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    One more Saturday night at Winterland! Yes, we're back to home base for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 42, the complete show from Winterland, San Francisco, 2/23/74. The one that featured the earliest amalgamation of what would soon become the Wall of Sound, the one that is so "loud, clear, and defined," it's been ripe for release for quite some time and we're glad it's finally getting its due.

    First set or second, there are no wrong answers here. From the unique show opener of Chuck Berry's "Around And Around" and an incredible "Here Comes Sunshine" that would then disappear for 18 years, to a medley of WAKE OF THE FLOOD tracks - "Row Jimmy," "Weather Report Suite," and "Stella Blue" - cementing their status in the canon and an unstoppable hour through the classic 1973-1974 Dead that is “He’s Gone”>“Truckin’”>“Drums”>“The Other One”>“Eyes Of The World,” it's all exceptionally hot.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 42: WINTERLAND, SAN FRANCISCO, 2/23/74 was recorded by Kidd Candelario and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

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  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    little feat

    Daverock, check out Sailing Shoes, Dixie Chicken and Feats don't fail me now. All great and if they don't get ya, their first lp was also quite good. All the above are with Lowell, and I saw them in 78 with Lowell and also many times after with other who came after Lowell. Not the same band without him but still a good time and if you like the sound of shufflin' feet, it can't be beat.

  • delhead
    Joined:
    Newish Sci Fi

    Read a series called The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells. Short series of 6 books, all but one are <200 pages. Not in the spirit of Asimov, Heinlein, etc but I found them to be a very entertaining, kind of nerdy quick read. Murderbot is a robot that figures out how to disable the part of itself that makes it obey human commands. The series incorporates some networking and programming threads into the story line. Nothing complicated that the reader has to think about but interesting (at least to me, I work at a software company). If anyone intends to try it, the 6th book comes before the 5th book in the story timeline. It's like the author intended to end with book 5 but decided to put out one more.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Had my virgin listen to waiting for Columbus

    this morning on a long walk

    Some good stuff on there

    No wood, but I am glad I gave it a chance

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Reading

    I gravitate toward non-fiction

    Just sayin

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    More literature

    Since we’ve been having such nice discussions of.
    Most of my early reading was any Dead, Rock and Roll, beats, etc (go figure).
    Dove deep into Kesey, Kerouac, Cassidy etc.
    Dabbled very superficially in Sci-fi because of friends influences. Ok, but not a big fan.
    Have tried some of the classics but have never been able to get past much of the old prose i,e., started Sound and Fury once but didn’t get too far. Couldn’t understand half of what they were saying lol.
    Of course read the required classics in school, though can’t recall what all that included, but remember I always liked reading classes etc in school (one of the only things I liked about school), but never really got tight with the old vernacular, perhaps my aversion to such is rooted in having to read so many pages of “dead guys” in grad school: Durkheim, Marx, Weber, Freud etc? Cool stuff, but tough reading!
    Was on a big Everest kick about 25 years ago.
    Over the years, ive gathered a pretty decent R&R collection of biographies etc, but through my collection development Librarian other half have been turned on to lots of more modern authors. Some I’ll list in case there’s folks out there searching that perhaps aren’t familiar.
    Richard Russo (great characters!)
    William Kent Krueger
    Jonathan Evison
    Jess Walter
    Jim Harrison
    Garth Stein
    Jim Lynch
    David Gutterson
    Nicholas Evans
    Yes I really like North West authors lol,
    Just to name a few off the top of the ole head, with some not so modern ones:
    Tom Robbins
    Kurt Vonnegut
    James Michener
    Tom Wolfe
    again just to scratch the surface, so many books, so little time, especially when constantly trying to chase the GD dragon…
    Keep ‘em coming,
    Happy Reading!

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    DMCVT and feat

    Glad someone else mentioned Theodore Sturgeon and More Than Human. Of course I heard of this from Phil and how it was such a big part of the Dead’s early metamorphosis. It also lead to a life long interest in Gestalt theory which seems to pop up in life now and again, especially when I was in grad school.
    Please check your PM when convenient.

    Feat: interesting, had forgotten that LF aren’t in the Hall of Fame, especially when you consider some of the questionable inductees of recent years! How the hell then are the Feat not in there? Hits, sorta of, I mean who hasn’t covered Willin. Longevity as a active touring unit still bringing it for decades, check, (well except Lowell and recently Paul). One of the greatest live albums of all time, check! So why aren’t they in???

  • dmcvt
    Joined:
    Literature

    Checked the small local library catalog for Fante, no dice. Glad to see recent posts sharing comments on books, always happy for leads on music and the arts. Thanks to all for this community of good will here. There are elephants in the room, topics we wisely leave elsewhere. Early brush with Sci-Fi happened in the late 1950s, when it was moving from near pure pulp with lurid covers into early social consciousness via writings of Bradbury, Heinlein, Asimov. Particularly taken with Theodore Sturgeons "More Than Human", the concept of gestalt consciousness, which seemed to blossom forth with the 60s acid tests and the music/performance of our host band.

  • deadfeat1
    Joined:
    Lowell George and The Feat

    I believe this has been mentioned here before and many of you probably already know that Lowell George helped produce Shakedown Street. You can check out Lowell on You Tube singing "Good Lovin" and "I Need a Miracle". For those of you not familiar with Little Feat, a good intro to the Feat's first thirty years is the compilation Hotcakes and Outtakes. It includes music from the Lowell era as well as the Craig Fuller and Sean Murphy years. The 2002 Waiting for Columbus compilation with the additional tracks is excellent and may be all you need. As noted before this is one of the best live albums of all time. The new box set release will get my attention, but perhaps not my money. I have to check it out. Of course the Archive has a ton of shows that are worth a listen. Interesting how The Feat never were inducted into the R&R Hall of Fame. Shows what they know...
    Early in my dating days with my wife we were talking on the phone and I had Little Feat playing in the background. She decided at that moment that I couldn't be that much of nerd. She shared that story with the band during a meet and greet during the 1999/Y2K New Years Eve show. As she frequently says the last 45 years is the longest date she has ever been on.

    Recent listens...
    Miles Davis - The Lost Concert
    Wilco - Cruel Country
    Drive-By-Truckers - Welcome to Club XIII
    Jefferson Airplane - The Woodstock Experience
    The Stones - El Mocambo '77

    The Dead - Still listening to the St Louis shows and the latest Dave's

    Be well...

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Introducing John Fante

    If you gents don't know John Fante, 1909 (b. Denver)-1983 (d. L.A.) (Ask the Dust, others) you owe it to yourself to do so. His writing is sort of film noir-ish, what the critics called "dirty realism." Charles Bukowski once said "Fante was my god." His prose and novels bring life to life. Check him out.

    After I became greatly enamored with his writing, I'm at a friend's gig and I see a Fante book on the front seat of his car. "What are you doing with Fante!?" I say, surprised. He's just as surprised that I know about Fante. So when we see each other, we discuss literature, much to the bemusement of his band mates.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    William Faulkner - Robert Hunter

    Alvarhanso - good to see you mention him as a favourite author. An extraordinary writer- "The Sound and The Fury" is one of the most powerful books I have ever read. A few years ago there was a folio edition of that published, too. A two volume collection, with the first section of the novel colour coded, as Faulkner apparently intended, to indicate the timelines and who the hell was actually being referred to. Quite helpful with two characters having the same name, and a storyline that moves backwards and forwards in time, on the same page without warning.

    There is an interesting essay by Nicholas Meriwether, in the book "All Graceful Instruments", called "Robert Hunter, William Faulkner and It Must Have Been the Roses". In the essay, Meriwether suggests that Faulkner's short story "A Rose For Emily" was an inspiration for the Hunter song. It sheds new light on "Must Have Been The Roses". Whether you agree with it or not, is a different matter of course - but worth a read.

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One more Saturday night at Winterland! Yes, we're back to home base for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 42, the complete show from Winterland, San Francisco, 2/23/74. The one that featured the earliest amalgamation of what would soon become the Wall of Sound, the one that is so "loud, clear, and defined," it's been ripe for release for quite some time and we're glad it's finally getting its due.

First set or second, there are no wrong answers here. From the unique show opener of Chuck Berry's "Around And Around" and an incredible "Here Comes Sunshine" that would then disappear for 18 years, to a medley of WAKE OF THE FLOOD tracks - "Row Jimmy," "Weather Report Suite," and "Stella Blue" - cementing their status in the canon and an unstoppable hour through the classic 1973-1974 Dead that is “He’s Gone”>“Truckin’”>“Drums”>“The Other One”>“Eyes Of The World,” it's all exceptionally hot.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 42: WINTERLAND, SAN FRANCISCO, 2/23/74 was recorded by Kidd Candelario and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

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Wow! Great sounding tape based on the Listening Party. Jerry and Phil sound absolutely fantastic. Looking forward to the disc 3 sequence, which I note is largely an hour in E. The Bonus looks to be fantastic as well, and I'm grateful for all the Ship of Fools we're getting. The one on DaP 34 6/23/74 with the instrumental jam on it is spectaular and I always look forward to a good Ship. Based on the Listening Party, Phil has it nailed with the swing, Billy not as much, playing it much straighter than later. Think I'll listen to this one quite a bit.

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Dave's intro, inclusive of heartfelt thanks and childlike wonder at the remote control = Priceless

Then...

Rouge Waves!
Oyster Catchers!
Bald Eagles!
Two Trees!
Slippery Seaweed!

And, a cool historical perspective: these shows helped to fund the Godchaux's growing family's first home

Thanks for the ongoing insights, Dave.
We love the sideshow as much as the chat.

Sixtus

P.S. GFar! Good to see you too my man

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and you can please most of the people some of the time ... but some people are just dicks. I think WC Fritos said that.

You know, if Rhino/dead.net just wanted to make as much money as possible, they probably wouldn't offer subscription sales, which after all come with a discount. If they were just trying to minimize effort and maximize profit, they could just offer every new release a la carte, jack the price up somewhere close to what these items sell for on the "secondary market" (ie, at least 2-3 times the list price), and they'd still sell out.

But they do subscriptions, probably because it makes it easier to budget, easier to ship. And in order to get us onboard, they offer the aforementioned discount, plus free shipping, plus a bonus disc. (AFAIK, the bonus disc has only ever been offered as an incentive to subscribe.) You'd rather just cherry pick the DaPs you really want? No problemo, but you don't get the discount, you don't get free shipping, and you don't get the bonus disc. Or you can just ignore the whole series, never buy any of 'em, believe it or not.

Let us note that pretty much every show is available for FREE online for anybody who wants to hear them. If the Dead and Rhino were really "greedy" they'd hire a team of lawyers and put an end to that. But they're choosing to let that go, and they're still managing to run their "elitist" reissue program for people who are willing for physical product and who want to hear the shows in the best possible sound.

Subscribe, go a la carte, listen for free, or don't listen at all. Make the choice that works for you. What else is there to say?

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That pretty much sums it up. Improvise, adapt, and overcome.

Excellently thought out argument, or as I say, storytelling. Great Read, indeed.

BTK, as said before, always jealous. Know you were just getting aboard. Just wonderin if you saw any of this run?

Sixtus: Hope all things are fruitful your way. However, you need that to mean.

Another show (s) I have not heard.

Find it interesting that this was the the first run since 1973 Tampa DiP1. Will listen to that first to see how much change/growth had occurred in 6 weeks.

Guess yall have chased down the soundcheck from 2-22.

Let it grow, tleo, us blues (x2), Attics, Roses (x2), Jam, Slipnot>Playin.

Bet that was quite the acid test uh, sound check.

Then on this release...Slipnot>Other One. Cant wait.

Sorta wish the sound check was the bonus disk...

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I think this Weinrich or whatever is just pulling your chain... if you look, the account was created today. I'm stoked for this release, love 1974 it's like E72 all grown up and ol' Jer still had some fire.

Last five (non GD):

T. Rex - Electric Warrior
Portugal. The Man - Woodstock
Dave Edmunds - Rockpile
Soundgarden - Telephantasm
In a Silent Way - Miles Davis

\m/

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8 years 1 month

In reply to by alvarhanso

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More classic Dave and not sure if his camera has batteries or what is coming out next in 2022. Priceless.
Looking forward to seeing this one in a couple of weeks.

I don't understand the negativity. Not every show is perfect. If you don't want it don't buy it. $100 bucks for 4 shows and a bonus is crazy inexpensive, look at the cost of everything these days. I am so happy the my fav band recorded most of their shows and you can listen to them at this level of quality for a small price. That they even were taped, survived and could be brought to life in this condition is a miracle that makes me smile with every release. Thank you everybody involved. Good capitalism is paying good people fair prices to do good things.

Enjoyable thread. Love 1974 GD, my only regret is that they did not release this run as a box set. ..but here we have it and so it is.

DVMCT, enjoyed your comment and perspective, I forget whose post it was that made me chortle my drink.. perhaps it was many..

Looking forward to this and am just settling in to my second favorite part of every release, the seaside chat.

Be good folks, but not too good. and thanks for being kind and just as important for being yourselves.

Los Lobos - The Town And The City
Los Lobos - Tin Can Trust
Iron Maiden - Piece Of Mind
The Flaming Lips - At War With The Mystics
Queen - The Game
Y'all stay cool. I love release announcement daze. Good to hear from everyone as always.

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15 years 11 months

In reply to by Vguy72

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Who now does not recognize an oyster catcher's call before Dave calls it out! And to see that mysterious Eagle - looked like Coho to me.

Nice release looking forward to a first listen to all four disks. A sub is a no brainer. Wish I smartened up prior to the 2nd year. Missed out on a lot of RoadTrips Bonus Disks, but C'est la Vie - thanks to friends here and gone for hooking me up...

Psyched about more releases coming! Spring is going to be a banner season for vinyl. Catching up on the Odd Vault vinyl re-releases plus DaP1 & Lyceum and with any luck RSD. No barware for me...

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#43 : 4/27 & 28/ 85. Frost Ampitheatre. #44: 4/5/69 Avalon Ballroom & 10/31/69. San Jose State

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Your comments sound funny to people who understand how business works. I won't explain the whys and wheres but it is a fact that it is because they do pre orders and Bonus discs that the Rhino has been able to provide a steady flow of Vault material to you for 2 decades at normal music prices. Don't let ignorance upset a good time. No they don't have enough money, didn't you watch the Seaside video? They're chipping in for John Maher's new house.

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Your shows are probably more likely to be released then mine. I would also like to enter 2/17/79 & 4/22//79 as a release for Dave's # 43. Dave's # 42 is a fantastic release, with or without the bonus disc, at a fantastic price.

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....wouldn't kill 'im to realease a few more from the 80's on and Dave's insistence on the vast majority being 60's and 70's shows is pretentious.

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As someone else mentioned, the band took a break after ‘74. I think many shows reflect the members’ feelings of boredom and stagnation. To me, much of the material sounds plastic, basically imitating its improvisation from the recent past without real spontaneity. To each his own, but I will pass on this one…

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In reply to by DCBoater

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DCBOATER - Interesting perspective. I like this year myself, but I vaguely remember one of the British posters on here saying that they had seen them in 1972 and 1974, and that they had declined somewhat by 74-not the exact words, but that was the gist.
I also remember ( I always seem to remember trivial things-nothing important) that Bob Weir once said they took a break after 1974 because they felt they were leaving the audience behind as their jams became more abstract. Something the interviewer-possibly David Gans, disagreed with. Me too, as it goes.

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In reply to by jawn

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Back to back Brent releases with DaP 39 and 40, and with DaP 35 and 36. A total of 14 CD’s.
Did you forget that already?

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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New release announcement (though we’ve know since December what is was going to be).

New seaside chat.

Whiners pop their heads up.

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9/26/81

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In reply to by wissinomingdeadhead

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4/19/86, Hey it could happen...some say best show of the year... :-)

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My first Dead show at Winterland. 15’ from the stage.
My first concert at Winterland was electric Hot Tuna in May 1973. Muddy Waters opened. I love Jorma and Jack but looking back at history I was incredibly lucky to see Muddy Waters.
I’ve gotten the subscription since the first year but had to order a second Dave’s 42.
Also ordered the glass/ tumbler. (Free Tumblers- S.Clay Wilson)

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Non Dead

The Samples-No Room

The Brian Jonestown Massacre-Their Satanic Majesties Second Request

The Byrds-5D

Satan’s Pilgrims-Creature Feature

Allman Brothers-Boston Common 8/17/71

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Ok, I'll admit I had no idea about this reference. Looked it up and had a laugh.

Question is,,,, does anyone called them tumblers anymore? :-) Seems like a word from yesteryear.

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We will be celebrating 420 today at the store. Every year they have calendars printed they need to be colored in. They come in around November and are given out all year. But on 420 at 4:20 every store has a "coloring" contest. Show up with the calendar colored in and the store workers will the judge the best. Everyone gets something, but nice stuff goes to the top 3. But free shit for everyone!!! Shirts, shot glasses, cozi's, frisbees, lighters, papers and of course, tumblers :-)

Just for the record,,,,, store claims to have opened on 4/20/1970. While I'm sure they started in 1970, I rather doubt the 4/20 date,,,,,, I almost sure 420 was not a thing in 1970,,,, but we run with it :-)

So happy 420,,,, may all your joints be fatties. (and not arthritic joints!!)

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co-worker last night turned me on to a group "City and Colour". (some guy Dallas Green)

Nice acoustic work, nice vocals.

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TTB just announced a major Thing: “I am the Moon,” 24 songs inspired by Persian myth and the pandemic, to be released across 4 lps or CDs over the next few months, titled Crescent, Ascension, The Fall, and Farewell. There’s even going to be films that will drop at the same time of each record, beginning May 31. Gotta admit, I did not see this coming.

Interesting to note the range of prices on this: you can get the music as individual CDs for $12 each, or individual lps for $23, and in various other configurations, all the way up to the signed limited edition deluxe lp set with booklet and other goodies for $170. I like it that there’s a price point for everybody (subtle hint to TPTB here).

I might regret it, someday, but I went for the deluxe lp set. I kinda feel like I’m putting Derek and Susan’s kids through college this year: bought tix to see them at Red Rocks, and again in NorCal a few weeks later, and now this box set. But it’s only money, right?

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It takes me about a year to listen to a year of GD concerts from the DH archives. I recently finished 73 and am now just into 74. After reading some of the other commenters, I wonder why some people are even Dead Heads. My first show in person was December 73 Cameron Indoor Stadium. Loved the recordings of all three January 74 Winterland shows. Here are the comments I wrote after each show:

10.0 WOW! 1974/02/24 - Winterland - Charlie Miller soundboard - perfect sound - outstanding PITB, Dark Star-~Dew, not fade away - feeling bad sandwich - excellent baby blue encore

9.7 1974/02/23 - Winterland - Charlie Miller soundboard - perfect sound for instruments, voices had issues in various places - some lyrics messed up in a few songs after Big River - outstanding The Other One

9.8 1974/02/22 - Winterland - Dick Latvala soundboard - bright and fresh from the winter break - great energy - Donna is back! - perfect sound for instruments, voices occasionally faded - introducing a polished US Blues.

So, obviously I liked the 2/24 show best, but as Dave said, that is prior pick. Of course, those issues that I mention with voices are just mixing issues that will be resolved in the release. I look forward to adding this to my regular listening rotation.

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Cool show, a lot of interesting stories on the Archive about this show. Time to release a 1969 box set. Just pick 6 of the best shows you have available and put them together in a box.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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You're welcome!
Are you the taper from Nebraska that recorded the July '78 shows in Omaha and Red Rocks?

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In reply to by Vguy72

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Chewbacca always has a nice supply of kashyyyk kush

Greedo was pissed that Han bogarted the goodies

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In reply to by StillMissingJerry

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Who's to say every body on here is a Deadhead?
I like the idea of listening to every show in a year during a 12 month period-but I've never got anywhere close.
Looking forward to this release, though.

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Dennis - The lady that cuts my hair is nuts in a Bobby Sherman way for this Dallas Green guy. Then my oldest mentioned how he liked his music, but I never checked them out. Now you have thrown the gauntlet down, so I have to.
Pretty cool what you guys are doing at the store for 420! I am on a long sabbatical from 420 festivities, but a Happy Day to all who will be celebrating. Bongs away!!

DaP 42 Very Good/Bonus Disc Better

PS - Bruce Hornsby has a new record out late May, part of a trilogy with his previous two releases. Ordered.

Drive-By Truckers on Sunday - As Dylan said to the Band, “Play Phucing Loud!!!”

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In reply to by daverock

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Nope, never taped a dead show.
You might be thinking of my good twin/bizarro Jerry other, Oroboros?
Unfortunately we’ve not heard from him in way too long!
I can’t say if he ever taped, but he was from the mid west and has great stories of the Iowa 74, Winterland 78, about meeting JG, and his cool ceramic Serpent. He had claimed this normal spelling before me so I went with an alternative that I saw somewhere? Wanna say Harrison’s book but not sure anymore?
Super nice guy, we miss him big time!

Speaking of missing, good to see Strider back!

Now if only we’d hear from SKULLTRIP, 4windsblow, GOGD, Kayakguy and many other fine posters my senile brain has missed that we’ve not seen in far too long!

PS, good to see so many folks, wish it was like this more often!

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GaryF- thanks, it is a work of love. I was taping shows years before the taping section, and now that i'm retired, I decided to get them up on the archive so everyone can hear them. It's been one of my Covid Projects. Up side is I get to listen to each show as they are digitized, not a bad way to proceed. I am fortunately teamed up with Charlie Miller and his team for pitch, wow, speed correction and uploading to lossless legs and Archive.org. So far on Archive are 13 shows from 1979 and 1980. Just enter Wiseman in the search after choosing the Dead collection. I'm especially proud of Seattle 80.

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That 6/13/80 AUD from Seattle is amazing. One of my favorites. Thank You!

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Your 6/13/80 Seattle AUD is "spinning" as I peck. Just exactly perfect! Great balance of "You are HERE" and "You can HEAR". I'll leave it to our capable audiophiles to wax more poetic. . . Looking forward to the rest of your growing "catalog" on the archive! A huge THANK YOU to you and all the countless other tapers who, over the years, have added so much to a Grateful Dead bonfire that's still growing. And, of course, thanks to the lossless legs vanguard and the Jim Miller's too). Onward

Thanks. I'm so glad you are enjoying it. In those days, I sometimes successfully smuggled in a light stand which I re-purposed as a mic stand, and in Seattle I had the mics on the floor about 10 feet high. I found when I went to shows out of the bay area, it was easier to get away with that.

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