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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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  • Dennis
    Joined:
    DaP 1 Vinyl

    I guess it sold out,,,, can't find on product page.

  • estimated-eyes
    Joined:
    first and etc...

    One of my earliest memories as a human being is my parents taking us kids to see Chuck Berry at Milwaukee's Summerfest. I was maybe 4-5 years old (so, c. 1974-75) and my parents sold us on the show by talking about Berry doing the Duck Walk. Man, did we go crazy when he did it! Summerfest was an annual event for most Milwaukee area residents in the 1970s and 1980s, so lots of bands seen there, but I don't recall them anymore other than the Violent Femmes a couple times.

    The first time my parents let me see a band alone with a friend at Summerfest was Huey Lewis and the News at the main stage in 1984. Lewis et al. were at the height of their popularity with Sports in the charts. Huge crowd that spurred the construction of the larger current amphitheater. I remember they ran out of songs after multiple encores and the band came out and played a blues shuffle with Lewis playing harp.

    Next was a couple Rush concerts and a few others, but the one that sticks in my mind from high school is The Kinks at the Riverside Theater 1987, second row center tix. After that, this sport-loving guy was sold on concerts and what they do for my soul. David Bowie Glass Spider Tour 1987, Pink Floyd 1988 (20th row Camp Randall), Grateful Dead Alpine 1988, Clapton Alpine 1988.

    Loudest-- ZZ Top Bradley Center 1994. That one was also the drunkest I have ever been for a show.

    Last-- Dead and Company Wrigley 2019. Not sure what my next will be.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: Yosemite Sam

    Ha.. now I have a visual of HF in real life.

    Regardless of how you may look.. to me, and perhaps others reading this.. we now have a perceived visual. In the end, perception is reality.. right?

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Nappyrags comin' up the inside.....

    Doooooood, GD and Airplane in Sept '67?? Savoy Brown with Kim Simmonds AND Chris Youlden??

    And now Stones and Carlos back-to-back?? (?????)

    Upon reflection, we all entered the concert scene pretty young (me at 14) and though I "missed" so much -- did not see Hendrix, did not see Pigpen -- it could not have been any other way. I've been using psychedelics fairly regularly for nearly 50 years now, with a couple epic stretches with opiates (now in the rear view), and I'm getting a wee bit crisp, if you will. Starting any earlier, I'd probably look (and act) like Yosemite Sam. Can't have that!

    As for loudness, it's a toss-up. Way too close to Roy Buchanan's Twin Reverb for many, many shows, and one night in front of Dicky Betts and I couldn't hear, literally, for an entire day. Just little scratching noises when my co-workers moved their lips......

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Loudest

    Hmmm

    The Heats in a little room at a university.
    Ouch on the ears. No earplugs. 1983

    GBH mid 80s. I wore earplugs. G l a d.

    Motorhead 2000 outdoors. So loud I had to leave. No earplugs. Dumb on my part.

    I get that rock is supposed to be loud. But not to the point of pain and days of "eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee"

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    @Carlo 13

    Thanks for the heads up on the Blues book you mentioned...I received it last week and it's great!

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Loudest concert?....

    ....AC/DC. Easy. My ears rang for three days. Worth it.
    Latest concert? Caught three Phish shows over Halloween weekend. And future shows? The Black Crowes. This Thursday. Got invited by my only contact from my high school days literally an hour ago. Didnt even know they were coming. We went to our first concert in 1984. Iron Maiden. I posted that a few pages back.
    Marco and I caught the fever in 84 and never looked back.

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    so loudest...

    On thinking about it, a top contender would be the pre Foghat original line up of Savoy Brown at the Whiskey in West Hollywood when Chris Youlden was still singing...the smaller room lent itself to loud...I had a freind who saw the Mahavishnu Orchestra at the Whiskey and he couldn't hear for a couple of days...also the "I Sing The Body Electric" version of Weather Report shook the walls of the Whiskey...after that show (two sets) we went out to my buddy's car and he had two flat tires...we had to take the bus back to the Eastside of town...real interesting ride due to the dosage we took for the evening...

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Setting the Jell-O

    My third show, Pink Floyd trio ‘87, set the Jell-O.
    The previous 2 shows I saw before PF seemed bland once a witnessed the Floyd (my favorite band at the time).

    Fast forward about a year and a half and GD was a Jell-O shot.
    GD was what I was looking for all along.

    Why did I buy all those Pink Floyd cassette tapes in the mid-80’s and never buy Live Dead, Skull Fuck, Europe 72?
    When I looked at cassettes in the record store I looked for long songs. I was searching for long jammy psychedelic songs.
    Had I only picked up live GD recordings…..
    I knew who GD were but only knew FM radio songs which were short, and I didn’t know anyone else who listened to them who could have shown me the light (most people were listening to big-hair metal at the time, which I despised). So, I didn’t know that GD played long jammy psychedelic songs.
    When Touch Of Grey arrived on MTV I didn’t even know that GD was still a band.
    1988 came around and I started hearing that GD was in fact still a touring band. Then I talked to someone who had been to their first show in ‘88 and it seemed like something I needed to check out.
    1989 came around and I was driving in my car listening to the radio and the DJ stated that GD tix had gone on sale that day. I had just cashed my paycheck and went straight to Ticketbastard and bought 6 tix. Got seats upper level side looking down at Jerry and Brent. Perfect seats for me and my 5 friends who just sat there and absorbed it all in.
    I was sold in the first set, but Set 2 with Drums/Space set the electric Jell-O shot….

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    My first...

    The first "concert" I ever went to was probably 1966 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion...my Pop took me with him to see the Flamenco guitarist Manitas de Plata (Little Hands Of Silver)...we also went there to see the Ballet Folklorico De Amalia Henandez, the national dance company of Mexico...my first R 'n R show was a freebie park gig at Elysian Park in LA with Jefferson Airplane & the Grateful Dead...it was mid Seprtember '67 the weekend before my senior year in high school started...my latest shows were actuallly the past weekend of Nov 5 - 8 in Las Vegas, celebrating my 71st Birthday with the Stones on the 6th & Santana on the 7th...my first time out in a large group since the lockdown began...the loudest is kinda hard to pinpoint...I laffed at the earlier mention of Foghat, I saw them with the Jeff Beck Group at the Hollywood Palladium and man they were loud!!!

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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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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Received on Monday, finally ripped last night, heading into the stereo rooom to give it the full treatment….now!

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In reply to by Oroborous

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I am a fan of the Harding Theatre show. One of the 71's that caught my attention years ago.

Thanks Doc.

Summer 90 was awk af for me
This release makes me think of those times

Yin and Yang, ninos.

Anyone notice the cassette in the cover art? 4/15/78

It truly blows mule that Brent would be truly and literally dead shortly after these shows

Harding Theaterre ja gerne

RELEASE 6 10 73 ALREADY WITH 6 9 73 AS A COMPANION SHOW.

a person wants pizza but we keep getting crackers with velveeta

I will have a nice glass of whine with my crackers please

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I saw a couple of pedestrians come within 3 feet of being struck by a left turning car this morning

Drive alertly, my fellow Deadheads of the Corn

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Arrived home to find 10327 had arrived in Scotland via Royal Mail with no charges. Promised the Mrs we’d watch a movie tonight so the shows will have to wait until tomorrow. Love the artwork with all the wee details such as the tape, the Batman skull tshirt, the children of the corn allusions and many more to discover.

One of the joyous shows from Fall 71. I like the cool way they slip "Hideaway" into the set-not showing off or "look at me , I'm playing the blues" but sweet and easy. The technical problems at the beginning of the show give the band the chance to talk to the audience. They do this in such a way that suggests that at this time they were still playing music from within a community, rather than being stood on stage playing at one.

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This is a fine 1990 release, as someone said a great showcase for Brent and the band at their peak. And for those that don't have the Spring 1990 boxes, it is a wonderful opportunity for fans to appreciate this band playing with both cylinders. Sound is excellent. Jerry sounds like he's having fun. Thanks to Dave and all for releasing this gem.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Holy cow, this show is a monster. When Phil is on.. the band is on and right out of the gate, Phil plays like a man possessed.

And that second set is a powerhouse, which still leaves 7/19 for tomorrow. Peak late era Grateful Dead. Have a great weekend all.

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How he can remember Desolation Row and routinely forget Truckin' is one of life's great mysteries.

For those looking for great Brent shows, try 4/8/89, Cincy. I took my college roommate to this show. It was his first. He was a big Pink Floyd fan. Opened LTGTR. Wang Dang. Blow Away (best one ever, sorry Philly). Also a great Fantasy/Jude that night. Anyway, he turns to me during LTGTR and says "Who the f#ck is that guy on kee-boards?" He got it right away. Still going to shows to this day.

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In reply to by Jason Wilder

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Overall a fine show.
HELP starts out perhaps a tad tentative? Perhaps pre-occupied with sound etc.
Sound is pretty good for opener, perhaps the bass and/or bass drum is a bit tubby?
SLIP transition is not flawless, but it is the openers, and if I was seeing this live, I’m sure I’d had no complaints.
So far I’m actually liking the crowd mix. Adds more realism for my taste, not so unnaturally dry.
Like the guy yelling lol.
MINGLEWOOD Kick still a bit tubby. Strait forward well played but not powerful.
Bobs vocals sound good, JG’s still work in progress, like in PEGGY O, he sounds good performance wise, but sound wise a bit dry and too out front? He does awright with just one little miscue.
Maybe their a bit tired near the end of the tour? It’s almost like they have a cool west coast laid back vibe going?
Perhaps it’s just the slow first set build up!
EASY saw 3, first one in 79, then 3/22/90 & 6/8/90, with this one being last of the 9 returns, and last one ever.
Not a perfect version, but nice, and nice to hear him go with some positive energy that sometimes lacked in latter days. After all these years, still mind blowing that he’d be gone so soon after!
MASTERPIECE this is a nice, smooth version, and Bobs vocals already seem really dialed in, while JG’s aren’t quite there yet. Another relaxed but well played song. Everything: Music/Sound keeps progressing subtly with each song.
BEW JG muffs the first line, but moves on nicely and by now Healy has him dialed in also, with the overall vocal blend sounding nice!
CASSIDY/DEAL as was often the case, by the time the set hit these 2 to close things out, the band and sound would be finally building up nicely to the big crescendo. JG careful, concise, not manic or forced.
Overall a pleasant, well played set if perhaps lacking a little in fire?
THE SECOND SET analytics slipped away on me as things were sounding mighty fine. Kinda status quo for the times with the slow build up of the first set and coming out in the second all guns blazing and the sound pretty damn good all things considered. Cruising nicely at a super clean 90 to 95 dB peaks, sounding great!
I’ll leave the hyperbole to others, especially in regard to the China/Rider. Great energy. The set progresses nicely, with the drums/space causing me to giggle! I like the the psychedelic vocal effects on Bob during TOO, and though I can understand how some folks don’t like it, I didn’t think it was too overdone, though I have heard it done so. I’ll just say on to a great finish and leave it at that.
The sound eventually was so good I’d forgot it’s lineage. Like if I just listened, I didn’t consider the source, versus if I thought about the source, then I noticed it a little, if that makes sense?
Best of the tour? Don’t know the tour well enough to say, definitely a consideration? Best of the year, I respectfully disagree.
I’m sure after stadiums it was way cool to be at these. Really look forward to tomorrow!
Overall, not flawless, but pretty damn solid! 3.8 outta 5 Red Sweethearts

EDIT: oh, one thing to note, the nasty distortion in space. Guessing it’s MIDI related. Seems more the recording than CD production. It didn’t last too long but if your blasting this at loud volume you may want to spare your tweeters and turn it down until it passes.

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50 years ago today…..

November 7, 1971
Harding Theater, San Francisco, California

Set 1: Truckin'-Brown-Eyed Women-Beat It On Down The Line-Hideaway-Sugaree-Jack Straw-Tennessee Jed-Cumberland Blues-El Paso-Big Railroad Blues-Comes A Time-Mexicali Blues-One More Saturday Night

Set 2: Ramble On Rose-Me And Bobby McGee-Loser-Sugar Magnolia-Dark Star>drums>The Other One>Me And My Uncle>The Other One>Deal-Brokedown Palace-Playing In The Band-Casey Jones-Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Not Fade Away

Encores: Johnny B. Goode-Uncle John's Band

Deadicated to bolo24, because I will not follow where the path may lead, but I will go where there is no path, and I will leave a trail……

Great and classic show and a long-time personal favorite. It has pretty much everything you could ask of the Dead in this era. Rockers, Cowboy songs, hot jams, the unusual coupling of Dark Star and The Other One, an unbelievably smoking NFA transition jam (maybe the best ever?), plus even the often-expected equipment difficulties, AND jokes from the audience! The circulating broadcast copies are excellent quality and highly recommended. The band sounds loose, and the crowd sounds juiced. OK yes there’s no Pigpen, but still highly highly recommended, a classic of the first rank!!

Rock on!!

Doc
It is requisite for the relaxation of the mind that we make use, from time to time, of playful deeds and jokes

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this release has two from two different shows, thank you Dave and Rhino and of course, the Good Old Grateful Dead. These two are smoking, especially the 19th.

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In reply to by unkle sam

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Yes, I am also a Drums/Space fan.

A few days ago someone asked why D/S wasn’t cut to make room for the Useless Blues encore.
The answer?
Because Drums/Space is better.

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In reply to by Jason Wilder

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My first show was 4/6/89.
I walked into that stadium with Pink Floyd as my favorite band, and walked out of that stadium with Grateful Dead as my favorite band.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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A reeeeeal luck of the draw for me

Sometimes I dig 'em
Sometimes I think of it as "well, we gotta fill 2.5 hours SOMEhow..."

Blurt bleeeet...that can be an alien dandelion baking cookies wearing day-glo orange socks

Or a

"Why did I pay money for this" moment

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Happy Sunday Heads!

I'm really enjoying Dave's 40 so far. Listened to the whole thing once. I've always enjoyed 1990 Dead and these shows are new to me. I have to agree with Dave, the second night is the one for me. Band sounds really in sync with one another and the show is full of energy and a lot of little musical moments. Enjoyed the first show also. I anticipate listening to these a good bit in the coming months. Foolish heart is a highlight for me. I've always enjoyed that song. One of those later era tunes that could have been jammed out more. Epic China Doll here also.

Count me among those who like Drums/Space. Especially the later years. I remember being particularly blown away by drums/space when I saw the band in the 90s and playing a cassette of infrared roses as background for some good smoke sessions. Seems like most of Infrared Roses was from 1989-91, maybe even mostly 1990?? Great versions on these shows. I like the audience recording in this also. I could feel some summertime outdoor vibes as I was listening to these.

Thanks Doc for the 71 anniversaries. I've never heard the Harding shows or the Cleveland show from Fall 71. Seems like I need to give those a listen.

So much good music. Play it loud if you can

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In reply to by estimating prof

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Gots dat peaceful easy feeling.

As was often the case with the second night, the sound is more dialed in outta the gate.
Though it does build nicely throughout to where later on you had to think/remember the lineage.
In other words, I thought these sounded good all things considered.

And speaking of hot outta the gate, Phil starts out a tad loud but quickly dials it in during a decent JACK STRAW opener. TLEO continues the refined easy feeling with some sweet harmonies.
It’s like the boys knew they’d cleaned up and did the working man’s thing at the stadium shows and now they could chill in the backyard. Same with DESOLATION, a nice, well played version, though I wouldn’t say Goat.
I dug the first vocal hallucination on the Phantom of the Opera line, but the second one may have been unnecessary?
PICASSO MOON moving along nicely then, whoa? Whhaaaa happen? Lol.
Tight ALTHEA/PL to bring it home, we’ll played but perhaps not quite the fire of the previous nights set closers?
First set overall perhaps more consistently well played with less time needed to dial things in, but after first run through I think my gut goes slightly with the first night? But that could change going forward?

Now I keep mentioning relaxed, mellow, laid back etc I mean these as good descriptors, not negatives, it’s how I felt at the June Cali shows. A band relaxed and confident and enjoying the situation. They may not always have the roller coaster energy, but good in a different way.
VICTIM starts kinda the same, more relaxed and not as violent or dissonant, which to me is what makes the song. I know many do not like this song, but it’s one of my favorite Bob songs lol. They do wrap it up nicely though and I can only imagine what it really sounded like live! It’s a shame JG jumps ship so quick as I could of seen them weirding that one out a little longer. Phil seemed to be digging it!
But JG is raring to get to FOOLISH HEART and he does a fine job with it. But next perhaps the crown jewel of the show, CHINA DOLL. A sweet, nice combo with UJB, but unfortunately no groovy space jam into Drumz.
But that’s awright as the D/S is quite nice, until that nasty MIDI signal distortion. Much of which is Bob as evident by when it’s just he and JG out there. I Turned down again until it passed, Into a status quo WATCHTOWER, and then another top highlight for me, the sweet BLACK PETE everything JEP by now!
Only wish sometimes he didn’t Segway quite so abruptly with some of these, to instead linger on those sweet transitional moments! But on to a status quo NFA to end another fine, we’ll played show! I’d say another 3.8 outta 5 Red Sweethearts. Emotionally I may have identified to the first night a smidge, but I’m kinda tired today so who knows, next time could be different!
I guess the clincher is that luckily they gave us BOTH shows so we don’t have to think too much about all that lol.
Thanks for giving us both and for two great shows from a so far lightly scratched tour!
Look forward to more plays of both of these.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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During NFA...a glorious moment...

Brief and brightly!!!

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‘You know our Love will not fade away’, I chanted this, and believed it then, and I’m living it now.
It really brought me back and into the present hearing the crowd at the end of NFA…

Make good use of the week and re-arrange the entire house.

Everything.. every piece of furniture, closets, down to the smallest kitchen utensil. Move it all to a new location/different drawer/different room, etc.

Before you start, ask yourself... what would Captain Lysergic do?

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In reply to by JimInMD

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I do want to keep "ping" as well as "pong", so I will need to find an alternate activity...

I did get a grin or two out of your idea

BITD if we were partying at someone’s house and they passed out wed do what we called decorate their house.
Rehang pictures or clocks upside down. Change the time on the clocks. Reverse things like the way the fridge door opens. Nothing they’d notice immediately, just tweek things a little. The classic move, if possible was to just flip something that used to be right so it hung left etc. subtle, but affective!
Things like swap which side of a dresser drawer had the socks and which the undies etc
great fun and when the victim woke up they wouldn’t notice, sometimes until much later.
We hit Prezman up on his wedding night. They were finding things weeks later and having a great laugh about it!
So try that PF, I’m sure the Mrs would love the surprise lol ; )

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What a show! What a run ! What a great box set! This box set is still in my top 3 of box sets, 1). Fillmore West, 2). Europe 72, and 3)Winterland 11/9/10/11/73. My brother went to this show, I know other folks on this forum went to these shows, as good as it gets..

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Enjoyed the first '90 show, really enjoyed the second one. Jer giving it his all on both nights. Really good '90s GD.

Now, um, looking forward to the announcement of #42 w/ bonus disc.

Dave, could you make that a 4-disc '69 show(s), now that your first shows have been Dave's Picks? Asking nicely, for a friend.

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Got my copy #23421 yesterday
Had to pay EUR 4,00 for taxes and EUR 6,00 for additonal fees.
Disc Two doesn't work on my regular player, the other runs it.
And with 07/19/90 one more show for my collection, have had
the previous show since decades. Both shows smokes!!!

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17 years 5 months
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Got my copy #8447 today
Had to pay EUR 5,60 for taxes and EUR 4,00 for additional fees.
Haven't had a chance to play it yet.

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Dave Kloc, who created the great art covers for DaP 33-36, has a few new posters on his site, including a darn cool Billy Strings poster. Great gift ideas. I’ve purchased a few from Dave in the past, and he is a serious hockey fan and all round good guy! The site is easy to find. Really a great artist that I wish Rhino kept on board for further work on the Dave’s series (no disrespect to any of the talented artists who have contributed so far), because it is pretty bad-ass stuff.

Now, where is my DaP 40!?

3 @ cal expo
2 @ eugene

Their sound at that time
Jerryz voice uh...at times...
Phil thunk thunk aint like it used to be: "BOOM BAH BOOOOMMMM!!!!!"

i still dig it

Fine release, Dave and pals. Thank you.

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Still working my way through the St. Louis box so DaP40 will have to sit on the shelf for likely another week or so. Too much good music is not a bad thing, right?

The rainy season has begun in the PNW and as my wife likes to remind me, "you don't freeze to death in the rain". Meanwhile in Regina, they are expecting snow tonight. Be well everyone.

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50 years ago today……

November 11, 1971
Atlanta Municipal Auditorium, Atlanta, Georgia

Set 1: Bertha-Me And My Uncle-Sugaree-Playing In The Band-Tennessee Jed-Jack Straw-Casey Jones-Me And Bobby McGee-Big Railroad Blues-Mexicali Blues-One More Saturday Night

Set 2: Truckin'-Sugar Magnolia-Not Fade Away>Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad>Not Fade Away-Johnny B. Goode

This is deadicated to John McCook…………

With the right vibes and the right people, it's easy to create something magical…..

Ah, what might have been! Sometimes, radical politics and rock and roll don’t mix well. And sometimes, the vibe effects the music……

Based on first hand accounts, as well as the audible stage banter on the circulating soundboard tape, this may be one of the most “unpleasant” shows of 1971. This is a difficult show to evaluate. Unlike some shows like Chateau d’Heronville and Terminal Island, which at least have “venue novelty value”, here the vibe is cold, confrontational, even hostile. Did the negative vibes effect the music? Hard to judge nearly fifty years after the fact, but I think that somehow it did.

The first set is about as long as most from this period. The “continuity” or “flow” is severely disrupted after Bertha. As usual, there are “equipment problems”. The second set is markedly shorter than most second sets from the Fall tours (six songs), there is no big jam number, and there is no encore. All that being said, overall the playing is pretty decent, and the Truckin’ and the NFA are strong. Still, I think this show generally falls well below the level of the other November 1971 shows. In fact, I’ve always thought of it as a somewhat oddball show, but maybe it’s just me……………

Rock on!!

Doc
Beautiful things can happen when you act intuitively and instinctively in a moment of anxiety and do something radical…..

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I don't know much about Sabbath, but if I have my story straight, I'm pretty sure Rick Wakeman was so bored with Topographic Oceans he was wandering about during downtime and found the Sabbath party much more to his liking (Sabbath was in the session room next door to Yes). Put a bunch of drunk musicians in a studio together and some unplanned things happen I suppose. I have a feeling that's how Pete Townsend ended up singing some backup vocals on Sway.

11/11/73 - I think I'll take a break from the new box set and put this old Classic on. Keith takes over on the Loose Lucy here. Dig it.

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In reply to by daverock

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First four are great
Sabotage is good
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath has a few good tracks

Then...meh.

But those first four albums are keeeeeeeeeeepers

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On election day in 2016, I got up a little early so I could stop by the local grade school and cast my vote. At that time, I was still using my ipod to play music in the car, so I got in, turned the key, and hit shuffle. Out came the first chords of “Sabbath Bloody Sabbath."

Normally, this was not the kind of music I’d want to hear first thing in the morning. But in this case, it perfectly reflected the dread I was feeling, and I cranked it up as loud as it would go. I just had this feeling horrible things were about to happen, I couldn’t do shit to stop it, and the music mirrored that feeling perfectly.

Where can you run to, what more can do? No more tomorrow. Life is killing you. Dreams turn to nightmares. Heaven turns to hell. Burned out confusion, nothing more to tell.

There might not be that many people who love the GOGD and also listen to Sabbath, but I’m one of ‘em. Paranoid is, hands down, the Greatest Metal Album Ever. They were fucking unstoppable, then. All the albums up to Sabbath Bloody Sabbath are good, but Paranoid is the peak. Iron Man? Fairies Wear Boots? Hand of Doom? Are you fucking kidding me? When I'm in the mood for metal, that's what I reach for. (Or maybe some High on Fire. Or early Mastodon.)

Anyway … nice long drive ahead of me today, and I’m in much better mood than I was in 2016. But I might crank some Sabbath anyway. Or DaP 40. We’ll see.

So I went to the doctor see what he could give me, he said sorry son you gone too far.

I am by no means a metal head.

Back when Paranoid came out I was an Andy Williams/Easy Listening/Oldies man. But I bought that album. I was hooked on War Pigs and Iron Man. Still the only two I play!

Some albums did break barriers.

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