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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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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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On the other hand, I think I am happier listening to Bickershaw at home than I would have been on the site. Going off misadventures at festivals a few years later, if I had been there, I would have probably have spent half the time face down in a puddle half a mile away from the stage. Or maybe down the local nick, having been caught with a piddling amount of dope in my pocket.
Wembley and the Lyceum - that's a different matter.

Ala Carte Order Vol 42 #23311 is in da house...bought it for a friend's birthday next month

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Here's the experience I'm having, which is not fun. UPS handles the initial transit of the Dave's Picks CDs, and in my area, the USPS does the delivery to the mailbox. I received a UPS/USPS tracking message that the box had been delivered to my mailbox yet there was no CD and we are sure it was not mailbox theft because
1. other packages of greater value and size and mail were still in and around the box.
2. My wife watched the carrier leave the property, and went out the front door and got the mail. There was no time for 3rd party theft.
Now I'm having to deal with the Post Office, which can pinpoint delivery by GPS. When I asked them about it, they went to check, and 20 minutes later came back and said they would "have to talk to the carrier about it". They did not tell me where it was scanned, now I suspect it was not scanned at a mailbox.
In addition, I have always disliked the whole "limited edition" crap, meaningful to only a handful of collectors. I plan to keep my CDs till I pass. My kids might try to sell them, and frankly I doubt having a limited edition will increase the value all that much. The reason I bring this up, is that of course DP #42 is SOLD OUT. At best the USPS is going to offer me replacement value. I don't care about that. I WANT THE CD! I am a long time subscriber, and now, even though I paid up front, in good faith, the product was not delivered reliably and it appears I have no recourse if I want to purchase a replacement.
While I have yet to hear from the USPS (they told me 48 hours), this situation has a good chance of resolving without me receiving DP #42. While I don't blame GD net or Rhino, I still feel a bit screwed by the whole setup, given the unduly limited amount of available copies.

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Strings that is. Yep, I saw a YouTube vide of the Help On the Way > Slipknot >Franklin's Tower they did. I really liked it, lots of energy and Bob leading at times. Really cool stuff.

I am still digesting DaP 41, but I have given 42 one full listen. Dave L and Co. are giving us the goods. With volumes 43 and 44 in the near future, I feel that elusive summer of 85 show(s) coming soon.

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Good stuff. Donna is pretty impressive on bid you goodnight. Sounds great most of the time, just a few warm up songs.

One of the best '74 Bertha's I can think of.

Eyes of the World is interesting as far as first impressions go, because it left me feeling like it took me to places that the two '74 versions from the PNW box set did not. I don't know maybe not. This I the kind of thin I'll obsess about all night as I listen to them repeatedly.

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Lowest one I've gotten yet + with bonus disc! Really glad its for this show. Art for the case is really nice too.

The performances are fine and mighty (looking at you, HCS, Promised>Bertha>GSET, He's Gone>Truckin'>O1>Eyes, etc), despite the occasional vocal dropouts and tuning issues. Picks like these allow me to rediscover an era I love and also challenge me to look past the vocal/tuning problems and just listen to the music.

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I'll see if the Doc can address this.
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35 years ago yesterday
, I was down at Laguna Seca Raceway for a knockout show with the Good Ole Grateful Dead. This was a great place to see the Dead. They kicked off the show with Sugar Magnolia. Bill Kreutzmann dedicated He's Gone to Paul Butterfield.. The Dead came out later that night and filmed part of the Touch of Grey Video.

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In reply to by marye

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Thank you thank you thank you! The Doctor did hear my anguish and has prescribed a wonderful remedy! I can't say enough for what great customer service this is, and how wonderful this community continues to be!
I was pain yesterday, sorry for the long rant, but DPs are such a wonderful thing that I was really feeling frustrated and at a loss. The Doctor's remedy is perfect! Thank and much love to this entire community!

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Just getting started. Sound seems very good. Has a little echo from the hall but not noticeable after a few songs. My tape from my buddy back in the 90's must have been a very good low gen. copy.
Have to comment on the notes and a review from the local paper about the show. Pre-internet and early taper era not quite accurate info but Jim Mason gets a K for close. He cites "Starlit Begonias" and misses the credit for Chuck Berry on "Jet to the Promised Land" but gets the credit right if not the name on "Reelin' and Rockin" for Around & Around.
The amp is warming up and the volume is going up too. So glad I got this vinyl since I missed the Dap 1 CD. Vinyl quality is good and heavy. Absolutely silent between songs and no junk in the grooves so far. Enjoy!
Cheers
Edit: The 1st set review. Strong start with Half Step, Jack Straw and finish with Promised Land. Everything at that just exactly perfect pace one expects from Spring '77. Notables for me were the spare but hot Lazy Lightning/ Supp. and a Loser with that cool chippy effect Jerry does.
Took me a minute to figure out the cover. Apparently the show was on the release date of a famous Lucas film.

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Finally arrived today in Saint Paul; in the past I received one of the Dave's Picks with a number in the 23,000s, but this one is darn close to the top number! I've been listening to DaP 13 (the Skater) in preparation . . .

Tomorrow is the 45th anniversary of 5/11/77, recorded live here in Saint Paul . . .

Ok one more time. Limited editions keep the costs down for everyone. The business decision to keep costs down by only handling a title for a short time. The argument that it keeps people who don’t have the money at the moment from the music simply doesn’t fly in 2022. Besides the sites available you can copy anything nowadays. The moral position of stealing from the artist doesn’t hold since the followed through on promise of Ltd pressing means the company won’t issue it again. ZFT keeps their catalog mostly in stock. Check out their prices

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just watched leafs v tampa while on night shift - shit if only all sports were like this !!!

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Why can this not be purchased as a digital download? Every other audio product is available in that format.

We can skip the shipping process. Production>warehouse>ups pick up>ups to your state>Drums>Space>USPS>USPS local delivery.

It shouldn't take 2+ weeks, to receive, after getting shipping notice Email. Could be made available to all, on the release date.

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The leafs are now my 2nd favourite team after - deep breath , the flyers . I know I know , no one likes us we don’t care ect ect . But I just love their mid 70’s fuck you attitude towards the establishment and let’s not forget the spectrum a home away from home .

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In reply to by perithecat

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Number 11639 arrived at my mailbox late Monday morning. It sounds much better than the cassette copy I have. The only thing I find disappointing is that the 2nd encore has been reformatted to the 2nd disc. So much for the limitations of the compact disc. Great show to say the least. Thanks, Dave & crew.

It just so happens that I was home and walking to my mailbox when the Letter Carrier arrived. I had met him several times in the recent past and he has a very strong resemblance to Jerry. I mentioned that he looks like the late Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead. He said that quite a few people have said that and that he is of Spanish origin and all four of his grandparents were from the Galicia region of Spain. He is exactly 20 years younger than Jerry and was born on August 1, 1962. The big difference is that my Letter Carrier is shorter and about 100 pounds lighter than Jerry was in his later years.

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In reply to by Born Cross Eye…

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Just stumbled across a 5-10-69 show I didn't have that I was at...it's from Pasadena's Rose Palace which was quite the dump...co-billed was an early David Lindley band "Kaleidoscope" and another band that did quite a few gigs around So Cal at the time, "Southwind"...DL'ing now and will give a listen when I get home from...drum roll please...WORK!!!...also snagged another one I didn't have, 10-21-71 from Chicago....good stuff

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Because I am old. Thats my personal reasoning, JW. my beloved calls me grampa because I resist a lot of digitalness.

A digital option would be good for those who are more digitally inclined, I do get that.

5 10 69, Nappy...I discovered that gem last year. (I am pretty sure thats the one.. ) And you got to be there...wow. envy, i feel

I WANT A 69 BOX, DAVE!

please

Mr Postman, er, Jerry?

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Someone smarter than me explained this business plan and it makes complete sense. The quickest way to decrease the volume of available Dead CDs released annually is to do away with the Limited Edition model and add the ability to download. This is a niche market in antique music, so it's not comparable to downloading your most recent Taylor Swift release. You want Dead? Lots of Dead? 4 a year + box set + novelty items like unreleased multi track Port Chester shows as bonus features for 50th anniversary releases? The bus door is open with cowboy Neil at the wheel.

“Why I outta, who you calling antique?” I can just hear Garcia lol

Ahem, but it’s the 21 century, you must use the proper terminology, “Legacy” is the proper PC terminology for things that are not new. ; )
And I’m not making fun of you amigo, just this crazy world we live in! Everything has to have some stupid tag now, often military in origin i.e., shelter in place instead of stay home etc, homeland instead of country…

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Finally caught up with my Dave’s 42 yesterday. Here's a linq to my scan of Matt Adam’s cover art for the 2022 Bonus CD (corrected & squared as usual). Matt's cover art for Dave’s 42 is also attached. Be sure to pass around. In the meantime, hope your copy has landed, or is about to, and you're blasting this great new installment from the Grateful Dead à la Dave or soon will be. Onward.

dropbox dot com/scl/fo/9crtfp490g7e88pf6hdvy/h?dl=0&rlkey=pu11ohbq64tt22gwygpuxqr2j

Having trouble? PM your email address and I'll email back with the dropbox linq.

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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You don't hear the word nincompoop very often these days, either. Shame really - it's a description that would fit so many.

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We watched 'Sound City' Dave Grohl's documentary about the history of recording studio Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, Los Angeles. Excellent film, covers a lot of ground with all the historic music recorded in the studio, including Terrapin Station! There is significant interview footage with Keith Olsen, due to his early involvement with Sound City.
Olsen went on to produce Terrapin Station, and some say take quite a bit of liberties with the final record.

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"Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays this Jeff Smith from the swift completion of his appointed rounds". A shout out and a big thank you once again to Jeff Smith for the excellent cover work! Now, if only my local postal service would deliver Da Ding Dang DaP42 before 43 gets released (Post Office: Obsolete; Dysfunctional)

In happier news that I’m sure fellow Leafers Oro and Angry Jack can appreciate, the series stands 3-2 for the Leafs over the defending two time Champions Tampa Bay. Get your clubs buffed up, Bolts, for you will be teeing off come the weekend.
Got my Emmylou Harris tix - wanted Fleet Foxes, but when the world gives you lemons, you get Emmylou tix!

Yeah, I don’t care what anybody says, Jeff Smiths awright! ; )

Nincompoop, yes it’s a shame such an awesome word has fallen by the wayside, BUT, fortunately cattywampus has made inroads!

NITECAT: yes that was an awesome Doc, that and the HBO series (Sonic Highways) he did where they went to different historic studios and did a song at each one for their album at the time.
Also, We hit 6/14/80 on POTDWD today, another beauty enjoyed!

MIKE: WTF, early last game I had to make sure I wasn’t watching the Sabres: endless stupid penalties and no effort, it was like they wanted to loose lol.
But Whatever happened in the locker room between 2nd and 3rd, the coach needs more of! Great third period!
I thought they were finished, but luckily, once again, I was wrong ; )
Now can they do it uno mas? GO LEAFS!

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Kaleidoscope, possibly the only band live who could have given the Dead a run for their money, though their recorded legacy is disappointingly slim and their first album , Side Trips is very much of its time and not really recommended.
But the band begins to hit its stride with the second album, Beacon from Mars, known to some over here as Pig Meat from Outer Space, (Bacon from Mars- geddit?)
Led Zeppelin, before they started denying being influenced by West Coast music, and in particular ripping off Spirit, said that Kaleidoscope was their ideal band, both for quality of music, but also stage show which included Flamenco and Belly dancers.
It was this band which sent me off to explore Turkish music including Baglama. One of the worlds great record labels is Kalan, delve into Spotters or Utube if so inclined, but be aware their are lots of female singers, Mrs Dogon and I love them, but perhaps an acquired taste, or for a contemporary band try Baba Zula.

TAXIM!
Now, Southwind, thats a name I have not heard in 40 years!

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being an occasional shopper and seller on ebay, I received a message from them today. It seems that the build back better plan has a stipulation that states that from this year on, if you make more than 600.00$ on ebay, you will have to prove that it was not profit or pay a tax on said monies. Now, for folks like me, I only sell old things that I have laying around the house, things that I no longer use or need. The new law states that you must provide a receipt of your cost of the item that you want to sell on ebay and if your price exceeds that, you will pay income tax on that difference. Now, how many people keep receipts of things that you purchased 20 or 30 years ago? How about 10 years ago? 5? last year? No one keeps receipts that long, so now without proof that you paid X amount of dollars for an item, you will pay income tax on the entire amount. Ebay is sending letters to everyone who has ever sold anything on ebay to write or call your representative in congress to get this 600 dollar ceiling raised or done away with completely. If this stands, it could very well mean the end of ebay profiteers who buy Dave's picks to resell. No longer with this new law will they be able to reap huge profits. I can see in the future a lot more picks being available due to resale being no longer cost effective.

last 5
It's a beautiful day 1st
Bruce Hornsby Big Swing Face
GOGD 5-10-69 would love to hear this one cleaned up
Iron Butterfly Inagaddavida
ZZ Top Rio Grande Mud

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9 years 3 months

In reply to by Dogon

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Sound City great documentary. Keith Olsen, "yeah, but you are a lotcloser to the bank." Or something like that. Great Doc. Have it on the DVR. I am sure you have seen Muscle Shoals. Another great one.

Also, the new ZZ Top one is really good, especially with the passing of Dusty Hill.

I remember one on Motown's Hitsville USA. There are some others that I can't remember right now.

Seems like on the Kansas documentary Miracles Out of Nowhere, they talk about a studio down in the swamps of Louisiana that looked amazing. It is, however, in the middle of nowhere. Made Muscle Shoals seem like the big city.

I see that there are two that will be released sometime in fall

Moonage Daydream about David Bowie's career

In the court of the crimson king about...take a guess

Daves 42 disc three today...oh boy oh boy oh boy!!!

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11 years 6 months
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Got the subscription but my copies of vol 42 didn't come with the bonus disc. Has anyone else encountered this?

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In reply to by Oroborous

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....grate ears think alike. I said that a few pages ago!
And to answer mugsie, not to me.

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Did you unseal the CD package yet? For the first time ever, my bonus disc was packed inside the "gatefold" of the main release. There was also a sticker on the outside of the plastic wrapping that said "Daves Picks 42 w/bonus disc". I could just barely see the bonus disc sandwiched inside.

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11 years 6 months

In reply to by KeithFan2112

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It's funny.....I saw the sticker on the backside of the discs but didn't think to look in the middle, and there they are, crazy
Thanks for the info KEITHFAN, grately appreciate it

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Glad you got the disc. That's not one you want to be without!

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Hendrixfreak, just to keep you in the loop the E72 sweat shorts are still available. Just think you can cruise around town in your $80 E72 sweat shorts and let everyone know, hey not only did I preorder these bad boys in May, they are limited edition, and it says so on the inter tag.

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Good Day All.

A request for some help, if you can. I was not able to transfer my old "FLAC to mp3 converter" to a new computer.

Would anyone please be able to suggest any inexpensive, easy software available to convert multiple FLAC files to mp3? I would appreciate any help anyone can share. (Oh yeah, I am definitely not the 'tech savvy' one, but learning).

Thank you for your time.

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In reply to by DeadVikes

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What a fantastic documentary. Although I am not a huge fan of his music, I have the utmost admiration for Dave Grohl.

Well Mike, we find ourselves here once again. Good luck to us tomorrow night. And to the Oilers. You are a huge fan of Matthews, but I would take Kucherov all day long. Combined with Hedman, it makes me nervous about the outcome. Those guys are grinders.

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9 years 4 months
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I received my Dave's 42 with Bonus but they managed to print the number on the spine. Initially I thought it was unnumbered but there it is, wrapped around the edge! Anyone know the doc's email? I haven't emailed him/ her since 2013. Thanks!

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Scotcha

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2 23 74
5 25 77
5 28 77
2 22 74

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13 years 4 months

In reply to by Pancho Pantera

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I use Foobar 2000.. it's decent, easy to use and free.

Not a big lossy mp3 fan, but I won't hold it against you.

DVikes/HFreak & Short Shorts. "Truckin' in style along the avenue... "
I realize $80 seems a bit high for a pair of drawstrings shorts, but they are on sale from $160, 50% off. A bargain.

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10 years 8 months
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Dammit Jim, you uttered the talismanic mantra, "short shorts," and I cannot un-see those pics of Bobby from the late '80s... E 72 drawstring shorts?? Well, I'd be on it, but I still retain at this late date a smidge of the ability to feel shame. So, maybe I'm waiting for the E 72 diapers. Not long before I'll need them...

It's a sunny day in Denver today but cloudy in my heart. My beautiful cat of 20 good years had to go down last night. Zoe -- the name bestowed by the triplets next door who gave her to me (they're now married and having children!) -- is/was tuxedo style, with a great sense of humor (she'd bait me when I came home, hiding behind a chair (not realizing her tail stuck out) then zipping past to hide again, and a big thumper (cat people may understand) who just liked to hang out, sitting at my feet while I strummed a guitar. At eight o'clock every night I was home, she'd come find me specifically to cop some affection. Used to claw her way under the covers on cold nights, which kinda freaked out the girlfriends, especially the veterinarian. My Eight O'Clock Woman is now far out among the stars as I use a pick axe to dig a hole in the garden for her soft little body.

Then prepping for a 65-mile paddle in my pack raft down the Little Snake River, one of the last wild rivers in Colorado.

To live is to love and grief is the price we pay. No "woe is me" though, just glad my baby is no long suffering the indignities of old age.

Cheers to all!

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10 years

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Jack - After following these guys for 60+, I am amazed I haven’t had a stroke yet, but I remain fit, and still hit the gym. They absolutely drive me to the edge, though, at how they can fold like a Samsonite Elite when they had Tampa all but finished. If the Buffalo Bills wore skates…
Regardless, a big finale on Saturday! As for Kutcherov, as my lady is of Ukrainian heritage, it’s not in my best interest to give props to anything Russian, but I’ll take Arizona’s Finest Auston Matthews any day. This guy is absolutely the real deal, and if the Leafs prevail, it will be on his back.

Still waiting for 42. Dropped a line to the good folks at Rhino today, finding delivery taking longer and longer, and how about thinking outside the box, and offering customer delivery/shipping options, for cost? This regular mail gig is the worst.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Zoe.

I'm sorry for your loss, HF. Losing a pet is not easy.

I write this from the veterinarian parking lot as my cat gets claws trimmed and pads trimmed.

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