album. I wish they would have included a version of Easy Wind. Like you say, a third album added to the release would have been great.

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Last 5:
John Coltrane-A Love Supreme-Live In Seattle
Shawn Phillips-Second Contribution
Pink Floyd-The Wall
Paul McCartney-Run Devil Run
10/18/72

Hadn’t played The Wall front to back in ages. Still enjoyable. Not ready for Dave’s 40, I have 1 more 72 show, and 2 ‘73’s yet to go.

Music is Life!!

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Argent Encore
Gentle Giant Playing the Fool
Grateful Dead SSDD (CD)
Yes Time & A Word
Pink Floyd Animals

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I like these - so here's mine

Complete Motown Singles 1967 - cd36 Various
Psychedelic Soul The Temptations
Starday Custom Series cd3 Various
Live in Vancouver 11/5/2000 The Cramps
Michigan Box 1950s and 1960s Oddball Labels cd3 Various

Last Dead was Live in Paris 9/18/74 on Saturday.

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I predict today will be the announcement for early bird pricing & the show will be 5/26/77, of course I could be wrong. Next Monday is November first which means 30 Days of November starts.

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8-4-76 Roosevelt Stadium
Led Zep - IV
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Pronounced
Ace - An Ace Album
5-17-77 - Tuscaloosa

Paul Carrack of Ace, Mike & The Mechanics, others? Great vocalist. I think he won a Grammy or two.

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Heard this guy last night James Booker. Piano player, never heard of him,,, did a cover of Eleanor Rigby,,, great.

Anyone out there know his work and maybe have a good collection of it,,,, I'd take some if available.

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St Louis Box
Zappa Little Dots
Zappa’s Last U S show ‘ 88
JGB w Clarence Clemons
Tattoo You box
The new Dead box was fun I’m going back for another run

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.... maybe most have heard.

Jerry Garcia playing with James Booker.

Very, Very Nice.

do a search for 'James Booker with Jerry Garcia - Slowly But Surely'

anyone have this rehearsal practice?

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Anyone else get a shipping notification? I’m still waiting for mine…….

Anyone? Anyone?

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First time playing this game:

GD: 10/29/73

The Ronnie Wood Band: Mr. Luck

The Flatlanders: Treasure of Love

George Harrison: All Things Must Pass 50th

Paul Kantner/Jefferson Starship: Blows Against the Empire

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Been pretty burned out on Dead, but managed to get Docs 10/71 shows in.
Letting the box sit for a bit before we have at again…

Been listening to a lot of jazz.
Have 3 Bill Evans albums I never really checked out, now our new regular go to picks!
Also some Soul Jazz; mix of Idris Muhammad, and a mix of Grover Washington jr.
Kind of a blur?… Coltrane Live at Birdland, Tribute to Jack Johnson, Cannonball Adderley Something Else, Dexter Gordon Go, Round Midnight Soundtrack, too many to remember? McCoy Tyner, Charles Mingus, Charlie Hunter, Horace Silver…?

Really looking forward to 40 for something completely different!

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In reply to by adedhed68

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I would give it until Wednesday, then notify marye.

the electronic mice might have chewed into your order.

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Thanks man. You’re right, it’s the Gremlins

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Guided by Voices - Propeller
Gary Burton Quartet and Eberhard Weber - Passengers
Millie Jackson - It Hurts So Good
Old time music at Clarence Ashley's Vol 2
Dave's Picks 38 - Sept. 73

Good weekend mix. Looking forward to Dave's 40 - maybe next weekend?

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King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard: I’m in Your Mind Fuzz
The Meters: Gettin’ Funkier All the Time
Grateful Dead: 12/10/71 from StL box
Roy Hargrove: The Vibe
Colin Davis/Dresden: Berlioz Overtures

Who’s the greatest band around, makes the cats jump up and down?

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Don Leady - Cumbia meets the blues
The Jimmie Vaughan story
Evan Johns - Panoramic life
Freda and the Firedogs
The Cobras - Live & deadly

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First time trying this out as well

The Blues Brothers - Briefcase Full of Blues
Wilson Pickett - Hey Jude
The Equatics - Doin' It!!!
Grateful Dead - 9/18/90 Bonus Disc
The Police - Reggatta De Blanc

Still waiting on a shipping confirmation for DaP 40 - I've noticed that I usually get my tracking # around the day of the official release which is a bit disappointing but I assume it's because the SF Bay Area is much closer to the warehouses in SoCal and as such they prioritize orders from further away. Hope to receive it soon and hope everyone's having a great start to their week :)

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GD 10-18-72
Manuel Ponce 3 Preludes
Villa-Lobos Prelude No. 3
Antonio Vivaldi Concerto in D Major for Guitar
J.S. Bach Chaconne BWV 1004 (Segovia Transcription)

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In reply to by wilfredtjones

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GD 10-19-72
Lynyrd Skynyrd 8-21-76
GD 10-17-72
Steve Miller 8-3-77
GD 12-10-71

GD 10-30-73 is playing now.

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Anyone ever listen to the Charlie Miller Audience tape.... "Space" out of drums and into Playing has the funkiest 8 minute infectious, feet tapping jam i have ever heard.... Not deep space or jazzy... doesn't sound like anything else to compare it to.... calypso feeling... bob t

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GD 9/2/83 2nd disk great.
David allen Coe
Sabbath bloody sabbath
Ozzy-live speak of the devil
Arlo Guthrie-Woodstock.
Bonus- criterion-the complete Monterey pop festival.

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Comes with a bonus disc, right? If so, I'm going with 10-2-77, paired with 10-1. Should be able to get most of 10-1, too as 10-2 is a shorter gig. Being 1977, it'll attract a lot of folks to subscribe. That said, we are overdue for some 1969.

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