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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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  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Portsmouth Guildhall

    The December 1963 appearance by The Beatles was their second visit to the venue that year, having played there in March. They were due to play in November but Paul McCartney was ill so it was rescheduled in December. My brother and I, together with two sisters that we knew went to the show. My mum was good enough to take us. It was more a visual experience than an aural one. The PA was the utterly inadequate house PA and the band used small amp/speaker combos (Vox AC 30?). Most sound was totally drowned out by screaming girls who were also busy throwing jelly baby sweets at the band. It was easy to see the band as the hall was small, having a capacity of around 3000. I can't remember exactly but I understand that the boys played a standard 10 song set on that tour so it must have been a pretty short show. The setlist for that tour comprised: I saw her standing there, From me to you, All my loving, You really got a hold on me, Roll over Beethoven, Boys, Till there was you, She loves you, Money (that's what I want) and Twist and shout.

    I saw many shows at the Guildhall over the following years up until the late 1970s. In 1969 The Mothers of Invention had the dubious distinction of being the first act to be banned from the venue. Their shows were apparently lewd and unsuitable for general public consumption. Unfortunately I only found out about their shows after the event. I did get to see them the following year at another event. Also at the Guildhall, in early 1972 the Pink Floyd played the complete Dark side of the moon for the first time. It is alleged that they played the complete thing a few days earlier along the coast in Brighton but due to equipment problems they were unable to play it in its entirety. The Tubes had the honour of being banned by the City Council before they ever got to the Guildhall. They were scheduled to play on Remembrance Sunday 1977, the day that Brits honour their war dead. Portsmouth is a major navy city having a large dockyard so the day is extensively honoured in the city. Members of the Council had heard rumours about The Tubes, so a delegation was sent to an earlier gig to check 'em out. They were sufficiently unimpressed to ban the band there and then. Mrs. Elsie Fudge (63), a magistrate, said that the sex scenes were totally unnecessary although the music was good. I was going to see them so I was not happy. I managed to see them at Knebworth the following year.

    Fortunately the Guildhall was not the only venue in town, the South Parade Pier being the best of them all. I saw some great gigs there, right up until it burnt down in 1974 during the filming of Tommy.

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Acoustic Attics. 9/24/94

    I saw an acoustics Attics on 9/24/94 at the B.C.T. Lesh, Weir, Garcia, & Welnick. I was at the S.F. Blues festival earlier in the day, and we ate at Everett & Jones BBQ that night, big fun.

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    First shows

    I got a late start compared to others.

    7-4-87 Jimmy Buffett
    9-12-87 David Bowie
    9-25-87 Pink Floyd
    (Summer 88 - pause due to DUI legal issues)
    10-6-88 B.B. King
    4-6-89 GD (still on probation for the DUI)
    7-17-89 GD
    7-25-89 Who
    11-6-89 Jethro Tull
    12-9-89 Rolling Stones
    3-8-90 Rush
    3-25-90 The Guess Who
    6-16-90 Steve Miller
    6-24-90 David Bowie
    7-1-90 Jimmy Buffett
    7-21-90 GD
    7-22-90 GD
    8-18-90 Santana
    8-25-90 Allman Brothers
    10-28-90 Fleetwood Mac

    I was benefitting from the nostalgia/reunion tours of the Classic Rock bands I had been listening to through the 80’s.
    I picked up momentum from there.

    Got an Attics Of My Life 9-10-93:
    Space>Wheel>Watchtower>Attics>NFA.
    Had mail order tix row 21 floor Jerry side.

  • hbob1995
    Joined:
    First shows

    May 1972 - CCR @ MSG - AWESOME!! (Saw John Fogerty last night. This guy still brings it and his voice is strong!)

    First Dead show, 3/23/73 @ the Buffalo Aud - great Tennessee Jed & Casey Jones - NRPS opened

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Simonrob takes the freakin' cake!

    Great stories, gentlemen. I'm voting for Simonrob -- first show, the freakin' Beatles in '63. No one's gonna top that.

    Okay, pal: spill! We want stories and we want them NOW!

    I got my first Beatles album in 1964. Begged my mom to buy it for me. My folks had a very old mono turntable, an unhoused tube amp and a giant piece of furniture my dad called "Lenin's Tomb." It had a 12" speaker. I'd put the Beatles on low volume and sit by the speaker and rock out. I was 6-7 yrs old. Maybe February '65 a President's Day sale made handheld transistor radios available for like $10. I BEGGED my dad to buy us one and he did. At that point, the Stones and Beatles and Motown ruled the airwaves, despite, yes, the one-hit wonders making the charts.

    Okay, Simonrob, start talkin'!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    First Rockers

    '74 Feyline's Sun Day #1 ABB, Marshall Tucker, Steve Miller, Elvin Bishop, Wet Willie all day event at Mile High.
    Too hot to really enjoy it after 5 bands.
    '74 Lynyrd Skynyrd at Ebbet's Field, a small club in downtown Denver.
    This is the one with the 27 minute Free Bird and I think every song from their first two albums. Smokin'!!!
    $5 at the door and two drink minimum. Underage stamp got us $2.50 ea. soda back when a soda was $0.25.
    Got talked into going by a friend (RIP Dave N.) who was learning to play guitar but had no car.
    '75-'76 Eagles at Red Rocks, Bob James and the CTI (label) Jazz Allstars at Red Rocks, Elton John, Yes w/ Gentle Giant, ELP, B.B. King, Les McCann, Ramsey Lewis, Herbie Hancock, The Jazz Crusaders, and every free show Colo. State Univ. put on at the lagoon.
    And it was uphill from there.

    DHB: There were no hotties at the X-mas party ( I had mine at home) but as a new employee I didn't want to show up in the middle of dinner. It was hard to focus coming down as I remember. Only one cool fellow employee surmised my state of consciousness after hearing I had come from the Dead show.

    Edit: HF, agreed it is pretty hard to beat '63 Beatles! And I love the N.Y. Rock Ensemble, Freedom Burger and what was the other one on my early tape, Let It Rock? I was taping cassettes of everyone's albums to save money and I had a car deck too. My first TEAC had a separate little black Dolby box.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Ist shows

    T.Rex May 1972 - the concert had to be called to a halt after about 20 minutes as hundreds of hot panted, screaming girls were getting crushed at the front of the stage. Bolan came back on, played a few acoustic songs then reverted to rock n' roll and more mayhem. I'd never heard anything so loud in all my life.

    David Bowie December 1972 - a much cooler affair at Manchester Hardrock - hippie type people sitting on the floor gazing at the future.

    Early 1973 - Black Sabbath, Hawkwind, Uriah Heep, Genesis and in September... The Stones.

    I first saw The Dead in March 1981 at The Rainbow in London, by which time I felt like my wild years were behind me, to some extent with a sensible haircut, job-all that baloney. I knew what I was doing by then. Or thought I did. Little did I know. Anyway - what had turned me on to them were the albums - Anthem and American Beauty particularly - so the show didn't really reflect why I liked them. Still enjoyed it though. It all seemed very civilised!

  • Forensicdoceleven
    Joined:
    I don't know one note from another……

    50 years ago today……..

    November 14, 1971
    Daniel-Meyer Coliseum, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, , Texas

    Set 1: Bertha-Beat It On Down The Line-China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider-El Paso-Sugaree-Jack Straw-Big Railroad Blues-Me And Bobby McGee-Loser-Playing In The Band-Tennessee Jed-You Win Again-Mexicali Blues-Casey Jones-One More Saturday Night

    Set 2: Truckin'>drums>The Other One>Me And My Uncle>The Other One>Wharf Rat-Sugar Magnolia-Johnny B. Goode

    Deadicated to Matt's_On_The_Way, boblopes, Hoopsie, lowspark75, muleskinner_blues, Gary Farseer, DaveStrang, Guss West, Ridin that Train, and Coconut Phil, because gratitude is when memory is stored in the heart and not in the mind….

    This show was relatively unknown until it was partially released as part of the Road Trips series in February 2010, and now, eleven years later, one still hears very little about it.

    The 16 song first set, one of the longest of the year, is very fine, with major Bakersfield flavors. Nice early first set China/Rider. Serious dose of country-western-Weir material. The first live version of Hank Williams’ You Win Again, a cover song I always enjoyed. I thought Garcia did it well………..

    The second set is slightly shorter, with a more convoluted Other One than in San Antonio , with the somewhat typical Other One/MAMU/Other One sandwich leading into Wharf Rat.

    Very solid show, underrated, definitely worth checking out!

    Rock on!!

    Doc!!
    No matter how I struggle and strive, I'll never get out of this world alive…..

  • Deadheadbrewer
    Joined:
    So 1stShow, who was the lady?

    No one leaves a Dead show early, unless the woman you're trying to meet up with is pretty special. :)

    First concert--Culture Club in 1983 at the Met Center in Bloomington, MN. The Dead played there a few times.

    Oro--Foreigner and Jethro Tull were my favorite bands in high school. Still love listening to both bands' early albums.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Cool stories.

    The Beatles in 63, nice! Bet that was something.
    HF always entertaining and reminiscent of the glory daze.
    Doc, too funny, thanks for sharing!

    Nothing historic here, but good sheet none the less!
    First was a huge obsession early on between my BF then and myself with the Beatles, but alas we couldn’t see them. And I was way into Hendrix in HS, but couldn’t see him. And I had a ticket to Zepplin later, but that show got cancelled.
    So as many 15 year olds would do back then, I went to a band that was all over the radio. Here’s my first dozen to illustrate that I’d go to pretty much anything I could until the full, GD addiction took hold.
    1/25/78 Kiss
    7/28/78 Bob Welch, Pablo Cruise, Foreigner, and Fleetwood Mac (Stevie like a goddess!)
    10/16/78 Uriah Heap, Jethro Tull
    1/20/79 Grateful Dead third row at small theater)
    1/24/79 Rush (10th row, might have been 1980?)
    6/1/79 Muddy Waters, Eric Clapton (Muddy waters should have been the headliner!)
    6/7/79 Supertramp
    7/23/79 Triumph (at the Philharmonic hall, first song flash pots almost ended the show lol)
    10/15/79 the Eagles
    11/9/79 Grateful Dead
    12/3/79 38 Special, Molly Hatchet, and the OutLaws
    12/4/79 the Who (day after Cincinnati, very powerful)

    By this point it was only opportunity that would keep me from seeing the Dead as much as reasonably possible for the next 15 years! Aaaaaaa the good ole daze!

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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.

Perhaps we could all learn a thing or two from VGuys playing card. Be kind this week and the ones that follow.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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Mennonite or Amish

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Man, Iggy as Pole Guy … you are crackin me up bro. Jack Black as Pigpen is pretty damn good too.

I couldn’t think of anything remotely that good, but I’m gonna say Jeff Goldblum as Phil and Bill Murray as Kreutzman. Sasha Baron Cohen as Micky. You know who’s a tough one to peg? Weir. Hard to find a guy who can do that mix of heart throb + cross-eyed deer in the headlights. Maybe Dustin Hoffman could pull it off. And then there’s Jerry. I got no idea who could play him.

Worst audience? One gig stands out in my mind: I saw Los Lobos once at a university performing arts center, where it looked like they brought in the same audience full of rich white people who go there to see Yo Yo Mama. (I don’t want to be more specific, because I know people who work at the venue, and they’re nice.) The Lobos were up there working their asses off, playing great, but the audience was so still and quiet they coulda been a painting. And then the band got rattled, and didn’t play well, and started making sarcastic comments about the audience. Ugh. Just a bad experience.

Glad to see the TTB getting some love. The Layla record is good, but seriously, if you want to know what they’re about, you need to listen to the live shows. Kinda like the Dead in that regard. They’ve got a couple very good ‘official’ live albums (including one from Oakland where I was happy to be in attendance) and several other full concerts available from Nugsnet, some of which are available as video. Highly recommended, at least until you can go see in them in the real.

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if you check on glue tube for tedeschi trucks darlin' be home soon. Incredible.

The band is hitting on all cylinders.

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....but it would be TTB, Crowes, Dead, Crowes, TTB.
That's a sammich.
I got the abbreviations down pat.
I still don't know how Derek does it.

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I wasn't too crazy about the trend to flick spit at bands in the punk era around 1977.

But the absolute worst audience I have ever been trapped within was at Reading Festival in 1977. A reggae band - possibly Steel Pulse -got bottled off as they did not fit the white rock boogie template. Then the following day Jayne County - Wayne as she was then-got bottled off for being different. A racist and homophobic mob - what was I doing there? Definitley time for me and hard rock to part company.

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No question, my two favorite, currently working, live bands. Even with a dozen people, two drummers, etc., TTB turns on a dime. And between Derek's guitar work and Susan's vocals (and Mike Mattison's), horns, backup vocals, they've got the soul/R&B revue and flat-out rock thing down.

As for the Lobos, what to say? Great people, I've met half the band. And deep knowledge of multiple instruments and incredible range of material. And best of all, they've got soul and spirit.

I hope my tic to see Lobos in Boulder in March happens. And I plan to seek a tic to TTB at the Rocks next summer, having missed 2020 and 2021 there. It's only 20 minutes away.

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I've seen TTB 5 times, mostly in smaller places. After the last time, walking out my girlfriend and I said at the same time "this band never disappoints".

I second the recommendation of the Oakland show. Great stuff. I like their studio albums. The second disc of the Layla show is a desert island one. Not a bad second on it.

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I went solo to see TTB at the Morris Theater in South Bend, IN in 2016, got myself a 4th row ticket on Derek's side. One of the best shows I have ever attended. That said, it also featured quite possibly the lamest audience I have seen. Nobody was up and shaking their bodies despite a stellar performance. I was on the aisle so I can't say nobody was up shaking-- I was. When the band came out for an encore, a lady off to the right asked if it was ok to be up and dancing and Susan replied, but of course. They proceeded to melt our faces with a sweet Bitches Brew jam. I left with this opinion-- Derek Trucks does something amazing every song and TTB is my favorite working band today. Non-GD that is, though today TTB is much stronger than any current GD-related band.

I second Hendrixfreak-- Los Lobos is my second favorite. Just had Colossal Head in for my commute this morning. Love those guys.

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....I've seen them four times and never left disappointed. Keeping TTB on my concert bucket list for sure. Currently on the east coast, but I see two dates at Red Rocks in July. I've never been there. They might just give me an excuse to go.

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til you see a great band at Red Rocks under the stars (or while it's snowing). I heartily recommend a light but solid dose when you make it there. I've seen the GD, the ABB, Bonnie Raitt, Santana, Dylan, Fogerty, Phil & Friends, all starting with Arlo Guthrie and Pete Seeger in '74. Dosed heavily to GD, ABB and Santana.

The joy is not universal. I caught Lyle Lovett one time. Big Texas swing band starts up and I'm on feet dancing when someone yells "Sit down!" I look around at 10,000 people: not one of them on their feet. I'm friends with a lady who walks the rows selling beers and she comes by: "Who ARE these people" she whispered. We were in the wrong crowd. Later, it started raining and, guess what, everyone decided it was okay to get up and move. Too bad; I'll never risk a Lyle Lovett show again and he's awesome. But his crowd sucks.

Anyway, compare that to the "kind" crowd for GD, ABB, etc., and even in today's over-regulated concert environment, you'll be glad you made the pilgrimmage. Then you can go climb a mountain.

does it rain there as much as folklore says?

Bob Weir said something along the lines of "the annual Red Rocks rainout"

Nice and rainy here in Seattle today

I think a lot would depend on how good your moves were. If your going to block someone's view, you need to give them something good to look at. Otherwise it might be thumbs down, I'm afraid. You really would be depending on the kindness of strangers then.

Well when I die, don't you bury me at all
Just nail these bones up on the wall
Beneath these bones let these words be seen
"This is the bloody gears of a boppin' machine."

I had something of flashback this morning, and it occurred to me that the first gigs I saw weren't heavy bands in the early 70s, they were in Blackpool theatres with my parents in the mid 60s. Notable ones were
Gerry and the Pacemakers
Frankie Vaughan
The Black and White Minstrel Show.

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The Black and White Minstrel Show. I remember seeing that on BBC television when I was very young, probably the late 1950s or early 1960s. As one can imagine, the name had nothing to do with the fact that this was before the advent of colour television. The George Mitchell Minstrels had a lot to answer for. Even way back in those days, how could anyone think that this was remotely acceptable. How times change.

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I remember in Blair Jackson's Golden Road magazine when he wrote a review of the 7/22/84 show in Ventura, there was a photo of about 5 or so guys dancing on the roofs of the portable toilets. I was at the show and I don't remember seeing that. It was a great show. Ventura was a blast!

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Alpine Valley late August 1990, bill of Robert Cray Blues Band, SRV and Double Trouble and Clapton. A big group of friends caravaned down to Alpine, we set up a keg in the lot and other extracurriculars. My buddies from college had some fine paper that we consumed along with a couple of lady friends and we were off and on our own.

I vividly recall that day-- Cray played a fine set and then SRV came out. Well, nobody was topping SRV that night. We were on the hill and SRV starts Superstition and none of us can help but get up and dance. Then the calls for us to sit down started. We looked around, shook our heads and moved down the hill to where folks were taking in the wonder that was SRV on that final weekend. Blew the proverbial roof off the place.

I have always appreciated the generally laid back outlook at Dead shows. Dance or don't dance; people are free to move about without much hassle; go to the bathroom and your spot will still be there and you will be permitted to get there. I went to Phish on Northerly Island in Chicago about 8-9 years ago. Three set show general admission on the lawn and you literally could not sit down the entire time, even during set breaks. You would get trampled. Go to the bathroom during a set and getting back to your people was not doable. Phish fans were very territorial. And we were nowhere near the front. Alas, I haven't seen them since.

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Daverock, you hit the nail on the head. 9,999 people do not want to see me gyratin' to the music. It involves nothing more than shuffling the feet forward and backward and moving the buttock-ular muscles left and right -- and that cannot be a pretty sight. Of course, the place is packed, so there's no room to move and I'm not a dancer. If you take away the word "dancing" and substitute the god-given right to stand up and move to a swing band, that's a more accurate picture.

Vguy, I'm dyin' to see The Gorge and may next year as a friend from Steamboat here is moving to the Columbia River next year and eventually I'll visit. So I cannot compare them. Indeed it rains (and snows) at Red Rocks shows. There were times in the 1979-1987 GD years when the show went on in pouring rain; other times, when well before show time it was clearly going to be a full washout the show was moved to McNichols Arena (famously, August 1979). One time, the day was sunny and hot (80s) and we were in line all day for the ABB to score front row center GA seats. Just before showtime the temp drops to ~40 and freezing rain began to fall and continued all night. Fortunately, I had whiskey and morphine, which took the edge off. They built a little cabin of plastic sheeting around Gregg and cut a hole in it so he could see the rest of the band. Classic stuff. I was not in attendance at a legendary Neil Young show when it snowed like hell. At the eastern base of the Rockies, the foothills can produce anything and frequently do.

So, yes, Red Rocks is rightly notorious for its weather. I always take an old daypack with wool and rainwear and hidden drugs and alcohol. Yet, if one goes often enough, you'll get a warm, star-filled night.

Some classic moments: we're back far enough to see over the stage to lit-up downtown Denver. The GD are jamming. Lightning erupts over the city and a big flash occurs. The crowd goes "oooo." Bobby looks over at Jer, unaware of the cause of the crowd's appreciation, with a look that says, "Ain't we somethin'?"

Nothing will touch their first shows there in July '78. We (and many others) were loaded to the gills with purple dragon blotter all afternoon, so when the sun eased off and the lights came on and the boys assembled and broke into Jack Straw, it was pretty sweet. I was 20 years old, long hair, t-shirt, jeans, sneakers - standard operating procedure.

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The last SRV show?

Red Rocks is awesome. The Gorge is on my list 100% for sure.

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Apples to Oranges, both spectacular.
I’d give the nod to the rocks, biased I’m sure, but if your at the Gorge on the right night with the sun setting over the River gorge in the west, it is pretty sweet.
One thing about the gorge is it’s kinda in the middle of nowhere.
Both worth the time/resources to check out a good band.
Both highly recommended!

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Jim, second to last SRV show. I traded tapes with a guy who recorded SRV's last show and I had that boot for so long. He wasn't sharing it around and that show deserved to be heard by SRV's fans, so I eventually shared it on a forum and then cds of that show started turning up. He absolutely crushed it that weekend.

Eerie story here. I went to the GD at Tinley Park in July and bought a sweet pink star tie dye in the lot the last night and wore it to Brent's last show. It turned into my 'Last Stand' t-shirt. I then wore it to the SRV show and didn't wear it for five years, bad karma. Getting ready for the Grateful Dead at Soldier Field 1995, I absentmindedly grab the shirt and halfway to Chicago, curse myself out for wearing it. I haven't worn that shirt since. It still lurks somewhere in storage in my house, though I can't recall where. Probably in great shape for a 30 year old shirt with fewer than 10 wears. Humans can be a superstitious lot, even folks who are not (I do not consider myself to be).

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My sister caught that one and I have what must be a tape of the simulcast from some radio station (guessing Boulder?). Still kicking myself for missing that opportunity. She had never seen him or heard all that much of his catalog and came away saying she'd never heard one person make so much amazing sound.
SRV is my third most collected artist in a tie with Clapton, behind ABB, and WAY behind the GD. No bootlegs but most of his published catalog. Trying to make up for lost shows I guess.
Cheers! And let's all meet up at The Rocks this summer!

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In reply to by estimated-eyes

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you might want to burn that one

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Simon - yes, it was weird how acceptable The Black and White Minstrel show was in 1960s Britain. Widely accepted by my parents generation - they were regularly on television during my childhood. I wasn't endorsing it by mentioning, by the way - terrible stuff.

Hendrixfreak - sounds good-I hope I didnt cause offence with my comments - just joking - but if I did - apologies. 99% of the gigs I have been to, people have rubbed along quite happily. I have behaved in every way imaginable at shows I have attended over the years. From dancing, sitting attentively, to being carried out unconcious. And that was all in the same night. I tend to sit and stare now. You would think nothing was going on. But it is.

Much like the board game in Jumanji.. that shirt needs to be crated, buried and never worn again. If it sells on EBay, how many more rockers will surely meet their end in helicopters and limos leaving the gig?

Do not sell it on EBay.

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If I didn't laugh at myself, I wouldn't be laughing at all... seriously, I'm only another hapless fool who's managed to survive due to dumb luck alone. Note my use of the term "gyratin'" -- that kinda captures it. My "dancing" is basically a public safety issue...Getting a load of shit is the only attention I get these days, might as well man up and take it!

I see there are no tix on sale for TTB 2022 Rocks, yet? When I looked for 2021, the prices were sky-high and all from scalpers. I'd love to make a plan to meet up, but getting tix or committing to ridiculous prices is not in my playbook. I thought of going up day of show with a little cash and seeing what I could do. Gotta admit, I can no longer spend a day on the stairs and then race to the best GA seats. I did that for decades and I'm done with the scrum. Plus, unfortunately, GA has been moved back to beyond Row 20 so they can get more $$ for the first 20 rows from fan club peeps, etc. Fuck that! It's a public park and now it's just another whorehouse, governed by whichever promoter scum is working a particular show. Not that I'm bitter or anything.....

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11 years 11 months

In reply to by estimated-eyes

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I was on another dead-based wedsite and someone mentioned that if you go to Target online and enter "Grateful Dead" in the search box a bunch of Dick's Picks & Road Trips pop up and they have a buy two get one free sale going on right now...I went and looked and sure enough they were there...gonna spend my Xmas $ a bit early I guess....

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6 years 10 months
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...get their copy of DaP 40 yet? Mine usually take about two weeks to arrive, but this one still hasn't shown. Just looking for a little confirmation that I'm not the only one (or that I am the only one and should be worried about missing out on this wonderful set of shows).

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4 years 5 months

In reply to by ShaggyFraggle

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Worth a listen
Missouri

Then the vveerryy next night they played a bunch at Fillmore East

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10 years 2 months
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I received mine here in Southern Ontario after about ten-twelve days of shipping/sitting gathering dust at Customs. This one was slower than most of the other releases, likely due to the inertia that is the Customs folks. Good luck on receiving it, but perhaps it’s time to call in the “A Team” > MaryE.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by That Mike

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Turkeys,
Hope ya have a grateful day!
Remember to be thankful for something!

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12 years 2 months
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May your bird be moist and your martinis dry!

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3 years 1 month
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Last 5: 1) 2/27/69, 2)Louisana Fog, Charlie Musslewhite, 3) 5/2/70, 4) Best of Muddy Waters, 5)3/1/69. Last 5 beers. Old Rasputin

I am thankful for the GD that is available

There are some jams that got away, though

7 14 70 has a sweet jam going in good lovin when about 2 to 3 minutes into said jam....middle of closing lyrics

11 20 70 The Other One....

4 7 71

Set 2 of 1 22 71

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11 years 11 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Chuy's Tape Box Vol 1 - Los Lobos Live In Santa Barbara '84 (Concert Merch Table Only Item)
Ava Mendoza - New Spells
Brother Jack McDuff & Bill Jennings - Four Classic Albums
Southern Bred Vol 8 Texas R&B Rockers
Dance Craze - The Best Of British Ska ... LIVE!

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6 years 10 months
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Wouldn't you know it, I checked the mail today and Dave's 40 finally arrived. I suspected it might show up the moment I put my inquiry out to the universe. But I also just relocated to Montreal (doing a postdoc at Dave's alma mater) and it takes twice as long to get anything done here. Or maybe that extra disc just weighed down the postal service.

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