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    You can listen to Grateful Dead records over and over again and never understand the attraction they have for certain people until you attend one of their concerts. Sometime during the Dead's usual five-hour set, it will all click: Jerry Garcia's Indian bead string of notes on the guitar, the ozone ooze of the vocal harmonies, the shifting, shuffling rhythm of bassist Phil Lesh and drummer Bill Kreutzmann, and the distant echo of the oldest of American folk music. - Columbia Flier

    "Certain people" will know that we're coming in hot with one that's got all these things and more, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 41: BALTIMORE CIVIC CENTER, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, 5/26/77. Yes, there's still plenty of spectacular May '77 to go around. Nearly chosen for Dave's Picks Vol. 1, 5/26/77 delivers three-fold. There's one count for the energy - all the precision of the Spring tour conjuring up the raw power of the Fall tour that was to come. There's another for the setlist which featured beloved songs from WORKINGMAN'S DEAD and soon-to-be favorites from the freshly recorded TERRAPIN STATION. And a third for its element of surprise (or shall we say surprises) from an astonishingly peak 15-minute "Sugaree" to new delights ("Sunrise," "Passenger," "Jack-A-Roe') to a rare first-set finale of "Bertha" to the second set's "Terrapin>Estimated>Eyes," traveling leaps and bounds towards the improvisational journey that is a nearly 17-minute "Not Fade Away." 

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 41: BALTIMORE CIVIC CENTER, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, 5/26/77 was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

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  • Dennis
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    Musical History

    I don’t remember not listening to music. Mom was the music person I guess in our family. She owned records, she sang in the house and every morning the local AM station would be playing the top 40. Top 40 back then 60-62 ish would be a real mix of music. You would go from Johnny Horton to The Platters to Frank Sinatra to Peter, Paul and Mary. Radio didn’t/wasn’t so pigeon-holed then. Though when I moved to Texas a few years back I was surprised at the number of top 40 (regional?) songs I never heard and never made the playlist in the NYC market.
    We were young when Mom got us record players for Christmas, I was maybe 7. For the youth, record players were wood boxes that you took the lid off and there be a turntable, the front had a 4 inch speakers, driven by maybe 1.6 watts that when turned to 11 you could hear in your bedroom!
    My first records were “kids” records, they were the size of a 45, but had only a small hole in the middle and you played them at 78. The only one I remember was Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee from Pinocchio. All of these bit the dust when me and my brother threw them like Frisbees. Mom started getting up kid lps. Great songs, like on Top of Spaghetti and The Cat Came Back.
    Mom had old 78’s that I listened the shit of out until I was maybe 11. Had a good Al Jolson collection and a slew of pop hits from her day. Songs like The Coffee Song by Sinatra. Silver Threads Among the Gold (Crosby), Red Silk Stocking and Green Perfume (can’t remember), The Woody Woodpecker Song. It was a golden age!!! Records spinning away at 78 RPM with the constant hiss,,,,,, ahhh.
    When I turned 13 I got a REAL stereo for Christmas. TWO SEPARATE SPEAKERS!!! First two albums Mom gave were both live! Johnny Cash San Quintin and Ray Stevens Guitarzan – LIVE! First I bought Andy Williams greatest hits. I continued to buy, I like “greatest hits” albums because I generally knew most of the songs. Like Dylans greatest hits 1, the Peter, Paul and Mary one. I know I was a boring boy!
    First show, maybe the first live show was in 8th grade, the school took us to the local amphitheater and we saw the New Seekers (I like to teach the world to sing). First show I paid for was Andy Williams at the same venue.
    I was big into disco in the late 70’s, listened to the local “black” station out of NYC. WBLS (stereo in black),,,, night show hosted by Frankie Crocker. Opened his show with King Pleasure’s, Moody’s Mood for Love,,,, great cut!!!
    In 78 met my wife and we moved in together. She was a deadhead and more of a rock person. Learned a ton of new music from her.
    Now all these years later I have a collection that boost over 7,000 artist covering over 750,000 songs. All stuff I listen to, no. I really, really, really don’t like metal or punk. We won’t even talk about German metal! (my kid listened to that shit) ( I’m sorry was that judgemental?). I’m more like a Libarian,, I read all the books, but I keep them in order and make sure they’re complete and labled correctly. (I think that’s enough .) I have all my records (except for the yellow 78’s), I have all of Mom’s 78 (about 600 of them), I have about 20 feet of lps, about 16 banker boxes of cd’s. And yet my wife doesn’t believe the limited edition vinyl is a GREAT investment for our retirement! Oh what fools these mortals be.

    Sorry about the length, sorry if I’ve I covered this before, thanks Oro for the first show shout out, don’t know how you could remember what show I”VE been too  I have no real memories of first show,,,, it was all way to new to me.

    Extra sidebar,,, caught a tube vid of Billy and the Kids in Hawaii at Bill’s house. WOW, what a house, huh!!! Hard to believe any of the other guys have digs that nice!!!!

  • KeithFan2112
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    Vinyl LP Pricing

    I have about 150, maybe more, that I picked up as a kid from age 5 - 15. Bought a few recently and they all seem to produced on the 180 Gram vinyl, which is much heavier and sturdier than the flimsy stuff we used to get. That's a plus. The pricing seems comparable when inflation is considered. The inflation calculator I looked at places 1 dollar in 1980 at $3.44 today. The last LP I bought back then was Rush - Hold Your Fire. It has a $7.99 sticker on it. So the 5 LP Dave's Picks Vol. 1 that I pre-ordered would have cost $27.52 for each LP, for a total of $137.60. Dead.net only sold it for $99, so I suppose we're doing alright if the inflation calculator is correct.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Genesis 1973 - Days of the Underground

    The show I saw was the one that was recorded and released on a live album the following year. It had a dramatic start- Watcher of the Skies intro, and all you could see on the stage were Peter Gabriel's eyes, illuminated by florescent paint. Everything else was black. I remember thinking the gig had an Alice in Wonderland quality to it. It was a bit like the David Bowie show in a way- everyone sat rivetted watching the stage. It was my friends who really liked them - I tended more towards heavy rock, where everybody went nuts. Black Sabbath and Hawkwind were the ones for me. It was good - but not quite to my taste as much as the other bands I saw. I never saw Genesis again - although I carried on seeing Hawkwind up to 2019. God help me.

    Simonrob - I got a very strong sense in the early - mid 70's that I had arrived just as the party was ending. Which proved to be the case, unfortunately. Most of the bands I liked had released their best records by 1973. In fact, I think they all had.
    Although I really liked the punk records and gigs from summer 1976-1977, I really didn't like the emerging punk culture - everybody walking around with cropped hair, spitting at bands, looking for a fight with anyone who didn't conform to the new dictat. Bands that copied The Ramones - all a bit rubbish by the end of 1977.
    What I really liked - although I didn't recognise it at the time - was rock n' roll. It was there, hidden in plain site in the music of both the heavy rock bands of the early 70s and the punk ones from 1976-77.

  • Nick1234
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    Quiet music

    Anyone got any suggestions for quiet early morning music? Gorecki's 3rd, Labradford- Fixed Content, Mark Hollis -ST, Larmousse, that sort of thing. Stuff that won't wake anyone else up 🙂. I'm one of those appalling larks, up at 4.30, I love the early day.

    Thanks.

  • Nick1234
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    The first band I ever saw…

    The first band I ever saw were Genesis at our local venue for 2nd string artists in autumn/fall ( take your pick 😀) 1972. I remember that I didn't much care for the music, still don't, and that the singer dressd up. I was 13 and these were warm up gigs for the next night at the Lyceum I believe, about 40 miles west of here. Alice Cooper, Bowie, Roxy Music, Stones, Zeppelin etc were much more my thing then. I met a friend in 1974 (he sold me my first acid on my 15th birthday) who turned me on to the Dead and I reciprocated by getting him into my stuff. Europe 72 was my first Dead album.

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    So long ago.

    The first song that made a big impression on me was "Apache" by The Shadows in 1960 when I was 7. After that it was the Beatles in 1962. I guess things really got serious around 1969 when the San Francisco sound became readily accessible in record shops and on the radio thanks to Radio Luxemburg (208m medium wave). BBC radio got in on the act with the John Peel show. Unfortunately by the mid 70s it was as good as finished with few new bands of any note coming to the fore. Disco, punk, new romantics etc. were never interesting to me and my circle of friends and British progressive music became so self-indulgent as to be virtually unlistenable. Of course there were still points of light in the darkness but the golden age of music had sadly passed into history.

    PS: First time I saw Genesis was at the Reading Festival in 1972.

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Davestrang

    You saw Genesis in '73? I was 9 when Abacab came out, and then came the Phil Collins tidal wave. I only ever heard two songs on FM radio from Gabriel Genesis in those days: Watcher of the Skies and Lamb Lies Down. In my early 20s I began buying up the Genesis back catalogue, as an extention of my taste for prog rock. I thought Supper's Ready was magnificent, and still play it regularly.

    I've seen a lot of youtube footage from '71 - '73. There's a great show from the Rainbow. That must have been a transcending show. And to see Gabriel's on-stage persona in his prime. Wow wow wow wow wow.

    Would love to hear about that experience. I may go see Steve Hackett - he's going on tour to play Seconds Out. I may see if that fits into my schedule.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Alright Manchester - lets go!

    My first gigs were when I was 15, in 1972. They were T.Rex in the summer - at which there was a riot of teenage girls who temporarily stopped the show. Then David Bowie in the December. This was at a venue called "The Hardrock", and it featured what they referred to as "festival seating". This meant everyone sat on the concrete floor in as close a proximity to the lotus position as they could manage. Everyone stayed down, too. Older people at this one than T.Rex.

    1973 things gathered pace - I saw Hawkwind, Black Sabbath, Genesis, Uriah Heep and The Rolling Stones.

    Records were really important too, of course- and going to record shops. Which could account for why I still like vinyl today over other formats.
    And television-I never saw Alice Cooper live - but I saw a film of them on the Old Grey Whistle Test, and in summer 1972 he had the big hit - "School's Out"
    And the music press-the N.M.E being the fount of all knowledge. Iggy and the Stooges didn't have a record out in 1972, and they only played one gig in England - in London, which I didn't go to. But it was well written up and photographed, so that it assumed mythic proportions. I snapped up their first album from the bargain bins - and "Raw Power" the day it came out in 1973. When Iggy Pop finally came to the these shores, in 1977, it was like a visit from the Messiah. Unfortunately, The Stooges were no more- David Bowie played keyboards, and people in the audience flocked to his side of the stage to watch him rather than the Ig.
    But those years 1972 - 1973, when I was 15-16, were magical times.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    The new Red Hot Chili Peppers record is fun....

    ....as you were.
    I discovered music when I was 12.
    The year was 1980. Ergo, my influences. Started with The Beatles.
    Then new wave and heavy metal.
    Used to make fun of Duran Duran back then. High school cliq shit.
    Now, I realize they kick ass.
    Headbangers Ball anyone? MTv Gen here.
    Music is indeed the best Mr. Ones.
    Edit. The Scorpions are doing a residency here. They also put out a record recently. It's pretty good.

  • LedDed
    Joined:
    First, it's the drummers...

    All Spinal Tap kidding aside, the drummers are always the first to go. Keith Moon. John Bonham. Ginger did outlast Jack, but not by much. Of late, Taylor Hawkins... Charlie was preceded by Brian Jones but that was lifetimes ago. Joey Kramer has bowed out of the upcoming Aerosmith Vegas residency, and Peter Criss could never play 90 minutes with KISS again. Let us not forget Neil Peart, Nick Menza... the list is endless. Lars won't be able to play like he does now in 20 years - maybe ten. Metallica will reinvent themselves.

    I am excited to catch the D&C shows again as Summer tour arrives. Without Billy. Will he ever return? Does it matter? Not to discount him - I love the man, and to me the best and tightest the band ever was was when he singularly owned the drum chair. But the show must go on.

    I love Dead & Co. Yes the tempos are leaden, but my god Wolf Bros. makes D&C sound like Ministry on methamphetamine. Someone tell Bob to stop dumping a bottle of Log Cabin over his fretboard before taking the stage. John Mayer, Oteil and Chimenti are so goddamn good. Bobby hangs his hat on them and it all meshes beautifully. Last summer at Red Rocks, Jay Lane ably took up for Kreutzmann and you could hardly tell, except there wasn't any coke on the side cymbal (heh-heh).

    The vibe at D&C shows is so goddamn good... all across the country. I have had some of the best times in the parking lots, Shakedown Street and in the venues with like minded brothers and sisters who carry the spirit of the Dead onward.

    I had to stick up for them. Be well everyone.

    \m/

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You can listen to Grateful Dead records over and over again and never understand the attraction they have for certain people until you attend one of their concerts. Sometime during the Dead's usual five-hour set, it will all click: Jerry Garcia's Indian bead string of notes on the guitar, the ozone ooze of the vocal harmonies, the shifting, shuffling rhythm of bassist Phil Lesh and drummer Bill Kreutzmann, and the distant echo of the oldest of American folk music. - Columbia Flier

"Certain people" will know that we're coming in hot with one that's got all these things and more, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 41: BALTIMORE CIVIC CENTER, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, 5/26/77. Yes, there's still plenty of spectacular May '77 to go around. Nearly chosen for Dave's Picks Vol. 1, 5/26/77 delivers three-fold. There's one count for the energy - all the precision of the Spring tour conjuring up the raw power of the Fall tour that was to come. There's another for the setlist which featured beloved songs from WORKINGMAN'S DEAD and soon-to-be favorites from the freshly recorded TERRAPIN STATION. And a third for its element of surprise (or shall we say surprises) from an astonishingly peak 15-minute "Sugaree" to new delights ("Sunrise," "Passenger," "Jack-A-Roe') to a rare first-set finale of "Bertha" to the second set's "Terrapin>Estimated>Eyes," traveling leaps and bounds towards the improvisational journey that is a nearly 17-minute "Not Fade Away." 

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 41: BALTIMORE CIVIC CENTER, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, 5/26/77 was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

The first time I saw a real blues singer/band /guitarist, as opposed to a rock band that played blues songs was B.B. King around 1980. It was, not put to fine a point on it, a revelation. I'd only heard a couple of his 1970's albums by then-"Midnight Believer" was one-and although it was alright - it was only alright. But live it was a different world.

I saw a few after that - Albert King, Memphis Slim, John Lee Hooker and Buddy Guy come to mind. The most recenet I can remember seeing was The North Mississippi Allstars, about 3-4 years ago. Well worth checking - quite trance inducing.
Also Catfish Keith. He is an American who came over to England quite regularly in pre-pandemic times, bringing with him his trusty National Resonator. Mainly blues/gospel in the Blind Willie Johnson style. The singing might be a bit ropey - but he's got the guitar style down pat. Nice guy ,too.

Must have been something to see Big Mama Thornton live.

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So, like many, I got my first Beatles album in about 1964 and my first Stones album a year later. On the latter, I could see on the credits that "(Jagger/Richards)" meant that Mick and Keith had written the song.

But what the hell was "(Chester Burnett)" or "(McKinley Morganfield)"??? These "names" seemed so foreign, I didn't understand that these were people's names. (How stately, how dignified: "McKinley Morganfield"!)

But I decided, based on the blues sound, that I had to find out. So in my teeny bopper years (say, 10-13) I sought out the truth: the basic blues I loved was written by Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters. Major discovery. Even while I turned on the Hendrix and (yes, sadly) Grand Funk Railroad, (better) Ten Years After, and Janis, I began my journey to the blues. At first, the R&B and soul on the radio: James Brown, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin. Then BB King, Albert King, Freddy King, Buddy Guy, Hubert Sumlin, finally Robert Johnson and Lonnie Johnson.

I feel privileged that I got to see BB several times (his call-and-response with the audience, powerful horns!), Freddy several times and Albert just once (but in Chicago from the lip of the stage).

Without 400 years of oppression, torture and murder, no blues. No blues, then no jazz, no rock 'n roll. In short, no blues, no nothing. Nothing to move the soul or the feet. And it's global, in the context of world music. Would that we could have gotten there without those 400 years and their crimes against humanity. But that stretch will reverberate on this Earth until humans die out. Which may not be all that long, the way we're going. OMG! Best put some world-weary Lonnie Johnson on and sing along.

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I like the new artwork. I think it is a lot different. Stella, if you want to surround yourself in Hendrix, and the slew of 60s icons, along with the dead playing viola lee, I would highly recommend the complete Monterey pop fest 67' on criterion dvd box. It is chock full of beautiful music and hot chicks too. It also contains the full dvd 'jimi plays Monterey' with 49 minutes of hendrix. If you are younger than the rest of us on this site (sorry guys) you may not have seen it. This will put to rest the whole 'trey' fiasco to bed. I love fish, but only the haddock, and tuna variety.

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In reply to by carlo13

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Any Dave's picks is good news to me so another 77 is welcomed and the sound samples sound great to my ears; but, I do understand the clamoring for more 80s/90s or even 60s. With the quality issue of the 1980s tapes in mind I do wonder What's become of the three night 1980 Nassau run? I think all three were recorded for the King Biscuit Flower Hour Radio. Did The GD, likewise, record them -- or other shows from that time period.

Perhaps an expanded Go to Nassau with all three nights could be released? They were strong shows as the excerpts on the official Go to Nassau demonstrate. That could scratch 'The more inclusive years' itch. I would buy it despite already having Go to Nassau which I love. If there are other shows of similar sound quality from that period. . .. Spring 1980 Selections Boxset!!! A compromise could be a matrices of boards and tapers copies? Go with what you got to include more years.

And Dave if you are reading a Fall September 79 New York City @ Madison Square Garden would be a great official release! These were Brent's first N.Y.C. shows and solid were those shows. It's a sell-out mini box waiting to happen.

I dream of Radio City/Warfield tapes being rediscovered in that Raiders of the Lost Ark Warehouse for complete box sets. Let's manifest these dreams.

Melkweg 1981anyone w/Grugahalle??

I was confused by the names of blues authors too. Who was this "McDaniel"? If they meant Bo Diddley, why couldn't they say Bo Diddley. He did. Often. Also curious that Robert Johnson's " Love in Vain" was credited to "Payne" on my old "Let It Bleed" album. It has been credited to Johnson on the most recent ( and definitley last) version of the album I got-the 50th Anniversary cd.

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Not my favorite interpreter but a Muddy & Wolf Joe Bonamassa at Red Rocks show is on PBS next Saturday. Probably an old one recycled for begging. I find him difficult to watch but there's no denying the skill of the once child prodigy. Virtually all the true blues legends have said speed doesn't equal soul, starting with the "British invasion" blues interpreters. But influencers they are and thankfully many of us did trace back the true roots eventually. Give me a Stevie Ray any day.
Cheers

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Burnin' the Seats of the Biscayne
or
Leavin' Town a Quart Fuller
by Rich McManus

The trip to Baltimore from the District of Columbia is virtually a straight run up the neck of a guitar--almost as invariant as a string. You get on I-95, point the car north and let about 30 minutes go by.

My brother Tom was the wheelman for the ride up to catch the Dead at Baltimore Civic Center. He was then in his first year of law school and, with proceeds earned from pumping gas, had bought a 1962 Chevy Biscayne, which is basically a living room on tires.

The bench seats, front and back, were full of guys. There was a cassette player, but it was one of those $89 models plugged into the cigarette lighter, with speaker wires trailing into the rear of the car where they attached to tinny speakers free to wander the car's rear deck as the vehicle pitched and rolled up the highway. At several points, the speaker wire was spliced by hand; once in awhile someone had to reconnect errant strands.

The tape for the ride up had to be one I had just scored in Chapel Hill, where a kid named Ivan Spector had allowed me to dub cassettes from his reels. He had permitted me to copy an April 1977 WNEW radio performance including a song I had called "Inspiration," and another I labeled "California."

So we had recent Dead to enjoy as we rolled up 95 on May 26, 1977. Somewhere along the way, a pipe was filled and passed across the expanses of the Biscayne interior. Hand to hand, to mouth, and front to back, crossways, frontways and oops, it fell into the crease in the back seat.

"A prophet on the burning shore..." Ten minutes after the pipe had made its rounds, reports of the scent of smoke reached the driver. Some in the back seat complained of warm bottoms. But there was no smoke or visible flame, just a persistent odor of burning leaves.

Tom pulled the Biscayne into a gravel lot near the Civic Center and we all hopped out, more curious now about the source of the smell than about the impending concert. We pulled the rear bench out, flipped it upside down and discovered an ever-expanding black circle in the straw matting that formed the interior of the seat: the thing was on fire, albeit a slow burn. The only thing with which to douse the sleepy blaze was cold beer. It seemed a shame to spend beer on the little fire, but that's what we did, then reloaded the bench in the car.

On the walk up the ramps inside the Civic Center, I wondered if such a secret fire would outwit our attempts to extinguish it. Would there be just ashes when the show was through?

We were in the balcony, on the left side as you faced the stage. Jerry was on the far side. All I really remember from that night is Bobby chastising the crowd for arriving late to the show, and Jerry grinning broadly as he rocked back and forth playing, the music rising out of him and his bandmates. They seemed like happy spectators at a circus they had called forth.

The pipe came with us on the trip inside. There was a girl sitting by herself in the row in front of us. The custom in those days was to pass what you had around. I leaned over to interrupt her concentration on the show, but she declined. She couldn't take her eyes off the stage.

Walking out after the show, I was convinced I'd just seen the best Dead show of my life. Which is exactly what I thought after leaving perhaps a dozen previous shows. "How can they play any better than that?" we wondered, worn out, giddy.

"Roll on up, gonna roll back down." One of the guys in our group, Dan, was from Baltimore. He knew of a corner bar nearby where the bartender would fill any container you had with beer, call a price, and you could walk out the door.

From somewhere within the acreage that is the trunk of the Biscayne, Tom produced an empty glass Tropicana jar. He disappeared into the corner bar, which on that May night was wide open, not even a screen on it, and emerged moments later with a frothing jug that the barman guessed was worth around $2.50.

"Took a whole pail of water..." The seats were mercifully cool as we whisked down 95, passing the glass from mouth to mouth. The dirty little six-banger under the hood was purring that night, past exits and overpasses and open spaces that are no longer there. It would be almost 20 years before we learned that people taped the show that evening, and would share that show (thanks Rick Wurster and Tom Melvin!) with whomever showed an interest.

Back then, it was as likely as your pants suddenly bursting into flames that the world's greatest rock and roll band would roll all over the world for 30 years, amaze everyone, and preserve performances--for that broad bench seat that is the future--that burn, unextinguishable, like a secret fire.

Detroit Land Yachts.

I’m not familiar with the Biscayne but in the mid-80’s my friend had a 67 or 68 Oldsmobile Luxury Sedan that could easily fit 8 teenagers comfortably.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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1984
Drove from LA to Bay Area on 7 13 84

Mike's 69 Ford LTD

big ol' thang

AC didnt work

But it got us there and back

I think I heard Airto on 4 22 79

Probably cant be released

Hot show. Ignore the sfb review in the compendium.

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had an olds delta 98 that was as big as that biscayne, that back seat was literally a couch on wheels.

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Ok I gave this Dave's release a third listen over the last few days. I really like it. I think Spring 90 was more together and energized, but Summer 90 is pretty damn good. I'm finding I like the second day, 7/19 a little better. It has a Foolish Heart, one of my favs, and some really great guitar work by Jerry throughout. The jam after Playin is really cool, as is the jam out of Uncle John's. I found myself playing those jams a few extra times, they were so good. Jerry sings with passion on all the ballads, even if his voice isn't as sweet as it used to be. The crowd singing the NFA chant at the end gave me shivers, and reminded me how much I loved to see the band with a crowd of deadheads. With such excellent playing, I even look forward to hearing the US Blues encore when we get it in a couple weeks. No shipping notice for me yet.

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Wow, great story, Rich! Really nicely written. I could almost smell the back seat burning.

Pretty sure I was at 7.13.84 along with Proudfoot. We used to call those early summer shows at the Greek the High Holy Days. I still wonder why there has never been a Greek box. Tape quality issues, maybe? I sure remember those shows fondly.

I think maybe that particular show was the one where we decided to get a room at this motel on University Ave maybe a mile from the Greek. Which was convenient cos we were none of us in especially good shape for driving after the show. We had like six of us staying in a one bed motel room. We couldn't really sleep, for various reasons, but fortunately a party started up in the parking lot. The whole hotel was filled with Heads, evidently, because some guy started playing tapes out of his van, that night, but instead of complaining everybody just started hanging out in the parking lot, passing around beers and whatnot. I still remember this one couple, they might've been the owners/managers, they were older, the guy was wearing turban, and they were watching us all with wide eyed amazement, wondering who the hell were these crazy people and what was that music?

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In reply to by Crow Told Me

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"yours truly on public saxophone"

Who said that, and where were they?

Answer correctly and win a smile

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In reply to by proudfoot

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I had to google it.. so that's cheating. (hint - 2nd show at one of our beloved theatres). But now I know, the things you can learn here at dead net. Good recording!

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I feel sorry for any Buffalo Bills fans. Your defensive coordinator should be fired immediatley.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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I know who said it, but not where. He used to dedicated one song to the girl in yellow underwear.

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Because Jimi said that at multiple shows over the years.

Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr! You lose trying to be too clever by half!

As for Rich's story, "let 30 minutes go by" -- that's too easy. Driving a straight highway while the lysergic is screaming in your veins was no pice of cake, I can tell you from experience. Better to find that local motel with the van and the tapes! And the time to give it, oh, say, about 8-10 hours....

As for the make/model of the vehicular accomplice, ah that brings back memories! My buddy Moose managed to get his hands on a 1959 Ford Fairlane, the vehicle with fins big enough to achieve escape velocity. Which we did, unfortunately, with four people abreast in the front seat and six across in the back. Which came in handy when I, with help, positioned myself horizontally with my head out the window, hurling as we jetted around the curves on Buffalo Pass, heading up the Continental Divide outside Steamboat Springs, Colo. in the glorious summer of 1974 (well, maybe less glorious for my compatriots who had to hold me in place to prevent my ejection from the Fairlane... ah to be young again!

As for the Milkweg shows in Amsterdam, I prefer the ones the GD played in the 20th century. But what do I know about 1881? Fortunately, before my time.

As you were...........

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9-19-72 (my first show, the Vault is missing the first reel; please let it be found in the Owsley stash of unmarked tapes)
8-12-79, Red Rocks (Purple Dragon ruled)
8-13-79, McNichols Arena due to monsoons (Purple Dragon ruled, Night Two)
8-14-79, McNichols Arena due to monsoons (left the Dragon at home because ... I had to)

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Saw Branford Marsalis play with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra on Saturday night at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. It was about as far as you can get from jamming with the dead, but it was excellent.

I think he mainly tours with his quartet, but if you get a chance to see him, I recommend it. He's still got it.

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I’ve seen Branford twice, both times with the Dave Matthews Band. Good times for sure.

Still no shipping notification for me…..yawn

BTK — I’m a Buffalo Bills fan. I’m really hurting today. The coaching staff really let us down. No two ways about it……….this one is going to sting for awhile

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Vinyl has arrived, it’s (my) Friday and it’s been a while since I’ve listened to this show

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In reply to by adedhed68

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how did the coaching staff let things down?

no need to answer if you don't want to

Neil Young sang, "only love can break your heart". He should have included "sports"

I remember a certain Super Bowl when all they had to do was hand the ball to Marshawn...but they passed in close quarters...and those fn Patriots were GIVEN the game

you'll feel better when the Chiefs lose next week

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Where did you guys/gals order from? I see it on Amazon, but not released until 1/28 - thanks

Another mini box idea: 12/26/80 -> 12/27/80 -> 12/28/80

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In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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....I don't like any of those teams, but thanks for getting my hopes up. Next!

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Question for those of you whose memory is better than mine. Out of curiosity, I was scanning various sites to see what the Road Trips bonus discs were selling for. A bunch of the descriptions say "sealed", just the bonus disc. As I recall, the Road Trips bonus discs were shrink wrapped with the Road Trip release instead of separately shrink wrapped. Is my memory faulty or are sellers shrink wrapping the bonus discs?

I apologize if I've derailed the Dave's Picks conversation with this question.

Mind the gap.

Saw him once with Buckshot LeFonque in 94 or 95. At this point I remember being there but don’t remember any specifics about the show.

Buffalo:
I don’t watch a lot of football but hey, at least the Sabres are doing better than the Habs.
And Truckin’ Up To Buffalo is a good DVD.

Hey Lemieux, no not you Mario, Dave, aka Vault Guy, more video please.
Pretty please with back bacon on top.

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In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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Everyone on this site’s favorite site lol. I saw that date but he mailed last week nice. I kinda forgot I love this box. Guess the other 2 vinyls released will need a playing also

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I just ordered it on Amazon, they are going to deliver it Feb 1.

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Billy The Kid - 2/17/79 is not in the Vault. There are no complete SBDs with Keith in '79. Too bad, because they started playing some older tunes they hadn't touched post-hiatus until Winter 78-79 (plus there was all the new Shakedown Street stuff). They could have put a nice box set together if they had Betty Boards. Oh well, what can you do. There's a pretty good AUD of 1/10/79, which has a Shakedown, Stagger Lee, Miracle, and (drum roll) Dark Star.

Still wondering if there's enough cowbell in 5/26/77 to wow me. Shipping notice is in - we will see.

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Keith fan , I have a soundboard of the full show, I believe I got it back in the 80s. I was at the show, it was a great show.

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I really appreciate folks who wished me well. Just spent day 13 in bed, and I sure am hoping to get back to work this week.
I listened to Dave’s 10 tonight-Thelma 12/12/69, a thoroughly enjoyable, Pigpen filled show. Will probably play the bonus disc from the 11th tomorrow.
I happened to see Wynton Marsalis at Blues Alley in DC in January of 1984. Quite the memorable occasion. Branford on sax, Jeff(Tain) Watts on drums, dad Ellis Marsalis on piano, and a 15 year old Charnett Moffett on bass. We even got to stay for the second set, and had a set Break chat with the non-Marsalis fellows. This was not recorded, although in December of ‘84, they recorded a double album at Blues Alley, with Kenny Kirkland on piano.
If music could heal, I’d have been back to work 10 days ago, but it’s still the BEST!!

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Have tried to post a couple times last few days, apparently i can't pass the robot test, will try again. Did save the post, on Jimi and The Blues, so may inflict it later on. Also saw Branford during the Buckshot days, they played at Dartmouth's Webster Hall, great show. Folks might remember he had a part in that zany movie, Throw Mama From the Train. Best of all was a most unusual encounter. In another life, I covered golf events as a journalist. Every January at this time (except last year) including right now, there's a massive event called the PGA Merchandise Show held at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando. For people in the golf biz, not open to the public, over the top industry showplace product release and sales, major networking etc. There's an opening ceremony the first day... turns out Branford is an avid golf nut and was asked to provide brief music eleven years ago. So at 7:45 am on January 27, 2011, Branford and his band started to play in the huge greeting hall, while thousands of golf people swarmed inside the doors, virtually ignoring him. They played for half an hour, then the welcome speeches began. I strolled over when the music stopped and had a nice chat with him, who cared about the speeches.

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In reply to by Mr. Ones

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I must have missed the original man down post.. get well my friend.

DMCVT - chill Branford story. How lucky.. hope you both had a good time.

To Cone Kids post, : They way to Dave's heart is through salmon and sasquatch sightings, not bacon. I loved the logs in the latest seaside chat too.. log rolling is a nice accent.

More videos please, I agree. For some reason, and I think it might be financial, they are not pushing videos. I like them, especially the stuff they have, not the multi-camera bootlegs. I am not sure why they did not sell so well. argh.

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Good news, KeithFan -- 2/17/79 was the one full 1979 show in the returned Betty Boards.

A search for "The New Alphabet: ABCD GD" will take you to a 2020 JGMF post with a pretty comprehensive listing of the returned reels.

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I have not been at the forum for a very long time and missed your post about being ill so a belated well wishes, healing-vibes, prayers, love, light and Holy Spirit to you.

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In reply to by deadegad

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That is geat news.

I really hope 2 17 79 gets released this year.

And I see 4 22 79 was a returned reels show.

:)))

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These two shows would be great if they were both released together, Keith & Donnas last show, and Brents first show. These were the first tapes I got when I first started collecting tapes back in 1980 or 81. I got them through my brother he also got 2/9/73 and 5/26/73 at the same time

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Trouble Over Bridgewater - Half Man Half Biscuit
Cammell Laird Social Club - Half Man Half Biscuit
CSI:Ambleside - Half Man Half Biscuit
Four Lads Who Shook The Wirral - Half Man Half Biscuit
Achtung Bono - Half Man Half Biscuit

Some might notice a pattern!
I’m getting in the mood for their new release in February ‘The Voltarol Years’.

....be sure to go onto YouTube and check out Christopher Hazard's channel if you have not done so already. He is in the process of marrying up the best audio (a lot of Charlie Millers' where available) with whatever video may be present - albeit this is not video from the GD's video feed; it is typically fan-shot video that is cleaned up and then married to the audio.

He's been releasing stuff at an awful consistent clip, usually several shows a week; and not just GD, a lot of Jerry Band too. I happen to be buddies with Hazard's right hand guy who is supplying the video, so I usually get tipped off about a new show being put up a day or two in advance.

If video with solid audio is your thang, this will scratch that itch.

Be Well People.
Sixtus

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Are there any videos/audio from '74 or earlier?

As for official video releases, I wonder if there's more production work and cost and, therefore, financial risk, in releasing video with well-synched music?

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