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

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

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

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

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

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Letters - Barry Miles

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    We’ve got the beat

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

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

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

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

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

    Mighty tasty

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

    I called my friend and said "more Dead!"

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

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

  • nappyrags
    Joined:
    before Neal Cassidy, before…

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

  • daverock
    Joined:
    The First Third etc

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

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

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

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    way deep

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

    Ginsberg also, of course.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    I’m with HF

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

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

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

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

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Hard Case Crime published some great hard boiled crime novels a few years back - with superb lurid covers. Cornell Woolrich is another great writer in that field - "Darkness At Dawn" a collection of his early short stories is a good one.

Ian Dury offered some free advice in one of his songs -maybe "Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll". The free advice offered was something like - "Don't take nothing that is cut price/You know what that'll make you be".

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I once saw him fall off his bar stool in a pub in Notting Hill. I guess it can happen to anyone.

I will have to check out the Burroughs letters volume you suggested. I did enjoy Burroughs Junkie and Queer, which are quite straight forward compared to the later experiments and cut-ups. Though lost in a move, I highly recommend the Allen Ginsberg box set Holy Soul, Jelly Roll. Some of the live recordings are absolutely stunning. Some early, quite beautiful and emotional recordings of America, Kaddish, Howl, etc. Lots of lesser known works too of course. But going up through the 80s with some recordings with the Clash.

Although adjacent to the Beats, I recently found my copy of Gary Snyder’s Mountains and Rivers without End that I bought at City Lights many years ago. Great poems.

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If you are ever in N Beach, besides City Lights there is also a Beat Museum, whose book selection is out of control. Definitely read Off the Road if you haven't yet, also Junky by Bill Burroughs is probably his best (and pretty much only readable book for that matter). The First Third by Neal is better than you might think. Hell's Angels isn't Beat, but a damn good read. If you are looking for something really obscure, get And the Hippos Were Boiled in their Tanks, a collab between Kerouac and Burroughs. Happy ready ya burnouts!

Went to the tour opener, Dodger Stadium is HIGHLY recommended! The playin' not so much, hoping they are just a bit rusty. LA, cheesy as hell but sunny and maybe the world's best tacos, so can't complain....

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In reply to by itsburnsy

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Great sound
Good performance
Nice setlist
No X factor

I would reeeeeeeeeeeeeally like 2 23 71 to get Norman-ed

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In reply to by proudfoot

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But Burroughs' other books seem impenetrable. And let's add another fascinating if somewhat lurid read: Owsley and Me: My LSD Family by Rhoney Gissen Stanley with Tom Davis.

On the music front, from the St Louis box, I absolutely loved the 12-10-71 show and the way it embodied loose rockin' fun, yet built nicely to a crescendo.

Enjoying the literature discussion, folks. I've purchased more than a handful of used paperbacks over the past week or so.

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We're getting lots of smoke here in W. Colo.
The Haywire fire said to be near Flagstaff.
You OK down there?
Best wishes.

HF: Just finished your Across the Northern Frontier. Thanks, good read and helped tie together some other reads lately about this area.

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Ha! I bought a couple books on this forum, too! Great conversation.

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Considering getting the 50th anniversary release of GD first album, which features a whole cd of Vancouver 66. Is the Vancouver show worth having another copy of GD first album?

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In reply to by nitecat

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I would say yes

Think of it as getting Vancouver with a bonus feature of 1st GD lp

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If you're willing to take a book recommendation from a stranger to posting on this forum, there is a great hard-boiled crime book from Mexico written in 1969 called, The Mongolian Conspiracy by Rafael Bernal. It is out in english, and oh, the protagonist's name is Garcia. Peace.

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In reply to by this bird

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Arrived today. Great stuff.

I am reading about the Keystone as I listen. The place seemed so cool. I’d be curious to hear some feedback from anyone who actually got to see Garcia play there.

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I have been listening to escape from new York new expanded edition soundtrack. One of John carpenter's best movies. The soundtrack is hypnotic. Has Anybody else played it? I think it sounds like tangerine dream, kinda?

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I'll check out this book. Thanks. I'm a book worm.

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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I had to drive into Flagstaff today...as I went down Hwy 64 and looked to the Southeast it looked like a volcano erupting...from 75 miles away i could see the smoke roiling at the bottom of the horizon, changing colors...scary...the Pipeline fire, it is believed, was started by a camper burning used toilet paper...to add to all of this was wind conditions that blew a steady 30 MPH with gusts over 50 MPH....hats off to all the responders and local volunteers who helped with the evacuation of livestock and animals from a local shelter that was forced to leave the grounds...tomorrow winds drop down radically and temps do too....

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In reply to by jjsoch

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JJSOCH - I haven't heard the recordings you mention of Allen Ginsberg, but I have seen him on film, and his words take on a different meaning when you hear him speak them as opposed to just reading them. That definitely applies to William Burroughs too. I missed a lot of his humour when reading the books, but it's very apparent when you hear him read . It's the way he tell's 'em, as British comedian Frank Carson used to say. I used to have a cassette of him reading "Junky" that was great-plus a few from the early 1990s, I think, backed by electronic type music. One called "Junkies Lament" I think-I forget the title - but it's a great story. Incredible voice.

Nick1234 - I hear what you mean about Joni Mitchell on the Rolling Thunder Revue box. Lord have mercy. I'm not so sure about Joan Baez, either. Obviously a beautiful singer and person - but I'm not so sure her particular talents fit in with those of Bob Dylan when they are duetting. She sounds a bit too operatic to me. Reminds me of how it might sound if a world famous opera singer -Placido Domingo or someone - would have sounded joining The Stones on stage and duetting with Mick Jagger on Honky Tonk Women.

re Ian Dury hitting the deck in Notting Hill Gate - according to Charles Shaar Murray, acclaimed journalist at the time, falling over got you accepted.

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In reply to by nitecat

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Nitecat- yes, definitely worth getting. I don't know if it is still available, but it also came out on vinyl a few years ago , without the first album.

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Came in yesterday,,,, nice package.

I like the "full size" "booklets" that come with the LP's.

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Howdy all,

I had listened to the new Dave's Pick a couple times in my car and enjoyed it. This weekend I had some time to play it on my main system with some nice speakers and to sit down with a proper head change and take it in. Wow!
The quality of the recording really struck me. This show has great stereo separation and clarity. Really nice. I haven't had another 74 show on the stereo in a while so hard to compare, but the audio quality on this really struck me.
Great show too. I really enjoy the He's Gone and the big Other one >Eyes. What an Eyes of the World. Band really gets going. Always Grateful to receive and enjoy these shows. Pretty amazing.

Another recent musical revelation is the album "Four Sail" by the band Love. Some great, crazy, psychedelic rock and roll. "Forever Changes" seems to the be Love album that everyone talks about, but I've been really taken with Four Sail. It's a bit edgier and wilder to my ears. 69 Dead type vibes.

Hope everyone is staying well and having fun out there. Cheers ya'll.

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In reply to by Dennis

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I hiiiiiiiighly recommend

6/4/78

I feel this should be a Daves someday

Very high energy

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Hey please feel welcome to cannonball into the discussion. Unless I have to buy another book...

So to that I say, I'll mention one more -- a bit morbid -- The History of Torture: From Primitive Snake Pits, Medieval Thumbscrews, and Iron Maidens to Modern Brainwashing by Daniel Mannix (1964). Folks, it doesn't get much darker than this. Cut to the chase: the bulk of torture techniques were invented by Christians and used to utterly destroy people who didn't toe the line. Read it while whistling "Singing in the Rain.".... It's, um, gripping...

Okay, back to reality... hey Nappy, good luck to you, all locals, and the first responders with the fire. We're all in this together.

And FirstShow, hey thanks for reading my first book. It coulda, shoulda, woulda been a lot better but the subsequent works vindicated my path.

GarciaLive 18 in the house... Probably spin it when I'm back from oral surgery in the morning. At least we don't live anymore in the "whiskey and pliers" dental extraction age, like Mark Twain did. Oh yeah, if any of you have not read Roughing It by MT, by god, drop everything, light a spleef and laugh your ass off. Hunter Thompson had nothin' on MT...

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In reply to by Dennis

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...Pretty Mama...54 years ago today I graduated high school...wheee...being only 17 I was still 5 months away from fun and games with Selective Service...and instead of going to the grad party I went to the Shrine Expo Hall to see Fleetwood Mac, The Chambers Brothers & Chuck Berry....

The Dead Kennedys open a track with Jello Biafra speaking "God told me to skin you alive."

Very strange how "Christians" could be (and some probably still are) so horrible to others. If you have ever read the Gospels, Jesus never says "go forth and maim plentifully". Of couse, JC himself had an unenviable exit from mortal life...

HEY. BE NICE!!!

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Be Nice

Respect the 10th commandment. Thy shall not steal thy neighbor's catalytic converter.

It's in imperfect world, I'd like to think we do our best. No time to hate.

Estimated - I played that again last night after reading your post. It is a great album with some fiery guitar playing. I only bought it about two years ago, so it hasn't seeped into my mind the way "Forever Changes" did-I got that one over 40 years ago, so its one those albums that almost becomes part of you after a while.
One thing though -it ( Four Sail) doesn't really seem like a Love album to me. The only ones that do are the first three, with the original line up. From that line up, original guitarist Johnny Echols is playing a few dates in London later this summer.

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to say Hey Now deadheads, DP 42 is a good one. Now, how about Gainesville?

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Toni Morrison is heavy duty

Her stuff won't make you think of sunshine lollipops and rainbows

But she'll make you think

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I thought the 10th commandment was about the Fillmore West Box Set.

Boy I miss lynx. Remember Mel Brooks History of the World: “these 15, (drops a tablet) I mean these 10 commandments”

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Have a lil' snack
Go walking at super low tide at Puget Sound
Listening to Quicksilver MS Happy Trails on headphones

Yeah

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Hey Proud, enjoy the low tide, lowest in like a decade, should make for some terrific beach combing. Stuck at work so jealous. Also, Sea Times had an article today that made me laugh about the comments earlier "Washington ranks No. 1 in catalytic converter theft in U.S." BOOOOOOOOOO

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CC

If you have a Prius, have the shield installed underneath.

At times, it _was_ a little pungent, Burnsy...

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In reply to by proudfoot

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I worked as a projectionist when Escape From New York was in the theater. That movie is ingrained in my brain. One of my favorite below radar movies. Finally, after decades, about a month ago, I watched Escape From LA. Did not do it to me, as it was not nearly as good writing or moving making. The special effects look cheesy today. Then 2 days ago I recorded EFNY on my dvr from a commercial free movie channel. Cant wait to watch it. Always wanted to have a car with chandeliers on the front. Just know, I would finally look cool.

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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recaptcha is a bitch to deal with

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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But I want your magic bus

You can’t have it

But I want your catalytic converter

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Your boys came out flying, but Tampa is tough. A team full of grinders who don’t get rattled.

Again. The guy’s name is Kucherov. He makes other NHL players look foolish out there. Insane skills.

Good luck in period 3.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....why do some straight people feel so threatened and offended by gay people? Mind your own business! Ain't no time to hate. I'll never get it I guess. 🌈
Onto this 3rd period!!

I don't know.. stop reading and you stop learning. Perhaps instead of the news read more history which seems to somehow keep repeating itself.

The answer, as inconvenient as it might,.. is not to read less.

I always thought deadheads were given a bad rap.. their heads (at least the ones I hung around) were far from dead, generally well informed, pragmatic, level headed. Quick thinking if for no other reason because they didn't want anyone to focus on what might or what might not be in that satchel left absent mindedly on the back seat...

We didn't want drama and we seemed to know what was up. Be smart or be in cuffs. Oh, and we really really liked to enjoy life, hence this incredible music and cultural Meca we seemed to enjoy.

Thats all I have.. As you were..

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I agree with you on the EFNY 2. It must have been fun as the projectorist on the original escape from new York. I love how Bob hauk said " I'm ready to kick your ass out of this world, war hero."

It seems to me that people who feel threatened by gay people are afraid of something that is different from the way they themselves are. Or of the way they actually are, but are afraid to face up to. If that's the case it's a form of self hatred.

But fear of the "other" has a ghastly reach across all sections of most societies. Fear of people who talk differently, dress differently, think differently, come from a different ethnic background, come from a different class.......you could go on, and on and on and...

If you think you are not like that yourself - the likelihood is that you are, you just aren't aware of it.

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In reply to by daverock

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I gave that a listen yesterday
Niiice.

Two things that distracted me...
Scarlet...Jerry disappears for while... that has always deflated some of the show's power to me
Keith....BAMBAMBAMBAMBAMBAMBAMBAM!!!!!

Truckin' is awesome

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37 years and 2 days ago I was at the Greek Theatre for a knockout show with the Good Ole Grateful Dead.. This was one of my favorite shows the Dead played at the Greek. Great 1st set , 2nd set set opens with Morning Dew and closes with Comes a Time. I had an absolute blast at this show! Hopefully, these Greek shows will be released as a box set. 1985, the Greek falls between monster shows at the Frost and Ventura, all release worthy.

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