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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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  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Phish

    Hampton Comes Alive's
    Weekapaug Groove

    High energy, bitches

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Phish Lore....

    ....I really don't know where to start regarding the lore, but it gets deep. But, I do know where to start regarding getting into them. A Live One or New Years '95. Check em out. I'll refund your time somehow if you don't get IT. And we all know what IT is.
    King Gizzard are pretty cool. They can't be pigeonholed into a certain category, and I can appreciate that. So many awesome sounds. Reminds me a little of The Flaming Lips. A little.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Crow told me

    Zappa?

    Start with "we're only in it for the money"

    I like a lot of his stuff, but therez plenty of meh, in my opinionionionionionion

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Crow

    I totally agree with you on Phish. Don’t know where to start on their library, and I haven’t been able to connect with much I listened to. Zappa, I have just never much cared for, but I respect folks like his body of work.
    PS - Grant Green was a fine guitarist, and a big influence on Walter Becker - the similarity in their tone and touch is incredible!

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Bug!

    That video with Trey and the little girl.

    You know, we humans might be capable of every sort of atrocity, and we might leave the Earth to a smoking cinder by the time we extinct ourselves (along with half the life on our planet), but we had our moments, didn't we? There were times when we came together to sing songs and dance and love each other and created beauty just for joy of it. Maybe that's enough? Maybe it doesn't matter (anyway).

    That video made my day. Almost makes me want to check out Phish, which, sad to say, I've never really done.

    Ever been kind of afraid to dive into a band or a musician, because you know that have such a deep catalogue and so many obsessive fans and so much lore? I know people who feel like that about the Dead. I kinda feel that way about Zappa: know lots of good people who love him, obsess over him, have to have every scrap of music they can get. And it kinda scares me off. Like, where would I begin? Where would it end?

    Glad to see King Gizz get some love. Those guys are just ridiculously prolific, and they love to confound all notions of musical genre, so they're had to pin down, but when they're in garage psych mode (as they usually are live) I really like them. Check out I'm in Your Mind Fuzz or maybe Polygondawandaland if you're curious. Or better yet Live in San Francisco.

    Last five:

    GOGD: DiP 31
    Miles Davis: Filles de Kilimanjaro
    Charles Mingus: Mingus Dynasty
    Ty Segall: Freedom's Goblin
    Grant Green: Grant's First Stand

  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    Robert Hunter

    birthday anniversary yesterday. Sure wish him and Jerry were still around.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Re: misc

    MIKE: just some self deprecating humor there, the best kind!
    Funny I don’t recall 2001 so much, but have cool memories of 1996. Had just move here that winter and we’re watching up in the hills at one of my cousins west of Boulder so we had to go back down and through Boulder on our way home at the time east of town. Even at that late hour there were nuts partying in the streets, people were driving around hoking horns in the middle of the night, it’s was wild and such a good feeling to finally be a “winner” after all the frustrating Buffalo years. If they can pull it off Friday, gonna be a big pa-teh in the city fo sho! Not so sure about the state, these folks aren’t quite the Hockey fans we are. Now I don’t get out much but I haven’t seen or heard anyone out here in the boonies talking about it which is sad.
    But hey, don’t cha know I’ll be ready!

    ISTSHOW: I read about that show, the bad ole daze of Colorado concerts. Heard/read about the crazy Folsom field shows BITD too. Must of been a gas! My first stadium show was quite the eye opener for a 15 year old: Bob Welch, Pablo Cruise, Foreigner, and Fleetwood Mac at the Ralph.I can still picture Stevie and Lindsey Glaring at each other as they sang and LB breaking strings he was playing so hard during Go Your Own Way, like they fully meant it lol. Great R&R!
    My Biggest crowd/Concert was Woodstock 94, surreal how many people were there!

    DAVEROCK: generally two kinds of loud: dbs, and ear damage due to sustained distortion and/or shitty sound.
    You can cause hearing damage often accompanied by ringing/not being able to hear temporarily at low DB if the sound is distorted. Sustained exposure to things like power tools etc can cause permanent hearing damage much more easily than just loud dbs if the sound is clean. This is science not opinion. Plenty of Dan Healy on this out there.
    I owned some of the same equipment and worked for a band that had a smaller version of the wall, so can attest that though the music is often not too loud (you can talk to your buddy etc) normally, but during peaks in the music things can get very loud, and because it’s so clean you don’t realize it like Simon said. I’ve had stereos like that too.
    But as good as the wall was, I’ve read every member of the team has stated over the years that the Meyers PA that they used in the late 80s etc could get way louder and was cleaner than the wall due to technological advances, including scale as it was now more practical to have increased and improved amps, speakers etc than the wall, and that it could sound better! Yes the wall was awesome, but it’s more about the historic significance about the innovation of what and when they created all this new tech, and the myth that has been built around it. I’ve experienced the Meyers PA hundreds of times where it WAS so loud but clean that you couldn’t easily hear your buddy, but didn’t realize it until you tried! Of course this can present a different and perhaps more dangerous hearing situation as you could actually do permanent damage and not even know it until it’s too late! The Meyers system had that potential but luckily Healy and co knew better.

    Most of the “rock” bands I saw had horrible sound because it was too distorted AND too damn loud. Saw The Who the day after those poor folks died in Cincinnati in December 79 and they had what I believe, but didn’t know of at the time, was a Meyers PA, but it was being used improperly and was ridiculously loud and shrill (all high end etc).
    It literally made the concert hard to enjoy!
    Yes, yet another one of the many unknown but awesome things the Dead did: basically invent good concert sound reinforcement that has changed the entire industry!

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Motown

    Integral to the transition from pop from the Brill building to soul and rock & roll of the 60s. Still some of my favorite hits. Stevie Wonder a great example of that transitional period.
    The Way You Do The Things You Do and How Sweet It Is - JGB staples.
    Remembering my older sister and friends perfecting their dance moves to Motown on the big mono system Dad built. The Alligator dance craze where one dives head first to the floor in a push-up move. Quite athletic and the girls made the floor shake doing that one.
    Glad you're digging it DR!
    Cheers

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Wall of Sound - Simonrob. Motown

    Sounds as though it was superb, and very conducive to the music being played. Provided not too many people took the option of talking to their mates, of course. As you probably know, with Sabbath, Purple and their ilk, not only couldn't you hear your mates in the hall-you couldn't hear them on the bus on the way home either.

    As side trip, I am getting a bit lost in the world of 1960s Motown at the moment, which I have never listened to before. I bought the Complete Singles 1967 box a while back, to go with the "Detroit 67 The Year That Changed Soul" book by Stuart Cosgrove that I was reading. So good, I decided to get the 1965 box. Then the 1963 one. And now the much coveted 1966 box arrived this morning. Great, great singles. Once I get the 1964 one-and maybe the 1968 one - I will call it quits.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    48 Years Ago Today

    My first big outdoor show. Sun Day #1 on 6-23-74 with ABB, Marshall Tucker, Steve Miler, Elvin Bishop, and Wet Willie at Mile High Stadium. And the ABB set had a Whipping Post!
    All in their prime, albeit lacking Duane. May still stand as the biggest crowd at a show I attended. Second largest was likely the Hard Rain tour at Ft. Collins Hughes Stadium the next summer. Dylan and The Beach Boys. Weird bill but a fantastic show. I don't even come close to some of you guys! Like Monterey Pop, Englishtown, etc. but a good time was had by all despite the warm beer.
    Cheers

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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 daverock

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Perhaps it was after they started singing ‘(Latter Day) Saint of Circumstance’.

Edit: On possible box sets I’ll use another quote from ‘Sir Henry at Rawlinsons End’. Excuse me while I shout, “I DON’T KNOW WHAT I WANT, BUT I WANT IT NOW’.
I’d be happy to see 50th anniversary issues of ‘Garcia’ and ‘Ace’, but that doesn’t seem to be happening.

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Oro - You happened to mention quite recently you knew Eric Nesterenko previously. Just read he passed away at age 88. I watched this guy in his heyday in the 60s when it was just The Original Six teams. He was a man of many talents and careers, and even played Rob Lowe’s father in a hockey film!

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43
12/01/79 with snippets from 11/30, way WAY overdue for the full Norman.

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In reply to by wissinomingdeadhead

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Hey Now! Started a new gig driving to the North Rim & back transferring hikers from one rim to another...over the past FIVE days I have made 8 runs back & forth...last Saturday as we left the North Rim at 7:00 AM (I stay overnight) there were about 120 Bison chilling in a meadow by the park entrance...today about 30 were crossing the road and we had to wait a bit while they did...I drive by the Vermillion Cliffs about 8:30 AM and again as I head north from the South Rim about 4:30 PM...great time to drive by as the sunlight plays beautifully at those times on the cliffs...life is good...my company, Trans-Canyon Shuttle, runs from May 15th until November 15th when the road to the North Rim closes for the winter....So I probably won't be posting as much until we slow down next month...a big lull in transfers in July & August as temps reach 120 degrees or so at the bottom of the canyon

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In reply to by Colin Gould

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Yes, I would have liked to see 50th Anniversary editions of those two as well. I might be wrong, but I don't think digitally remastered cds have ever came out of those two. Both great albums, featuring core material from then on till the wheels fell off. Side 2 of Garcia is classic, too.
Bit of overkill with Europe 72, methinks.

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Both those albums were remastered in HDCD and reissued by Rhino in 2004 or 2005. The Garcia reissue has 8 extra tracks whereas Ace has no extras.

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In reply to by simonrob

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..I never knew that! They slipped right under my radar. I wasn't as punctilious in 2004.

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If anyone boos you offstage, that is simply applause from ghosts..........

The ghost of Dick Latvala paid me a short visit last night. The next box set shall be February 1973--2/9, 15, 17, 19.

That would probably sell reasonably well..................

Rock on!!

Doc
Our feet are planted in the real world, but we dance with angels and ghosts.......

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Some poor soul died there the other day from hiking too far too fast in hot temps.

Respect the heat, folks.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Hey Doc, didn’t Dick mention 2/21, 2/22, and 2/24?
He had these on his to do “list,” but only 2/15 I believe of those you mention.
Maybe he’s gained new insight from the after life ; )

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DL had a very high opinion of 2/19/73. However, there may not be a complete copy in the vault? We can pray that it was a returned tape.....................

Rock on!

Doc
When the past no longer illuminates the future, the spirit walks in darkness.

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Doc that would be a killer box set, I would also include 5/26/ 73 & 8/1/73.

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BTK--and others..................

I've often wondered why the monster 73 Kezar show hasn't been officially released yet. Maybe they're holding it back for a May 73 box set: 5/13, 5/20, 5/26. That might sell a couple of copies...............

8/1 would make a nice single release, but possibly also being held back for a July/August 73 box? Maybe holding it for the bonus disc for WOTF 50th?

Needless to say, TPTB don't consult me..............

Rock on,

Doc
There's nothing scarier than unlimited choices.................

Truly weird how we were just talking about Nester. May the four winds…quite the interesting character and beloved long time local!
Sadly, this came on the heels of “ The Sheriff”, Bob Braudis, long time Pitkin county Sheriff out here, long time friend of HST, and a long time peace officer with major emphasis on peace! We went and saw him at a book reading back a few years and came away really impressed. Above all else, his philosophy that it was his job to try and keep people out of jail whenever possible, rather than put them in. A big man who left a big hole, he will be missed! Perhaps now he’s hanging with Hunter and Dosent have to look the other way anymore lol.

So much great 73 still out there just waiting to get the Norman!

AJ: sorry about the Oilers, thought for sure they were going to win last night. Great series that was much closer than the outcome would suggest. Sorry you didn’t dig Small World. I’m biased, so like everything I’ve read of his, but agree the ending could have been better. I thought he did an awesome job of illustrating the challenges and institutional inequalities that so many face, especially immigrants, and as usual gave us interesting characters. I like how he jumps around in history and illustrates the differences between the generations of these characters etc. it brought to mind my mothers second generation immigrant background. Her parents and 2 sisters were from Europe, while she and her brother were born here during the depression. I think he puts a lot of effort into his characters, authenticity, and to get the reader to empathize and perhaps gain a different perspective of others. This is one of the books I mentioned that was building nicely and then…yeah, felt the ending kinda let the book down. If you have time you should try West of Here as it is truly his best.

I didn't dislike the book, it's just that the timing for me put it into relative perspective. That Steinbeck dude can write.

The characters were very interesting as was the story line and the points he addressed. My great grandparents were immigrants and both of my parents were born in the Depression. They valued everything. Something you don't appreciate until you get older. I really liked his recurring theme of do it for the future generations. I can't tell you how many times I have told my kids that my job is to "push you up the ladder."

It's almost like he didn't know where to go next, so he just ended it. It reminded me of The Lincoln Highway by Towles in that regard. I plan on reading West of Here.

Not too disappointed by the outcome. It was an exciting series. If Tampa can regroup and eliminate the Rangers, I'll be happy. Good luck in the finals. I'll be backing the Avs.

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In reply to by daverock

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Or we'd be on our knees in this old world. Excellent point, Oro.

Just finished listening to DaP 42 and I must say, that 3rd disc really smoked, especially Truckin' and Eyes.

Yes, Daverock, enough with E72. Been there. And will return.

But we gotta know: where will Godzilla place his big toe? (Translation: what's in the box??)

I really like the idea of a 1973 box...but we did have a couple shows from that year in the St Louis Box last year, so I'm not holding my breath. Plus its the 50th sodding anniversary of 73 in 6 months, so may be they will be hanging fire for the banner year.

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In reply to by daverock

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HF, hey I don’t seem to be good at much else anymore, hopefully I can still make people laugh and smile.

DR: forgot about those St Louie 73s. Man that DS disc is money!
You’d think they’d hit 73 big next year, but they seem to purposely avoid anniversaries.
So many possibilities still from that year?
Maybe Kezar or one of the big summer shows will get the stand alone treatment ala Rockin the Rhine etc?

AJ, I hear ya, sounds like we’re on the same page.

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11 /9/73 is a killer show, my brother went to that show. That whole Winterland box set 11/9,10,11/73 is in my top 3 of box sets.

I think that they will give HendrixFreak an anniversary gift of a Box containing all the shows he saw in 73.

We would all be winners with that release.

And if the ABB Comptroller would allow their stuff to be released too, then that would be even better.

As for 2022, in the Lyceum vinyl Box video Dave implied that they were working on more 72 stuff for later this year (at least that was my interpretation). But more E72 vinyl shouldn’t count as this year’s Box.

So, my prediction for this year’s Box is……

….. I have no idea…..

But I’m sure that I will order it as soon as I see the email announcement.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Señor Pata Orgullo...sorry to say but folk die here weekly, either hiking, falling off the rim or on a white water river trip accident...NPS usually plays down the deaths but word always gets out...I can think of five in the last few weeks...so sad...

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Their song "summer breeze"...every time I hear that song I go back to hearing it when I was an 8 year old kid at a bumpercar ride and that song was playing on a PA...a magical moment.

Y'all be cool, Jim. Thank you.

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is an absorbing, nearly 600-page book by a medic and a former top ranger at that park, which is carefully written and documented all deaths in Grand Canyon. Unfortunately, a close friend of mine died this spring rafting in the canyon. Nappyrags is right: happens all the time. Just as deaths occur in Colorado every year due to avalanche, climbing and rafting. (There's a similar volume for deaths in Rocky Mountain Nat'l Park.) I read both with great interest to learn about every mistake that proved fatal. Some you see it coming, some are quite novel, others were simply unlucky. And there are always new ways to die, depending on circumstances. For instance, I will not carry a pack or exert myself if temperatures rise above ~95 F. And drinking too much water too fast can kill you. Etc.

As for "more '72 to come later in the year" ... so now I gotta watch Dave's Lyceum vinyl video to parse the tea leaves? Hope springs eternal in those of us interested in FALL 1972... But I cannot think of a worse punishment for myself today: another Dave video.... Could that prove fatal, here in my easy chair??

I just realized that the new Jerry release (with Merle) is Nov. 2, 1974 -- so after the GD "retirement" shows (which really were calculated by the band to get rid of the Wall and cut payroll and some characters, knowing they'd return -- really, almost a gigantic prank), Jer simply went right back to work with HIS band... And, of course, famously went subterranean with the movie project, got hooked on H, etc. One can almost imagine some band members with less energy getting resentful that the band shut down its revenue stream, but ... oh, there goes Jer, who basically never stopped gigging. Although the band almost immediately recorded Blues for Allah and did gig three times in '75, while Bobby seized the Jerry model and got Kingfish together (a shit-kickin' unit I had the pleasure to see many times).

Just a thought as I tracked my Jer vault release as it wends its way into my sweaty paws...

HF - Haven't read that book but I seem to remember hearing that a few folks met their end stumbling over the edge of a precipice in the middle of the dark night while taking a leak. Maybe apocryphal. Did read Craig Childs book on floods years ago and there is at least one insane story (aren't they all) about one of the many monster flash floods coming down a side canyon (Havasupai?) Never rafted the GC. Did a couple of rim to rims. Went south to north, which is def the way to go. They were a gas. Gonna do it again.

And yeah Joan kicked ass on Hard to Handle night 4 at Red Rocks. That was one of the shows I listened to recentlhy. Got to that track and I was right back to being there thinking how she owned that song. Traded verses with Bobby but she was in charge.

If we do have more 1972- which would be great - I hope it would be something that hasn't already been released. Not, for example, a deluxe version of Veneta Oregon. Although I suppose if you haven't already got it, it would be most welcome. Having said that, if another E72 show came out on vinyl I'd be tempted, I suppose. But a show that hasn't come out before would be my preference.

I always liked that Kingfish album, and the smattering of live recordings I have by them. I wonder what happened to Robbie Hoddinott?

Nick1234 - that Rolling Thunder Revue box arrived today. Looks great, so thanks for prodding me in that direction.

Death In The Canyon was co-written by my doctor, Dr. Tom Meyers...He is also a river rat and over the past 35 years has hiked one end of the canyon to the other in increments...good guy...another who used to work at the clinic here is Tom Martin, he was my physical therapist for years and retired to focus on his river trips and documentation of the history of canyon rafting...

HendrixFreak, I couldn't agree more. I saw Kingfish severeal times, also. Kingfish was a hot band, especially with Dave Torbert and Robbie Hoddinot. I always liked Torbert and his rockin' energy.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Nitecat - I loved Joan's singing on a whole host of tunes. HF had commented on her gift for singing Pig's songs and I was riffing on that. I'll have to find my discs for night 3 at RR to check out Mr. Charlie, which I'm guessing I loved (no memory of it right this moment) cause I never met a Mr. Charlie I didn't like. She sang Days Between Ist night and it was fantastic. A favorite song of mine, so emotionally deep and such fantastic (in several respects) imagery - easily one of the most powerful and beautiful songs in the Hunter/Garcia canon.

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All versions of the super deluxe Waiting for Columbus are now up on the Rhino store. The 8CD + 2LP + 7"Single is there for $139.98

store.rhino.com/artist/little-feat.html

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Can't slip anything by you because you are somehow connected.... I bow to you, sir. You can tell Dr. Tom that a fellow author has been touting his work.

Nitecat: I always loved Dave Torbert's songs with the NRPS. I just recorded "On My Way Back Home" (Powerglide?) taking turns on the verses with a female singer, then we duet on the bridge. He had a hippie vibe but great changes and bridges and such. Torbert's bass playing put the spunk in NRPS and in Kingfish. (NRPS never the same once he left to play with Bobby.) Hoddinot was a great Tele player. Sad, I heard he kinda lost it mentally.
I simply cannot remember but I think maybe I caught a double bill with Jer Band with Kingfish opening? I know I saw Kingfish in several NY emporiums. That was 1975, the year we were introduced to blow, so several Jer and Bobby shows got kinda blown out, if you will.

Oro: You're KILLING ME! A "dry" heat ... as in, for instance, the technique that's used in BAKING DEAD THINGS in the oven. Or, in this instance, killing things that are alive and THEN baking them! Not to be too jocular about people losing their lives, but one of the special flourishes in Over the Edge that Nappy's doc apparently has rec'd feedback on is his tone in describing some mishaps -- mishaps so monumentally stupid that a little tone is called for. Not quite as extreme as your tone on "dry heat"!!

And yes, if there's more '72 to come, make it unreleased fall shows. Not more vinyl from the E72 tour. I mean, it IS 2022. Is it so out of the question that Dave will do a fall '72 box?? Sorry folks, I just cannot help myself...

Thanks for the heads up! When I looked during the Memorial Day sale only the LP was on sale and available.

The first time hearing Waiting For Columbus was a mind blowing experience. My first night in the Dorm in college and some of the older guys were already set up and invited me in for beers and a tube. They had on Buckingham Nicks, which I had not heard before and then they put on side 1 of Waiting for Columbus. It was musical bliss. Can't think of a more transformational first listen of an unknown artist to me.

Looks like it will be shipping same day as Lyceum LPs.

Here's hoping we get a new boxset before DaP44 arrives!

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I read a ton, always have. A few years back I vowed to read more science fiction, and read the Foundation series by Asimov. Man that was good. Kind of mind blowing the scope of that work.

I read the first Broken Earth book by NK Jemison. It was good but I don't know if I'll be reading the other two. Maybe some day. I started the Wheel of Time series. Maybe more high fantasy than sci fi, but its stood the test of time and I enjoyed book 1. I'll be continuing that one.

I tried to get into Malazon Book of the Fallen. Read the first book and a half but I just can't get into it. Its all over the place. People say it comes together between books 2-3 but I don't know if I'll pick it back up.

If you like sci fi and haven't checked out Neal Stephenson he's worth looking into. I read Cryptonomicon a number of years back. I've been meaning to get to Snow Crash and he's got a newer on that supposed to be good.

I just finished a survey of Russian history that was just ok. Too broad to be of much use, but it was interesting to read the history of Ukraine, Belarus, Russia Poland etc through the 18th to the 20th century.

I just started Nabokov's short story collection. I read Lolita last year for the first time and now I have to read more Nabokov. Man was Lolita good. He just writes so deliciously.

On the music front I've been uploading the last year and a half's worth of dead releases onto my new computer so I have some catching up to do - I haven't really listened properly to the STL box yet. Excited to do that. I've been streaming a lot of Dub Apocalypse from archive lately. Great for summer afternoons.

Good to see the conversation going strong around here. I try to pop in once in a while. I've been watching a fair amount of playoff hockey, but its just not the same without the Wings in the bracket the last few years.

Enjoy all - and keep the book discussions going - I need more recommendations!

If you enjoyed Stephenson's "Cryptonomicon" try his trilogy of "System Of The World"...I read Cixin Liu's first book of "The Three-Body Problem" trilogy and while trippy I don't know if I'll get to the other two anytime soon... "The Flying Sorcerers" by David Gerrold and Larry Niven is a fave (pretty much anything by Niven is a fave)...another one is "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" by Phillip Jose Farmer...so many books...so little time...

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Hope you like it Dave. After hearing Joni Mitchell screech on This Land is Your Land you'll never say a bad word about Donna ever again.

I'm not a Dylan nut, I like what I like and I don't like plenty, but the deluxe 6cd set of More Blood More Tracks is stunning as well.

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This one is taken from the inside cover of ‘Laik Tors’ by Das Rad. It struck me as oddly inappropriate. I’m listening to the album at the moment and it’s very good.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by Colin Gould

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I gave set 2 a listen a couple of times. Didnt take.

Then yesterday in the car sightseeing...YAHOO! Glorious glorious GD.

A different note...sacrilege to some of you, but Little Feat has never appealed to me. 1990 in Eugene they opened for GD. Uhh...no.

Opinionz, opinionz...

Ho lee phuq...that was 32 years ago. Wowzerz.

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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is awesome. That is until Lowell George passed away. I got into them right around the same time as the Dead. Maybe just a bit before. David Bromberg was in that grouping as well.

Feat opened for the Dead at Oxford Plains in the summer of 88. Awesomely fun time. Mediocrely fun music.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Love the feat, yaaaassss not the same without Lowell, but I still liked em. Like the post Dead, not the same, but those great songs make it all good! Oxford 88, lol. Big blur, do remember digging the feat from just outside at the far end where the Prezman had his turtle van and usual three tanks of medipure lol. Got to catch them no and again over the years and always enjoyed them.
Unfortunately, I don’t think Paul Barrere gets the credit he deserves. Really, so many good folks played in that band over the years.
But I’m not sure I need another box of mostly the same stuff? Waiting for Columbus is an all time top live album imho, so I’ll be interested to hear what y’all think. This chasing the dead dragon has become outta control, so will I really listen to this more than once, or, will it be worth the cost since they culled such great versions for Columbus? Shit, what I’m trying to say is, is there enough reason to spend the cash, is there enough must have material, above and beyond Columbus (which I have on CD and vinyl) to justify the expense?
Anyway, as I say we’ll have to wait and hear what folks think?

David Bromberg: he, Feat, first Blood Sweat and Tears album, Return to Forever, John McLaughlin etc, all came to me through older heads who said “if you like the Dead, try this” I can still remember a few of those virgin listens where my teenage mind was blown wide open! Such an awesome time when we got turned on to so many wonderful things, most that still resonate strongly even after all these years!

Nick - yes, I am well pleased with the Rolling Thunder Revue box set. So far I have only played the first three rehearsal discs. The first two seem to be setting the scene, and the third is good enough to be a release in it's own right. I'll look into the Blood On The Tracks box. They have one in the local library, but it's only a single disc, by the looks of things - a straight through alternative version of the parent album.
I'm not an in deep Dylan fan either ( obviously). All the albums up to Self Portrait-which I have played exactly once- all meet with my approval - but after that it gets a bit spotty. I'm not too keen on Before The Flood-and Street Legal doesn't appeal to me at all. I really like that "Trouble No More" box though. A great band, and the whole set works for me as an overall concept.
I have never heard an 80's Dylan album apart from Dylan and The Dead. Great run from Time Out Of Mind, through the next 4 albums, though.
And I've never heard a Little Feat album.

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