• 1,676 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Herbie, Jerry & Merle

    Herbie Hancock is about the only one of the artists on your list that I have already, Oro. I have Maiden Voyage, Empyrean Isles, Head Hunters, Sextant, Thrust, and Man Child. I find all to be enjoyable.

    1973-1974 Jerry and Merle is a sweet spot, lots of soul and jazz influences showing up in their stuff from that time, those Keystone Encores box set shows in particular are phenomenal. And an absolute highlight of the Merle and Jerry Collaborations would be Merle Saunders and Friends CD Fire Up +, that disc is on fire from start to finish, incorporating tunes that are straight soul like Lonely Avenue and Expressway to Your Heart, other stuff that is more jazzy like Save Mother Earth and Man Child, and some funky stuff like My Problems Got Problems and the phenomenal Welcome to the Basement. Merle Saunders, Jerry Garcia, Tom Fogerty, John Kahn and Bill Vitt tear it up. An album well worth tracking down if you don't have it already, just peak Jerry and Merle. CD was Released in 1992 and is includes most of the songs from the 1970s albums Fire Up and Heavy Turbulence, I think.

    Another gem is Hooteroll?, a jazz fusion masterpiece from Jerry Garcia and Howard Wales. That is a great album, great to listen to from start to finish, cohesive and gorgeous music.

    I think it was something in the air, 'cause there were just a lot of musical styles and genres being mixed together or teased apart into something new during that period from the late '60s to the mid-'70s. Funk flowing out of soul, jazz fusion explorations by a bunch of artists, the emergence of electronica with stuff like I Feel Love, lots of cool stuff all happening in a relatively short fertile time. Musical forms are constantly shifting, blending, and distilling new stuff through time, but that late '60s to mid '70s period seems like a particularly fertile time, especially for the mixing of jazz, soul, funk, blues, and rock and roll into new forms combining elements of each and taking them in new directions.

  • wissinomingdeadhead
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Box Set '22

    Still going with Boston Garden '91.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    FTK, Soul Jazz

    VGUY, that should be awesome. I read about it in Bass Player magazine. Interviews with both Les Claypool and Geddy Lee. They asked Geddy what he thought of Les trying to do this and Geddy teasingly said he was nuts!
    Hopefully they’ll be a big brown beaver sighting?

    CHARLIE: interesting how you heard of SJ. Even more so how many of us come to certain music, fascinating really.
    I heard if it after reading an article by Michael Chabon in Rolling Stone about his at the time new book Telegraph Ave (which I liked), but in this article he gets into this Soul Jazz that I’d never heard of, and I’ve been into lots of Jazz fir quite some time. It’s hard to pinpoint and like many styles or genres it casts a wide range: from syrupy string laden Mizel brothers productions all the way to more standard Jazz played by more recognizable names. The sweet spot to me is very much like what Merl and Jerry do on say 9/1/74, or the recent GarciaLive Vol 18, or on Fire Up and Heavy Turbulence etc. I like the oft used description of “Jazz with a backbeat”.
    I have maybe 2-3 dozen albums but would say these are good ones to start with:
    Donald Byrd: Black Bird
    Charles Earland: Black Talk and Leaving this Planet with Freddie Hubbard and Joe Henderson
    Idris Muhammad: Power of Soul (title track is awesome Hendrix cover), and a (2 for 1) of Black Rhythm Revolution, and Peace & Rhythm.
    Deodato: Prelude
    Grover Washington Jr.: I like Inner City Blues and Mister Magic the best. Earth Tones off Magic is nice groovy mellow almost new age like? One of my favorites of his. I think Magic is a good first choice. Soul Box is pretty good too. I’d say ya might not like all the tracks on all the albums depending how your pleasure tends, but if you made an 80 minute best of from the three you’d have a super cd. If that helps? But I’d advise anyone interested to check out stuff online first.
    There’s a good series of compilations out called the Legends of Acid Jazz that has some good treatments of many of the main cats, like genre guitar go to’ Melvin Sparks, and Leon Spencer, George Benson dabbles around the Soul Jazz edges. Jimmy Smith Back at the Chicken Shack is old school, and Dr Lonnie Smith is another of many keyboard/organists. One of the cool things is how like jazz, so many of the main dudes play on each other’s albums.
    Many more but those are good starts.
    The cool thing is it’s easy to Segway into things like MMW: End of the World Party and Uninvisble, and even on to the Beastie Boys, yes those Beasties Boys: The In Sound From Way Out and The Mix Up. I think of Curtis/Superfly as another cousin to all this. Herbie Hancock Head Hunters fits too.
    To me SJ is like another kind of jazz fusion. Not the scorching Miles or Return To Forever etc, which is more rock like to my ears, but like a funky soul stew of jazz, soul and rock. Perhaps like some Motown cats played jazz?
    As I say, sometimes hard to pin point, and certainly not for everyone, but to me it’s like the Garcia/licorice story.
    Not everyone will like it, but those who do will love it!

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    A Farewell To Kings....

    ....yea. Primus will be playing it. Contemplating taking some fungus along 🤔.

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Soul Jazz, Acid Jazz

    My exposure to soul jazz or acid jazz is limited and mainly consists of listening to Fusion FM hosted by Roy Ayers in Grand Theft Auto IV in Liberty City, not sure if that's exactly on point. Nice stuff, a mellow, jazzy, psychedelic vibe to some of it as I recall. Mister Magic by Grover Washington Jr is on my list of future acquisitions, maybe some Roy Ayers as well, who knows once I get started in that direction, just haven't picked it up yet. Hopefully Mister Magic is before the transition to Kenny G. that you describe, Oro. Grand Theft Auto in its various iterations actually turned me on to a bunch of great stuff on the various radio stations. Cool to just drive around listening to the radio, sparking the occasional police chase or just looking for hidden stuff. Don't knock it if you haven't tried it. Not a bad option as far as an option for a time vacuum. You know you're hitting the GTA a little hard when you start to notice all the unique stunt jumps when you're driving around in the real world. (GTA fiends may get it, the rest of you will just have to play the game excessively, then take a drive in the real world.)

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    DMCVT

    Mary says the tech team is looking in to why you can’t post.

    Thanks Mary!

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Next box set/ Sugar Pie DeSanto & Etta James

    Saw Sugar Pie DeSanto and Etta James both play at the S.F. Blues Festival, also saw Etta James play with the Dead in 1982. Next box is gonna be something from 90,91, 92, possibly Winterland March 1977. I hope its something from 1969/1970 with acoustic material included.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    That’s why they play the game

    To quote the great Chris Berman!
    What a game! Now that was sports worth watching.
    The outcome does not surprise me. The Bolts are like a bad case of the clap that just won’t go away, and I mean that as a complement!

    AJS: well said as usual. I agree. Pretty much sums it all up.
    MIKE: LOL. and yeah, Kadri’s “enthusiasm” can sometimes be a little nerve racking.
    PF: love the cup jokes etc, and the energizer bunny, hell last night I felt like I was doing speed!
    Dark-Star: good to see ya xxoo. Sounds like your the drunk yelling from the arm chair. I’m just showing solidarity for my fellow Americans, and VGUY, STOLZTY, PANCHO, PT BARNUM etc.
    VGUY/PRIMUS: will they be doing Farewell to Kings? Either way should be cool! Have Fun!

    CHARLIE: cool stuff, thanks for the good read! Brought up so many awesome aural memories. You guys ever check out Soul or Acid Jazz (prefer Soul as Acid is not really appropriate). Charles Earland, Donald Byrd, Idris Muhammad, Melvin Sparks, Deodato, Jimmy Smith, Dr Lonnie Smith, Grover Washington Jr. (before he went all Kenny G) and so many more. Fits right next to Curtis the Superfly Pusherman etc, GOOD SHEET MON!
    Lots of crossover between Soul, Motown Jazz etc. I always felt much of what Merl and Jerry were up to fit in this category. And Disco is perhaps cousins to all this? I like to make my own sorta best of CDs, and I made a killer 2 disc version for a friends young daughter who loved disco. But we like it too, it can be fun stuff, hell folks used to dis The Bee Gees but if you really check out their music it’s pretty solid (and those boys burned like chimneys. My cousin worked on their studio and said no burned like the BeeGees) and I Feel Love, that was my opening track! And what a great stoner song. Put that on a big stereo set up with good stereo imaging, get prepped ; ) , and sit in the sweet spot and check it out. It sounds amazing and that cool auto pan stuff is right outta Healy and Mickeys bag of tricks.

    Ah yes, Music, sweet, sweet music, the antidote to what ails ya and the ills of the world.
    As Mr Ones would say, Music is the best! Crazy how much great music there is…

    CONEKID: almost forgot ya. I can understand your ongoing feud. Took us awhile to get over the Wings lol.
    And as a life long Buffalo fan for good or for Ill, it’s still hard to like the Dolphins (sorry vguy) Dallas, and I’m not sure I’ll ever be able to root for the Patsies, even without Brady and Gronk!
    I’m just curious, is because of the overall war that was that great rivalry or perhaps just the Lemieux issues?
    I’m trying to remember, I’ll have to look for that show you mentioned.

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Ah, soul

    Hahaha. See what I did there. 🤭

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    I Feel Love

    You are correct, DaveRock, Donna Summer's I Feel Love is great, if I'm in the mood for some Donna it's either that track or Love to Love You Baby more often than not.

    Sugar Pie DeSanto is awesome, one of my favorites. Soulful Dress is a great tune and she has a lot more just as good, or in a couple cases even better. I picked up a couple of CD's by her and Go Go Power, the complete Chess Singles is a smoker from start to finish, the better of the two that I picked up. Soulful Dress, Do I Make Myself Clear, In The Basement (with Etta James) and Mama Didn't Raise No Fools stand out in my memory at the moment as highlights of that collection. Do I Make Myself Clear is absolutely on fire.

    And, yeah, the Stax boxes, the first three were an early acquisition for me in my soul collection, but there is also a fourth Stax Box - Rarities and the Best of the Rest - that covers some soul rarities, some gospel, and some of the other stuff released on Stax and related labels that ranges outside the soul category. That fourth one is not quite as consistently good as the first three, but it does have a few things that got in my head and my completist nature left me no choice but to pick it up.

    For something from this century that sounds like it could have been released in the 1970's, check out Charles Bradley, particularly the track Ain't It a Sin. If you can watch him do Ain't It a Sin online on the you post it video site and not want to pick up some of his stuff I would be surprised. Started checking Charles out when I saw an article about his soulful cover of Black Sabbath's Changes, good stuff, cool version of the song.

    And Curtis Mayfield, started checking him out when a friend suggested the Superfly soundtrack, and all it took was the song Pusherman to get me seeking out more Curtis, not to mention my dawning realization that the HBO show the Wire had a bunch of Curtis playing at various points and I dug it. Give Pusherman a listen and see if you can sit still. There's a good box set - Curtis, Keep On Keeping On, Curtis Mayfield Studio Albums 1970-974, a good way to get all his albums at once for a great price. The HBO show the Sopranos also had a bunch of soul tunes scattered throughout, I'm still looking to track down a copy of the song Sally Go 'Round the Roses by the Jaynettes. Or rather, I just picked up a copy this morning, further support for the hypothesis that I have an online shopping problem and a near pathological need to expand my CD collection.

    I'll try and shut up now, but once I start down the soul rabbit-hole I can't stop.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 8 months

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.

user picture

Member for

14 years 2 months
Permalink

Geez, I'm buying books discussed on this club, too! I love reading books, i have all my life. Thanks for the interesting recommendations.

HF best wishes, that's a rough one. Lost my dad in surgery years ago.

I was at the Bob Fried Benefit at Winterland in 75, also! We were inside, and just itching for when "Jerry Garcia and Friends" would come on stage, making only their second live performance in 1975. We weren't certain it would be the Dead, but we had high hopes!!

Just finished listening to Boston 6/10/76 from the 1976 box a few times in the last week. What an incredible second set! Really jammy Help>Slip>Franklins, Let it Grow, Playin'>Dancin'!

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by bluecrow

Permalink

I’m obsessed now!
Can’t find it Bluecrow. Non of your suggestions and now I’ve heard so many damn calls my reference sound in my head is getting lost lol.
I think I have a new age sorta CD from the Southwest that might have it, I’ll have to check after work since I’m not getting any done!
I know for a fact it was prevalent on that night raft cruise on the Colorado around Moab. I know I’ve heard it before and think it’s a common bird, but has an unusual sound
Doooaahhh

The most visible birds in Lowestoft are seagulls. They seem to be increasing in number-and in size. If someone is eating their lunch outside on the seafront, the gulls sometimes swoop out of the sky and take it out of their hands. It's a scream.

Sixtus-the Grenadier sounds like my kind of pub - although I don't go in them so much now. A lot are closing all across the land. First the smoking ban, then inflation, cheaper stuff from supermarkets.... I think people are happier glugging their ale at home now out of a can. Which ain't the same at all.

user picture

Member for

10 years 11 months
Permalink

Tried posting this the other day, but kept being accused by the website of trying to insert Legend of Zelda characters, so will try again. Have been surprised not to see mention of another of my favorite authors, one who studied Faulkner and especially F. Scott Fitzgerald as well as Kerouac and Kesey: Hunter S. Thompson, the man, myth, legend, and author extraordinaire. Hell's Angels is very good, but Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas is an absolute classic, and may be surpassed by Fear and Loathing On the Campaign Trail '72, because it may be the finest book on any election. It's full of as much keen political insight as it is with wild exaggerations, lies, calumnies, and libelous defamations. He continued to be brilliant and incisively witty, but when he turned from character to cariacature, his writing suffered. The collections of his letters edited by Douglas Brinkley have been very interesting reading as well.

Another great one, perhaps a one hit wonder, Joseph Heller and Catch-22. Far better book than movie and mini-series. I'm still grateful they tried at least. But it is a hilarious book, and the sequel from the late 90s, Closing Time, about a septuagenarian Yossarian is suitably weird and entertaining.

Also, two other wildly different books that I can't recommend highly enough: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon is an ingeniously conceived and executed tale told by an autistic teenager who is coming to grips with a crisis in his life that he doesn't understand, he thinks he's solving a mystery like Sherlock Holmes. It is profound in its simplicity. Secondly, Victor Wooten's The Music Lesson, which is an incredible book for music lovers to experience a new way to look at the world, universe, music, and their interconnectedness. A struggling bassist in Nashville in the late 80s, Victor comes home one day and is visited by his idiosyncratic music teacher, Michael, whom Vic has never met before, and he encounters him on a skateboard wearing a cape, yet the guy goes on to teach Vic many important lessons about music, life, and everything in between, with other random teachers/disciples of Michael popping up along the way. If the story is true, it's a crazy and well written tale, if it's fiction, then Victor Wooten may be as good a writer as he is a bassist.

To hendrixfreak, sorry for your loss. It's a tough thing to go through, and time does help, but John Lennon still had a point with his play on words that "time wounds all heals". Dwelling on the good memories helps. Also good music. Levon Helm's When I Go Away was one I leaned on.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by itsburnsy

Permalink

....I see roadrunners here quite often. Hummingbirds (which are awesome btw), and doves are frequent. So are pigeons, but do those really count?

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

Yes. Officially listed as the Rock Dove.
Only seen a roadrunner twice.
Their legs do spin around like a pinwheel,
just like the cartoon!
Maybe three or four kinds of hummers where you are.
Cheers

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

I'm in the Shetland Islands house hunting and there's plenty of wild Rock Doves up here on the cliffs. Also puffins, guillemots, razorbills, kittiwakes, great skuas, arctic skuas, gannets and lord knows what else. My friend who lives here keeps asking me what they all are, as if I know, I'm no Bill Oddie. That may be a rather obscure reference to our American friends here but he's the only famous birder I know. Wheatears are my favourites up here. I love the Shetland Islands, paradise to me.

Last five have all been Talking Heads live YouTube videos, they're a great band to watch.

user picture

Member for

4 years 5 months

In reply to by Nick1234

Permalink

Listening to 5 17 77 with the duck sound in FOTM

Good timing

user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months

In reply to by Nick1234

Permalink

Catch 22. Another required high school book that I finally read for the the first time last year. You are correct. It’s funnier the Heller.

Also read the Curious Incident. Very good book.

user picture

Member for

15 years 1 month
Permalink

I knew a lot when I was younger, was always chasing them and some I caught but that's another story. HF sorry for your loss, I lost my dad 7 years ago and I still miss him. This too shall pass. Ya got to keep on keepin on and keep the good memories.
Haven't read any books recently except Carlos Castaneda's first book about some guy named Don Juan. Read it 50 years ago and just found a signed copy so read it again. It's a great story and written very well, easy to read and lots of fun.

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

The official Miles David estate shows a new release in the Bootleg Series - Volume 7 That’s What Happened - is being released in September. This bootleg series is remarkable, in sound and scope, and this new edition focuses on some of the last works he did in the 80s. One of the discs features a live show from Montreal in 1983, featuring two of the best guitarists he worked with - Scofield and Stern - and sometime Rolling Stone bassist Daryl Jones. No hesitation- already ordered.

For today, I received the new Jeff “Skunk” Baxter CD to play - long overdue - and I want to give the TTB “Crescent” another spin, because there was some quality guitar playing by Derek, and a little less vocals from Susan, which suited me fine.

To any Philly Flyer fans - Lucky you getting John Tortorella as your new coach. His blowouts with the press are legendary and hilarious, and I expect this guy to go Tuco from Breaking Bad by about the third game coaching this underperforming and sad sack team.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

get it?

Fair Isle, looks perfect!

Tortorella as Tuco, snicker, snicker

Ok, Bluecrow, ISTSHOW et el. Here’s my last time trying to I’d these damn birds lol.
“woo woo wooo woo wa wa woo woo woo” very fast repetitive sounds, especially when there flying around, which they seem to keep in motion and sorta low to the ground?
Call is sorta like the three stooges, but more like when as kids they would have us do the Indian dance and go woo woo woo woo with your hand over your mouth, sorta fast and staccato like?
(Sorry if that’s culturally inappropriate or offensive? They had us do it in school but it’s probably wrong nowadays?)
PLEASE help me figure this out, it’s driving me nuts! Lol

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months

In reply to by Nick1234

Permalink

re Talking Heads-the above is one of the best live concert films I have ever seen. It's also, apart from the 12" single of "Psycho Killer", the only Talking Heads music I ever actually got round to getting.

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

We’re going downtown, and look at a few mug shots, a few lineups, see if we can’t narrow down this perp that has been driving you crazy.

user picture

Member for

3 years 1 month
Permalink

I hope the next box set will be from 1968, 1969, or 1970. It could all be from all 3 years or One single year.. Hopefully, if it's from 1970, there will be some acoustic Dead included. That's what I hope it will be, what I think it will be is is something between 1979 to 1991 and it could be from multiple years. If it's from the latter, I hope its Frost ,Greek, and Ventura shows. It could also be Winterland March 77. Now back to your Ornithological disscussian.

....all fun and games unless you watch Hitchcocks fiim lol.
My son and I went and watched Lightyear last night. #1 reason was because we are huge Pixar fans. #2 reason was to see what all the hubbub was about.
Sorely underwhelmed regarding "the scene". Lasts like a second and was in the first fifteen minutes of the film.
People are freaking out over that?
Never mind other 90 minutes of the movie that teaches the value of friends, teamwork and sadness of loss.
Keep picking the low hanging fruit.
Banned in 19 countries, and some US citizens cheer that on and wish Lightyear was banned here.
Over a kiss.
Rant over.
Vegas Golden Knights hired Bruce Cassidy from Boston Bruins fame as their new head coach.
Last name checks out.
Y'all stay cool and safe.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

I wish I'd got married in a suit like that, cracks me up every time.

Got home this afternoon to find the Little Feat 5 album set waiting for me. Got a second hand one from Amazon for £10 including postage. Great to hear Dixie Chicken again, what a fantastic record. The sounds a bit weak mind you, I'm looking forward to seeing how the other 4 sound. £2 a disc I can't complain.

I've just finished Jonathan Evison's West of Here. Very underwhelmed I'm afraid. Cliched, shallow characters, no story or plot to speak of, I doubt I'll try another of his.

user picture

Member for

15 years 3 months
Permalink

ORO
Fair Isle is a beautiful island, but very isolated. I was last there in 2015. We stayed in a guesthouse owned by an American who had lived on the isle for a while. He had previously found a very rare bird for UK (Citril Finch). It took some time to convince the bird observatory staff that it wasn’t a joke. Shetland has great scenery and is fantastic for birding so I’m envious of anyone looking to move there.

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months

In reply to by Vguy72

Permalink

Never heard of it. What happens for chrissake ? On second thoughts...don't say if it's too bloodthirsty.
In the old days if something was banned it was usually considered as a heads up for something that was worth seeing or hearing. I guess the threshold is so low now that that no longer applies.

user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

I'll take a shot. Fast, repetitive call, over water on your raft trip, even after dark.
Swallows? They make all kinds of chittery calls while feeding on insects flying with their mouths wide open.
Four or five varieties. Barn, Rough Winged, Violet Green, Bank, Cliff, etc.
Total guess but WTF (welcome to Fruita around here).
Cheers

Edit; no forget I said that. Doesn't match your call description. I'm actually watching the Three Stooges right now.

Edit 2: A cuckoo? Now I'm going crazy.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

Permalink

....been in a punky mood, sooooo.....
Bad Brains - I Against I
Clash - Give Em Enough Rope
Motley Crue - Theatre Of Pain
Queen - Queen 2
Prince - Musicology
.............
I would toss in Talking Heads, but I would be a day late and a dollar short.
There are a few bands I regret not seeing when I had the chance. TH is one of them. Prince is another.
.....
Little Creatures filling out the final sixth. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
Good record.
.....
Prior to that, it was GD Hampton '84.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

I didn't know there was a guest house on Fair Isle Colin. I thought it was the bird observatory or nothing and since the observatory burned down it was nothing. I'll have to look into that I wouldn't mind a couple of nights there next time I visit. The Isle of Vaila is up for sale. £1,700,000 or thereabouts, I'm a bit short of cash for that.

Listening now to Philip Glass solo piano music. It's annoying me a bit at the moment to be honest but it's early and it's quiet enough not to wake my wife.

Thanks for all those posting pos vibrations my way. As of a few hours ago, both Pops and Bro are recovering at home. Nobody died, a good thing. Dad is doing great, my brother had a much tougher go, but hey.. he broke on through to the other side. Time will tell, but he is doing fine, in good spirits and he still loves the GD and Birds.. (yes, an avid birder or as we call it here a Ornithological freak). My first exposure to the GOGD was through him.. and he got me stoned the first time too. Should I be horrified or simply thank him?

As you were, but thanks so much for the positive thoughts. It means a lot to me. It's been quite the week.

Love 1974 GD. Know any good ones?

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months

In reply to by JimInMD

Permalink

I'm half way through the 3rd cd of 5/17/74, the first 1974 show in the PNW box. It's not the most spectacular show of the year, but like with all shows from that timespan, there is plenty to enjoy. Very different from the Road Trips compilation of 6/16/74 and 6/18/74 that I played yesterday. On that set you are in the zone from the first song on the 1st cd through to the last one on the bonus disc. 5/17/74 is a lot bumpier, with many of the aspects of the year that aren't so good, sitting alongside most of those that are.

user picture

Member for

12 years 2 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

Just cost me 75 bucks for the new Miles stuff. Ordered the cd's and the white vinyl.

If you're gonna be poor, be happy!

Thanks on the heads up

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by Dennis

Permalink

Make mine not too tall and not too expensive please!

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

Permalink

Finally!! Someone says something that speaks to higher consciousness...

Wait, I'm serious! Confession: I have the complete, remastered works from Ted Healey days to the reels starring criminally underrated Shemp. And I say that as a dedicated Curly fan.

Good stuff for difficult times.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

2 years 6 months
Permalink

Broke out Wembley LPs and suddenly got the urge to listen to Wes Montgomery - Willow Weep For Me. Have spent the whole week blasting DAP 42, 41and 33 to soundtrack last night's hockey game...Happy Father's Day to all

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

Cheers!

Oro - Did you finally locate the name or species of the feathered flyer that has driven you crazy lately? Wouldn’t you be pissed if it was your neighbour’s budgie!?

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

Wrong thread and totally irrelevant, but I found it interesting, I just heard on the telly that Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, was the manager of the Lyceum back in the day.

user picture

Member for

3 years 1 month
Permalink

On this date June 19th. I would have like to have attended the Grateful Dead show on 6/19/68 at the Carousel Ballroom in S.F. Hopefully, there is a tape of the show and it will be released one day.

user picture

Member for

14 years 2 months
Permalink

Made it through the first listen of this new release, I really dig it! My fav was Freedom Jazz Dance kicking off the second set on CD2. Really jazzy. I love having a sax in the mix, also. Makes Jerry's band swing a little. And that drummer is wild! Really interesting drummer. This makes me want to dive into other recordings from this early Jerry/Merle period, like the Lion's Share, Keystone Korner, and Complete Fantasy recordings from Keystone Berkeley.

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months

In reply to by nitecat

Permalink

I’m with you Nitecat, first listen yesterday was very nice!
I’ve always dug the Garcia/Saunders Soul Jazz vibe, some of my favorite all time JG comes from there and other non GD outings. And I love the other, similar GL stuff, but this one seemed to be a little jazzier, but also tighter? like you can tell they’ve been playing together for a few years at this point. Some stuff can be a little too loose, but I don’t recall much here? Going in for round 2 momentarily…

MIKE: nope, my “research” (ya know, sitting on the patio wearing a warm glow and a beer, with cool tunes playing softly in the back ground so as not to drown out the awesome night sounds of nature!). Ahem, but a I ment to put shoes on and go atop the berm and try and see one, but fortunately we’ve been blessed with some rain the last couple of evenings thereby putting the Kibosh on said “scientific” research.
I can totally mimic it using that flat hand on the mouth trick I mentioned previously. Add a slight speed and frequency modulation and it’s dead nuts on. I’ll update when appropriate.

Oh, and holy Toledo, did the white death come down hard last night, seven Zed, against the Bolts in the finals??? fo-git-a-bot it. I still don’t think the Bolts are finished yet…

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

I’m glad the “research” is on going. Man’s quest for knowledge, and all. I’m just hoping your neighbour doesn’t plop his budgie or parrot cage by the TV, and after hours of Nat Geo or Discovery Channel “Birds of The Amazon” showings, it has started mimicking the rare Ogopogo Thrasher of the rainforest, and you keep hearing this thing through an open window. Solution: One skilfully placed hungry stray cat.

And wow - I knew Colorado was good, but they were dominant last night, like they were playing some Tier 4 college team, not the two time Champs. As I said a few weeks ago, start chiselling the AVs player’s names on the Cup now. Bolts - Get to know your golf clubs again.
(PS - When I was 13/14 I used to caddy at this exclusive golf club, where a lot of NHL players were members - anyone old enough to remember Derek Sanderson, for example? Some of these guys could hit that ball like it was launched from a rocket. It was a phucing dot on the horizon, and the caddy was supposed to follow it for like $3 a round. An Eagle with a telescope on its best day couldn’t see where those shitting balls went half the time!)

VGuy - You too! Happy Dad Day to all the Dads. We often don’t get enough due for our efforts. But it’s the best gig ever.

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

You might be calling that bird to mate with your head or ... something worse. Like, if it's a jailbird, ya know ....

user picture

Member for

7 years 5 months
Permalink

Derek Sanderson?? Wow, haven’t thought about him in a looong time. One of my favorite Boston Bruins. He’s no Bobby Orr(nor is anyone else), or even a Gerry Cheevers, but he’s high on my list of fave Bruins.

Last 5:
Miles Davis-Live ‘70-‘71(Mich./Boston)
Zappa-Erie Disc 6
Zappa-Erie Disc 5
Miles Davis-Sketches If Spain
Bill Frisell-History, Mystery

Music is(and always will be) The Best!!

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

Permalink

This was 1970 - 1971, prime Derek Sanderson - healthy, fit, that characteristic moustache, before his demons got him (and Orr saved him). Good golfer, too. Another player I remember clearly was Brad Park of the Rangers. Heady stuff to be around these athletes as a young kid.

user picture

Member for

7 years 8 months
Permalink

TOO>space>st.stephen. Ignore alien orders.

I can explain cryptocurrency very clearly to you.

Don’t ever buy it.

Do you understand?

If you don’t believe me, look up the Dutch tulip bulb mania.

Derek Sanderson. Tremendous hockey player. Sadly, I heard many stories about him hanging out at Daisy Buchanans on Newbury Street. After his downfall, he came to give a talk at the school where my dad taught. Since he was the only one who knew anything about hockey, my dad got to spend the day with him. Said he was a great guy.

The Avs look good, but remember that the Rangers were up 2-0 in games and 2-0 in game three. The Bolts are a team full of talent and experience. As I have said before, they are grinders who don’t get rattled.

If I were able to start a hockey team with any of today's NHL players, it would be:

Kucherov
Stamkos
Mackinnon

Hedman
Makar

Vasilevskiy

user picture

Member for

7 years 8 months
Permalink

Great minds think, or listen alike. V too.

product sku
081227881603
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/dave-s-picks-vol-42.html