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

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

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

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  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    little feat

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

  • delhead
    Joined:
    Newish Sci Fi

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

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

    this morning on a long walk

    Some good stuff on there

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

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Reading

    I gravitate toward non-fiction

    Just sayin

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    More literature

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

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    DMCVT and feat

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

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

  • dmcvt
    Joined:
    Literature

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

  • deadfeat1
    Joined:
    Lowell George and The Feat

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

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

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

    Be well...

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Introducing John Fante

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

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

  • daverock
    Joined:
    William Faulkner - Robert Hunter

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

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

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

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

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

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In reply to by That Mike

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I probably taped 100+ interviews all over the country, both on the phone and in person from California to D.C., over the five years I spent documenting Roy Buchanan's life and he had an amazing breadth of colleagues. However, Dale Hawkins probably was first, then Ronnie, to hire Roy. (Dale met me at a coffee shop. I suggested we go somewhere to loosen up and smoke a joint. He goes, "Oh! I didn't know you were cool." I said, "Yeah man, I'm cool. And I've got something for you." So he said, "Follow me to my studio.") We rolled a couple -- I had taught Rollo California to cultivate and he'd done pretty well that year -- and we talked, Dale played some new recordings for me, pulled some blow out and when I extracted the half-lb as a gift, man, Dale's eyes lit up like it was Christmas! He was a hard ass, but with Southern graciousness.

Of course, a missing bit of rock 'n roll history is that Robbie Robertson picked up the "whistler" -- that high harmonic note -- created by simultaneously striking the string with pick and fingertip -- from Roy. Though Robertson, with The Band's help -- created some of the most memorable songs in rock history, Robbie couldn't shake a stick at Roy's guitar playing. Not even close.

Oddly, I pursued Robertson (and Jeff Beck) for years for an opportunity to discuss Roy's influence and they never came to the phone. Robertson had a flack named Jared who kept saying, "Robbie wants to do it, Robbie really wants to do it," but monthly calls over a several year period yielded nada. Beck on the other hand probably never learned that I called his guitar tech, my only point of contact. The tech sez to me, in a British accent: "Listen mate. Jeff's under ee-NOR-mous preshuh for the upcoming tour. He can't possible take time to talk." We've joked about "ee-NOR-mous preshuh" ever since...

Yes to all the GD show touting that goes on here; it has led me to explore my own collection. And the mention of various archival releases by other bands has pushed back retirement. I guess I should say "thanks"!

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Could care less about hockey,,,, or is that couldn't?

But did make me pull out the classic by Gary Puckit, "Young Girl Get Off of My Ice". Can't let a GREAT hit like that skate by.

I don't watch any sports, certainly not hockey, but I watched the clip of that guy getting his third goal. Amazing a person can control a hard piece of rubber like that!!!

On the music sent to me front, recently had a very fine person from this site send me ALL his mp3's. This added about 300,000 cuts to "The Collection". I believe this will bring me up to over a million tunes.

Obviously, NO ONE can listen to all this stuff, NO ONE will probably like all this stuff. I like to think I'm more the library, the stuff is here when you are ready. It's cool when someone mentions a band and I'm like I think I have some of that. Last night at work a group came up "Dream Theater". Never heard of them,,,, but I had a dozen of their albums!!! (and no I didn't really like it,,,, I'm an almost NEVER metal guy).

So I'll be busy racking and stacking all this new music (NOTHING goes into the collection without proper id-ing and my form of labeling) for a while. But I have knocked out 75,000 cuts so far!

After this last run through, one has to ask,,,, "Can the Beatles stuff be repackaged and more ways???"

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Someone mentioned somebody releasing a Waiting for Columbus package. Found the package, but it seems it can't be "pre-ordered" yet.

True?

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17 years 6 months
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The upcoming Little Feat box on Rhino seemingly cannot be pre-ordered from Rhino themselves but it can be pre-ordered from retailers such as Rocket Man Bezos. It is down to who you want to give your money to. The release date is still two months away so no need to panic.

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Is there a book in the works from all your diligent research on Roy Buchanan? A ready audience here on Dead.net if you publish. Guaranteed to sell a couple hundred just to us. What an impressive project! You folks amaze me here.
Back to my slacker lifestyle. Cheers

Tried to look up my relatives who had died in war to memorialize them today. Lots of veterans but only a Great Uncle navy man in WW1 and had to go WAY back to the Revolutionary War to find another relative (Our side, but even in that family name we had both sides represented later in the Civil War) who gave the ultimate sacrifice for us. Thank you sirs.

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2022 is turning out to be a suck year for loss. Others have posted about Ronnie and I just got to say I agree, the guy was cool as hell, funny as all get out and just a pleasure to be around. Rest in Peace mate, you will be missed.

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10 years 9 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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Roy Buchanan: American Axe (Backbeat, 2001) is now out of print. We pursued Roy in concert, 1974-1986. I caught him probably 80 shows. (Same as GD, come to think of it, though very different circumstances.)

You can get the Kindle version or look for it in a library or used. Reviews on Amazon. I have resisted writing this until it was out of print so as not to use the forum for commercial purposes. At risk of turning folks against me, the other music book (still available) is Working for the Man, Playing in the Band: My years with James Brown (ECW, 2018), a ghost-written memoir of my guitar teacher's years with the Godfather of Soul.

Proudfoot: chortling is superior to simply "laughing." Carry on!

3/25/95, Band Show, working merch with my cousin, at Lulu’s in Kitchener Ontario, home to the worlds longest bar!
Ronnie’s there, larger than life as usual. Believe he was wearing a cheap windbreaker so if you didn’t know who he was you might think he was some farmer lol. Met him backstage, super nice like all the Band boys, but man, when he sat in, boy could still work it! Big, no HUGE fun! Believe I danced me arse off?
Four Winds Blow big guy!

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Topchinacat, we had arrived the night before and slept in line on concrete and rocks before they opened the gate. So we had a great spot for hearing as well as recording the show.

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You are correct sir, I also have not seen the 8CD + 2LP + 7" single variant offered in retail outlets but, unlike you, I have not specifically been looking for that version. If I come across it for pre-order anywhere I shall let you know.

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HF (or P.C.?), not to be confused with the book about actual axes by a different author LOL.
Not in my local library, will try inter-library loan. My wife has accounts with all the used book merchandisers so we will find one. Thanks!
Cheers
Edit: already found a used copy of Working For the Man. Dude you are erudite! I'm definitely going to get Across the Northern Frontier. I'm currently on a David Lavender binge, CO born author of 40 history books including one on a similar subject. Now back to my slacker lifestyle.
Wait, what? You bushwacked Pike's Peak for book research? Gotta get that one too. I have buddy who climbed that one that way too when he was young. Said it would have been too easy just to drive it and it wouldn't count for his 14er list.

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3 years 1 month
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This is a great show and would make for a great release. It's not that long, so it could be paired with another 1969 show for a double release or part of a larger 1969 box set. The show at Springers was part of a great story on the Dead that appeared in Rolling Stone Magazine, well worth checking out.

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Being a huge Roy Buchanan fan, I bought American Axe and enjoyed reading it a few years ago. Highly recommended! I might get it off the shelf and read it again.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Keep an eye out for Tau Herculids meteor shower tonight. Great to see these connectings to things back in the day, RIP Ronnie. See, react and then why don't I respond to various content, fall way behind, faster we go, rounder we get. I too love the 76 box, from a short era, on deck now. Belatedly, sincere condolences on the loss of your buddy, HF. Sat down to write about what pets, animals meant to me after reading comments, it felt too ponderous. Fortunate to live in a place where I hear and see wild animals often daily, up close, very close, like yelling get the HELL off my porch at a bear three feet away or chasing deer out of various de-fence-less gardens. Hummingbirds within inches, steal my face, hover under my nose, more "nectar" please, buds aren't open yet. A male American Bittern, submarine pump, strangest of all bird calls for weeks deep into the gloaming, looking for a mate. Used to travel too much to keep pets. HF, those of us fogeys who have been reading these entries for a while knew your connection to Roy, now others may learn. I will find AA someday. Had a summer job as a teen with same company where Roy's first keyboard guy, Dick Heintze worked his day job. SnakeStretchers band name came from Danny Gatton, he put that band together for Roy. Who has that first album, the one covered in burlap, anyone? How about the story that Roy worked as a barber before music paid enough, kidded my little brother later on that Roy cut his hair as a munchkin. Saw Roy down in DC several times at The Bayou, My Mother's Place, possibly underground cave known as The Far Inn, cannot recall it all. Did a deep dive into all the Viola Lee Blues I could find last winter, agree, Shrine top contender, there are a couple fine others, raw, missing teeth, worth the primal quest... and Road Trips 1.3, that bonus disc has about the best Hard to Handle, rumor had it Jerry was down on his knees at the end of that solo. They must be working on that 60s box, why don't they tease us, please us? There has to be enough material for 10-12 discs, we know it will have warts, just give (sell) it to us. Sure, we'd take a 60s Daves but a box would blow us away... Bolo, where are you??

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In reply to by nitecat

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archive (.) org/details/roybuchananameri00cars/page/2/mode/2up

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In reply to by nitecat

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Nitecat, you probably already knew, but there's a "professional" video of that show out there in "vast audio radiance" ... kind of cool because I'm not aware of alot of videos from that era really ... it will take you right back to nearly 40 years ago!!.....tc

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In reply to by topchinacat

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Good lucks to your boys tonight. You know I am pulling for the Oilers, but am fine with either team. I considered a wager until I realized that it would likely amount to me offering up some chicken wings and you offering some of those Rocky Mountain oysters. So I'll pass.

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In reply to by topchinacat

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Topchinacat, are you refering to the documentary about the US Festival? "The US generation"? That looks interesting, although not focused on the Dead.

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In reply to by billy the kiddd

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Billy - I can remember reading that article, by Michael Lydon, in the book of Rolling Stone articles that came out in 1974. Although I hadn't heard a note of their music at the time I was fascinated by what he wrote. The whole thing about The Dead and their scene seemed amazing the way he described it. In fact, it served as my introduction to them, in a way. That, along with a hatchet job written by Nick Kent in the NME in the same year. He put them down, but made them sound great in the process.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Back at ya, it should be fun!
RMO, LOL, not gonna go there!
Besides, icksnay on the hockeysnegh or the content librarians will shhhhuuuussseee us!

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In reply to by Oroborous

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"don't say 'hockey' on dead.net"

note to those who hate on the GD: bugger off

and if you need a palette cleanser: I highly recommend Pretenders first album. rock me, Chrissie and pals!

and how about this classic: Warm Leatherette by The Normal. freakin' awesome.

For the rest of the series, both teams should just agree to play 6 on 6 with no goalies. The goalies are not even making any difference.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Not sure who did the video ...it's got interviews with Bobby, maybe Mickey too if I recall ... and it's on YouTube but in spite of all my cleverness, I am unable to even remotely indicate that address here ....

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I think I pulled a muscle in my arm from grabbing the chair too tight. Holy crap!

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Swans PCIAGI
Pretenders first album
Clash Sandanista
T Rex EW
T Rex TS

GD
10/18/74
3/18/71
12/18/73

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10 years 1 month
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Off to Burlington with Iggy for the weekend, gonna meet up with a slew of UVM peeps to have a bit of an off-year reunion (damn yous 2020); looking forward to reconnecting and some outdoor time around town. Gonna do a deepest of dives into Dave's 42 on the upward journey. Glad to leave the kids at the curb, we've got Iggy's mom to thank for that.

Be Well Peeps!
Sixtus

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LP 21 / Side B
“Truckin’”

LP 22 / Side A
“The Other One”
“Drums”
“The Other One”

LP 22 / Side B
“The Other One”>
“Morning Dew”

LP 23 / Side A
“The Other One”>
“Sing Me Back Home”

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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That is exactly what I posted a year or so ago when 5/3/72 was released. I do not have the patience or desire to flip an album in the middle of a song.

Six - so jealous of you. Burlington is the coolest town in America. Sorry Boulder people. Too bad the Chicken Bone is no longer.

Oro - we can’t have the Rangers in the finals. They should have lost to Pittsburgh. I take back my prior comment on refereeing. Offsides is offsides. I don’t care how you try to rationalize a blown call.

Good luck tonight . . . to my Oilers.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....the first part of their 4 episode I Am The Moon opus dropped on YouTube. Check it out! Good stuff.

Yep, did not see that coming last night, hope it was a fluke.

For tonight, I purchased a seatbelt for my chair! Expecting another burner!

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I got a daughter at UVM too, bumped into Mike Gordon (literally) last time I was there coming out of Citizen Cider. Burlington cracks me up because every time I visit (from Seattle) I see like 50 kids in GD shirts and not ONE in a Phish shirt. Anyway, enjoy one at Zero Gravity for me....

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In reply to by itsburnsy

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Might be too late, be advised a very large sinkhole just opened up recently on the interstate you are/will be using, I-89, that will sloth or divert traffic off the highway around the Williston area (culvert washout fifty feet down). What a great town... great music scene, jazz festival, brews, saw Miles Davis there eons ago at The Flynn, David Bromberg, Phil and Friends, JRAD, etc etc.

my wife bought tix for TTB for sometime this summer

I have always ignored them

I hope they give me a good impression

I am much more open to different music these days

Hockey: you guys have me checking scores daily

I will probably track the Krack-en more in the new season

12/19/73 GD
:)))

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Have really been enjoying 42. I think the bonus disk may be my favorite artwork to date on the modern releases. Still slogging thru E72.

Saw 7 shows in three weeks, well actually 17 days. I have been exhausted with nothing in the tank. Finally getting back to normal. My days of 3day weekend shows are over, just can't recoup like when I was younger.

Sixtus, glad your and yours are getting some time off. I know you both need it. Never been to Burlington, maybe some day. Wish I could summer there.

Fishman came into a friend's CBD shop this past weekend. Can't believe he didnt snap a pick. Wondering why Fish even came in.

G

Proud - I posted this years ago. Hockey is very much like the GD. It is popular, but remains essentially a fringe sport. The fans are wildly passionate about their team and the sport. You probably have figured that out by now. Most importantly - you must see it live. You’ll be hooked. Those Kraken jerseys are so awesome.

Following is a list of places on the planet that are cooler than Burlington in the summer:

Concerts, festivals, the mountains, the lake, the people, the shops, the breweries, . . . .
Less than an hour to the border of Canadaland and more importantly, less than an hour and a half to Montreal. The town itself is not too big and not too small.

Burnsy - I hope your daughter is enjoying her time at UVM. I know she is. Just about everyone loves it there. It’s suddenly become the hot school around these parts. I selfishly hoped my daughter would attend so I could spend another four years reliving part of my youth. Not to be. She turned down a very generous scholarship to study biomedical engineering so that I could pay full price at Colgate. And I couldn’t be happier or more proud.

Phish. Good lord. I never understood it and never will. I was in a bunch of engineering classes with Mike Gordon. Real nice guy. They were never all that popular when I was there. The Joneses were the band to see on campus and Max Creek when they came to town. Then for a week or two each spring and fall you were off to see the boys on tour. Not surprised you don’t see many Phish shirts when you visit.

Edit:

Oro - so I hop in the shower at the start of the second tied at 0-0. 5 minutes later when I return it is 3-0 Avs. WTF? Come on Canadaland. You are better than that.

....yeah about that. I have no argument regarding those. I'll just let it lie.
I enjoy crowds and people. Covid was rough to me. And don't you dare get me started on monkeypox.

My favourites are easily the ones that discuss other bands and types of music. After that, books and then films. I would prefer politics and religion to sport, I have to say. The pets one was quite nice. The only time I watch sport is when it is on the telly, which I sometimes put on with the sound down, listening to music. Speaking of which-good day at the cricket yesterday. What happened was...
Last 5
Motown Complete Singles 1965 disc 23 ( 2nd from 1965) Various
Rock and Roll Music cd 11- Studio 1979(plus 1964-1966) Chuck Berry
Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy The Who ( before they went off)
Profits Seer and Sages The Angels of the Ages Tyrannosaurus Rex
Rite Julian Cope

Last Dead was 6/26/73 from the PNW box. The last of the 1973 shows included - and surely one of the best of the year. The 3rd cd is off the planet - Other One-Bobbie McGhee-Other One !

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by daverock

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Dave - my apologies for leaving that out. As it turns out, I just purchased my first Dickens novel, Great Expectations. I’ll post an update in 3 or 4 months when I finish. I’m a very slow reader.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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It's the best way. I'm wading through PK Dick's short stories, and I'm in no hurry to finish. Both Dick and Dickens are worlds to get lost in.

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12 years 1 month
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Just got mail about the Jerry Garcia Before the Dead. They've release in limited vinyl. They're 150,,,, amazon had some seem as high as 450?? Not sure why.

They seem like they are limited, but the amazon ads seem old,,,, the jerry site says back in stock?!?

I ordered,,,, I have the cd set and have always like it, so what the hell.

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15 years 11 months

In reply to by daverock

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Discovered Folio Society last fall and been rediscovering my favorite Science Fiction books I have not read in 30 years, along with reading the Ian Fleming books for the first time. Sort of like the yearly releases here, very nice editions but pricey. I get to experience your shipping woes in reverse (minus the VAT).

Folio Society just came out with a nice edition of PKD's short stories. I think they had a Limited Edition set of all of PKD's short stories, but that sold out long before I discovered them and was too pricey for my budget...

Halfway through The Handmaids Tale (1st read). Next up will be Moonraker, then deciding between Dune or Foundation Trilogy (both re-reads).

Still have some of the 4 disc E72 Germany shows to go thru, but finished strong with all four Lyceum shows on their anniversary date. Did a little blast thru the three cd's of Kate Bush due to Stranger Things the last couple of days.

Rooting for the Celtics in The Finals and hoping The Oilers bounce back. Sad to see the B's get bounced. Suspect it's Bergeron's last season wearing the Spoked B. Would like to see a Canadian Team win some year (as long as it's not the HABs or the Canucks). My preference would be The Leafs if the B's are out.

Played Disc Golf for the first time in 30 years. Bought 2 beginner sets for my daughter and I and we went for the toss and walk last Sunday. Last time I played was in 1990 when my college concert crew and I road-tripped to see another buddy who lived in DC. It was a whirlwind trip. Did the monument tour, visited the Whitehouse, a session of both the House of Rep and Senate. We walked around Georgetown and saw BobW walking around there and headed off to play Disc Golf. The next day got to see my first Dark Star hitting the monsoon that was RFK on 7/12/90. Pretty sure Jimbo was at that show.

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