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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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  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    My Doctor wrote a book.....

    Since we were just talking about famous people and now we are talking about literature I will combine the two subjects. My doctor wrote the book The Kite Runner, once he wrote the book he no longer needed to be my doctor. He was a great guy and a great doctor.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Letters - Barry Miles

    "The Letters of William S. Burroughs 1944-1959" is a great book. In fact, I prefer it his novels. Less messing about, if you know what I mean.
    And talking of Barry Miles - his "William Burroughs - A Life" is worth looking at, if you are interested in Burroughs. It seems a very truthful book - it doesn't always present Burroughs in the best light - which, considering what he did, isn't a bad thing.
    Denis Johnson is a more recent American writer who is worth reading. His collection of short stories, "Jesus' Son" is a good starting point, chronicling his life of addiction and petty crime in the late 60's, I think. He thankfully transcended that lifestyle, though, and the last book he wrote before dying in 2017- the beautiful "The Largesse of The Sea Maiden" is exceptional.
    Harry Crews is another hot one. " The Knock out Artist" about an ex boxer who retires and goes on to earn money by knocking himself out with a single punch to the face is a wild and windy ride.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    This forum is triggering my CD and book buying....

    and that's not a complaint. Okay, I'll go for Carolyn Cassady's book and the 1926 Jack Black. So to this literature list I must add a few:

    The Big Con: The Story of the Confidence Man by David W. Mauer (inside look from 1940 on how hustlers of every stripe fleeced their marks, from the late 1800s to 1940)

    Lowlife: Lures and Snares of Old New York by Luc Sante (1991) More than you want to know about the underclass in NYC, from pimps and whores to rogue police to grog shop druggings/robbings. The goods.

    Both are meticulously documented nonfiction. And if you have the stomach for the very nastiest fiction, try

    Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby Jr. (1957). Indescribable, the prose is tough as nails. Horrifying in parts, downright disgusting in others. Highly recommended....

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    We’ve got the beat

    As I said, I spent a little time on the (beat) mountain.
    As is often the case, On The Road was my gateway drug to the beats via the Dead! I’ve Read much of but not all Kerouac. And now have a bunch more “new” stuff I’ve not read yet. It’s been so many moons ago and my reading comprehension perhaps was not as good, so it might have been me, but a lot of Jacks writing can be tough. He unfortunately at times could really wallow in the mire. As the years passed, and the alcohol took hold, he wasn’t the same young enthusiastic Sal Paradise most know and love. But there are also so many fine writings! Just Gotta Poke Around!
    My favs above and beyond OTR are: Dharma Bums, the parts of Desolation Angels that involves the former, and a book of short Stories called Lonesome Traveler. Gary Snyder is awesome, but alas I’m not much of a poetry guy : (
    I have several bios, but have not read them all yet. Our boy McNally’s Desolate Angel is very good, Angel headed Hipster by Turner, Subterranean Kerouac by Amburn, The Awakener by Helen Weaver, Jacks Book by Gifford, and Memory Babe by Nicosia, which some consider THE JK book, but since it came to me late in life I have not read it yet. In fact so much stuff from and about Jack has come round in later years and unfortunately their just collecting dust since Ive been more inclined to read other things. I often get really deep into a topic, then move on. But hopefully some day I’ll get the beat bug again.
    There are some good “letters” books too that give more insight to the actual people behind the characters and are interesting snap shots of life in mid century America.
    Carolyn Cassady’s Off the Road is another excellent inside look, but from a much different perspective. along with Women of the Beat Generation by Knight.

    The Holy Goof is good, but I think I liked The Cassady Issue of the great Spit In the Ocean series the best!
    Mucho cool stuff in those Spit in the Ocean issues! The Fast Life of a Beat Hero I think is good? Cant remember but I have it so? The First Third is more about little Neal and the sometimes incredible, but often horrible, eye opening experiences of his youth than the Angel Headed Hipster he became. He always aspired to be a writer and having the big time writer friends he had, you could say things rubbed off on him. He also worked very hard on his writing, so it’s not as I say A book to judge by its author! Some of Jacks portraits of his own child hood are also some favorite JK writings. Again, interesting looks into sort of working class mid century American life.

    As much as I dig psychedelic Neal 2.0 and all his influence on the scene and his Herculean feats with the pranksters et el, I prefer early beat Neal, Dean Moriarty, I think of Dean Moriarty…

    It’s been so long etc, but I have read some Burroughs and Ginsberg etc, but I’ve never been a big poetry person, and Burroughs can be a bit too out there, but I loved reading a ton of Jack, and anything by or about Neal.
    OTR and more so Dharma Bums literally changed my life in my twenties! Must Reads imho.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Hearing 9/18/74 for the first time in a while

    Mighty tasty

    One of the first shows I ever heard on cassette back in the day

    I called my friend and said "more Dead!"

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    Oh...and another is...

    "The Beat Hotel: Ginsberg, Burroughs & Corso in Paris, 1957-1963" by Barry Miles...had a blast reading this ...have his Zappa bio in storage somewhere....damn books....

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    before Neal Cassidy, before…

    before Neal Cassidy, before Herbert Huncke, there was Jack Black who wrote "You Can't Win" published in 1926...his autobiography details his life as a petty criminal and dealing with "straight society"....

  • daverock
    Joined:
    The First Third etc

    HF/Oro - that's good to know. I have read around "The First Third" in a way, without ever actually coming across the book itself. I have a copy of "The Collected Correspondence of Allen Ginsberg and Neal Cassady", here, that has letters in it between the two people from the 1940s-1960s. I will definitely dip into that again before the summer is done. And I read Carolyn Cassady's "Off The Road" when that came out some 30 years ago.

    The best holiday of my life was in 1990 when we went on a tour of the West Coast-my one and only visit to America. We only spent two days in San Francisco, and spent the time alternately doing what me and my girlfriend chose to do. Us having little in common. As San Francisco meant more to me than it did her, I had first shout - and off to City Lights book shop we went. Among others, I got a biography of Neal called "The Holy Goof", by someone I had never heard of at the time and have never heard of since, called William Plummer. Like the other books I have just mentioned, I have never read it since, but I thought it was great at the time.

    And when I got back home, there was a letter ( or maybe "Spiral Light", I forget) on my doorstep, telling me The Dead were playing Wembley that October. 1990 was like my 1960s.

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    way deep

    Oro and HF - you are guys are so deep in the catalog. I'm amazed. Feeling out of the know for sure on works like the First Third. so yeah, way back in late high school it was On The Road, of course, that opened my mind. But out of that scene it was Gary Snyder (Dharma Bums, Japhy Ryder,) that ended up having the most profound affect. Still someone I turn to time and again. Riprap and Cold Mountain Poems is foundational (Migration of Birds!) and then there is the Smokey the Bear Sutra.

    Ginsberg also, of course.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    I’m with HF

    The First Third is mos def better than one might be inclined to assume. “Don’t let the glasses fool ya” oh, wait, that’s Bromberg, ahem, aaaa, how bout, don’t judge a book by its author!

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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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Jerry Garcia
08/01/73- Roosevelt Stadium - Jersey City, NJ
Bob Weir
10/16/81- Club Melk Weg - Amsterdam, Netherlands
Phil Lesh
03/15/69- Hilton Hotel - San Francisco, CA
Mickey Hart
09/11/81- Greek Theater, University Of California - Berkeley, CA
Bill Krutzman
05/07/89- Frost Amphitheater, Stanford University - Palo Alto, CA
Pig Pen
09/08/87- Providence Civic Center - Providence, RI
Donn Jean
08/22/68- Fillmore West - San Francisco, CA
Vince Welnick
02/21/91- Oakland Coliseum Arena - Oakland, CA
Keith
07/19/87- Autzen Stadium (University Of Oregon) - Eugene, OR
Bruce Hornsby
11/23/73- County Coliseum - El Paso, TX
Brent Mydland
10/21/88- Reunion Arena - Dallas, TX
Tom
03/19/73- Nassau Coliseum - Uniondale, NY

Edit: 2/21/71 was changed to 2/21/91

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2/21/91
3/15/69
5/7/70
7/19/89
8/1/82
8/22/72
9/8/91
9/11/90
10/21/73

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In reply to by fourwindsblow

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Nice topic today.

I think 2/21/71 came out with the Workingman's Dead 50th release.. or I would have gobbled that up in a New York minute. What a great show.. so glad to see it finally get out.

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Looks like everybody picks 3/15/69, hopefully they will release it someday. I just got back from a hike up by Stevens Creek Dam and saw a huge rattlesnake, first one I've seen this year.

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Somebody quoted the “trouble ahead, trouble behind” lyric and I had a mini flashback.

Once I was tripping with a guy I’ll call the Big A. The Big A could be a pain in the ass, but he was reliable trips partner, because he was big and ugly, so nobody ever messed with him, and he was kind of unflappable. If you suddenly had to deal with the landlord or a cop or something, he could always somehow pull his shit together and act normal. On the other hand, he was one of self-taught pseudo-intellects who would often ramble on about Nietzsche when he was high, but I could usually just tune him out when I had to.

Anyway, this particular time we were tripping, sitting on the porch of his house gazing out over the uncut grass and this big oak tree, whiling the afternoon away, and he puts on Workingman’s, and launches into a dissertation about the lyric.

“There’s trouble ahead, and there’s trouble behind,” he said, “but that’s only a notion, and it just crossed his mind. It didn’t linger there and fuck him up, ya know?”

And then he went on to explain Lao Tzu said much the same thing blah blah blah. But you know what? In that moment I thought it was the most profound lyric ever written.

Got my DaP 42 yestiddy, got the DaP 1 vinyl today. Haven’t made it all the way through either yet (so much music, so little time) but they both seem pretty damn great.

Trouble with you is the trouble with me. Be well.

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Why in the world can't Dave's Picks release a concert on CD with the tracks in the order they were played? He's Gone would have fit on disc 2. I understand that Dave wants to preserve the ">"s but it's ridiculous to elevate that concern ahead of the song order (especially when it involves moving an ENCORE to the middle of the concert for f's sake). And the transition here between He's Gone and Trucking was not that special or seamless-- there's actually a rather clear seam.

(Someone is going to reply that they just save all the tracks on their computer and rearrange them to the concert order--but if we all wanted to do that we wouldn't need to buy these CDs).

The show choices are great. But can you please start giving us the shows as they were performed?

THANKS!

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I remember years ago, I put the dead on the back burner, and made the rounds of hair band concerts. Then I started fresh with new ears in 2002. "Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in."

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In reply to by carlo13

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The eagle has landed and Vguy72 and I are imbiding in liquid refreshments before the show starts...wheeeeeeeee...

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In reply to by nappyrags

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....thanks Nappy.
And I climbed onstage and snagged a setlist. Its what I do.
See you down the road good sir 🍻

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I didn't realize what was going on until the He's Gone fade out. I had already transferred the music to my music player, so imagine my surprise when the next song was not He's Gone. I was running around looking for the box to see what order everything was in and I was checking out website setlists. My girlfriend thought I was an idiot running looking for that CD Box. Tell you what I did. I switched the playing order on my iPod. You follow me, I renumbered the song titles themselves, so they now play in the proper set list order. Worth a try.

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In reply to by Trainwrecked

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They do seem to keep to the correct running order on vinyl, for better or worse. 5/19/74 has several sides with only a couple of songs on - in fact both "Peggy O" and "US Blues" each have a side to themselves.

Billy - that would merit a photograph, in my books, seeing a rattlesnake. Providing you didn't have to get too close.

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An old Three Stooges gag. But I have to state that each time I post here, dead dot net sends me an email that reads:

"That Grateful Dead item is going fast ... better get it before someone else does."

Anyone else getting these? I love this band, I enjoy this forum, but that grabby grabby message sickens me. First, if you visit, you get a sales email. Second, it plays on greed -- theirs to sell, yours to have something at someone else's expense. Third, because while someone thinks they're being slick with the latest online sales gimmick, they're actually disgusting a longtime customer.

I hope someone reads this who can return decency to this operation by scrubbing that grubby little automated trick.

And now, back to Vguy's and Nappyrags' hangovers............

Yes, I get those come buy more of our swag emails too, mildly irritating, agreed. It's not going to happen, am in the "get rid of all this clutter" and downsize phase, make room for more music. If I set spam filters, then important announcements might be missed, like the surprise release of the 60s box we all know will be coming soon after us older folk, the prime target audience, lose the rest of our hearing. Vguy, too late to warn you, if Nappy showed up with a cat, not to lick it. No other oral-feline inferences implied. Finally made it all the way through 42 plus bonus disc. Tempted to make audio quality comment, however to be real, will spin it all again as others still getting their hands on this. The obvious, a few warts in terms of vocal drop outs or missed lines, not the recordings fault and a few tuning issues because after long jams stuff happens when strings are bent. Nice and loose at home base, easy to savor 74 era material. Excellent overall and most enjoyable.

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How was the show? Need details if memory will serve.
UPS won the race. DaP1 vinyl was a day early. DaP42 still in my mailbox and was a day late. Big day in the works.
Song order: I'm with you fellas. I'd rather have it in order. Some do that with a fade-out/fade-in. And on the vinyl it appears they could have made it on one less whole LP. Can't they fit at least 25 min. a side without cramping the grooves? Dylan's early albums always gave you your money's worth fitting 55+ minutes on two sides. (Edit: Did the math and they had to have that many sides, at least on DaP1, to keep it in order.)
And HF is so right! Don't always get the annoying, "Hey you didn't buy anything!", and it seems to go in batches, but it is too much like Wayfair or anyone else giving you the hard sell.
Cheers and good listening to ya!

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I was in a cold muddy field at Bickershaw listening to the Grateful Dead playing a seemingly endless show. I have just listened to the Europe ‘72: Bickershaw Festival Deadcast which brought back so many memories of a cold, wet and muddy weekend with some of the best music I have ever heard. Maybe surprisingly, people's recollections of that weekend in the Deadcast correspond with my own memories of the event. I guess everybody who was there will never forget. Such events are burnt into one's memory.

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Perhaps our only regular correspondent who attended a Euro '72 show?

Ah, the joys of a long night two-stepping in the mud as the rain pours down and the band rocks on.

At my first GD show in fall '72, it did not rain. But I was a month past my 15th b-day, so when the band showed no sign of stopping after 2-3 hours and the crowd is bopping hard, I did wonder what the hell everyone was on. Well, I found out soon enough...

But I can easily recall many nights standing in the rain for a show -- the Byrds spring '72 in a field near Woodstock, the afternoon set by The Band at Watkins Glen, epic downpours at Red Rocks with the GD and, separately, the ABB. At the ABB, a friend shows up as planned as the show begins and I'm ready to leave. He drags my ass to the bar, buys me a large Jameson and I use it to wash down a hit of morphine sulphate and VOILA! I'm back "in the mood" for the show. That was the show where the roadies built an impromptu hut of wood and plastic for Gregg, with little windows cut out for line-of-sight to the other players. Meanwhile, the audience is 10,000 drowned rats -- but totally rocking drowned rats. That's the gamble at the Rocks. Thank the gods I missed the early June show with Neil Young when it snowed. Somehow I never tire of hearing THAT story...

To avoid annoying sales messages from dead dot net I have unsubscribed. I subscribe to the Picks, so no worries there. And I'll just keep checking in to catch the box announcement. Gotta think June should bring news.

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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2/22/74: (bonus disc) starts out a little ruff, but by Loose Lucy things have entrained and the sound is dialed in.
Not sure I’ve ever heard a bouncy Roses. Ruff but fun! Playin is what you’d expect, beauty eh! Has a nice short but clear and concise Slipknot reference too! Can’t recall the Ship off hand (alcohol and listening at night sometimes will do that) but I’m sure it was fine like the rest of it. I’m not familiar with the show, but wonder why he didn’t use some of the more extended stuff? Probably not enough time using using those “first” versions etc.
Certainly great music but will have to listen more, not sure it stands with some of the previous Bonus discs which can sometimes be as good or better than the release itself. But that’s just being more a critic than a fan, and the fan is glad to have it and will enjoy it for hopefully a long time. I do distinctly remember wanting to keep going, a good sign, and get into 2/23, but I know how much I prefer to do virgin listen in the morning, when I’m somewhat fresh, with coffee and a nice light morning buzz, but before the weed takes over the conversation. So that’s what’s happening next, woohoo!
Ok,it’s go time buttercup!

PS, happy happy joy joy to Mr Bill

Fascinating watching the little footage there is of this festival on youtube etc. Good, if short, interview with Jerry on site. Very little of the band playing unfortunately. The site looks medieval. I think I have commented on it before-but those people jumping off a high diving board into what looks like quite a small tub of water intrigue me. Especially after it has been set on fire. The things you could do before health and safety! Not that I'd have been queuing up to have go.

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1979 was my first journey from the Bay Area to see the Dead at Red Rocks. I had heard so much good stuff about the Rocks, I just had to check it out. Just my luck, it was rained on the first night and they moved the next two shows to McNichols Arena. Was I bummed!

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That first night, 8-12-79, was extremely hot and worth the trip, no? Check the tapes...

Okay, if you traveled, ending up inside the Big Mac would be a comedown. But they opened night 2 with the hottest Shakedown ever, there's a Candyman, and and and... oh well.

As Bobby said at the beginning of the second show, "You'll be glad to know that it's raining like hell outside right now," and believe me, it was indoors or nothing that night.

Having blabbered, however, I can easily recall that I have no memory of the third night, but supposedly they played great! Here's a clue, folks: don't do big doses two nights running. You'll turn into a rabid Deadhead with no hope of recovering your good sense. Oh, wait....

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17 years 4 months
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As soon as you get the art work please send it my way. Gracious thanks in advance
Drp

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Spent some time with the second set of Bickershaw show this afternoon and never realized how much the Dark Star echoes the Live Dead version. I've always heard it more as a prelude to the blooming catastrophe that is this show's The Other One, but it stands on it's own even if not of the same stature as the legendary versions of Wembley, Tivoli, Paris, Düsseldorf and Rotterdam. And for our newest release, this morning on a drive I was able to give the Bonus disc a listen. Upbeat versions of IMHBTR always appeal to me more. The embedded Slipknot jam did not disappoint! I'll be giving THAT another spin tonight. Along with the HC Sunshine, over and over and over.....

Happy Birthday Bill, and thanks so much. To have a drummer be the leader of such a great band is awesome to all of us wanna be drummers.

Yuck Yuck

And happy 50th Simon, spinning Bick 3rd time this spring. Love it. They showed how much strength they had in this show, super troopers indeed!

G

Edit: And if you have never heard1989-05-07, you should at least listen to the second set. Phil brought back the intro to The Other One. This is the first show with real development with midi. Second show overall if memory serves. And the drum space leading into it is very nice.

One of the highlights of the tour.. but there were so many!

A few years back by now, VGuy brought this up here and refocused me on that show. So many high points.. perhaps the best Lovelight of the tour, into a strong GDTRFB. Dark and the Other One are excellent and of course the only time they both were performed on the same night this tour. It's a classic.

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8-12-79 at Red Rocks was my first Brent show. He blew us away. Not a rainout. Most excellent. Was so let down that the rain had the next two nights at the sonically challenged McNichol's. But we still got our Nobody's Jam. But likewise my first attempt at seeing a three night run was somewhat disappointing. The weather is always a crap shoot in CO. My track record for the Telluride Bluegrass Festival confirms that.

Happy Mother's Day. Everyone call your mother!
Cheers

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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Like Simonrob, I attended Euro 72.
Several shows in fact, Second Wembley show, Bickershaw, and 3 Lyceum, but which 3 I can no longer remember.
I was actually also onboard as a very young whippersnapper, for their previous visit at Newcastle Under Lyme.
After that just 2 of the 3 AllyPally ( where I was very disappointed, thinking that the band had changed for the worst-though I actually liked Seastones!!?!!)
And then, that was that.

Bad enough to get endless messages about things running out, or sign up now to keep up with dead news. EXCEPT, when you're already signed up and my fav ad's for things you've already bought!!

hammacher schlemmer ask me once a week about buying that teak wood shower bench,,,,, that I bought 2 years ago!

And don't EVER look at an item on amazon,,, same thing.

It's always funny, but a little annoying.

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Hey Drpryan, Looks like my Dave's was delivered to my post office box yesterday (Saturday). I hope to get into town tomorrow to snag it, and will make a scan of the Bonus CD available as soon as I can. Looking forward to spinning this one! Onward.

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In reply to by JeffSmith

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Thanks for posting again. I forgot about the discussion we had last fall (?) about the older heads in our midst. Forgot about your shows, in particular, the Newcastle-Under-Lyme (Hollywood Festival/Lower Finney Green). Congrats on Bickershaw as well.

Was in my kitchen fixin another pot of coffee when I heard a thud out front. Forgot 42 was tracking to be delvered today. Go outside and see DaP1V box with x2 on it. Thought well post office will have to make a second trip today to deliver 42. Opened it up and both 42 and DaP1V were in the same day. Made my day for sure. DaP1V looks incredible. And for me, it is the first vinyl I have bought in 36 years, wow. Not sure I will open or not. Not sure if I will pull out one of the 2 turntables I have over years. Blue Crow, I am a with you there a bit. I am not a horder, I don't save every mustard bottle I buy. I do hang onto things I consider valuable, hence the turntable, as a collector. It does mean some clutter around here but not bad at all.

G

Edit: Both came in the same box...duh failed proofreading.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Gary Farseer

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With that kind of mojo going on, perhaps you should purchase a lottery ticket!

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12 years

In reply to by Gary Farseer

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Got mine yesterday.

I opened mine just to look at the etching on the 10th side.

I was happy to see they didn't use the cd cover and just blow it up to fit an album. (like dp19(?) they blew up the cover and it looks a little pixelated. But this cover is crisp and clear.

I like how the side of box has number 1 at the top and large. Gives hope all of the Dave's will make vinyl someday.

Have you seen the prices for this on ebay!!!! Quick scan 300 to 600 hundred!

Oi Vey

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Dennis

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Daves 42!!!

While going through my collection, I found a happy surprise

Complete shows of 2/13/70 and 2/14/70 (at least complete recordings)

I obviously forgot I had that. Dont know how, but I did.

Road trip
Daves 42
5 8 77
6 10 73
Steppin' Out
5 28 77

:)))

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10 years 8 months
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Five effin' E 72 shows! I bow to you... The Lyceum shows must have been plush and epic, especially after the mudfest at Bickershaw. After Watkins Glen, I swore off standing in the mud in the rain, despite having the best rock bands ever in front of me. At least at Red Rocks you're standing on concrete or wood and each row has a kind of drainage channel under the overhanging wood seats. Still, at that ABB show I referenced, the day went from sunny and 80 degrees to pouring freezing rain at about 40 degrees. I've upped my game since then with a full daypack of gear, just in case...

What I Iike about Bickershaw, apart from the music itself, is that it sounds like an outdoor show at high volume. Something about their style of playing seems slightly different than theater shows. Akin to, if quite different from, some of the summer '73 shows or Golden Gate Park '75 or Englishtown '77 in that the band is playing louder and may be more spread out on the stage -- not sure how to describe the sonic qualities that I think I hear (or project).

In any case, dogon, I think the band rose to the occasion of the E 72 tour as they had gelled again after Keith joined and probably felt they wanted to be at their best musically for a Euro audience, not to mention getting a record out the journey. Kinda weird how, between the fall '72 release of what was then an epic 3-LP pkg, all of two hours long (!) and 2011, 40 years later, when they put out 73 CDs of the entire tour, more than 30x the amount of music. Two friends and I took 2 1/2 years to go through that steamer trunk, just a little over a month between shows. That really allowed us to dig in. (Too bad I didn't take notes...) We had a no-talking rule while the music played and took breaks when the band did. If someone erupted verbally at some amazing riff, as happened often, the other two guys would shoot daggers with their eyes and during set breaks we babbled like crazy men.

Downright amazing we have that music. In fact, I recently thought maybe I should stop buying GD shows and listen to what I've got. That conversation in my head was fairly comprehensive and convincing, ending with ... NOT! As has been stated by many before me, I need just one more show.....

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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Well, it certainly helped that I lived and worked in London at the time. If I had already moved to Sweden it might have been zero!
( I live in Skåne, so might have been able to make it over to Copenhagen I suppose!).
I had first heard about the Dead while on a school trip to Denmark in a review of Monterey, got intrigued by the name, got home and bought the first album on day of UK release. Funnily enough it took me time to get Anthem, but when I GOT it, there was no looking back, I liked plenty of SF bands as well and bought in to the whole Beat/Digger alternative scene big time. Of course, living so far away I projected a lot of my own anarchic hopes and desires on the band.
But for me the Dead were not just another band, so it was a no brainer to see them as much as I could, but if Wembley hadnt been the Skullf*ck that it was, I probably wouldnt have chased down tickets for Lyceum ( 2 quid a pop, up from one pound for Wembley!).
Bickershaw was more an afterthought, a bunch of mates were going, and I tagged along, I mean the Dead AND Don van Vliet!
By the time the wall of sound rolled around a lot of the magic had rubbed off, in my opinion the new songs didnt carry the same profound weight of the Workingmans or American Beauty songs, could never stand US Blues or Loose Lucy for example. I found the sound brittle in a way, perhaps even joyless?
I spent the next few years with diminishing returns, dabbled a bit with the Paisley Underground, till I realised that no rock band could ever rival the magnificence of the Dead in their pomp- so I started to listen to jazz instead! And didnt really give the boys another thought till one and two from the Vault. Then I began catching up with their post hiatus iteration, but sorry, for me I have found nothing of interest after Keith left,

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May 8th
1981
It SMOKES!!!!!!!!

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The Dead only played this gem 11 times. I thought it would have been cool if they would have brought it back for the acoustic Warfield shows in 1980. If you haven't seen the video of Garcia playing it on Playboy after Dark, check it out on You Tube, it's priceless.

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In reply to by nappyrags

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So after a couple of days of extreme thrills in Vegas I hit the wall yesterday...as I was leaving the hotel yesterday morning headed for home about 8:30 AM my car coughed and stalled in the parking lot...my check engine light came and warnings about various things...shit...I decided to drive it to a Vegas Subaru dealership which of course was busy as all get out on a Saturday morning...after about a four hour wait I was told that the electronic gas pedal needed replacing, cost about $600...but the kicker was the part wouldn't be in till Monday, maybe Tuesday...no good...I wanted to see about having it towed as I have a premium AAA membership...With a total of 256 miles from Vegas to Flagstaff my AAA membership covered a free 100 miles...the other 156 miles would be out of pocket and cost would be @ $10 a mile over $1,500...screw that...I called Robyn and told her I was going to chance it and drive it to Flagstaff....which I did without breaking down...she met me in Flagstaff as I got there about 6:00 PM, we did a bit of grocery shopping and after 12 hours of my initial departure time I got home...crap...oh well...see what this repair sets us back tomorrow....

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In reply to by Dogon

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Hat's off to all you folks that caught some of the E72 shows.

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DAMN what a sad story indeed. Try owning a 2004 Pontiac GTO just about every repair is at least $600.00 & every time I drive by a gas station it gets homesick. But it is the 82nd one built & it has the ultra rare deer installed sunroof. I do have a SYF plate up front I guarantee it's the only GTO equipped with a SYF plate.

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Hmmmmm. . . I had a sunroof once. Think it must have been installed by chimps – every time it rained, the sunroof leaked. . . so I moved to west Texas.

Leaky sunroof caused move to west Texas!!!

High price to pay for the roof not to leak,,,, I'd have traded the car:-)

PS - I'm in Dallas, we have rain, sunroof leaks! 2017 Buick (yes Buick, I'm old)

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In reply to by JeffSmith

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I also has a leaky sunroof but remained in Florida. I just had a beach towel handy

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In reply to by drpryan

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I too genuflect to all those who attended any shows on the Europe 72 tour. This year marks my 40th anniversary of seeing the band for the first time. I can proudly (more like sadly) admit that I missed the good stuff.

And yes, I had to look up the difference between a pound and a quid.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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There is no difference between a pound and a quid unless you’re putting chewing tobacco in your mouth!

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In reply to by Colin Gould

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Thank you.

I know that now, but I still had to look it up.

Can I still spend my farthings?

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