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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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  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    TTB Layla

    Thanks for reminding me. I've been meaning to do my second run through of their full rendition of Derek & The Domimos Layla That TTB released recently (2019 LOCKN' show?). Got that a while back and have had so much to listen to lately I put it away and forgot about it. The original Layla was such a huge part of my early influences it would be hard for me to not love it. Trey A. doesn't really shine with all those guitars in there but I could pick him out pretty readily when he got the solos. I'll be looking for them at Red Rocks.
    Cheers
    Edit: and thx for the correction re: nephew. I thought Derek was the little boy on the cover of ABB's Brothers and Sisters album too until I looked it up. A whole bunch of Dereks, Duanes, and other tribute names in that generation that grew up on the Georgia farm (commune?) that ABB retreated to after Duane's death. Too bad it didn't console Barry Oakley who took Duane's death hard and ended up in his own motorcycle accident a year or so later.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    TTB 1st show....

    ....I knew of them, but never really heard them. I was watching Black Crowes videos, Chris Robinson apparently sits in with them every now and then. The YouTube algorithm apparently works well.
    Immediately looked up tour dates. No west coast fare, yet. I will be looking out for them.
    And Derek is actually Butch's nephew.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    TTB

    Hard to believe you haven't found TTB until now Vguy. My concert buddy and I were discussing who we dared to venture out of covid hiding to go see and both came up with TTB. She is so soulful, he the most amazing guitarist, love watching his hands and cannot imagine how he gets those sounds. Amazing finger play. Of course you probably know Derek is Butch Trucks (ABB) son and grew up around some amazing musicians and was on stage himself at age 12. TTB has taken up the mantle of all the great rhythm and blues acts like Delany and Bonnie and are single handedly introducing the great songs of the '60s and '70s to a younger audience as well as some gems of their own. Great mix in the band of horns and fantastic backround singers like Mike Mattison. Great interview with Derek about learning who those great R & B artists were in a backwards way in the 2010 Clapton Crossroads Festival DVD. This artist leading to that one, etc. I think that's when I found them doing Derek and the Dominos song Anyday with Bill Murray going WOW! and Eric singing along backstage. Priceless. I will say that Derek is not Duane Allman reincarnated as some have said. They have similar tricks and sounds but Derek has a style all his own. There are a couple of his slide tricks he overuses IMO but not to a level where I don't watch and learn. I could go on all day about these guys. Oh yeah, and Oteil B. (D.&Co.) is their bassist often! We are everywhere. Enjoy!
    Cheers!

  • daverock
    Joined:
    No talking

    Ledded's comment reminded me - that was one advantage of those ultra loud bands we were talking about. They drowned out the assholes who can't stop talking.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    So, I was watching concert videos on YouTube last night....

    ....and fell asleep. Woke up an hour later to some good sounding music that I was unfamiliar with. It seems YouTube picked The Tedeschi Trucks Band as a recommendation. Wow! What a band. I had heard of them before, but never really checked them out. Thanks YouTube! I proceeded to binge on them until 2 AM. My new favorite band for the week! Highly recommend 👌.

  • unkle sam
    Joined:
    Yes sounds, Kinks, Biopics, German Bands, Roger Waters

    Yes is One of my favorite bands and I have seen them many times, I saw that crab nebula show with Moraz, like his playing with them, saw them in 72 with Wakeman, the Tales tour in February 74 when Wakeman played White Christmas during awakening because it was so cold. in the round with Moraz, in quad with Moraz again, 30th and 35th anniversary tours. the 30th anniversary was with Igor Stravinsky in the keyboard spot and he was good also, even if short lived for that position. That was the quietest show I have ever been to, Jon Anderson even commented on how attentive and quite the crowd was which helped them as a band put forth their best sound, and it was an awesome show. During and you and I, you could hear a pin drop, no, really, it was that quiet. 35th was with Wakeman again and I always loved those first lp's with him. Since then, they have gotten rid of Anderson, who, IMO, is Yes. And Wakeman is not with them anymore and Squire passed away, so it's basically just Howe and White left of the original band.
    Saw the Kinks during the "Low Budget" tour, awesome show and Ray and Dave were at their peak. what period would that be? It was in an arena if I recall.
    So If jonah is to play Jer, can he play? will his playing be dubbed, should be interesting but I sure won't pay to see it.
    German bands I liked back in the day were Lucifer's Friend, first Krautrock I ever heard and I loved them, kinda a cross between Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath and Uriah Heep. Also Kraftwerk were favs in the 70's.
    Roger Waters' sound has always been spectacular, have seen him many times from the Pro's and Con's tour, thru his latest tour, the DSOTM tour was great, In the Flesh circa 2000 was good too, great light show and clear as a bell sounds.
    soo much to comment on and so little time, you guys rock

  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Live Bad

    Worst audience ever was probably Steven Wilson at the Boulder Theater a few years back. Don't really like him much anyway but a friend is a big fan so went out for the night. The audience sat on their hands the whole time and were just so... analytical and uptight, much like Steven Wilson and his music. Anyway I hated it and my friend the big SW geek was also nonplussed.

    Other horrible experience at jazz club Dazzle in Denver. We'd been in there all afternoon racking up a huge food and drink tab with many persons, and then before the music started the hostess came over and said, no talking. Like, not "keep your voices low, please," but silencio! What total bullshit.

    I'd been drinking and let my feelings be known. Having been to El Chapultapec as well as other noisy, bustling jazz clubs before, it's up to the artist to engage the audience and if people want to chat over drinks so be it. This place was like fucking church.

    I got us thrown out on purpose, left loudly and fuck Dazzle. I'll see my live jazz elsewhere.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Silence is golden

    Billy - yes, that's where the magic lies. I can remember seeing B.B. King the first time, and he did that song where he roars the opening line-"I've got a good mind to give up living." He then stared out at the crowd - no music, no chatting in the audience - perfect silence. I was spellbound.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: Pin drop / Morning Dew

    I have used that exact descriptor for Morning Dew. And the next moment.. cataclysm and the end of the world.

    Thanks Billy.

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Quietest concerts / quiet Dead moment

    My quietest concerts, we're seeing Elizabeth Cotton at the tiny Sweetwater in Mill Valley, and John Fahey at the old Freight & Salvage, on San Pablo Ave over in Berkeley. Unforgettable quiet moment in a Grateful Dead concert, 9/11/81 at the Greek Theatre durring Morning Dew, when Garcia sang "I guess it doesn't matter anyway", you could hear a pin drop in that place. Super cool moment, that I'll never forget.

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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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Hard to believe that Root Boy was a frat brother of to be President GWB at Yale and was thrown out by him at a house homecoming party... very strange character there, and the songs, Mood Ring, Used to be a Radical, Christmas at K-mart. Why not when Tricia Nixon invited Grace Slick to the White House and Grace tried to bring Abbie Hoffman in with her. Too political? Danny Gatton was low key way back then, a known D.C. talent, though overshadowed by Roy Buchanan and Nancy. They played around town in several bar/club locations, DuPont Circle, Bethesda, Georgetown. I did not grow to appreciate Danny as such a gifted master of the telecaster until later on, then he seemed all about rockabilly. Now Bill Kirchen, another telecaster master... caught him with Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen, outdoor concert American University in D.C., 1972. Lost in the Ozone Again...

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was the title of Root Boy's last lp, and I have a signed copy of it. We were fortunate enough to catch his last performance in the good old USA at a place called the Junkyard in Altamonte Springs, Fla. He was fat, sweating like he was in a sauna and wasted to the gills but he could still sing in that gravely voice and he could still move about on the stage. We went backstage and I saw his latest lp laying there on a table, I picked it up, ripped off the plastic wrapper and stuck it in his face for his signature. He looked at it and said" where did you get this?" I told him "right over there" he gave me a wink and signed the lp and stuck it in my hand and said "you've got balls man" He had a chunk of hash that night that was as big as a baseball. He was looking forward to his trip back to England, little did we know it would be his last trip.
The first time we met was in 1986 or so at a performance at the Great Southern Music Hall in downtown Orlando, the romantics opened and they were literally booed off the stage after my then good friend (since deceased) took off his boot and threw it at the lead singer, hitting him in the chest, which ended their performance. Boy, was he pissed, we laughed and laughed. Back stage, Root shook my friends hand and said, "That guy is such an asshole, good shot" Good times indeed, loved his band and those Rootets were hot. Mood ring was a good tune, along with "He's not too old for you", "My wig fell off", "In Jail in Jacksonville" and the classic "Boogie till you puke"

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In reply to by unkle sam

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Go to gdsets-dot-com and there is a page with some of Dick’s hand-written notes from his tape trading days.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Bust out your credit card (if you haven’t already), Johnny Cash Bears’s Sonic Journal is coming out on colored vinyl.

Saw it on elusivedisc-dot-com

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Thanks Ice Cream Man. I already had ordered that when it was first announced,,,, I see the date has been pushed back to January now.

All the house comments reminds me of Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House. When Cary Grant and Myrna Loy are working with the architect, drawing all over him plans. They end up with an upstairs twice the size of the downstairs. The architect finally says " Perhaps what you need is not so much a house as a series of little bungalows."

DaP 40 Glass coming today, yeah!

Unsure about the whereabouts of the last 2 45's !!!

Oh yeah, and that Johnny LP should include a comic book!

DCMVT - it's actually his rockabilly playing that turns me on, although the recordings I have could be from a few years after you saw him.There's some great clips of him on youtube - one I really recommend is titled Elvis Medley from 4/10/89. You might think that sounds a bit dull if you don't like Elvis, - but man alive, Danny Gattons picking on this is incendiary!

There seems to something about a telecaster that brings out a certain type of virtuosity you don't tend to find on other electric guitars. Doesn't work for me, mind.

I've never heard of Root Boy, but he sounds like the ticket too.

I seen the name go by on these boards I believe, but still didn't know him.

I have 3 of his albums in stock though,,, Cruisin' Deuces, Live with Robert Gordon - The Humbler and Redneck Jazz.

On redneck jazz , very nice cover of Ode to Billie Joe and the Andy Williams classic, Canadian Sunset.

Thanks for the pointing out, will have to take to work to play.

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And Happy Build-Day to the Proudfoot robot.

I'm listening to Listen to the River in order, and finally made it to D3 of 12/10/71 for the first time; whoa. THAT'S what it's all about!

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by Dennis

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Dennis -I've never heard Redneck Jazz - I think that was his first album. Crusiin' Deuces has a "Sun Medley" on it which pops the cork...but "The Humbler" is the one for me. One of the best live albums I have ever heard. Robert Gordon is only so so, and it's his show - but Danny Gatton plays out of his skin.

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The late, great Evan Johns played guitar and sang on "Redneck Jazz". Danny Gatton returned the favour by joining Evan Johns and the H-Bombs on "Showdown at the Hoedown".

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Thanks a bunch Daverock for pointing that clip out, had seen something from the same era, Gatton interviewed on Nightwatch by Charlie Rose, that clip also up on utube... Danny shows Rose different stuff and makes it all look so damn easy... it was me that did not appreciate rockabilly back in the day, now we have seen rockabilly with Albert Lee, Jeff Beck and even a little more with Billy Strings. Check out Johnny Hiland, he takes Danny G as a mentor. Now for something almost completely different, every time slide guitar comes up, noting that Derek T is such a great player, there's a clip up of Sonny Landreth playing with John Hiatt on "Riding with the King" live from Basel... Sonny is amazing.

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"Blazing Telecasters" by Danny Gatton and Tom Principato is another album worth checking out if you like, er... blazing Telecasters.

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Magnificent

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Pleeeeeeeeeeease

Pick something from 1969

Pleeeeeeeeeeease

Pick something from 1968

90 87 is nice and all

But

1969 1969 1969

1968 1968 1968

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In reply to by billy the kiddd

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does anyone have any shows in their immediate future? Next month I'll be headed to Tucson & Scottsdale for a pair of Los Lobos shows...I might do a swing through Northern New Mexico and Colorado for them too in March...being in Las Vegas last month for the Stones & Santana got me pumped up for more after the last 20 months of mainly stayin put...I also just checked the Tedeschi Trucks Band website and still no info on tickets for their pair of Red Rocks in late July...damn I need to go to those...

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Hoping for a speedy recovery to Brother Carlos after having a heart procedure done last week...Get Well Loco, we need you here still.

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In reply to by simonrob

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Blazing Telecasters looks worth checking out. I notice that you can get it on dvd, too. The title and description put me in mind of another sparring tele cd-"The Return of The Hellecasters"-the Hellecasters being John Jorgenson, Will Ray and Jerry Donohue. Fiery.

I still don't feel inclinded to go out to gigs yet though. I'm still waiting to see what happens next before I venture out. One of my friends went to see Mary Poppins in London last month, though - and she's not dead yet, so maybe I'm being over cautious.

I came across this show while digging into one of my external HD's...gave a listen to this Charlie Miller Remastered SBD and really enjoyed it...The Big Railroad Blues in the middle of the pre-drums 2nd Set knocked me out...if you have it give a listen today

Grateful Dead
Market Square Arena
Indianapolis, IN
December 5, 1981

--Set 1--
Alabama Getaway ->
Promised Land
Friend of the Devil ->
C C Rider
Cumberland Blues ->
El Paso
Ramble on Rose
Passenger
Bird Song ->
Let It Grow

--Set 2--
Shakedown Street ->
Lost Sailor ->
Saint Of Circumstance
Big Railroad Blues
Playing in the Band ->
Drums ->
Space ->
The Wheel ->
Playing in the Band ->
Stella Blue ->
Sugar Magnolia
--Encore--
One More Saturday Night

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Okay, I'm sure most of us have watched as UPS takes days and weeks to move an item one state. (Big Brown does have logistics) So after waiting a week for the final Dave's Glass to come from gnarlywood, email says delivered!!!

Run to front door, no glass,,,, look all around the porch, nope not here.

Check online, says delivered to door and signed for by "Spencer". Problem is no Spencer here.

After many a frustrating attempt at contact, finally someone call me. Tells me it's been handed off to the USPS. I'm like so you're telling me delivered to door is the post office and someone named Spencer signed for it? I asked about a tracking number, she tells me it's their number (1Z..........)

I check PO and no it's not their number (duh)

Call UPS back, a lot of bullshit, but they will call me back. Acted like they were going to find the driver and make him go back to where it was dropped off, pick it back up bring here. HA HA HA HA HA HA

Needless to say, no further word from the folks at UPS (short for up yours?)

Sent in a form to dead.net, hoping for the best. Hoping that where ever it was dropped, that person will see my address and bring here. (further ha?)

Jim, as I said, at least with the axe there was only one and you either got it or didn't. Four random things, you're hoping for the best.

That delivery system is called “mail innovations”.
Not very innovative.

I have the UPS and USPS apps and when used together you can actually keep pretty good track of packages from Gnarlywood. But, you can’t speed them up.
It’s the alter ego of Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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My reCRAPTCHA on another page said ‘buses’, and it was one big picture of a UPS truck.

I think it’s a sign……

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Too big to care.

Dane!
Another beaut, that whole run up to 12/9, DaP 20 is hot!
That pick still really puzzles me?
IMHO, Once again he picked a good city and street/neighborhood, but went to the wrong house.

Still say Dane box would be fun.

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Short answer, glass came today via USPS,,,, yeah.

Longer answer - though I had a tracking number for the item, it was only a UPS number.

UPS said they dropped at the Post Office, so shocked they said "inside delivery", and that Spencer signed for it in the delivery status online. I would have thought when I talk to UPS and they told me that, that they would have had a tracking code for the Post Office. Odd too because the package itself had a USPS tracking number on it!?!

So I was wrong, there I said it. Still say UPS sucks. Post Office brought the damn thing today (SUNDAY).

Why I love my Post Office! Now I have the complete set!!

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Anyone else keeping up?

I like the artwork he's using for the "cover".

He appears to be (at least after 5 days) to only be using "official release" stuff.

I always view these as just a nice playlist someone else put together.

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In reply to by nitecat

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linernotesmusicblog.wordpress .com 2021 12 01 31-days-of-dead-2021-introduction-day-1-help-on-the-way-slipknot-franklins-tower-san-francisco-ca-8-13-75

I hope this works,,,, that is the info without the back slashes. He is not posting the songs since they all have been official releases, but once I see what song he picks I add to a folder.

BTW - once december is over I will post all the songs in order on my g drive, there they will numbered and labeled correctly.

Hope that helps

This was a good one to bring back; I do feel like it could have been offered some more breathing room to begin to resemble the jammy gem it once was during it's original '73 - '74 stint. In fact I was just listening to a top two version from today's date in 1973 - you know, the show with the monster 45 minute Dark Star. That HCS ranks up there with Dick's Pick's 1 Tampa IMHO. Fight me!

The Eugene show from '93 of which Proudfoot speaks is also fantastic.... and a rebooted HCS kicked it off; also included is a really long & jazzy Bird Song and tight peppy China > Rider in the 2nd. In fact that two show little run would make a fine release one day, it's all hot.

Be Well and Merry, People.
Sixtus

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In reply to by Sixtus_

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Sigh, alas, one of the biggins (and one of my favs) that I didn’t get to see : (

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In reply to by Oroborous

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You can have the one I got to see... but I'm not complaining, they tossed in a the last Comes a Time which made up for it a bit. The early ones were definitely better..

Edit: I would have liked to have seen an Unbroken Chain and how about another Visions of Johana (although I did catch the lesser version performed in '86). That's my late era song I wish I'd have seen. I guess I should be more grateful about my Here Comes Sunshine as I only saw a couple shows post 91.. if only Kermit the Frog didn't sing it. It's such a beautiful tune and the harmonies are a big part of that. In hindsight.. perhaps I am a bit too critical of the later era shows, when they were on, they could still bring it and they brought happiness to so many people right up until the end, I am grateful for that. It was a great community service they performed.. the gift that keeps on giving.

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KF and Doc were over on Listen to the River comments and wondering where we all are. Da40 of course, we're always on the most current release. This is a little harder to get to without going through Community, then Dead Store Product. But this AM it wouldn't let me sign in to comment on The River tab even though I was already signed in to the home page. More weirdness. Fitting for us misfits I guess. I do need my daily dose of Doc's pearls of wisdom and esoteric thoughts so glad he posts far and wide. (and DR, I know they are quotes but I love how perfectly poignant they are) Cheers

Edit: Still having issues signing in to comment today. Took three tries for this round. The site trying to tell me something?

I saw the first and last ones. Just listened to them both again.
I kinda like the first one?
Don’t recall the second one though I know I’ve heard it?
The last one was actually decent considering the time.
Don’t think I’ve heard the others?

Saw the 7/9/95 Chain. Also decent, actually listened/watched that show the other night.
Weird, there’s only video on utoooob of part of the show?
Certainly not mind blowing but not that bad a show really.
Its certainly better sounding then I remember it, though some of that was situational etc.
You can tell Phil and Bob are trying hard to compensate and playing hard.

It’s funny that none of the shows I thought were bad at the time, now don’t seem too bad?
Certainly not great, but worth a listen. Not terrible…

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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How does this happen?

I dreamed last night that 1971 Bob Weir was sitting at a piano and made a comment something to the effect "Keith doesn't play with much soul."

W

T

F

?????????????????????????????????????????????

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In reply to by Oroborous

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I think you're right.. When I pop on the soundboards of some of the shows I thought were a tad stinky and give them a listen, they usually sound much better than how they went down in my mind.. especially the ones that were recorded well. I have not listened to Visions side by side before, but I really like the one from the rectum on 3/18/95. I am happy I caught the Hampton '86 one though.. and the last Comes a Time at the Crap Centre in 94. Stand-out memories from some less than stand-out periods in GD History. I do have some regrets on some of the shows I let slip by.. Augusta 84 being one of them. I had a ticket offer for that one. D'OH!

Speaking of dead dreams.. I had a weird one last night and it definitely referred to my show seeing period. I ran into this guy I didn't recognize but who remembered me from back in the day. He got into this side bar about old times and the woman he had married that apparently dated me back then. So this guy goes on discussing fond memories and things that went down that we both shared (I guess). He called to his wife who walked over and gave me a hug, she hadn't aged a bit and still had it going on (why didn't I marry her?, the one that got away).. anyway, as me and her husband had a jovial conversation walking down memory lane he casually said I've got some doses, want some? At which point I immediately woke up thinking but not able to say yes and poof, he was gone and I'm staring at the ceiling. I had this vivid visual of this woman and I never dated her but she looked like a composite of all the women I knew back in my early college years. Weird I know, but sort of GD related.

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I was at Compton 12.6.92 for the big HCS comeback. Christ that venue sucked. Anyway, it's probably my best live Dead memory, along with the 2 RFK Dark Stars (91 and 92 I believe) and the Casey Jones comeback on 6.20.92. Dead & Co does a mean version if you haven't checked it out yet you should.....

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by itsburnsy

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Lol, wow, cool dream!
I don’t really dream much, but I’ve had similar where there’s some awesome gal seems hot on me and just about when we’re going to find out, Dooooaaaahhh, I wake up lol.

Casey Jones, that’s the other “old” song I didn’t catch.
Can’t complain saw many of the “musts” and many rare, firsts, lasts etc.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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....I'm partial to this one. "Count your age by your friends, not your years. Count your life by smiles, not tears."
Also, "Time you enjoy wasting, was not wasted."
TURN OFF YOUR MIND, RELAX, AND FLOAT DOWNSTREAM

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14 years

In reply to by Dennis

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Dennis thanks for the clue. It's interesting Ed is choosing officially released music this year.

We finished the Beatles three parter last night and the rooftop show was exciting. Interesting they agreed they had seven songs worked up but only played four, with two repeats.

Earlier I posted that this longer doc couldn't possibly hide unpleasant moments. How silly of me, I realized when I understood that they had over 64 hours of footage.

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