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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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  • bigbrownie
    Joined:
    First, Last, Loudest

    First live show: The Sound of Music at the Lunt-Fontaine in NYC, probably 1963, with my parents.

    First rock show: Allman Bros. at Roosevelt Stadium in Joisy City, 6-6-74. Dad took us.

    First unsupervised trip to NYC for a show: Frank Zappa at the Felt Forum, Halloween (early show), 11-31-75.
    Little did the folks know that they were releasing the beast. Oh, yeah.

    Loudest: A tossup between Aerosmith, 12-16-76 at MSG (and I saw pretty much every big-name act at the Garden between late '75 and Aug. '77), and The Who, 10-6-16, at the Santa Barbara Bowl (5th row left, in front of the PA).

    Last show before Covid: Ricky Skaggs, 3-9-20

    First show after "back to normal": Pat Metheny, 9-29-21

    Most recent should-have-been: Dave Grisman (cancelled), 11-11-21

    Most recent: the Immediate Family, 11-6-21

    Next up: Bela Fleck, 12-15-21.

    Who do I look like? I have been told that am Roy Buchanan's doppelganger, but to me I just look like sad, old Chevy Chase.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Vguy, our resident evil genius!

    I always have to think before I get your jokes. I "think" that's a good thing.

    Unless getting your jokes means that I've slipped in a permanent way.

    I fear it's the latter.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    My wife has been missing for over a week....

    ....the police said to be prepared for the worst. So I had to go to Goodwill to get all her clothes back.

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    I Wish that I Knew What I Know Now

    The Faces in October 1973. I still think they were one of the all-time great bands, and it still kind pisses me off that Rod Stewart decided he’d rather go make disco records with a bunch of studio hacks rather than rock with Ronnies Wood and Lane, not to mention Kenny Jones and Ian Maclagan. What a band. The coulda shoulda woulda given the Stones a run for their money.

    Loudest was probably Meat Puppets circa 1994. This was in a small-ish club, and I think at that time they were touring as an opening act for Stone Temple Pilots, so their equipment was probably waaaay too loud for the room. It’s the only show I can ever remember where it was so painfully loud that I had to go outside and a take break mid-show. Couldn’t hear shit for days.

    I think the last thing I saw before everything shut down was Titus Andronicus. Seems like a million years ago.

    Poor young grandson, there’s nothing I can say, you’ll have to learn just like me, and that’s the hardest way.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Loudest?

    What?

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Nappy, last, and loudest

    First, happy, happy, joy, joy to good ole Nappy! Many more good sir!
    Hellava start: Airplane/Dead in 67, boo-yah!

    LAST: Gary Clark jr. Fall 2019, Nat Rateliff and the Nightsweats fall 2019, D&C Boulder summer 2019.
    Had tix for D&C 2920, and Phil fall 2021 but didn’t feel comfortable yet so got refund.
    Still waiting to for that cup to be filled…

    LOUDEST: LOL. Some of the bands I played in were pretty loud, not good, but loud!
    Gray Matter we basically had late 70s Dead stage gear only in little hole in the wall dives. We played a battle of the bands once and first song was Deal. Just as were peaking out on it we blow the power. Now this is at a R&R club that hosted many acts including the popular well known but now lesser drawing kind of acts. So the infrastructure was much more than a typical bar. But with all those MC2300s and a big PA when we hit that big crescendo on the outro, complete with bass bomb, we’ll boom boom out went the lights. Sound guy was flummoxed “do you really need all those amps” LOL.

    Working for some pretty loud hard rock bands too. Eventually we realized that we should ware protection so got some Norton Sonic 2s: sonic filters that protect but still let you actually hear the music. They were a little bass heavy though so we modified them by sticking a booger sized piece of duct tape in the opening. Much more even frequency response which is crucial if your mixing, especially monitors where you need to hear harmonics and other tells BEFORE things start to feedback. Great product, wish I still had them though I’m not in loud situations much anymore.
    90-95 dB peaks on the home system is plenty loud for this old timer. BITD that would of been more like 100 dB plus lol. But hey, it was good clean Mac power!

    The Who 12/4/79 was way too loud. They were I believe using a Meyers PA even before the Dead did full time, but they weren’t using it properly: way too shrill!
    Over the years many situations that made it loud, but my all time most notable was the Dead on 5/17/81, smoking show! I ride a bus myself, scored a ticket at the last minute, walked in, never looked at my ticket, just saw an opening in the third row, boom.
    Well they were still using Clair Brothers PA with the big square boxes, but they were stacked on the ground, not hung. So my seat was way left near the end of the row, which was just mere feet away from the PA. Also, JG was trying out the new McIntosh MC 2500 that was replacing the 2300s. (Probably since Binghamton was very near)
    He didn’t use them very long so I’m wondering if they were too much for his needs? He stuck with the 2300s decades after they stopped making them.
    Man was he screaming loud that night, you can really tell on a good Aud tape. So combine that with my proximity to the PA and, well, I’m lucky I didn’t do permanent damage as my ears rang for several days afterward. The worst part was I had my first collage final the next day and couldn’t hear the Proff give the directions at all, just ringing!
    I think it’s a testament to clean loud versus dirty loud. Your ears can tolerate clean loud easier than all that distortion cranked to 11. But they’ll also get damaged without you necessarily knowing it right away due to lack of pain from the distortion. A quieter distorted sound while damage your ears way quicker than a louder clean one!

    Not sure about loudest but worst was the Stones at a stadium show late 70s, perhaps early 80s?
    As was often the case with the big stadium shows back then, after the first 3 to five acts, and after the headliner had started you could just walk in. But it was so loud and terrible sounding we left even though it was free! You could hardly tell what song they were playing. Always left a bad vibe for me about the Stones: just another way they (to me) were sell outs. High ticket prices but shitty sound, very opposite the Dead!

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    If perception is reality, we're all in a lot of trouble!

    But please, populate your nightmares with an image of HF as Yosemite Sam..... har har har!

    GarciaLive 17 just landed and it looks tasty. I caught that band at Seton Hall University in South Orange, NJ, on 17 Sept '76 and man, everyone in the hall was blasted on blow that night. Or at least it seemed that way to the white-wallers I went with. The floor was open and absolutely everyone was twirling (or swirling, in our case). The band seemed to be tooting as well and the "songs" were 10-15 minute excursions apiece. All just minutes from my childhood home... And we'd seen 3-4 GD shows that June in Boston and the Capitol in lovely Passaic, NJ.

    Yours truly, YS

  • Forensicdoceleven
    Joined:
    Yes, I'm quirky, loud and crazy........

    Yo!! Rockers!!!

    Loudest ever? The Who, old Boston Garden, April 1 1976, twenty rows back dead center. Overpowering and oh so awesome!! Pink Floyd March 14, 1973,old Boston Music Hall, close second...........

    What do I look like? LOL picture a cross between Clark Kent and Timothy Leary..................

    Rock on!!

    Doc
    Musicians want to be the loud voice for so many quiet hearts.....

  • Deadheadbrewer
    Joined:
    First, Latest, Loudest

    The aforementioned Culture Club in 1983 was my first. I lived a few hours from the Twin Cities, so I missed a lot of shows I would have loved to have seen. I was 13 at that show, and my friend's older sister drove us to the show. I can't believe my parents allowed it; they were pretty strict.

    Latest--I have seen some great string quartets lately, and went to Adam Meckler Orchestra (groovy big band) recently. Those shows were all outdoors or required proof of vaccination and masks. Things are going badly here in MN right now, as far as Covid goes, so I've skipped a few shows recently. And I just can't bring myself to pay more than about $30/ticket anymore, when so much amazing classical and jazz is inexpensive or free, and at those shows one can sit in a beautiful 300-person (or less) theater with no lines for anything. Other than Dark Star, I think my live rock-n-roll days are behind me, and I'm only 51!

    Loudest--everything at First Ave. is TOOOO loud, so I've walked out of shows there. I left a Living Colour concert there once when I couldn't discern any notes or lyrics . . . just a painful smoosh of noise. I think I left a Blues Traveler show there once . . . And my wife and I walked out of Yonder Mt. String Band at First Ave.; somehow they couldn't even leave the volume down for acoustic music. :( My friend used to practically LIVE at First Ave. back in the day, and now he's been battling tinnitus for years.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Loudest?

    Too many to remember but I do remember physical pain to the point where I was using my taller friend as a shield and even squatting down a couple of times when it got intense. Couldn't even find a tissue or something to plug my ears. Good thing it was an open air show!
    You guessed it GD 7-08-78. You can hear one of those moments during Ship of Fools. Jerry scorched me! But that can happen when you play with fire. No regrets and no permanent damage and only now losing some hearing on one side.
    My first tape of this show taken from the Italian bootleg CD has a better take on this than the box set CD. You can really hear the amps buzzing loudly before the start of the second set. That CD came out in '95-'96 on Red Robin (?) so was that some of the Betty's from ABCD leaking out? Inquiring minds want to know. Thanks
    Cheers 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'm a little surprised this is still available.

I would have thought these be gone in a heartbeat since the cd's of 1 go for so much>

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In reply to by JimInMD

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....I actually house the vast majority of my Dicks/Dave's/Official GD Releases in numerical then release order within my 1/3 scale British Telephone Call Box....the red version of the Dr. Who TARDIS; it's about 4 feet tall. It serves as my GD time-machine, capable of exploring the greatest depths of the known musical universe.

The other myriad artistical boxes are displayed all around the house in various, notable locations.
Sixtus

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Good comments Spacebrother. My era for shows was this as well, 1988-95. I have gotten through most of the first night and it sounds just like a solid GD show from the era. I like this as a change of pace from the St. Louis box. Nice show, so far (halfway through Dew). Can't wait to hear the rest.

My first 4 shows were Alpine Valley (when is Dave going to release Alpine 89 in video and audio) and then went to Tinley Park in 1990-- first and third shows for us. The venue sucked from the parking lot to the acoustics. It all had a bad vibe. The first night at Tinley was a good show, the third night was fine but not stellar. We were in the pavilion that night and even 31 years later I remember we all noted how Brent looked that night (bugged out eyes a few times on the big screen). Come to find out he was not well in mind, body and spirit.

I was also at the blues summit show at Alpine (Clapton, SRV, Cray and Buddy)-- first night of two. That was my first time seeing SRV and he blew my mind. I walked out saying he sold me all his cds. Just a stellar show. Then I heard of his passing on the radio. I really don't listen to SRV too often, it makes me damn sad. It was very foggy the night of our show, too. I remember my buddy driving and ending up on the wrong side of the highway at a spot where a divider appeared. The fog got SRV the next night.

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Just got my copy of #40 today and to my disappointment Disc 3 was scratched up along the edges. I've already written emails requesting for help but now I turn to y'all and ask if anyone can send a FLAC file of Foolish Heart. It's the only song I'm unable to burn due to the scratches and it's a favorite. A massive thanks and a small gift will be given in return. Thank you and hope everyone is having a great day!

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10213 arrived right on time today! Looking forward to listening.

I'm really impressed with different approaches to shelving. I proudly display on my office shelf Dead by order of release for DP, DaP, Road Trips and Garcia releases. Box sets are displayed on the office shelves wherever they fit. I moved recently, and don't yet have a shelf unit for my non dead cd's, except for a few in a shelf in the dining room.

A few years ago I purchased two used library card catalog units, which cassettes fit perfectly if you take out the center rod. When I moved, I got rid of one of the units, and most of my cassettes. I held on to the cassettes I recorded myself at a show, and they live in my office card catalog. I am slowly digitizing my recordings and plan to upload them to Archive.org. My LP's have had a hard life, they were ignored for 20+ years, living in the garage. They are in bad shape, in plastic boxes in the current garage, and I hope to clean them and store them better some day.

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... in Deer Creek!

Just received #40, listened to the first two discs. A really good show! Enough so that I feel I've probably been missing out by not listening to more 1990.

I think I'm always going to prefer the early '70s, when they were still playing theaters rather than arenas: I always get the feeling, with these really big shows, that the Dead feel obligated to keep things moving and deliver a rockin' good time, whether they feel like it or not, and I kind of prefer the more intimate feel of smaller places where they seem like they felt they could just relax and play whatever.

You can hear a little bit of what I mean at the end of disc one of this set, when they do the final a cappella chorus of 'Rider.' In a lot of the best (IMO) versions, they take the dynamic way down at that point, sometimes slowing the tempo, and sing it quietly and kind of wistfully before they bring the volume back up for the final chords. In this case, it sounds like they were thinking of doing that, but then the crowd was hooting and stomping so loud they can't slow down or ease up. But it still winds up being a pretty good China-Rider.

Seems like a very welcome addition to the collection, and I haven't even listened to discs 3 & 4 yet, which are supposed to be the better show! Clearly, I need to rethink my bias against the '90s.

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I just opened the mailbox and what do you know, dap 40. The first disk is sounding good. Thismikebenz, yes it dr.demento. He is now 80 yo and still kicking. I just bought his book on great blues players of all time. He was a big blues fan. He writes about leadbelly, srv, blind lemon, and others. The book came out in 2000 and he signed it twice with his real name Barry hansen and dr.D.. The book was also a rhino release. For twenty clams you can get one on his site. Good quality paperback too.

My CD rack was getting full when the DaP series started. That rack now holds DVDs, Blurays, and non-GD CDs.
GD CDs are all stored in plastic storage boxes where they are protected from sun, dust, dog drool, etc.

Music files on HDs are in chronological order and in AIFF, ALAC, FLAC, and AAC formats; backed up extensively.
ALAC files are played in the living room from an iBasso DX120 connected to the stereo.
AAC files at 320 kbs are played in the car from a USB drive.

Vinyl is stored in tie-dyed Victrola record storage cases.
Interesting fact: when I was buying the Victrola storage cases (I have 7 currently) there where a lot of different colors and patterns, and tie-dye was the lowest price. Score!
I think that most people don’t want tie-dye. All the more for me.

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Because #10,337/25,000 is playing now. It arrived yesterday but - GASP! - I waited until tonight to rip and listen because we had people over who aren't really musos. I know, letting riff raff like that into the house... blame my wife.

After indulging in that last box set from St. Louis, then seeing Dead & Co. on the Rocks last month, and now this two-show set arriving, I realize how much I like to mix up all the eras to keep the ears fresh. Dave does a masterful job of era surfing. I know he can't please everyone, but I have zero complaints about this series from day one.

30 days of Dead is a nice little pre-holiday gift every year as the days get shorter and the nights get longer.

I lined a basement wall with bookshelves, each of them different sizes and styles. I picked them all up used off Craigslist or whatever when we moved in here, I said, that wall in the basement will be my wall of sound. There's dozens of rock and roll books and cds and music dvds, blu ray etc. Box sets are stacked along the top along with Germanic beer steins, old absinthe bottles, decorative skulls, signed baseballs, and other random tchotchkes. My guitar cases and amps fill a hallway next to them, with two full stage racks of electrics lining another wall.

The cd's only get played on a boombox when I work out on Sunday mornings or in the garage when performing some manly task... the rest of the time all that shit just sits there, except for the guitars. My kids are getting older and moving their scene down into the basement gradually, trying to bust in on my space. I worry about their idiot friends getting their hands all over my shit but haven't been into boxing it up or anything. I guess we'll see how that plays itself out.

Never had enough vinyl to fill up more than a couple of old fruit crates (thank God) or I'd need a storage locker.

Out in the garage there still remains an old hard-sided suitcase that looks like something out of Kerouac, filled up with unboxed cassettes and 45 rpm singles. My last friend with a cassette player in his car has finally moved on to a smoother ride, so it looks like those cassettes are headed to the grave at long last.

Last 5:

Rolling Stones - Tattoo You Deluxe cd (none of the 'new' songs are worth a shit, but the original lp remains a classic)
Grateful Dead - Dave's Picks 40 (show one, as bad as Brent looked he still sounds great)
Dire Straits - Love Over Gold (more people need to make that choice)
Various Artists - The Metallica Blacklist (eclectic as fuck and not half bad)
Elle King - Love Stuff (Sassy!)

\m/

When I was a teenager I had a friend whose dad had worked at an FM radio station in the 70’s, and had a basement full of vinyl, with some rare stuff.
My friend was constantly stealing albums and trading for bud.
I remember that he took a Sgt. Pepper’s picture disc.

Also,
Did you enjoy D&C?
I recall that you (I think it was you) always thought that they played too slow. I didn’t think it was that slow, but this fall I’ve been watching the first song previews on utoob, and they seem to have slowed down even more. It really is too slow now.
Maybe it’s the headphones that John now wears.

And why is he even wearing those? They switched sides of the stage and now he can’t hear?

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In reply to by carlo13

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Thanks for the heads up on the Demento Blues Book, I just ordered it...do you have his "Barry Hansen" Specialty Records LP he compiled? It's Called "Doo Wop" from 1968 and is killer diller (LP only)

Side One Sweet & Dreamy
–The Chimes - Pretty Little Girl
–The Monitors - Our School Days
–Larry Williams - Bad Boy
–Vernon Green & The Phantoms - Sweet Breeze
–Jesse & Marvin - Dream Girl
–Marvin & Johnny - Flip
–The Four Flames - Wheel Of Fortune

Side 2 Outrageous & Contagious
–Roddy Jackson - Moose On The Loose
–Bob "Froggy" Landers* With Willie Joe And His Unitar - Cherokee Dance
–Roy Montrell - That Mellow Saxophone
–Jimmy Liggins & His 3-D Music - Drunk
–King Perry & His Pied Pipers The Animal Song
–Rene Hall And His Band - Cleo
–Joe Lutcher - The Traffic Song

I am surprised it's never been released on CD (I think)

I also just ordered two illustrated books on the blues by R Crumb & William Stout ...excellent drawings of the older artists with a quick bio on each one...They are dirt cheap and available at book outlet if you're interested...thanks again for the heads up on the good Dr...

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The blues book is definitely worth the $20. The signatures make it even cooler. This book has a lot of hardcore blues guys. The book is very informative, and has some major hitters that most people never knew existed. I have not heard of doo woo of 68, but will look it up. Thanks. If it were not for these black blues legends, we would probably not have rock and roll. Motown too. Bo carter - banana in your fruit basket is from 1931-1936 is probably the coolest name for an album.

Those cards you mention are what the book is made up of including his Jazz & Old Timey Country cards....also included with the book is a CD of a lot of the old timers playing...
"R. Crumb's Heroes of Blues, Jazz & Country..." CD included
"William Stout - Legends Of The Blues"

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There'd have been no Spooky Tooth if it hadn't been for the blues.

My bro-in-law is a Spooky Tooth fan, likes a lot of the UK blues, starting at Mayall on down. I did see ST guitarist Ariel Bender playing with Mott the Hoople during his short stint with them, circa 1974. I was disappointed to miss Mick Ralphs, who departed by then, but Bender/Grosvenor was no slouch.
Speaking of Mayall - who is pretty incredible “live” himself - has a new album coming out. Or as the youngens like to say, “dropping”. Not big on that expression. You “drop” dishes, not albums. You “release” albums, you never “drop” them IMO.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Bet he wares em instead of in ear monitors either because he likes the fit/feel and/or the sound of the cans better?
Probably isolates better from the on stage noise, especially when Bob gets loud with that super thin and distorted sound he likes these days.

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17 years 4 months
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This would have been a really fabulous recording, except for the crowd noise.
Bad form once again, Healy.

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3 years 2 months
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37 years ago today I was at the B.C.T. to see the good ole Grateful Dead. They played some songs they don't normally play, Gloria, Why Don't We do it in the Road and Down in the Bottom. This was a fun run of shows, might be a box set one day. A very cool Rick Griffin poster came out for these shows.

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Let’s see, we’ve got drop tuning, drop biscuits, drop cloths, drop dead gorgeous babes, the Dew Drop Inn, drop leaf tables, drop off laundry, drop kicks, mic drops, and drop zones. Seems like I’m missing something?

Regarding audio on DaP 40, I’ve only listened to the first two discs, but there is indeed a fair amount of audience noise that filters in occasionally. Which is No Big Deal, just tends to remind the listener that they were playing a big venue. More bothersome to me (but still no big deal) is this weird echo that happens with the vocals at several points. No idea how you’d get that. This was an outdoor venue, right, so it’s not an echo off the back wall?

Just to be clear: the audio quality overall is very good, and this is NOT meant as a gripe, just an observation about an oddity in this recording.

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That Mike - congratulations on seeing Mott The Hoople in the 70s - something I missed out on. I had a ticket to see them in 1974-Queen were the support band - but it was cancelled. I did see Hunter/ Ronson circa 1975, and then, this century, two celebratory shows by Mott - one with the original lineup( minus Buffin) and one with Luther Grosvenor on guitar. Both great nights.

Incidentally, a great album worth checking out with Luther on is "Supernatural Fairy Tales" by Art from 1967. Same band as Spooky Tooth before the name change. An album with a beautiful psychedelic cover, which disguises the muscular nature of the music - which is more blues rock crunch than chocolate box psych.

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17 years 5 months
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Maybe if you didn't leave 3 minutes of the crowd clapping and chanting "You know our love will not fade away", you could have fit the encore.

The vocal echoes were intentionally done by Healy. He did that frequently and rumor has it that messing with Bob’s vocals is one of the reasons that Healy was fired.

Crowd noise between songs was added so that there wasn’t silence. Dave states this in the seaside chat.

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What about balls?

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In reply to by daverock

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DaveRock - We had a friend in high school that was really hip to music we didn’t know - he was the guy that got me into the Dead, along with Byrds, Burritos, etc etc - and he got us in our group to listen to Mott. I remember Ian Hunter was a great showman, good with the crowd, and Morgan Fisher was on keys, along with Overend and Buffin. They were pretty hot shit then, touring in support of “Mott”. A great show, although the crowd was all Glam, and we were a bunch of hippie high school kids in jeans and long hair.

Sounds like you saw some great “splinter” acts from Mott! Ronson was an underrated guitarist, and producer (Roger McGuinn). Bowie was lucky to have him.

PS - “… more blues rock crunch than chocolate box psych.”. The Best line I’ve read in a long time!! Haha!

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Listen to the performances on this frickn masterpiece my gawd!!! Althea is STUNNING! Promised Land is also one for the ages. This was when Jack Straw was Jack Straw, just ripping (minus a minor vocal flub that Bobby acknowledged :) US Blues is also one for ages but unfortunately not included. Desolation Row oh my gaaaawd if that's not one of Weir's best performances I don't know what is. I've always been partial to the second night as I was lucky enough to have patched into to a kind taper's Nakamichi shotguns and just think it's the better of the two shows.

First night I distinctly remeber starting the clapping during Morning Dew, yup that was me, probably pissed some old heads off, but many others joined in. Help>Slip>Franklin's ALWAYS a joy. China>Rider is in my top 5 of GD tunes and Brent is going crazy during the transition but this is not my favorite version (please see 8-4-89 Cincy, front row center from GDTS certainly didn't hurt!) As most know, Brent passed just a couple weeks later RIP BRENT. Terrapin was played smoothly and powerfully. The Weight had minor vocal flubs too but is really special to me -- first and only time I heard the GD do it and just a special tune.

Jumping around a bit but Playin' from night two holy McCoy that is the real deal! UJB is quite possibly my favorite all-time GD tune and this one is performed well (minor vocal flub by Jer Bear in second verse). The vocals these two shows were just beautiful.

On the Dave's Pick version, the clarity and separation of all the instruments, guitar interplay, and definition of Brent's keyboards is unbelievable how it brings it forth better than old audience recordings. My transfers from analog to digital of 7-19-90 have survived but this release is on another level. Thank you Dave and GD (~):} ! Only other complaint is the digipak as I'd prefer regular quad plastic jewel case. But super fast shipping and receiving for this custie Touch Head and I'd gladly do it again!

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by That Mike

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That Mike - Mott the Hoople were more of a mainstream band in England, having 4-5 hits between 1972 and 1974. They straddled the pop-rock divide, appealing to both the long haired rock crowd as well as the fashion conscious 14 year old.

The Dead were much more obscure in my world-I only found out about them through reading a music paper in 1974-the N.M.E. There was a great feature on them by Nick Kent, who basically wrote them off as being flag bearers for the hippie era. Sounded fascinating to me! It was a good example of what I think of as the "reverse effect syndrome" whereby someone inadavertanly promotes something, and makes it more interesting, by critizing whatever it is they are writing about.
The reverse is also true-the more someone praises something, often, the less attractive the thing they are praising comes across. Dave Lemieux take note!

DaveRock - I get what you mean on reverse effect syndrome. For me, it is sometimes the “who” that is doing the writing or talking about that catches my attention. These are often the so-called “musicians musicians” you hear about, that the public didn’t care about (like that matters anyways), but the artists are absolutely fantastic when you dig into their catalogue, guys like Richard Thompson, Buddy Miller, Townes Van Zant, Ry Cooder etc. The Dead were such a band in a way, a niche audience. Growing up, it was all Led Zep and Van Whaling and Aerosmith for most of my contemporaries; the Dead were an acquired taste, but once you had it, well, here we all are all these years later!

PS - I passed that info on the Art album to my bro-in-law who is the Spooky Tooth fan, and wow, that is quite the trippy album cover. I also learned Gary Wright - friend to George Harrison, and ST guy - was American. I never knew that, I’ve always thought he was from England. For my next trivia night…

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On my copy of disc three, at about 6:20 on Desolation Row, the vocals get extremely distorted for a couple seconds, and then it happens again at about 6:40. Anybody else have this problem?

I’ve mentioned that there’s a strange echo on the vocals on several tracks (including Desolation). If this is something Healy was doing on purpose, well, no wonder he got fired. We’re not talking about a little reverb or anything like that. It sounds like the kind of echo you hear when a band is playing a large space and the vocals are bouncing off the back wall about half second later. Which is not THAT much of a problem, you kind of get used to it. But this distortion I’m getting at 6:20-6:45 is very distracting, really jerks you out of the mood of the tune. Is my disc 3 defective? (Haven’t got to 4 yet, 1 and 2 were fine.)

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12 years 1 month
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Not so sure that was a wise trade.

Tuch for Eichel? Are the GKnights still mad about Tuch not lifting the puck against Holtby?

Eichel is expensive and always hurt.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....that trade sucks ass. My 2 cents. Trading for a guy with a broken neck. Ugh.

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10 years
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Never accept a $3 bill or a player in a trade with pending back/neck surgery - see Nathan Horton.
Buffalo - 1
Vegas - 0

Now where is my DaP #40!?!?

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I would rate this above average Dap. It really gets grooving. Jerry was definitely having a good time. I now know to shut my gob when it comes to the 90s shows. I've seen them at all the boston garden 90s shows and remember jerry smiling at most of them, Until the day i had wrist bands for tickets for the the 95 shows but never got to use it. I am even getting emotional thinking about it. What a horrible day it was. I kept that wristband on till it fell off naturally. Even my mom cried. Long live jerry.

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9 years 3 months
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Crow, looks like you got your answer, but yes I get distortion around the same time and about 10 sec later.
Ha! Desolation Row is not on my hit list, but I remember thinking this is a really nice DR, I’m groovin on this..then the equivalent of a record needle traveling across a record jolted me out. Ahh well.
Otherwise some great stuff so far!

You should check out the 91 Boston Garden shows, especially the 26th!
Good sheet Mon!

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13 years 4 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Big fan of both Dylan in general and the GD's take on Desolation Row. How did bobby remember the words?

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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we got 9/25/91 instead

wtf

(yes, that's a whine)

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4 years
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I’ve often wondered if that line about “playing electric violin on Desolation Row” was about John Cale, who Dylan would have met while hanging around with Edie at the Factory.

It’s a fine Desolation Row on #40, even in spite of the [BLOOOOSH!] audio oddities [KER-BLOOMP!] that pop up around the 6:30 mark. Healy, you bastard!

Really really liked 7/18/90, it might become my “go to” when I want to hear Brent. The next night is at least equally good in terms of performance, I just like the set list the first night better. To nitpick a little: seems like they could’ve edited the lengthy Drums>Space to find time for that missing US Blues. I’m pretty sure Drums has been edited in previous DaPs.

Praise be to Nero’s Neptune! the Titanic sails at dawn.

I don’t recall the show dates but he would also distort Bob’s vocals during The Other One. It kind of worked on that song to make it a little weirder (Weir’d-er), but overall it was unnecessary and detracted from the music.

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17 years 5 months
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Received DaP40 about a week ago and have had time to digest it. Very good selection, but I’ve come to realize that Dave & I have different tastes! He states in the Seaside chat that if only one show were released, it would have been the 2nd night. IMHO, the first night is FAR superior, in both play and song selection. All in all, best “late years” pick yet!

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7 years 6 months
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Will do. Thanks.

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16 years 4 months
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50 years ago today…..

November 6, 1971
Harding Theater, San Francisco, California

Set 1: Bertha-Me And My Uncle-Sugaree-Jack Straw-Tennessee Jed-El Paso-Loser-Playing In The Band-Cumberland Blues-Black Peter-Beat It On Down The Line-Deal-Mexicali Blues-Sing Me Back Home-One More Saturday Night

Set 2: Ramble On Rose-Me And Bobby McGee-Cryptical Envelopment>drums>The Other One>Cryptical Envelopment>Comes A Time-Sugar Magnolia-Brown-Eyed Women-Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Not Fade Away

A solid, well played show, with a blazing Bertha opener, nice first set versions of Black Peter and Sing Me Back Home (the last SMBH of 1971), a complete Cryptical/Other One/Cryptical suite (which sweetly goes into Comes A Time [an unusual coupling]), and a typically November-nice NFA suite (according to Dick Latvala himself, “One of the most exciting versions.”).

Definitely recommended!!!

And, incidentally, dedicated to Hugo Winterhalter….

Rock on!!

Doc
The young man knows the rules, but the old man knows the exceptions…..

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15 years
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Hello all, I bought 2 Get Shown the Light box sets way back when they were originally released ... I hate the packaging, hate the way the discs slide in and out of those way too big cases ... for a long time I've kept the second box unopened, thinking it might be valuable someday (then they released the all music edition) ... so I've struggled with the 5 5 77 show for years, the second disc simply will not play ... so I opened the second box today, went right to 5 5 77 disc 2, and lo and behold, same exact thing, defective, won't play ... disc 1 plays fine, but the 5 5 77 disc 2 from both copies of the box set I bought will not play ... I can't imagine that I'm the only person with this issue, given my 0 for 2 performance on the same disk from 2 different box sets ... This is beyond frustrating. Has anybody else had issues with 5 5 77 disc 2?

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15 years 2 months
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DaP #40 has just been delivered to me in the UK by Royal Mail.
Strangely, Royal Mail tracking stills tells me they are expecting it from Switzerland. They have been saying this since 28th October.
The important thing is that it is here and I should be able to play it tomorrow.

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