• 1,367 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Dual release. 2/17/79. & 4/22/79

    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

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Aikon

    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.

    :)))

  • deadegad
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    @Mr.Ones

    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.

  • aikon.art
    Joined:
    Keith Fan 2/17/79

    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.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: Pretty Please w Bacon on Top

    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.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Re: Mr. Ones

    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.

  • dmcvt
    Joined:
    Branford

    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.

  • Mr. Ones
    Joined:
    Day 13

    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!!

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Keith fan 2/17/79

    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.

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    2/17/79

    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.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 6 months

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.

user picture

Member for

3 years
Permalink

"About 120 shows were played in 1967 and only about a dozen tapes are in the vault". Hopefully more will show up, were lucky to have the tape from the Shrine Auditorium.

user picture

Member for

13 years 5 months

In reply to by nappyrags

Permalink

Nappy, as soon as he figures out your passwords you're done. With your PC and Amazon two day shipping they have little use for us.

user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months
Permalink

Hey Pedro, I ordered the re-released DP 19 CD directly from Real Gone.

They are producing the correct Disc 3 and mailing out to everyone who got the duplicate disc through them.

Mine is theoretically scheduled to arrive today, after an epic USPS routing journey from California to Denver to Harrisburg PA to Lancaster PA to Chicago and finally back to Denver.

Chicago, New York, Detroit, it's all the same street...

user picture

Member for

12 years
Permalink

So, after Jimmy Buffett dies and enters the pearly gates, God takes him on a tour. He shows Jimmy a little two bedroom house with a faded parrot banner hanging from the front porch.
This is your house, Jimmy. Most people don’t get their own houses up here, God Says.
Jimmy looks at the house, then turns around and looks at the one sitting on top of the hill.
It’s a huge two-story mansion with white marble columns and little patios under all the windows. Tie-dyed flags line both sides of the sidewalk and a huge Grateful Dead banner hangs between the columns.
Thanks for the house, God, But let me ask you a question.
I get this little two bedroom house with a faded banner and Jerry Garcia gets a mansion with brand new Grateful Dead Banners and flags flying all over the place. Why is that?
God looks at him seriously for a moment, then with a smile God Says,
That’s not Jerry’s house, it’s mine.

user picture

Member for

16 years 5 months
Permalink

Hey rockers!!!

Is it just me, but did every DaP just disappear from the Dead store. In the past, they always left even the sold out one up there for a while..........

Rock on, with a tip of the hat to H G Wells and Claude Rains,

Doc
I'm not sure that I ever could, but I certainly had the ability to pass unnoticed.

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

I was wondering the same. Dave's picks have disappeared completely.

user picture

Member for

16 years 5 months
Permalink

I think it's because they're all going to be replaced by Doc's Picks..............

Ah, one can dream.......................

Doc
It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.......

user picture

Member for

11 years 10 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

Lene Lovich!!! Mas cool...saw her at the Whisky in West Hollywood way back when...Her and Les rocked the joint!

user picture

Member for

10 years 9 months
Permalink

Lots of fun people and not crowded. The band came out smokin' with a new killer drummer (so sorry, Bugs, you were major fun) and Conrad's son played electric bass throughout (no guitarron, unfortunately), as Conrad is recovering from a non-threatening health thing-y. With a new rhythm section, these guys simply rocked out, though they also did some multi-instrumental Mexican folk songs for which they're deservedly famous.

Naturally, especially for Boulder, they did NFA and Bertha in a medley that turned into an insane, long jam. Caught up with some of my peeps after a too-long hiatus and we had a blast, with a little whiskey and a little Indica to sweeten the already amped mood.

Let me tell you, folks, going to a show, hanging with a fun crowd, catching up with friends and partying to the hardest-working American band of 50 years standing (I've caught them maybe 15-20 times over the past 30 years) was, in a word, humanizing.

Got up today, went about my business with a smile, renewed, eager for more. This period right now is likely to be a lull in the pandemic and I'm going to take advantage of it by hitting my local open mic sessions and catching a few local bands. Once spring arrives, it'll be easier to be safe outdoors.

That's my story and I'm sticking to it. As you were....

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

Just listening to the first set pitb. My daughter was visiting, and she said "good jam dad." The dead right? ...........yup.

user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months

In reply to by carlo13

Permalink

....they played my favorite Samson that evening 👍.
I've caught The Wolves four times. Never left disappointed.
Jim. Just Do It.
Thumbs up to the "good jam Dad" Carlo. My son did that during a Hell In A Bucket I played the other day.
And no, I'm not a Nike spokesperson. I'm an Adidas, Sketcher and Birkenstock kind of guy....yup.

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

Yup. That Sampson on 76' can be tricky for novice deadheads since it starts quite different , and can be passed by if not looking at set list. aka. Browsing.

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

Rodney dangerfield and joe pesci said in easy money, "we're just browsing". "Well , you dont look like browsers". "Mabey I'm just half browser, on my fathers side". I guess you had to see the movie.

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

By the time that CD came out, I was looking for new Dead releases every time I went you the record store. I was only really into the two-tracks in those days, but I did try out a few Dick's Picks (16, 18, & 20). I understood two-tracks to be anything that was not a Dick's Picks (but they did sneak To Terrapin: Hartford '77 right under my nose; that thing was mixed perfectly at the board and they knew it). Anyway, I remember listening to Disc 2 first, because seeking out a Sugar Magnolia to supplant Rockin' The Rhein was an undercurrent in my Dead upbringing (I still love Rhein the best).

When that Samson pre-jam came on, I had lost track of where I was in the disc but remember being enthralled by it and thinking, yeah, this is why I love the Dead. And then the Jam merged into Samson, and all was good in the world.

Stoltz, that might be my all time favorite Floyd moment. The Echoes "guitar part" is right up there.

Only two more months until Winterland Feb '74 + Bonus.

....from New Year's 76 also sticks out way far in my mind. The totally seamless switching they do during the Good Lovin into that Samson is something to behold. I still remember where I was the first time I actually *heard* that sequence, driving from DC to Baltimore to go hang with my brother. When this segment came on I recall jaw dropping, staring blankly at my car CD player saying *WHOA*. The light had turned green, I was none the wiser.
That show has been a top tier '76er for a looong time.

Be Well People.

Seventy-Sixtus

user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

A much happier story, "the light had turned green, but I was none the wiser"

then

"The light had turned red, but I was none the wiser"

Sampson and Terrapin Station (the studio version at least) are two songs that really benefited from two drummers.

Back to your regularly scheduled Dark Star > Discord & Mayhem. May the peak be with you.

user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month

In reply to by JimInMD

Permalink

Apparently a mummified body was found in a wall at Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center.
Did someone get stuck while trying to sneak into a Dead show?

user picture

Member for

11 years 10 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

a DJ in LA early to mid 60's...his name was Gene Weed and he went by the promo name of "The Weedy One"...he worked at KFWB and also hosted the TV show "Shivaree" which was a syndicated answer to "Shindig"...the weedy one indeed...by '67 he was weedy no more...I say a strain should be named after him....

Both tragic and hilarious. One of those things you just can't reconcile.

To all you kids watching at home.. being stoned does not give you walk through solid objects superpowers.

user picture

Member for

11 years 10 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

In the early 90's there was a gig at the LA Memorial Coliseum ...Headlining was Guns 'n Roses, 2nd bill was Metallica and opening was Motorhead...A buddy of mine took his 14 year old nephew and copped a couple of backstage passes from a friend of his...his nephew was a big Metallica fan and wanted to get their autographs on an LP he brought...a band flunky was standing by the door to their motorhome/dressing room and rather rudely told them they couldn't go in...Lemmy watched this go down, told my buddy "we'll be right back" and steered the kid towards the door, gave the flunky an "I dare you look" and they both went in...a bit later they came out and Jace was loaded down with swag and his autographed LP...my buddy thanked Lemmy and then Lemmy asked Jace "do you want G'nR's autographs too?" and Jace told him "Nah, they suck"...Lemmy looked at my buddy and said "That's a smart kid..."

user picture

Member for

3 years
Permalink

That's a wild story. I saw some great shows in that building. The last time I saw the Grateful Dead there was Feb 1989.

user picture

Member for

5 years 8 months
Permalink

I've been digging on this one lately! I agree with Dave on his thoughts of this show sounding a little more raw/gnarly compared to other spring 77. Dave has spoken of this show often since arriving on scene. Another great pick!........ such a great time to be a Deadhead, right?........ have a grateful day, Gang!!

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by jonathan918@GD

Permalink

The Mummy was a DH who got so high that at the exact moment he was peaking somehow his molecular structure vibrated at the right frequency to move through the first wall, but because of the composition of the second wall his progress was impeded at just the moment when his peak and the peak of the song subsided, thereby significantly reducing the molecular frequency such that he was now unfortunately trapped inside the wall. To make matters worse, his attempts to pound on the walls and yell were dampened by the unfortunate fact that Drumz was now in full progress and by the time the sound was quiet enough for him to be heard, he was unconscious due to lack of oxygen, thereby sealing his macabre eternal fate, until now.
Brings new insight into “you’d be better off dead” !
Goes to show, ya don’t ever know! Perhaps he shouldn’t have dropped that last tab? You all know the story “ well I dropped a couple hours ago but I’m not feeling it, maybe I should eat another one”

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

from the Napster! Keep ‘em coming.
Too funny, nobody likes Axel, even other heavy metlers lol.

user picture

Member for

15 years
Permalink

From my post on 2/19 -

here's the clue for Today: Miami greyhound squid

You may notice that the "T" in Today was unnecessarily capitalized. Hence, show date is 2/19.

The Dead played seven times on 2/19. But where and which year?

"Miami greyhound" was the nickname for Hall-of-Fame basketball player Rick Barry of the Golden State Warriors. The team played their games at the Oakland Coliseum Arena. But not on 2/19/91, because the Grateful Dead played there that night.

For extra credit, I was going to ask if anyone knew the historical significance of that show. That's where "squid" comes in. If you Google "Grateful Dead squid," a video pops up of a band called Squid playing "New Speedway Boogie." Rick Barry's jersey number was 24, and 2/19/91 was the 24th time the GD played that tune. It was also the first time they played it since 9/20/1970 - on hiatus for over 20 years!

Over and out.

user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

What a weird find! Gives new meaning to the phrase “If these walls could talk”. The press is speculating it may have been someone “accidentally” (on purpose al a Jimmy Hoffa) got caught in the wall during construction.
It begs the question - didn’t any of the other workers notice when the young carpenter’s apprentice disappeared after lunch? Stopped reporting for work? Never came for his pay?

I’d say there is skullduggery afoot in Oakland all those years ago…a mystery for the ages.

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

I just listened to Ry Cooders fine Paradise and Lunch album containing the awesome song “ain’t ya glad” that walls can’t talk etc
Spooky, must be that 5/14/74 DS we been messing with on POTD, like a psychedelic weegee board!

Sorry about that Chief (er uhm Bolo)

So Bolo, who is that mummified twirler hiding in the walls of the Kaiser? If anyone knows it's you.

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months

In reply to by JimInMD

Permalink

But if he told you he’d have to kill ya!

EDIT: notice the way back machine has been reprogrammed.
Do you know somethingbyer not telling us?

product sku
081227881610
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/dave-s-picks-vol-41.html