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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
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    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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IMO that’s the problem with cryptocurrency - no one can really explain it. Based on what I know it sits somewhere in the middle of at least three really complex domains - technology, finance/economics, and governmental policy/politics. You hear a lot of people from any one of the three give you a really great explanation of why its the next big thing (mainly the tech folks from my experience), but they are completely out of their depth when talking about the other fields (monetary or governmental aspects for the tech people).

I have a 0.0001% understanding of the tech side, and I believe people when they tell me that the blockchain is truly novel development. But I don’t think anyone has developed a killer app for it yet. Cryptocurrencies in particular - the most well known blockchain application, float somewhere between fixing a problem that doesn’t exist (if you’re in the US at least - replacing the dollar, or really any other currency), and acting as a facilitator for laundering money and financing illegal activity. But those actions will never be sanctioned by any modern, western government anyway. And those are the governments in whose money real, productive actors can trust, and no one has any logical explanation for why the US government would encourage or facilitate a competitor to the US dollar - it’s dominance and the immense soft power that comes along with it are not going to be relinquished.

I look at crypto/blockchain/NFTs now kind of like the internet in the early 90s. A fair bit of it may be useful and the technology will develop and eventually be used in productive endeavors. But to try to guess which ones those will be at this point is incredibly risky. If you want to try to invest in it I would suggest trying to cast as wide a net as possible to take part in a moonshot perhaps, but also be in a lot of duds along with it.

BTW, revisiting 1-22-78, McArthur Court - what a great show. High energy hard rocking stuff, from Minglewood on. I took a pause at Terrapin; hope to finish off the show doing some yard work tomorrow.

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Let me first state this: I am an idiot.
Having gotten that out of the way, I would no more invest in crypto than I would transition my music collection to an all streaming model. My question is…what do I own?? I can’t see it, can’t touch it, can’t even show it to you. I realize that I am a luddite, but could someone please explain this to me. What the f*€k do I own?? Where is it?? Why can’t I touch it??

You may now resume your total enjoyment of the McArthur Court show.
This has been an editorial from the idiots for democracy group.

The most shocking thing I've heard recently is that half the power in the world will be used keeping the "secret" number!

Even more shocking was the majority of electricity will be used in streaming!!!

I'm an idiot also and would probably never buy any (never say never). But they install a crypto machine at the store. People come in and shove cash into this machine and get some form of "coin". We believe they're drug dealers!

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In reply to by Slow Dog Noodle

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Someone smarter and more ambitious - not to mention someone less troubled by pesky things like ethics - needs to develop the God Coin. I'm pretty sure they'd be the richest person on the planet inside of a year.

If any of you want to take this idea and run with it, just remember to tithe me my 10%.

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First, Vguy generously suggests that "there are some really smart people on here," and I'm thinking, "Well, why don't they post any comments?"

Then several smart(asses) reintroduce themselves using the opening line: "I'm an idiot," before demonstrating that they have common sense, which, as we all know, is in short supply these days.

I mean, I'm good -- unless this confessional thing catches on and I begin to spew. There's just so much you folks don't want to know! After polluting this forum with endless "stories," I still haven't even scratched the surface. (Depravity R Us...)

Ah, the Dutch tulip craze. It's one of the main chapters in another book I recommend: Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds by Charles MacKay (1841) -- sadly, a remarkable work of insights for our times, only 180 years old.

I know only one or two things about crypto: you can't touch it and it's going down, down, down. What Freddie King coulda done with those lyrics. Oh, wait...

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53 years ago today, Aoxomoxoa was released. It's one of my favorite Dead albums. Aoxomoxoa & Anthem of the Sun, are my two favorite 50th anniversary releases so far. I like the original version so much more then the remixed version. It would have been nice if he Dead would have brought back Mts of the Moon. and Doin that Rag. Also on this date, the Dead started a great 3 day run at the Fillmore East that would make a great box set.

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Mr. Proudfus - thanks once again for your recommendations. I listened to 11-19-72 this weekend at your urging and yes it is spectacular. I listened to the jam two more time over the weekend.

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I’m not trying to bankrupt you, but the Miles Davis site is offering “What It Is - Montreal 7/7/83” as a 2 LP record store release, $25. Not sure if it is limited edition, but while you had your wallet out…

As for crypto, I think Slow Dog Noodle said it best, how it lurks at the vector of three powerful societal forces, with just enough ambiguity and lack of clarity to make it an investment only for the most daring, or insiders. To me, it always seems like something dreamed up by illegitimate cartels and bad actors to finance and hide their illicit and nefarious deeds. I have enough trouble managing a retirement portfolio of blue chippers and emerging companies, with full public disclosure, and lawful accounting practices; Cryptocurrency is just a little too shadowy for my risk appetite.

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Coz I used to understand things. One is either born an idiot or one is not. If you weren't born an idiot, then you won't become one. I used to understand things but now there are plenty of new-fangled things that I don't understand so there is something else at work here, like senility or some other form of brain-rot. Or maybe the things I don't understand are so half-assed that they cannot be understood by any sentient being. Like ephemeral moolah. Why is it called crypto and where is the crypt anyway? Nobody seems willing or able to explain that. How hard can it be? Try asking the government of El Salvador who made the stuff legal. They even spent bazillions of taxpayers real money buying it and suddenly it's lost 2/3 of it's value. Somehow they still have the same amount of shitcoins but most of their real money has disappeared. Try explaining that to the masses when they turn up at the gates of the government building demanding to know why the coffers are almost empty.
As for NFTs, what is that? Non Fungal Tokes or something like that, but again it appears to be something you can buy for a buttload of money and at the end of the day you have nothing to show for it. A fool and his money... etc. I managed just fine before these things were imagined and I'm still doing all right without them. I suspect that it's a creation of the devil and as such can best be given a wide berth. So there.

Why I outta…
I resent, er a, resemble that remark! ; )

HF, oh do tell, ya know ya gotta get it out, and some of us old duffs are bored off our asses with life so need some vicarious hijinks (not to be confused with the adventures of mr jinks)

Dutch Tulip craze: who knows how that might of shook out if they’d had ole Tiny Tim around?

CRYPTO: the great Sgt. Shultz nails it yet again, “Col.Hooooggaaaan, I know nothing”

Holy Guacamole Batman, this Garcia!Live Vol 18 is a real Bobbie Dazzler!
Good tight lineup perhaps at their peak, good set list, only recall Tough Mama having some hiccups, awesome Beatty board that sounds great after brief initial tape anomalies (do they plangent these? I’ll have to look…)
I’m sure some folks prefer more of the “normal” stuff that came later, but these early seventies local gigs with this lineup playing Soul Jazz and Jazz are some of my favorite all time Garcia.

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In reply to by simonrob

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Some people are born idiots, some achieve idiocy and some have idiocy thrust upon them. In my case, it's a combination of all three. My period of maximum lucidity and connectedness with society occurred when I was between the ages of 30 and 50 roughly. Things were a bit confusing before and after then. But on the whole, I think I am happier in the state of idiocy.
No idea what cryptogram is, obviously. I'd much rather improve my guitar playing skills than learn about stuff like that.

Listening to 5/19/74 and reading the positive comments about Garcia Live 18 -which I think is from the same sort of timespan - makes me feel tempted to seek it out. I haven't kept up with live Garcia releases.

Best record I have played today-"My World Is Empty Without You" by The Supremes. My God.

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What a guy, just looking at him made you laugh. Way better than Curly Joe.

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In reply to by That Mike

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I saw and ordered that one last night. Jeff just said it's on the way.

I was really hoping to find a digital copy (cd), so I can listen.

Like Jimmy Castor sings,,,, "gotta find a turntable, gotta find a turntable, gotta find a turntable".

I could just reach in a grab one and say "come here"
(a little novelty blast from the past. Never a blast from the future?)

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I knew you’d get it! You got great taste, Dennis! If you get your hands on a turntable, or a friend with a turntable and a great sound system that wants to hear The Master Play, I’d like to hear your scouting report on it.
I’m hoping the estate has a lot more stuff to release, too. Maybe our own Dave Lemieux…

like centavos??? Discerning idiots want to know...starting in 1969 me and three other friends (who strangely enough are still kicking it) were labelled "The Blockheads" (From Gumby of course)...my pal Huntz had a snazzy Corvair ('63 maybe?)...we went everywhere in it so we named it buckets as "we came in buckets" an old R Crumb line....

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In reply to by nappyrags

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the 55th Anniversary of the Monterey Pop Festival just passed us by...I was 16 and I asked my Pop if there was any chance of my being able to go...he looked at me over his Bo Diddley glasses and said "Are you Fuckin' crazy???''...HA much less what Mom would've said...

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In reply to by nappyrags

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HOT af

Nice place though

Go to RiversideCA to the Cheech
Museum of Chicano art

Veeeeeery cool

Was a great year for music generally. Maybe the last year when singles were more important than albums. Plus you had Batman on the telly - with Julie Newmar as Catwoman.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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I live full time in the Coachella Valley and can vouch for the heat in the summer (well, winter too, at least relatively speaking). We've only had a handful of days over 110 this year, so the REAL heat is still on the horizon.

On a different note, 11-19-72 is one of my favorites... I've had a soundboard cassette for 40 years ... Birdy, Box, Stars and Stripes Jam, but mostly that Dark Star with the Weather Report tease into 1/2 step.... not sure why, but it gets me every time!

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In reply to by PT Barnum

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This is real and it is a feature of high desert soil in the American West and, apparently, known worldwide. Cyanobacteria and other organisms build vertical "castles made of sand" that can reach 4-6 inches in height and are amazing to examine up close. They serve to hold soil together in arid regions where vascular plants are too few and far between to hold the surface together so that it all doesn't just blow away in the wind. Serves the larger ecosystem in that way. It's like the Earth's skin. A few years back I was examining some really impressive examples and then reached for my walking stick, which I had laid on the ground. My pal warned me that a scorpion had scuttered under the stick and, indeed, without that warning, I'd have been bitten. (I always stand the stick upright now and use dead trees to stash my boots, sox, etc. when backpacking.)

Now, the scorpion is an amazing critter that has about 450 million years of evolutionary history on Earth without undergoing much change. That means it has survived a dozen or so major extinction events and come out stinging. Around here, they're an inch or two long. In the South Africa, they grow to 8 inches in length. Get this: in the Devonian period, 400 million years ago, sea scorpions grew to 8 FEET in length, but perished 150 million years later, though, obviously, this life form has survived in myriad forms. Today's lesson: not all "crypto" is for idiots...

Next up, Oro: a few truly salacious tales of misspent youth........

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Please check your messages Señor Hendrixfreak....

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In reply to by nappyrags

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Good luck tomorrow night. I think game four decides the series. If the Avs, win, the Cup is yours. If the Bolts tie it, I think they win in 7. That being said, it all depends on Kucherov. If he is out with an injury, it's over. These two teams are awesome to watch. Just a reminder of my prediction back in April which is posted below.

Yes. I think Colorado is the team to beat.

The President’s trophy winner rarely brings home the Cup. Say goodbye to the Panthers.

It’s extraordinarily difficult to win the Cup three times in a row. Say goodbye to the Lightning.

We all know how the teams from Canadaland have performed over the last 25 years or so. I’ll be backing the Oilers in the west and the Leafs in the east. I’m truly hoping this is the year the Cup heads across the border. It’s been way too long. Regardless, say goodbye to our brothers to the north. All of them.

That leaves Colorado. Good luck to your local boys.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. Band from Australia. Styles all over the place. These guys are pretty damn good. Any of you ever check em out?

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Greek or Latin for hidden marriage? Still have my first hand drawn warning pamphlet from a visit in 1980 to the Needles District in Canyonlands. The Park Service was new on this thing to protect the integrity of the soil. No big ranger station then, just a beat up single wide trailer that was closed when we got there around sunset. Didn't get a map or even see the brochures. Navigated from our own topos. A 3 day, 35 mile trek all the way down to the Colorado River (below the confluence with the Green R.) and back up through the lanes (Devil's Lane is a must see) and the slot canyons. The most spectacular and colorful terrain I have ever hiked through. Confession time: We bushwhacked many times off trail and had two dogs with us, a big no-no. We had to lower the dogs down some sections with a short rope and our belts as they aren't that good at rappelling. Had to drink boiled water from potholes as we totally underestimated the scale of our endeavor. Practically a death march down to Spanish Bottoms where we filtered the muddy water through bandanas before boiling. Camped at the bottoms across from the pull-in for some really big rafts with lots of customers. We were so jealous eating our freeze dried or ramen while we could hear an outrageous party across the din of the river and smell their steaks cooking. I think there's a big rapid right below there. Long story short we felt pretty bad when we were leaving and picked up the brochures stating no dogs and no bushwhacking. Luckily we did not harm the cryptogamic soil as one of the group was a biologist and future lifelong Park Service and Forest Service employee. I have hiked that area many more times but all day hiking. Got to see the Yellow Man pictograph on one a couple years later. It inspired my wife to become an archaeologist and a published author (her graduate studies thesis) of a study of the rock art of Nine Mile Canyon in N.E. Utah. We still go to the Needles District as often as we can and stay in the Squaw Flats campground (will they rename that now?) at a campsite we call Mushroom Rock for obvious reasons.
Cheers, summer's here and the time is right for dancin' in the streets!

P.S. Just read an encouraging article about the beautiful Utah red rock country: Tribal Leaders and Feds Reestablish Bears Ears Commission. Hope they can undo the damage caused by Zinke et.al.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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9 2 83

Like a frozen pizza instead of Blondie's

Good enough but not mindblowing

I hope the upcoming Daves is a "real cracker" (thank you to MPFC for that one)

On to 6 17 76
So far a tasty show

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In reply to by proudfoot

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....Trey Anastasio played a solo acoustic show last night in Grand Rapids and a seven year old girl was holding up a sign saying "Can I sing Bug with you?" with a heart. And he invited her on stage and she nailed it.
Shit like this gives me hope in this crazy world. Thank you Trey. You made me tear up watching that. Class. Act.

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In reply to by Vguy72

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cool

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I concur, it’s do or die time.
Game 4 should be a biggy!
Boys seemed a little mortal, or flat last night, and Kuemper was just plain no bueno!
Getting a little nervous. I know the AVs aren’t the Rangers, but the Bolts game back from down 2 games in the final, so…would love to see the AVs win it for game five at home for the fans etc. there’d be one hell of a party in LoDo on Friday night, but holding my breath until when/if I actually get to watch MacKinnon hoist that puppy.

EDIT: that Bug video made my morning! Got both me and the other half choked up.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Nothing I see can be taken from me

Thanks for sharing that VGuy. Beautiful.

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In reply to by bluecrow

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Kid singin with Trey

I dont know the song but that is a beautiful moment

Thank you for the tip Vguy

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Thanks, Oro for pushing Garcia vol 18. I needed some nudging to put this one on, and it truly is one dazzling show, esp the second set. It’s just my humble opinion, but it is one heck of a showcase for Paul Humphrey. His drumming just makes this show. Gonna go pull out Hot Rats - Gumbo Variations, anyone?

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I lived and worked there from February 1979 to end of April of 79. Then had to double back to northern Montana and take my old job again in the backcountry of Glacier National Park.
I still walk several miles a day here in the mountains of southern New Mexico. I do have an old nickname of over 40 years to uphold.
Monsoons arrived in force.
Libre Fuerza Aerea Mexicana!

I dont have the gumbo variations
But I do have hot rats regular
At top volume as I prep the house for guests

Excellent suggestion

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In reply to by Strider 808808

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Fascinating glimpse into the Free Festival movement in England in the 1980's with a rare screening of "Hawkwind Live at Stonehenge- Summer Solstice 1984". It was shown in the early hours this morning, and it is on again on Sunday on Sky Arts.
Compared to what festival sites look like now, it all seems very poverty stricken and a little seedy. Bedraggled looking people huddled round camp fires, humble tents, blackboards with the names of all manner of drugs chalked on them. Probably similar to what's on offer at the big corporate events of today, thinking about it - but now it's the norm - then it was very alternative.
The music is weird and wacky - but not really too good, unfortunately.

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Funny, I prefer the first set as a set. Although I love Freedom Jazz Dance from the second, Merle's Wondering Why goes on and on and doesn't do much for me. I'll give it another listen. We were all dancin' during the first set last night while I cooked dinner.

I’m hi-curious! ; )

Good question PF, I know it usually drops around the first of august so probably not until 2-3 weeks before : (

Maybe we will know 7/18

The 40th anni of my first show

When an actual time machine is invented, one of my first adventures will be 7/18/82

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Day Job has some alternate lyrics. Most of you won't care, but it's cool nonetheless.

Killer filler from 9 2 80

I haven't a Day Job in weeks

But that will change soon

:)))

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the past few days was the 53rd Anniversary of the Newport Pop Festival in Northridge CA 1969...Jimi played twice, Spirit tore it up as did Johnny Winter & Jethro Tull...over the three days I don't think we slept over 6 hrs total...some fun....and the doses were free!

Is incredible too. Maybe a bit light on long jams - the one coming out of Truckin' may be the centre piece, but every song is played really well, and Jerry's guitar sounds superb.

It's probably been mentioned before, but I wonder how loud these 1974 shows were if you were actually there. They sound very quite, listening at home. Almost delicate. Especially compared to live shows I saw at that time-Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, etc who were so loud you couldn't hear for a week. I have just played the live 1973 show from Sabbath's Volume 4 super deluxe bollocks - a show I attended, as it goes - and even playing the cd quietly, you can sense how loud it was in the hall. The Dead sound almost acoustic by comparison.

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