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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.

First show, Dave threw out a couple vague hints, no substantial information, I thought. Kinda funny when he threw the ball for the dog.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by nitecat

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At a burger joint waiting for my order

Dark Lady by Cher

Very dated

Lol

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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....our dogs would love it too.
Cheezy Answers.
I never have been to the Bay Greek.
I have been to the LA Greek.
Parked on a hill. Looking for 2 for 5 grilled cheese. 🧀

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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I have hatchet guilt.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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....the sun came up.
And getting ready to set.
Made a friend in the check out aisle.
Strangers stopping strangers.
Daves 42 is awesome👌

So 53 years ago today (and tomorrow and the day after) i was at the no cal pop festival with a stellar lineup headlined by Jimi of course...I was a mere child of 18, heavily involved in telling the SSS to kiss my brown hairless butt...after the festival ended I went to hang with friends in Berkeley dealing with the People's Park showdown....mmmm some fun....

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4 years 9 months

In reply to by hendrixfreak

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I too really love the artwork (Kwakiutl?) for the PNW box ... but it's more about the music than the art (no offense intended). And speaking of boxes, I wish to hell I'd picked up the E72 trunk .... I've got all the Dick's, but somehow, I checked out for a couple of years and only have most (not all) of the Dave's and Road Trips. I think that since I have had pretty decent boards on cassette for about a dozen of the E72 shows( and considering the cost), I didn't bite. Not too smart. Anyone have ideas on how to get a Trunk at this juncture? I am quite certain that Mrs. Cat would not appreciate the expenditure any more today than in the past, but this is a bridge that would be crossed at that time.....

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In reply to by topchinacat

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I'm unanimous in awarding JimInMD the line of the week: "I have hatchet guilt." Actually made me laugh out loud. Thanks!

I have box set envy: I missed buying FW69 and Winterland Nov 73. It's all psychological. At the precise times those sets came out I felt I could not justify another $100 GD box. Imagine the shortsightedness. Revel in the stupidity. Feel the frustration: Aaaarrrrgggghhhhh!!!!! (Friends have shared the music, so I'll be okay...)

This is only somewhat mitigated by the fact that I chipped in for a friend's copy of the trunk and 30 Trips, only to encourage their procurement and enjoyment. So there's that.

Back to business: Dave's cryptic remarks never reveal anything. It's like the Federal Reserve chairman or Kremlin-watching. It's all about the freakin' tea leaves. At least I think we know now that Dave's earlier reference to "variety" meant vinyl. Henceforth if he uses the word "primal" I'm camping by the laptop...

I have box envy too. I was unaware of the FW box. I got back on board when Spring 90 TOO was coming out and I listened to the pristine 24 track recordings on the listening party. Brought me right back in. Started collecting boxes right away. Picked up the Trunk and several other boxes I missed on ebay. Filled in my Dick's collection. I'm hooked now. Never sprung for the FW box, though. Now it's so pricy. I guess I'll wait until I feel flush again.

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In reply to by nitecat

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yeah...I have that regarding Fillmore West and Winterland 73 (and isn't there a Winterland June 77 box?)

thanks a lot, "thinking I was being responsible with my money at the time."

I do have unofficial copies of many or all of these shows, but I kinda wish at times I had the official material.

I will NOT pass up a primal box or a Greek box. "Best of GD88 first sets box" I can live without.

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My copy of DaP #42 has arrived today. It will have to wait to be played as I’m expecting to be out all of tomorrow and I had deliveries of around 24 cds of varying genres so I’ll have to work my way through them.
I’ll change my header photo as soon as I have time which will probably be Thursday so the weather underground will have to remain for a little while longer

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If I were betting man I’d be willing to wager that the Lyceum vinyl set sells out, eventually, and as soon as it does, it’ll sell for at least $1,000 on the “secondary market.” Because that’s what happens with more or less every limited edition release. Want to buy any of the early Dave’s Picks you missed out on? Some of those go for about $400 now.

So, if I was smart, I’d probably buy two copies of the Lyceum set, sell one of ‘em, and keep one copy to have and to hold, basically for free. But this will not be happening, for two reasons: 1) I don’t have $1,100 to invest in anything right now, and 2) I would find a way to fuck this up somehow. (Once, I decided it would be a brilliant idea to spend my student loan money on a large quantity of weed, and then sell enough of it to make my money back, so that I could have a somewhat smaller but still fairly large amount of weed to smoke, for “free.” Six weeks later, I had neither money nor weed, and I’m still not entirely sure what happened. But I can guess.)

I really wish I’d bought the Europe box, now, too. But I think it was about $450 when it came out, which seemed like a lot of money, then. Nowadays, individual volumes from that set usually sell for $100-200 each. Or more. Topchinacat, if you want to buy the whole set, you can usually find one at discogs.com ... if you’re willing to pay $1500-2000.

It’s kind of weird there’s never been a Greek box, isn’t it? Wonder why. Maybe because a lot of those shows were broadcast on KPFA and there’s a lot of boots out there? Maybe the available source recordings weren’t well preserved? Maybe because it’s too obvious, and TPTB would rather surprise us with something we would never have guessed? All of the above? None?

Someday, everything's gonna be different, when I paint my masterpiece.

I missed out on FW69 box which led to much wailing and gnashing of teeth. But over the last few years, three of those years have come out on vinyl, and hopefully the fourth will be following on in the near future. So I'm not so bothered about missing out on the cd box now.
Maybe all the shows from the E72 tour will be released on vinyl, too, over the next few years. Not much use if you don't buy records...but a good incentive to (re) start if you didn't get the trunk.

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In reply to by nitecat

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I would keep your eyes on eBay for the E72 Steamer Trunk. Sometimes you can get lucky. Negotiate, sometimes it works. Discogs is risky for that big of a purchase because if something goes awry you have zero protection. There is no discogs customer service or even human beings that run that site. At least with eBay you have eBay guarantees if the seller doesn't offer them.
I got one after all these years last September and it was worth it.

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I see a few brand new copies of the Europe 72 steamer trunk on eBay ranging from $2395.00 to $4500.00. You can buy it at a lesser price for one that's not rated brand new. I think I bought the Fillmore West box for $80.00 when it first came out ; I bought 2 copies one for me and one for my brother. The Grateful Dead used to send out an almanac in the. mail and that's where I heard about it. It didn't sell out right away. I don't think that this web site was even up at that time.

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I bought a mint (perfect) 72 suitcase last year for $1300. I figured that was about as "affordable" as I would ever see it and I jumped on it. I had caught the bug a year before and was literally spending every last cent on every box and show I could get my hands on. I went overboard, but in many ways it is worth every last cent. For a band I never got to see live, they have helped me through the last 3 years (the Covid years) in ways I never thought anything could. Certainly willing to burn anybody a few shows they want. This music was meant to be shared for sure. And there is nothing like listening to a good Dead show while on a good mountain hike. Every show has something to offer.

I have been “casually” looking for just the steamer trunk only for a number of years. Not a huge fan of the big boxes in general, but that is a cool one. There does not seem to be a big supply available unless you want to purchase the entire package. Way too much scratch.

All the individual shows and the music only complete set were available for a long, long time. Around the holidays, dead.net would offer discounts and they still didn’t sell out. I recall paying around $350 for the entire tour. A couple of friends paid even less the following year.

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Around the time many of those early box sets came out, my cash flow was relatively minimal. So, I often had to settle for compilations or single releases. So, for example for the FW69 box, I got the three disc compilation and I was fortunate enough to get the bonus disc which was nice. Still, I regret not buying that one and both of the Spring 1990 box sets.

Now when the Europe 72 box was released, I was very tempted to buy at that point. However, I would have had to make a credit card purchase for that and I wasn't keen on running up my credit card debt. Fortunately Dead.net did sell all of the Europe 72 shows individually. So, I was able to piece it together via I did ala carte purchases of a few single shows at a time (per paycheck). I managed to get every show except for a few.

Over time my cash flow increased (thankfully), I was able to search through the wonderful website of eBay, and I found many of the releases that I missed of box sets and otherwise. Overall, it is nice to own all of the officially released material (or well most of it). Even though it stings a little as I paid a secondary market price, I was still able to acquire these for decent prices when compared to the usual going rate. In the end I feel it is worth it as I love owning the physical product. It is like I have my own personal GD vault.

Thankfully, I have been able to maintain the cashflow and I haven’t missed a single box set or Dave’s Picks since about 2014.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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After I got hooked again on boxes by Spring Tour 1990 TOO, I started looking into the Trunk. I called a friend of mine who had one, and asked him if it was worth it? He said, yeah there are a lot of good jams, but there are a lot of repeat songs. Around 2015 I poked around ebay looking for a good deal, and snatched up a near new one for $800. I must say I'm surprised to see them going for around two grand! I love the jams in this box!

And then I had to get the Spring Tour 1990 box on ebay, also. ANNND one of the Winterland boxes!

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Could not spend that kind of money when the Trunk was released. But later on, I purchased the All Music Edition. At first did not want to purchase because it was the same price as the Trunk without the Trunk and Book. But pulled the trigger which was sweetened with that FTW coupon the year Boxilla came out. Missed out on FW physical product, but getting the vinyl as it comes out. Glad to see RealGone rereleasing Dick's and RoadTrips, was able to fill the gaps of the later years of release.

I hope they do the same for the Dave's series. Unnumbered to keep the collectors happy, but available to those who missed out originally! I missed out on DaP1, but just got the vinyl.

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...has a ton of Dick's and Road Trips right now and are offering 20% off. Damn they started the sale right after I bought one of the Road Trips!

So 53 years ago today (and tomorrow and the day after) i was at the no cal pop festival with a stellar lineup headlined by Jimi of course...I was a mere child of 18, heavily involved in telling the SSS to kiss my brown hairless butt...after the festival ended I went to hang with friends in Berkeley dealing with the People's Park showdown....mmmm some fun....

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In reply to by daverock

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with Vegas and cancelled concerts? Another tour stops just before sin city as Steven Tyler voluntarily enters rehab after relapse.

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I'm so sorry to all the families in Uvalde Texas who were affected by this horrific tragedy, my heart goes out to all of you.

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10 years 1 month
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Happy Star Wars Day aka Dave's Pick's Volume 1 anniversary aka a day that changed my own life forever.

May The Force and GD Be With You
Sixtus

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4 years 9 months
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Thanks to all for the advice ... I am inspired and will redouble my efforts to add this to my collection ... and thanks for the lead on RealGone .... I picked up a couple of road-trips that I didn't have to round out my collection....still missing the first dozen Dave's however ... but the secondary market is kind of pricey so there's gonna have to be some prioritization I suppose ... (bummer!!) ..... thanks again all.......

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by topchinacat

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Listened to 9 24 76 via youtube
Great stuff
Started 7 16 76 today
A voice calls out for "WALK IN THE SUNSHINE"!

a second or two later Jerry starts up "Cold Rain and Snow"

Love it

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In reply to by proudfoot

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There's a Capitol Theater (Passaic NJ) tape from April '77 (I think) and if you listen carefully you hear Mickey Hart say, "St. Stephen, let's do St. Stephen." And Weir says, "No. Around and Around." And Hart retorts, "Have mercy Weir! Have mercy!"

The band that never stops entertaining, even when they're not playing...

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In reply to by topchinacat

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E72 is the box I would focus on if I had to choose one. Don’t get me wrong, I absolutely love FW69. But, the sheer volume of music makes E72 the clear choice. I am not over exaggerating when I say it will provide a lifetime of enjoyment.

Dave played 5/25/72 on TIGDH this evening while I was driving. For a few minutes during the Wharf Rat jam I forgot where I was.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Great record

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As usual, my listening sprint was derailed by the May Dave's Picks. I have managed to get the Dark Stars in. There is a cool Steve Hoffman Forum thread that has people analyzing all Dark Stars in great detail. A must for people who enjoy reading about the little nuances and time stamps when everything occurrs.

E72 repeats. I find a lot of cool stuff from version to version on many of them. The longer jam songs are obviously worth the trip. But even the shoter tunes have subtle differences that make them great to get to know (most of them).

This Dave's Picks is incredible to my ears. It's just a consistent dose of Dead all the way through with great sound and good mixing. Yeah, there are some audio anomalies here and there, but they're not too frequent. Billy is having a night of it. I've been including the Bonus Disc highlights within the main set, because I can't wait 4 or 5 hours for China Rider, Brown-Eyed Women, and Uncle John's Band. How does it compare with DaP 13? I can't tell you that...you couldn't afford me....

Sixtus I also love DaP 1. Man, What I went through to get a copy of that. Some lommox on eBay sold me a burned copy for 40 bucks. What a dick. But I was desperate to hear what was so great about it, and I didn't have any '77 except the commercially available 5/28. So I basically had no exposure to the '77 machine. And it was so popular on eBay, I figured it was the Veneta of '77. It did not disappoint. Still has some if my all time favorites from that year. I think they play just about flawlessly, like a studio record, all the way upmto the backup chorus vocals. I still find it to have the most definitive Mississippi Half-Steps; doesn't have the jam you get with Englishtown, but that's what Englishtown is for. It's only weakness IMHO are the last two songs. Not really into post-hiatus Around And Around or Johnny B.

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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That’s a really bad loss. Makes me nervous.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I know 7 17 76 has been released
But
How 'bout others?
Ever heard 7 16 76 first set?
2nd set today...

And whoever among us that advocated for MUATM return.. YEAH. Covid ish probably delayed it again this year

But I will do my own MUATM in August

Be kind to everyone today, my fellow Deadheads

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7/13/76, great show, time to release it, I was there. Those Orpeum tickets were hard to get, they went fast. The Orpheum only holds 1800 people. I saw Garcia play there a couple of times in the 80s.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I’ve been pretty relaxed throughout the playoffs so far, but third period last night I started getting the fear.
Actually started getting unsettled before that since all the broadcasters etc were acting like it was already over.
Now being a Buffalo Loser for sixty years has made me a tad superstitious. See the last Bills game for reference, ahem. So it makes me extremely uncomfortable when they do that. By the end of the game everyone was acting like it was over: the press, the crowd, the AVs, everyone except the Blues!
But the thing that really signaled code red was the increasing sloppy play in the AVs own zone. As the Blues started scoring/catching up, they seemed to become extremely energized, like folks fighting for thier life will do. At the same time most of the AVs seemed to ? Can’t really describe but the result was increased sloppy play and worse, scary turnovers in their zone. This seems like their Achilles heel throughout the playoffs?
When McKinnon got the hat trick it was a slight relief, but I actually said to the other half, that I was worried this isn’t over because of the above. Sure enough, they tied er up and now it’s a whole new game.
I told her at the start of OT if they keep coughing up the puck their gonna lose…
I felt really bad for McKinnon after having such an amazing game. That ridiculous third goal was old school magic ala Gilbert Perrault, beauty eh! But one player does not a team make!
So now you have an extremely capable and energized Blues team, heading back home where the fans will be jacked like Casey Jones himself, and perhaps an AVs team with internal noise In their heads, which all makes me like a dog that knows he’s going to the vet! No Bueno!
Hopefully some of the folks who’ve been quiet in this series will step up because If they don’t git er done in game 6 I think the Blues might win the series.
Hope this 20 year curse doesn’t turn into a fifty year one like our poor bastard friends from the North. ; )

And talk about scary good, I’d say currently the Bolts are the team to beat! Not sure what to make of the other eastern series? You’d think Edmonton would learn from the AVs and nip that one in the bud tonight?

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In reply to by Oroborous

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The 18th is the shizzle, but selfishly I hope they don’t release it soon as I have a great bootleg copy on CD, so would rather have something released we don’t have lol I got a tape of that one very early in my development and I’ve always loved the energy and turn on a dime segways on that one. Perhaps my favorite 76 show?
Ha, great question for Sixtus: what’s yer favorite 76 show?

EDIT: I’ve not heard the 13th. Consider radar fully pegged!

7/12/76
7/13/76
7/14/76
7/16/76
7/18/76
yeah
(7/17/76 already released...)

I looked yesterday and saw that the Avs were up 3-1 at the end of second period. I am surprised the Blues came back. in Colorado.

Sports...

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The PNW box was rightly hailed for showcasing the band's development in '71 to '73, major years of evolution in setlists and style.

And we assume, probably correctly, that vault tapes for the earlier years are fairly scarce. Taking up the spirit of the PNW box, an even greater illustration of band development would be to issue a modest box containing one show each from 1966 to 1970, the first five years leading into the 71-73 period of growth. The '66, '67 and '68 shows might well be one disc, two discs each for '69 and '70. Beef it up with a lengthy '68 show or two-show curated output for '69 and '70. Or pad it with partial shows that will never be complete. Ten discs and a booklet for $100. Make it limited edition if necessary.

Screw the fetishization of anniversaries and just do it. One show each from the slender stock of '66-'70 won't kill future notions of other uses. (And what "other uses" can anyone imagine? Shows from the first five years don't exactly scream potential release as "Dave's Picks" due to length.)

Yet another brilliant idea from HF that may never happen. But it's worth considering....

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....funny you've mentioned 7/18/76 - I, too have an excellent bootleg CD of this show and it is indeed a WHOPPER! The sheer ins 'n outs of songs during that second set is truly magical. It's outstanding.

As for my favs in all 'O 76, I was OVER THE MOON when the June '76 box came out - it hit all of my sweet sweet spots, and in doing, so, included my all-time favorite show from '76: June 11th. I needn't go into excruciating detail on this one, it seems to speak for itself on many levels; but that second set is is just pure drippy bliss to these ears. The Eyes is, hands down, my all-time favorite. Fight me!

But, that entire box is so outstanding and I really love the grooves they spew forth in that early part of the tour and then on into July. By the end of the summer, the sound is already starting to morph and get a bit more edge, which takes on an entirely different conversation and feel heading into '77.

Thanks for inquiring Oro. Inquiring minds want to know.

Be Well Peeps!
Sixtus

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Berry interesting. Another awesome box that has not had proper love!
I need to carve out some time this summer and reacquaint, especially the 11th, hmmmm, that number 11 again lol.
Agree on 76 evolution etc. Really is yet another interesting transitional period, and another that amazes me how many consider it fly by territory? To each their own I guess…

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In reply to by Oroborous

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....Goodfellas is one of the best movies ever made imo.

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One of the great rock drummers has passed away. He had to cancel his UK 50th anniversary tour for Close to the Edge due to health reasons. Now this Rest in Peace amigo.
One of my first big name rock concerts was Yes in September of 1972, Close to the Edge. I had seen other bands before this, but this was a biggie. Have seen Yes many many times throughout the years, in the round, quad sound set up, Wakeman, and Morantz and Stravinsky and back to Wakeman and Alan White played the drums on every tour. After the death of Chris Squire and Jon Anderson and Wakeman leaving, I don't know how they can continue on as Yes. The end or an era.

It seems a shame that the length of 60's shows may limit their potential for release as a Dave's Picks. I would much rather have a one disc 1968 show than something like that 4 cd 1987 show that came out.

Something of a myth that the longer a show was-or a particular version of a song, - then the better that show or song was.

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Bummer, agree, one of my top favorites movies of all time!
Best mob movie ever! Four winds blow…

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