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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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  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Nitecat 1987

    Nitecat, I was at that Oakland Dylan/Dead show in 1987, I thought the Dead played great, and seeing Garcia playing the pedal steel was really cool. My favorite shows of 1987 were the Garcia band acoustic/electric shows, those shows at the Warfield Theatre in Nov. 87 were a knockout, and the show up on the Eel River was a totally cool scene. We drove back to the Bay Area to see Garcia play at the Greek on Sunday. Bonnie Raitt was also on the bill.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Shipping notice occurred this morning....

    ....my mailbox is chrysalis. Gonna start glowing soon.

  • hitmeister
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    I haven't received mine yet,…

    I haven't received mine yet, but I've had a recording of this one for many years. When I think of this show, I always think of the NFA. Perhaps it would be my favorite version if not for the one from Hartford 2 nights later.

  • alvarhanso
    Joined:
    Re: Video

    I'm quite into concert videos, and if they get some good film of the Dead from '65-'77, I'm likely buying it. Would love one of those Acid Test videos to be released on something if a whole Viola Lee exists and is in the Vault or if they work out a deal with whatever Merry Prankster may have it. The footage they shot for TV doing their new single Golden Road would be good if that's in the Vault. Or if more of Europe '72 was captured on film. Any Wall of Sound footage, like the Last Shows at the Winterland in '74... For '76, it'd be nice to get an official, cleaned up release of 8/4/76, paired with cds like Sunshine Daydream. I don't really care that it's in black and white. It's a great show that exists complete in both formats, and would make a great combo release.

    My love of concert film is derived from The Kids Are Alright and The Who 30 Years of Maximum R&B Live video with fairly good snippets of shows, and led me to tracking down bigger chunks of those shows. I got a VHS of the Who at the Isle of Wight in 1970 in 1994, two years before they released the whole show on cd, and at least another couple years later, finally the video was released. Fast forward 28 years, and I have a decent hoard of Who videos I've traded for or downloaded, and got quite a bit of Pink Floyd, too. And if they release any Duane era ABB officially on video I'll be getting that, hopefully the master of that PBS film of 9/23/70 Fillmore East is somewhere to be found. The one on youtube is good quality, slightly better than the VHS I had and VCD I still have, and I hope there's more footage of the Love Valley Festival July 1970, Duane is jumping around during Mountain Jam, and just tearing it up. Some bits of their opening set at Atlanta Pop Fest have been shared on Instagram, and a May 1971 show in Chapel Hill, NC had at least one song set to a montage of footage from the events that day. Stuff like that popping up gives hope there might be more buried in a closet somewhere. Talking Heads Stop Making Sense is also just a masterpiece of performance art, and some of the Peter Gabriel concert films I've seen are incredible as well.

    Also, Couch Tour is an awesome and amazing thing that pre-dates COVID, but really hits its stride because if you wanted to watch live music, that's what you had. It's also a great way to go through an entire Phish tour without getting Wook flu, which has no mild symptoms, nor any known vaccine. And the ability to pause and go to the bathroom, YOUR BATHROOM, which is even better.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    VFTV IV, Sauce, Hatchets, Missing Shit and GD

    First.. thanks Nitecat.. it's refreshing for a relative newbie like me to hear an old timer like you saw more shows in 87 than any other year.. because, well, same for me. Saw 8 CA shows, Red Rocks, Telluride, Alpine, first shows in Boston (well Boston area, Boston Proper, ...) plus many more. I had the time and saved for tickets and gas and by 88 and especially 89, responsibilities came to roost and try as I might.. from that day forward they remain (although I still try and see as many shows as I can pull off). My only Greeks and Ventura.. Love VFTV IV and videos in general, but I do sort of agree with OB.. I don't revisit them as much as I should, not sure why.

    Sauce.. anyone who gets sauced needs a proper sauce staining prophylactic preferably loose fitting with a pocket for a left handed monkey wrench. They're good at keeping gooey stuff off the friggin sofa..

    Finding shit.. so my older brother came out to visit today. We left early for some backcountry skiing the first part of the day. Perfect conditions plenty of snow, crisp temps balanced with plenty of sun and edibles for me. Had a blast. Got home just before the kid got out of school and planned to take him downhill skiing for the afternoon/evening. My brother reaches for his wallet and his hand comes out the bottom end.. big hole in pants, no wallet. He took three diggers, most in the first hour. Additionally, he is an avid birder and is supposed to head to India next week to catch migrating fliers and other interesting foul feathered fun. So having no wallet causes big problems when balanced with international travel. We can do this, I said.. no new snow to bury it and I don't think anyone else skied there today. Lets retrace our steps, no time to waste. ....and I found it.. about two miles from the truck and a foot off the trail close to where he last fell. About 1/4 of the wallet was sticking up above the show, made it back to the truck in record time. Drove home as fast as one can drive and call it safe, made the last two hours of downhill skiing before resort closed, got some BBQ to go on the way home, just finished eating. Whew.

    What does any of this have to do with the GD. It has everything to do with the GD, what else am I going to listen to?
    Starting with 7/17/76 of course. What a great day ....and HF, no, I did not bring my hatchet. That's all I've got. As you were.

  • nitecat
    Joined:
    VFTV4

    Funny thing, just last night I was watching View From the Vault 4, which features two stadium concerts which wrapped up the 1987 6-stadium Dead-Dylan Tour. 1987 was a great year for this deadhead, it was the year I saw the most Dead concerts in my life. I saw all three west coast stadium shows on the tour. When I watched the video, I enjoyed watching Jerry's fingers as he plays such beautiful runs on his guitar, and also the interaction between Jerry and Brent. It was great to see them smiling at each other. There were some distracting special effects the director through in from time to time, but fortunately not too much. The show was excellent too.

  • jjc
    Joined:
    Received this morning. God…

    Received this morning. God Bless The Grateful Dead!

  • frankparry
    Joined:
    3/1/69

    Picked up from Rough Trade in Nottingham this morning for a penny under £85 (about $114). I couldn’t find it on dead.net store so don’t know if that’s a good price.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Okay, I surrender to the prime directive: sauce protection

    And I confess:

    I got through one tough winter a few years ago by buying more than a half dozen Rolling Stones vault videos. Some are fantastic, but some will drive you crazy. The music's going, Jagger's done with a verse, and Keith ramps up a solo -- while the camera follows Mick doing his stupid prancing across the stage! Or the camera is on Keith and it's Mick Taylor or Ronnie soloing. So, yeah, rock video can suck. If I recall, the Scorcese film of the Stones was pretty good, as was the Last Waltz. (Though I hated to see The Band break-up.)

    Hmmm, do they make those aprons in XL? I put on a few covid pounds....

  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    Ha - The Daily Doug

    So, DMCVT...talk about irony...I actually stumbled across that one - The Daily Doug - last week, and meant to rant about it here.

    I won't spoil it, but hey now it was so entertaining to see a classically trained ear totally break it down and 'get it', our beloved Terrapin Station.

    Goose is good, from what little I've checked out on uTooB.

    That somewhat infamous Mini-Quarter Scale Wall of Sound is being utilized by a Dead Cover Band this Sunday evening, in Lancaster, PA. Local Heads Rejoice. I'm looking forward to the Future Scales Project those shows are funding....one Day, one Day...the Full Scale will come....Muah ahh ahh ahhhhhh.

    Daverock...see, that's the beauty of DeadZoomin'...easy to make new friends/maintain current ones, minimal commitment to travel plans/accommodations other than trips to the loo or refresh your vessel of choice....can come and go as one pleases....no pressure situations...yet a somewhat shared experience; but agreed that a solid setup helps nudge the whole thing along a bit.

    Reporting with Storm Track Blues,
    Sixtus

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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.

There already is a complete show available and it's a Charlie Miller remix to boot ... since the archive made soundboards unattainable as downloads you can find it at shnflac dot net...if you're new to this site look at the top of the page for the search bar...under project use the drop down and enter GD 1969...under kind enter CM-Gems...after that hit the search button and pages of 1969 shows pop up...all you have to do is scroll and look for 4/26/69...I think it's on about the 2nd page...the other show from the Chicago run is available along with The Boston Ark shows just prior to the Chicago run...

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39 years ago today I was at the Aladdin Theatre for another great night with the Good Old Grateful Dead. My friend and I sat at the craps table after the show and he won $500 dollars, he had never played before, I didn't fare so well. Big fun!

We started the weekend with The Compton Terrace show the night before...then after that we drove directly to Vegas getting slightly lost on the way...we did see the sign for "The Dead Mountains Wilderness Area"...kinda scary in a "haha are we tripping or what way"...that Compton Terrace show had the first Help >Slipknot >Franklin's since '77 I believe...what I remember most about the Vegas show was that the "regulars" weren't used to rock 'n roll madness yet and our being shadowed by casino security...I think...

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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David Bowie the man who sold the world
Nashville Pussy Rockpalasst 2000
Nashville Pussy Bogota 2016
Motorhead Kiss of Death
Neil Young Arc

and

FUNKADELIC

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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....on 8.13.
Unable to attend. That's my granddaughters wedding day. I'm walking her down the aisle.
Maybe next time George.
Regarding 3.26.83 Aladdin, I was into metal then.
The Aladdin theater has great sound. Saw my first concert there in '84. Iron Maiden.
It's still there. Now called Zappos Theatre. Don't you DARE tear that building down. If that happens, I'm grabbing my pitchfork and torch.
Phish crushed that venue on 12.6.96. Claypool and LaLonde sat in for the encore. One of the best shows I attended. Swoon.
Officially released.
To see the Grateful Dead there would have been incredible. I was apparently born three years too late.
RIP Hawkins. Damn.

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7 years 4 months
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I must chuckle, for it is quite obvious that I am NOT a technically savvy person. I grew up with physical product, and I will die with physical product. Quite hilarious to think I may have something unique.
DAVEROCK, thanks for the supportive response. Life can be good , sometimes it just takes time and effort to figure things out.

Last 5:

Cuong Vu 4 Tet-Change In The Air
McDonald And Giles-S/T
Grateful Dead-Hollywood Festival ‘70 highlights
Queen-News Of The World-Disc 3
Fleetwood Mac-S/T + bonus tracks

Nappy,
What’s the ID # of that Miller?
I was at etree and losslesslegs last night but didn’t see anything new.
I have
sbd.gmb.96449
sbd.unknown.13390
sbd.yerys.71

Thanks

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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This is an old transfer that Miller did in 2009 info as follows

gd69-04-26.sbd.miller.97393.sbeok.flac16

on the info page it says he used 96449 as a patch source

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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My Car Deck died yesterday...or at least the CD player did...I can still hook up my Hi Res player through the Aux input and use my iPod Touch as well plugged into the USB Port, but what's the fun in that?...actually I've been listening to audio books and podcasts in the car but any excuse for shiny new toys right? I'm looking to get a CD player that has the capacity to play 24-96 bit Hi Res files via flash drive and gee golly, guess I'd have to upgrade my speakers while I'm at it...I have a Subaru Forester (2014) so we shall see...Oh Honey!

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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Darn cat!!! he got mad cuz I wouldn't play any Cat Stevens...He's partial to Moon Shadow...

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10 years 4 months
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DaP 16 was 49 years ago (cover looks like a Scooby-Doo House) Great show IMHO. Disc 3 gets a lot of attention because it IS truly a monster (WRS Prelude => Dark Star => Eyes of the World => Playing in the Band). I think it's very strong and energetic right from the opening of Cumberland Blues (although it's a bummer that Jerry's guitar drops out right as he starts cooking through a solo in Cumberland; it sounds like it was a real scorcher). Otherwise the recording is fantastic and the band cooks. What else could I ask for? A Loose Lucy, that's what. Oh - what do you know, it's in there.

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4 years 8 months
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Billy & Nappy, I was at that Aladdin show as well ... not too big a deal to get there, living in Santa Monica at the time ... it was trippy to see all the heads (in fully regalia!!) invade the casinos ... the regular guests were perplexed, at best! The show was great fun and typical of the 82-83 time frame.... I was fairly new to the scene, having see the boys at Red Rocks, OK City, the US Festival, Frost, etc ... this was another completely new (and somewhat bizarre) experience!

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Should I be worried that I can't find my Leatherman???

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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Perhaps sleep with one eye open?

The Supremes - Love Child.
Pink Floyd - The Wall.
GOGD - 1973 I think. Got a little high.
The Scorpions - Rock Believer.
Joan Jett & The Blackhearts - Changeup.
Elton John - Madman Across The Water.
....time for bed. Think I'll play some more Supremes to lullaby me.

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3 years 1 month
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39 years ago today, I was at the Warfield Theatre for another great show with the Good Ole Grateful Dead. These 3 shows would be the last time the Dead would play at the Warfield. Garcia would still play here with his electric and acoustic bands, also with David Grisman several times over the years.

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17 years 6 months
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Hi All, I hope everyone is doing well. I happened to stumble across Bob Weir 's page in my news feed on Facebook. There is a free stream of the Wolf Brothers show happening right now. Its on the Nugs.net YouTube channel.

I have found Bob playing with the Wolf Brothers accompaniment interesting and refreshing especially when compared to Dead & Co. - I am not putting Dead & Co down as that is not my intent. I just think it is neat to get a different musical perspective on classic GD and related tunes and Bob does that quite well with this group.

Anyway for those that are interested you can go check it out.

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by Gratefulhan

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I tried to stream this.. but they wouldn't let me unless I signed up for the 30 day trial. Maybe I will do this later, but it's not in the cards tonight. Oh well

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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Asleep in GD land

Last....hmmm....fiiivvv.....zzzzz....

Ramones
Ramones r2r
Motorhead Inferno
Nashville Pussy High as Hell
Yes Relayer

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by proudfoot

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2 Boxes per year Dave.
2 Boxes per year Dave.
2 Boxes per year Dave…….
.
.
.

If we were allowed to have 2 Boxes per year, then we would probably be getting a new release announcement around now.

Dave?
Dave?

Dave’s not here……

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Killer Alice Cooper
Rock N' Roll Queen Mott The Hoople
Unicorn ( mono vinyl - sounds lush) Tyrannosaurus Rex
Slow Death The Flamin' Groovies
Focus 3 Focus. The sort of album my old friends would describe as "good music."

I read an interesting novel by David Mitchell called "Utopia Avenue" earlier this week. Its a fictitious account of a rock band in London during 1967, but it interweaves real characters into the plot. So when they go to a party, Brian Jones and Syd Barrett are there. And when they go to San Francisco - they meet The Dead, and one of the characters has an acid trip with Jerry in Golden Gate Park! Beautifully described over about 8 pages. It sounds a bit preposterous, and it is - but I really enjoyed this book.

Dicks Picks 19 coming out on vinyl here next week. As ever, it costs an arm and a leg, and as ever I will probably buy it anyway. I do like these vinyl reissues.

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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I tried to listen to The Weir(y) Wolves last night on that nug.net feed and i thought it sounded terrible...come this A.M. and I'm reading a page from Lossless Legs about it and folk who are more tech savvy then I am were talking 'bout how bad it sounded because it was out of phase...how do sound folk allow that to happen? Or how does that happen?... I just caught the Wharf Rat > Good Lovin' end and wasn't that impressed, bad sound or not...too laid back and slow for me...people's comments on the sidebar were hilarious...so gushy goo sweet and lovin' it (More power to 'em) you'd think they were talkin' about a newly unearthed '68 board or something...

P.S. My fave wolves are Mexican Greys.... ;)

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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Daverock's mention of Alice Cooper brought to mind a couple of strange billings involving Alice...first at the Hollywood Palladium it was headliner Alice, then Howlin' Wolf (No shit!) and opening was Commander Cody & The Lost Planet Airmen...who thought up that billing I wonder...I was out of town and missed it but I remember friends who went telling me Wolf was not looking that good and did his set sitting in a chair...the one time I did see Alice was in '77 at Anaheim Stadium...Alice, The Kinks second billed then The Tubes and Nazareth...we went for The Kinks...we were down front and when The Tubes came back out for their encore (White Punks On Dope of course) they had a great surprise...just before they came out there were whistles blowing and heavy snare drumming...lo and behold a marching band & drill team from a predominantly Black High School came out and performed with them...crazy funny....this was the tour that was billed as "The Alice Cooper Show" and that it was with the guillotine and all....

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Nappy, my favorite wolf, is Chester Arthur Burnett, hands down. I agree 100% with you about the Wolf Brothers, they put me to sleep.

....didn't watch that live stream, but I youtoobed a Wolf Bros show from last year at the Greek. I lasted two songs before I started nodding off. I mean, they're great musicians but agree. Too slow.
I finished The Peacemaker TV show instead. Funny stuff.

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Alice is, to me, a real interesting figure in rock history. From what he says, he realized one day that rock stars were all playing Peter Pan, but nobody wanted to be Captain Hook. And so he took that on, and made millions. Kind of brilliant, really. He also made a kind of rock and roll that was expressly “for the kids” at a time when rock critics wanted rock to grow up and be “serious art.” He made some killer records with his original backing band: Love It to Death is a classic, IMO.

I got the DaP vinyl from Real Gone, glad to hear it’s going to be available via deadnet. I’m glad I got it, although I must say it does show some of the limitations of vinyl when it comes to Dead shows. It’s six lps, and some the running times are pretty short: a 9:42 version of Sugar Mag get its own side, and one other side is about 12 minutes, which is not super convenient. And Dark Star-Mind Left Body gets split in the middle. Still, it’s kind of a Cool Thing to Have.

Wolf Bros is just too slow and sleepy for me. God bless Bob for staying alive and well enough to keep performing, and I hope he keeps going and going and going. But there’s a lot of other stuff I’d rather listen to. Such as:

Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra
Sonic Youth: Daydream Nation
ABB: Cream of the Crop 2003
GOGD: Warfield acoustic thingy
Van the Man: A Night in San Francisco

Go ask Alice, I think she'll knooooww!!!

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10 years 2 months
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For the release of DaP 1 vinyl April 29. Getting antsy.
Daverock, who is the vendor on that DP19 vinyl over there, and if I may ask how dear is it?

Last 5: (all vinyl)
Tull - Thick As a Brick
Gentle Giant - Self titled
Yes - Fragile
Lenny White - Big City
DP 19
Cheers!

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15 years
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Best lp's Love it to Death, Killer and Schools' Out. Saw Alice twice, once in 72, great show, Schools' Out had just been released and the stage hands and Alice thru out panties into the audience. Had a couple of hotties dancing in cages on the sides. Did all the theatrics. the guillotine, the straight jacket during The Ballad of Dwight Fry, the blood all over the stage, the fake chicken that it looks like he cuts into pieces, it was all there and that band was so tight, 72 was a great year for rock and roll. In fact, the peak of rock in my opinion was 69 - 72. Also saw Alice in 78, pretty much same show, but different musicians, a different band for sure. There was this new guy on lead guitar who looked like a body builder or a wrestler or that ilk. He played a guitar in the shape of an M 16 rifle. He could actually rock even with those bananas that he called fingers. Alice was another of those bands that I played to drive my old man nuts, he would literally turn red and start screaming at the top of his lungs, he really did hate rock and roll. May he rest in peace.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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Istshow- DP19 is for sale on Amazon UK at £160.91. Expensive and some very short sides. Still...

Crow - that's how I perceive Alice Cooper, too. I liked them when they were a band, and not an individual, and Summer 1972 was when I got into them. They seemed like a poke in the eye to everyone- society, the Woodstock Generation, my friends who liked "good music" - and at the age of 15 they were right up my street! In fact I have just played my 50 year old copy of "School's Out"-and uncannily it plays alright, with hardly any clicks or crackles. They were one of the bands who had great singles in 1972 who I have mentioned before - Mott The Hoople, David Bowie, Hawkwind, Roxy Music, T.Rex.

In fact, I read another book this week, about the music of 1972 focussing on these bands. "Pin-Ups 1972 Third Generation Rock N' Roll" by Peter Stanfield. It suggests the above bands represented the third great era of rock n' roll, following on from Chuck, Elvis Little Richard etc in the 50s and The Beatles and Stones in the 60's. What he writes doesn't exactly tally with my experiences - but it's close enough.

It's a bit of a coincidence that my favourite year for The Dead may well be 1972 as well They were obviously operating from within a different dimension to these other bands I have mentioned. The Dead became more my cup of tea when I got to the grand old age of 19. Although I also saw countless punk gigs then, when it was in it's early days-summer 1976- summer 1977. Sorry for going on a bit!

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Nappy, you are so right, a lot of the folks who were at the show last week were loving it, me, not so much. I agree that it is good that Bob is still out there playing, but this could be his final year of touring. I remember back in 14 or 15 Bob saying that he thought that he had 7 good years left, which would put him at 75. Bob will be 75 in October so this could be it as far as tours. He could go the Phil route and just play limited engagements at his favorite venue or maybe just retire. It's hard to say but he really has turned some of those dead tunes into lullaby's. Don't know if there will be a Dead and Co tour this year, saw that Mayer is on tour solo. Plus Billy has been told not to tour and Mickey has gotten Planet Drum back together so I don't think there will be any Dead and Co. this year. Not that I would go, also way too slow for me.

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5 years 1 month

In reply to by daverock

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They are releasing Dick's 19 vinyl again? I bought it a little while back. I don't remember them releasing DP 36 vinyl twice. I missed that the first time around and had to get it off ebay for quite a bit more. Hm....

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by DeeDeeMcTrivers

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I've just had a look, and I bought that one off Amazon UK in March 2021. I don't know if it came out in the States before then.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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Maybe I should also say that the VAT for Dp36 was nearly £30.00 on top of the asking price. So although DP19 is listed on Amazon UK at about £160.00 - the actual price will be closer to £200.00. Cripes.

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15 years
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and I don't know what the dead might do. Saw on facebook that there will be a Dead and Co. tour this summer.

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Dead - “Best of” PNW Box - Believe It If You Need It (Keith’s playing is sublime throughout the whole box, and the band raises their game in the PNW)
Ry Cooder & Ali Farka Toure “Talking Timbuktu”(Ry was into World Music long before it was a thing!)
Eagles - “On The Border” - i wish they stopped after 3 albums, before going Hollyweird
Soundtrack to the movie Afterglow - Mark Isham and Charles Lloyd at their best
Cowboy Junkies - “Songs of the Recollection” - a version of Gram Parsons’ “Ooh Las Vegas” with stunning fuzz guitar and ethereal vocals that ole Gram would have loved!!

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by That Mike

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Coincidentally, I have been listening to 5/19/74 from this box over the last day or so. It's the album, though - so just one record at a time, then I'm off. Side H has just played, which leaves I,J,K and L to look forward to tomorrow. A beautiful recording. Such a spare sound with great separation between the instruments. What you miss in crunch is more than made up for in clarity. Both Jerry and Keith shine. In fact, I might play the rest of this later on tonight.

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Vinyl prices are so out of hand. It’s great that DiP 19 is available again on vinyl, but it’s outrageous that they’re charging $199. For comparison, the 3/1/69 vinyl, also six discs, was (I think) $74. So why is this reissue of a reissue $125 more? Or to look at it another way, the initial Real Gone release of this set was $119 (which was bad enough). Why the extra $80?

My guess is somebody looked at what these reissues go for on the “secondary market” and decided it was OK to start charging scalper prices from the get go. Not cool. I realize nobody’s putting a gun to anyone’s head and making you fork over $200 for vinyl DiP that you can buy on CD for $50. But it still seems greedy. Hope this trend does not continue.

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In reply to by daverock

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....I know what I'll be listening to tonight.
All covers?
There's a track called Ooh Las Vegas?
To my knowledge, they only played Vegas once (I was there) and said they would not return because the crowd was too loud/rude (which I would agree with).

VGuy - Yup, an album of all covers. I have the Vegas tune on a tribute album to Gram Parsons they played on from maybe 10 years ago, but I forgot the song, so when I heard it again - wow! Really love that fuzz guitar, great tune!

Dave - I think the PNW was a bit of an overlooked gem in the Dead Box Set canon. I had bought the 3 CD set for one of my sons who lives in the PNW, and he said he and his friends played it constantly while camping. I love the box set, but if I have some driving to do, the 3 CD set is perfect. That mega PITB is something else! Geniuses, these guys were geniuses.

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