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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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  • That Mike
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    Piano Jazz Redux

    First off, welcome back Dennis! I totally understand on the Charles Lloyd set. I did pick
    up the first “trio” CD (the one with Frisell), but haven’t had a chance to play it yet. Expectations are high. I don’t think the vinyl box set is limited issue (I don’t think), so no rush to get it yet. I didn’t realize until yesterday that Lloyd & Frisell played the Ottawa Jazz Festival this past weekend, which is only a 4 hour car hike from here, and would have been a great weekend trip for the wife and I. Like the Toronto Maple Leafs - next time(sorry for the hockey talk Dennis). PS - I have some albums by the “other” Bill Evans, the sax player (he has played with Hornsby) - he is a decent player. Tell me your impressions of the Miles album when you can.

    Sixtus/Oro - I was thinking another way to approach this “Which Artists” to listen to for piano jazz, since the lists everyone provided were really great, but perhaps overwhelming, is to approach it more organically, ie - the kneebone is connected to the shinbone etc. Start with a jazz artist you perhaps know, and see what side players he or she plays with. Who contributes to their sound? Or labels. Blue Note, a great jazz label for generations is a great one to start with. A great many recordings in the 50s & 60s on that label were produced by Rudy Van Gelder. Like all Producers, he had “go to” musicians he would call into the studio to back an artist. Tony Williams, drummer, is making a solo album, Van Gelder may call on a young Herbie Hancock, or Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson etc. Next, Shorter is making an album, who backs him up? How about all the truly remarkable musicians Miles Davis worked with? Four of them became star keyboard players in their own right: Jarrett, Corea, Hancock, and Zawinul (who had a budding career with Cannonball Adderley).
    I always found in music in general, and jazz in particular, the kneebone is connected to the shinbone; you like “this”, you’ll definitely like “that”.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    1st show and jingles

    I have an LP of Winston cigarette ads that were played on the radio. My father got this from somewhere, I was maybe 16. Still have.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    piano players

    Don't forget Jeff Chimenti,,, who I think is better than Keith.

    Some mentioned Bill Evans piano player.

    I just got in my vinyl copy of Miles Davis Live - What it Is - Montreal 7/7/83. Reading the back cover and there is Bill Evans, only he's playing saxes and flutes. So I looked it up,,, it said this.....

    This double LP release features one of Miles Davis' final great bands: John Scofield on guitar, Bill “The Other Bill Evans” Evans on saxophones, flute and electric piano, Darryl Jones on bass, Al Foster on drums, and percussionist Mino Cinelu.

    So there are two Bills. I think one must have a goatee and be from the evil universe!

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Keith Godchaux

    Can't talk piano players without mentioning Keith Godchaux, at one time one of the greatest piano players 9n Earth.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Dennis

    We have the same blessing/curse of remembering esoteric things like jingles. Every cigarette, beer, cereal, appliance, and car ad had a jingle. Now they just steal a song we all liked and now can't stand as they've ruined it for us. Really, "Everybody Damp Rid"? Or "All Right Now" for a drug I don't need? One of the favorite games my wife and I play is to jam together songs and jingles that have nothing to do with each other. You start with Red Red Robin and end up at the Woody Woodpecker theme then Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend or the Dick Van Dyke show. Likely because we can't remember the whole thing anyway. I think the advertisers in the 60's had evil intentions for our little spongy brains. I'm the youngest of three and the back seat of the car was where I might subject my sisters to hours long renditions of This Old Man. "Mom, make him stop!" Unfortunately an earworm can really screw up my day even now. So the cure is to just have music on all the time. Music is the best.
    Cheers

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    WOW

    Only gone for 4 days I come back to 17 pages of "stuff"! (ok, once I stripped away hockey it was only a half page :-) )

    Too much to cover or comment on,,,,, but I try a little.

    That Mike - Chuck Lloyd, thanks for the heads up. Chuckie will be on back burner for now. 600 bucks for the 24 albums and a box set yet to come?!?! My wife's wallet does have limits!

    Springsteen,,,, ok I'm from Jersey, past that, Bruce appeared in my life at the right time I guess. His songs always speak to me of hope and the struggles of the working stiff.

    Disco - I was big on the disco ball. Back in the late seventies with Frankie Crocker on WBLS,,,, stereo in black. I believe you'd find a lot of recording technics came out of the that disco vein.

    Couple of unmentioned disco headphone songs,,,, Peter Brown - Do You Want to Get Funky with Me. CJ & Co - The Devil's Gun, or Santa Esmeralda - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood. GREAT, GREAT album of day and GREAT GREAT headphone album,,,, Dr Buzzard's Original Savannah Band!!!!

    Zappa,,, I keep buying his "stuff", I like a chunk, a chunk can be tedious. Sometimes GREAT ability does not translate to enjoyable. If you're a musician maybe you can be awed by technical, but if you're an idiot like me you can't tell he just played an augmented Major G in a diminished F. Also the twice I caught Frank he seemed to think he was doing you a favor by playing and you should be thankful he did!

    Jazz piano,,,, you read the list people posted and you like, oh yeah, him. I like when some said don't forget tatum and liberace. On the Oscar front, my buddy is a huge fan. Caught him whenever he played. He had an album called something like "for my friends". He had this one cut where he was playing song "a". Right hand carried the melody and left belting out rhythm. All of sudden left hand started playing a different song , "B". So now he's playing two songs at the same time. Notes from song "A" start walking down to the bass end, while song "B" starts walking to high end. The two hands cross each other while jamming out and poof, back to one song "A". I was wowed to say the least! :-)

    Charlie 3 - Ipanema (great tune). I used to go to this restaurant/coffee house/bar. They would have bands, small venue 20-30 people listening to this group. They started playing Ipanema and out of this crowd comes this woman steps up to the mike and starts sing the lyrics in Portuguese and she sounds exactly like the origial! Song ended and she went back and sat down. Blew the room away and I think the band!

    Mr Ones,,,, I pretty sure I have the motown hippo stuff

    Finally an incredible flash-back moment. Sorting thru the latest treasure trove of music I've recently received I stumbled across Miriam Makeba,,, name meant nothing to me. Wiki said she was the voice of Africa (or something like that). Sorted and filed all. I always listened to pieces of what I add to my collection so I have some idea of what's what. So it looked like a cut "pata pata" was her big hit. I put it on and my head exploded. I knew the song, but had not thought about it since it came out. I mean I had not THOUGHT at all about it, which is odd for me since I have almost every tune I know running thought my head at all time. Even the childhood ones I learned in 1st grade!! I don't think a month goes by when I don't find myself singing the Erie Canal! Trust me I've never navigated on it, but sing about once a month. :-) Commerical jingles always run though me,,,,, remember this one,,,, My beer is Reingold the dry beer, think of Reingold whenever you buy beer. It's refreshing, not sweet, it's the extra dry drink. Would try extra dry Reingold beer?

    Like Monk,,, it's a blessing,,,,,,,, and a curse! (mostly for the people that have to listen to me sing them :-) )

    Sorry for the ramble, but you did leave me 17 pages to comment on! (but no hockey comments thankfully)

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Piano

    Professor Longhair

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Mike Garson

    Amazing piano solo on David Bowie's "Alladdin Sane". Decades ago, a mate of mine wrote to Mike Garson, asking for a transcription of the solo. Incredibly he got a reply. Not a transcription, though. If I remember rightly, Garson said he couldn't transcribe it if he tried. Hats off to him for replying though.

    Practising 4 hours a day for 15 years on any instrument is cheating. As the man said, we could all be good if we did that.

  • larry26williams
    Joined:
    lol

    lol

  • Cousins Of The…
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    Piano?

    I'll go with the old school: Albert Ammons, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Willie "the Lion" Smith, Fats Waller.

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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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Is it my imagination or did I notice that the Avs had to many men on the ice BEFORE the freakishly odd goal?

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I was at one of the Ally Pally shows in September 1974. The hall was reasonably large and the full-blown Wall of Sound was used. The sound was really clear and the volume was "ideal". It certainly wasn't excessively loud - talking to your mates was possible without having to shout. Like home stereo systems, the better the quality of the system, the harder it is to judge exactly how loud it is. With the Wall of Sound definitely the emphasis was on clarity and quality rather than volume for the sake of it.

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(Hammer & chisel) C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O (chisel chisel tap tap) A-V-A (to be continued)…

GarciaLive Volume 18 - As others have noted, quite good. For those that loved this particular edition of Jerry’s constantly rotating personnel, seek out the 3 Disc Pure Jerry release - Keystone Berkeley September 1, 1974. Leaving aside the family politics, the Pure Jerry series was an excellent collection, and they always included a little bit of swag with each release; this one included a bar napkin “from the Keystone”, which I still have!

Now, back to work!
(Hammer! Chisel!) L-A-N-C-H-E (chisel chisel) 2-0-2-2-C-H-A-M-P-…

Yea. The Avs had too many men on the ice. But you know what, it did not impact the play, so I am O.K. with it. It's not like a few years ago when the refs were overturning critical plays for irrelevant infractions. Or when Marchand jumps off the ice with ten seconds left in the period, leaving his team shorthanded and allowing the Blues to score the Cup winning goal. Not a penalty, but you screwed your team.

Oro - congratulations. The Avs are not going to lose three straight. I hope they win it for you tomorrow night. Always nice to hoist the Cup on your home ice.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I just spent an hour watching Cup Check with Steve (from last night) and reading the comments.
If that’s an actual too many men penalty then half the goals in the NHL are bad goals!
Mac was no where near the play, and none of it affected the game, period!
The only reason the game wasn’t already over was the refs non calls against Tampa, luck and Vasilevskiy!
But if that’s not enough, the Bolts had 7 men on the ice, and Kadri was still able to burn 2 defenders and Vasy!
And if folks really want to get real, the refs stopped calling A LOT and more so as the game progressed.
If people are going to nit pick then go back and look at X number of actual penalties in OT and the 3rd with some involving hits that could of led to potential injuries. If the refs would of called even a few of those Tampa infractions, the game never would have gone to OT as the AVs PP would of scored for sure. The Bolts were gassed and on life support playing 5 Defensemen ffs!
I know, a lot of coulda, woulda, shoulda, but come on, anyone who actually KNOWS hockey they NEVER call Too many men in such situations AND, understands that in the playoffs, especially close final games etc, the refs generally let them get it on unless it’s just blatant and/or the refs need to calm down the aggression a little to keep things from getting outta hand. Ya know, tamp down the violence for national tv etc. lol.
So it was appropriate to not call a penalty on such BS. It was consistent with how they were (and often do) call these games.
And Cooper, who I think is an awesome coach: he’s just trying to change the focus and perhaps motivate his team. It’s truly bizarre how he, Kadri, and one of the linesmen were all involved in an even worse call that did affect the outcome of an AHL series.
Bottom line, it wasn’t a penalty and didn’t affect the play in progress. Certainly not the way that BS off sides during the Blues series in 2019? I think it was.
It sucks that things happen in big games like this, but unfortunately they do. Sure it would be great if it was all squeaky clean, but life ain’t like that. So it sucks that the Bolts are in the unenviable position there, but one could argue if they hadn’t have cheated the cap they wouldn’t have made this far anyway, and in the long run, the AVs probably would win anyways due to youth, healthiness if players, and talent, it just sucks that now there’ll always be that dark cloud.
But hey, you’ll get over it just like Sabres fans have had to get over NO GOAL! It sucks but Ce la vie!

And MIKE: to quote the Wolf from Pulp Fiction “let’s not go %#erking each other off just yet”
If the Bolts can get enough healthy players, I don’t think thier gonna go quietly into that good night!
Or maybe being a long time Buffalo Losers fan (you pick the sport) I’m so paranoid and psychologically stressed out that I won’t be able to relax and believe it until I see em with the cup in the victory parade! ; )

Sorry folks, the madness will be over soon, one way or another (see how I snuck some Dead in there ; )
Now back to yer Take A Step Back dance!

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(Whistling what appears to be “Ripple” while chiselling Colorado Av names on Cup):
M-A-C-K-I-N-N-O-N (tap tap tap) M-A-K-A-R (continues whistling)….

Oro - Tampa is an excellent team, and if they ripped the lighting bolts off the jerseys, sewed on Maple Leafs, and called Toronto home I’d be over the moon, but this AVs team has got the winner’s swagger. They are just built to win this thing. I know some terrible things happened in Buffalo sports (damn you, Brett Hull!), but this ain’t your Dad’s Buffalo Sabres (or Bills). These guys are the real deal, and I’d stock up on “party favours” if I were you, because the whole state is going to go wild!!! The last winner we had here was the Craptors a few years ago, and those celebrations are incredible (see Golden State recently).

Back to work! (Resumes whistling “Ripple”) K-A-D-R-I (tap tap tap)…

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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That video with Trey and the little girl.

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

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

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

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

Last five:

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

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In reply to by Crow Told Me

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

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In reply to by Crow Told Me

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Zappa?

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

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

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In reply to by proudfoot

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

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In reply to by Vguy72

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Hampton Comes Alive's
Weekapaug Groove

High energy, bitches

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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1stshow - yes, it's not often mentioned that Jerry must have listened to, and been influenced by Motown-and Southern Soul - (Pigpen too-big time). Listening to theses singles collections it also becomes evident what a huge influence these records were on The Beatles, The Who and The Stones-all of whom covered Motown songs. The Stones carried on doing this into the 70's and 80's, with "Aint Too Proud To Beg", "Just My Imagination" and "Going To Go Go"-maybe more, too.
If you haven't got any of these Complete Motown Singles boxes from individual years-on the Hip-O-Select label - I highly recommend them. Great sound and informative essays. Only trouble is-you get one-you want another. And so it goes on.
Seems odd that it took me so long to get into all this. When I look back, 95% of the bands I listened to in my teens to early 20's were white, male, guitar based. When I did branch out into the blues, that tended to be "lead" guitar based too-the 3 Kings, Buddy Guy etc.
Oro - interesting what you say about the quality of sound. Bands seemed much more deafening in the 70s than they did afterwards. Either that, or I was 3/4ths deaf by about 1981! But the other thing about 1974, which was different, was that it was a very uncluttered sound. Quite sparse, with much separation between the individual instruments. They were much more jazz like than the bands I used to go and see in the early 70's, I suppose. Although The Mahavishnu Orchestra from that time were so loud it could make you feel sick.

It's nothing to do with me, but I'm not too crazy on kids singing. It was another craze in the 70's-Little Jimmy Osmond, Lena Zavaroni - and arguably the worst band of all time "Our Kid", a sort Liverpudlian version of The Osmonds. The only record I can think of that I like with kids on is "People Ain't No Good" by The Cramps.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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....actually PF, I'm partial to the one from Vegas '96. I was there and can confirm it was a rager.

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In reply to by Vguy72

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I have only two Phish releases

Hampton Comes Alive
A Live One

Every time captcha commands me to identify traffic lights, you know what song goes through my mind

Gotta get a live one into the (very long) cue

I do consider myself lucky to have been to a Phish show in 1991 in a little place in Seattle

31 years ago...wooooow

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I tried to get into these guys, bought their cd's and downloaded their shows. Back in 1999 we even went to the big end of the century show down in the everglades. Three or 4 days of fish. There were a couple of tunes that i could get into, split open and melt, run like an antelope, a few others but I just can't get there with their music. I was a dig vocal opponent to Trey being the guitarist with fare the well but Bobby said that maybe for the 75th, we can use your guy. (I didn't really have a guy, just thought trey was the wrong choice.) So when the 75th rolls around, I will be there, unfortunately, none of the band will be.
By the way, did anyone see the pics of Billy the drummer? heard he pulled a muscle and couldn't play the entire next show. Not a good sign.

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Got laid off today. After 10 years with this company I was replaced. So now I have this huge hospital bill and no job and on the same day SCOTUS kills Roe. A dark day for all of us but especially women.

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I can’t say anymore I’m just horrified

I am sorry about getting laid off. That sucks donkeys. And with medical bills.

The Exploited have a happy tune called "Fuck the USA"...it comments on "you go to hospital you gotta pay"

They also have a singalong track called "Fuck the System"

I always appreciated their subtlety

SCROTUS

I have very mixed feelings about...you know...but I don't see today as an overall long run victory

Companies that specialize in prevention should seize the opportunity

Well...

10 20 74 is a good listen. Be warned, though...some of the vocals are kinda sour on Good Lovin'

Good health to Kreutzmann and PT and everyone

Make some art today, my fellow Deadheads

Captcha wanted...TRAFFIC LIGHTS!!!

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In reply to by nitecat

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Our ole buddy DMCVT has been completely “captured” and has not been able to post etc for some time.
He reached out to me via email asking about a mail address or someway to contact Marye.
I don’t have any of those addresses, but I think some of you good folks might.
I’ve just PM her, but thought if someone can help him get her directly he’d really appreciate it!
Thanks

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Not bummer day.
Sounds like PT got the shaft, “thanks for your loyalty, here’s a pink slip”, DMCVT has been fully captured, over half the population of our country have lost the right over their own bodies, my other half’s car stopped running on the interstate Wednesday, folks having family members pass on or damn near, Covid numbers here are through the ruff just as the part timer and tourons are rolling in, next someone will tell me their daughters knocked up, moneys missing from your dresser, and your GD HD isn’t working!
“Oh the times they are a changing”

Phish: I think their great musicians and I have A Live One and got schooled a little by some college guys I was in a band with back in the late 90s, but it’s just not clicked for me. I think it’s the lyrics? No offense, but they don’t have Hunter sending them timeless snap shots of Americana etc. again, no offense, I don’t dislike them and their great players etc.
I think it’s the goofy stuff I can’t get past. Maybe it’s a generational thing?
Somewhat same with Zappa. Great musician, composer, perhaps genius, but some stuff is just too goofy for me, and not always very melodic, but hey that’s just me. And the problem probably is just me. I’m sure in both cases if I really dug deep and spent a bunch of time I’d find things I do really like. I usually can find something cool about most music. Like I have Zappa Apostrophe and Overnight Sensation, and I love them both, but it’s not prime time for me.
The only music I normally just can’t handle is Opera, choral stuff, Rap etc, and angry negative or hateful metal etc.
definitely nothing that promotes hate, violence or other negativity.
If I want heavy metal, I’ll take some scorching 80s Jerry! ; )

Sorry to read about you getting laid off. I hope something turns up soon.

Watching the news on television these days is like watching an international horror show. I used to read about dystopian worlds - now I feel as though I'm living in one,

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Sorry you got laid off, hopefully you will be rehired soon some where else. There are lots of people hiring at this time, so hopefully you won't be out of work long.

I might very well be wrong, but I get the impression that they mainly appeal to Americans who followed The Dead around in the 1990's. And who went on to see Phish live during the mid 90's and onwards. If you are not one of that happy breed, their appeal might be a bit puzzling.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by daverock

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Agree on the spaciousness etc. Probably due to the fine recordings but also the fact that’s with the wall only one source ever came out of any particular channel/speaker column etc. Except for maybe the vocals? Not positive if they mixed different mics into the vocal cluster as a whole, or if, like the instruments, they were segregated? i.e., only Bobs vocals would pass through dedicated speakers instead of all vocals through all of the vocal cluster (that giant convex center section above Billy)? The instruments were most definitely through exclusive dedicated amps and speakers for only one particular instrument. Phil had dedicated channels for each of his four bass strings! So notes from different strings were sent to a whole stack of amps and speakers dedicated to only that string!
Doing this reduces distortion while increasing efficiency and clarity significantly.
Amazing stuff! A true fest for the likes of us geeks!
And of course the proof is in the pudding!

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10 years
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PT - Sorry to hear you were laid off by your employer after ten years. Lousy. I have been there, too, and it sucketh, but I hope you are back on your feet soon. A pox on your old employer.

Phish phans - Some nice recommends, but anything I’ve tried before didn’t stick. Not sure why but some acts just don’t click with me. I have done a deep dive on the music of both Ornette Coleman and Eric Dolphy, two of the most “out there” jazz acts next to Sun Ra, and I found them easier to get into than Phish, and especially Zappa. However, I’ll keep an open mind.

Oro/AJS - This is it gents - tonight is the night. The only direction a coach can give his guys before the game is likely “Enjoy. It doesn’t get any better than this.”

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Bongo Fury and Live at the Fillmore 1971 are very worthwhile. I saw him a few times in the mid to late 70s and was bored stiff but the two concerts above must have been great fun.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Nick1234

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....when you have 6-3 conservative majority in the SCOTUS.
The new hires are on record saying they wouldn't touch R v W during their hiring interviews.
Now excuse me. I'm going to go yell at the clouds for bit.
My political rant for the month.
Google what laws Missouri is already drawing up regarding making it a crime to leave the state to another for an abortion. Wow. Just.....wow.

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I hope its from 1969/1970, with an acoustic set for the 1970 stuff. What else, Frost. 1982/ 1985 would be nice. Ventura. 82/83/84/85. would be great. Complete Winterland Oct 1974 audio & video would be cool. Maybe, they will come out and say they have the tapes for the entire Fillmore East September 1970 run and they are going to release them all, that would be sonething. Time to order a case of beer from the Russian River Brewing Company ( Pliny the Elder), for a big 4th of July bbq. Let the Good times roll.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by That Mike

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MIKE: I try not to be too superstitious, but the way todays been going, I’m getting the fear! Lol
Being the WE, at least I can drink my way through tonight’s stress fest ; )

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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6 13 80
Yeees

And BTK calls for the box announcement

What
Will
It
Be
??????

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7 years 3 months
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I agree with those who’ve stated that it’s just SO difficult to start listening to an artist that has a 20 or more long discography. How WOULD one know where to start??
Re: Phish & Zappa??
I believe Phish is best enjoyed live. Very few studio albums are top notch. There actually might not be a best place to start.
The same with Frank Zappa. A ton of his best(imso) stuff is live. I actually think the new Zappa Erie set would truly be enjoyed by the bunch of coconuts on this site. I’m not suggesting you spend over $100, just try streaming the set 2 discs at a time. There is basically one concert on each 2 discs of the set.
I saw the Zappa Band on Tuesday, and was blown away by the level of musicianship. Not as fun as a REAL Zappa show, but I still gave it a 10!!

DAVEROCK-> Where are you GETTING these Motown singles boxes?? I only see a random one off available on this side of the pond, and it seems $125-$150 is the going rate.
I would LOVE to have any of the 67-71 boxes, but I cannot find or afford them.

Music is the Best!!

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15 years 9 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

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I highly recommend Zappa's 1974 Helsinki show (You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 2). I am particularly enamored by Ruth Underwood's vibe!

Shows from Roxy 1973 and Palladium 1977 are really good shows too.

When we had him at Umass Amherst in 1984, one of our music professors, Archie Shepp, joined him on stage for the 2nd show (Let's Move To Cleveland). It wound up on YCDTOSA v4.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

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Phish...A Live One or Hampton Comes Alive

Phish does need to be live

Zappa....I tell you, We're Only in it for the Money is the place to start. On headphones is best. Vvvveeeeerrrrryyyy psychedelic

And listen to Boblopes...YCDTOA vol 2 disc 1 is some the best non-GD music I've ever heard

Flash thought
"You can't do that ondemand anymore"

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9 years 1 month
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...It ain’t just Motown. I can’t get enough Motown, that is true, but it’s just a slice of the Soul that’s out there, so be careful, you start with a little Motown and next thing you’re mainlining Stax with a Funkadelic chaser.

I don’t have the individual singles collections, yet, but the Hitsville USA collection from Motown covers 1959-1971 or so in 4 discs for a good overview of the Motown sound, and a number of Definitive Collections of several Motown artists are an easy way to expand a collection. The Definitive Collections have pretty good sound and give a pretty decent collection of stuff for each artist, I’ve picked up the Mary Wells, Martha Reeves & the Vandellas, Smokey Robinson, and a couple others.

Stax was a southern soul powerhouse, as one might imagine when the house band is Booker T. & the MG’s, and there was a lot of great soul released on Atlantic as well as various smaller labels of the day. Stax has a number of complete singles box sets from Stax, Volt and related labels stretching from about 1959 up through the 1970's, some cool obscure stuff amongst the more recognizable tracks, and Atlantic has a number of different collections of various artists with some really smoking stuff. Stax also has some collections of stuff from individual Stax artists, they call them Stax Profiles, and remasters of some of the more successful original albums, the Dramatics Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get for example . I found that once I started with the singles, and collections, I was soon tracking down a bunch of original albums from individual artists, and there appears to be no end in sight.

Lots of flavors of soul, bleeding into funk if you go down certain pathways, crossing over into the blues in other directions. Big, juicy, orchestral, pyschedelicized soul from Isaac Hayes, funky, raw, goodness from James Brown, even rawer sounds of Ike and Tina back in the early days, the smooth sounds of Smoky Robinson and the raw, electrifying sounds of Sugar Pie DeSanto (Etta James’ cousin, Etta’s got nothing on Sugar Pie in my book). Aretha Franklin just burning it up on Chain of Fools and Respect from her fantastic run of albums on Atlantic, it really doesn't get much better than Lady Soul or Aretha Now. From Booker T. & the MG’s to the seductive sounds of Sylvia Robinson or Sade, Jean E. Knight rocking Mr. Big Stuff, with that great funky groove, the smooth sounds of Marvin Gaye, the earnest, aspirational, social messages from Curtis Mayfield in that distinctive falsetto, and too many more to list, I can’t get enough soul of all flavors.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Sixtus_

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If I was a women in this country, I’d make 1/6 look like a picnic. Now I don’t condone violence etc, but no one seemed to actually do anything about that, so I guess that’s stays quo now?
To me this is about man’s ignorant arrogance to think he has the right to tell a woman, or anyone, what they can and can’t do with their body, period! Folks can argue all the rest till the cows come home, but the above should not even be up for discussion!

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9 years

In reply to by Oroborous

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Hoping to see the Cup tonight, but not because I like the Avs.
As a Red Wings fan I still hate the Avs from the 90’s.
For those who don’t know why, ESPN is premiering this Sunday “Unrivaled: Red Wings v Avalanche”. If you watch that you will know why I still hate the Avs.

But now the Wings are in the East and consistently lose to the Lightning, so I don’t want them to win.

So, rooting for Oro.

But as I was typing this the Bolts scored…

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If you were a woman you would make 1/6 look like a picnic but since you are not a woman you will yell from your armchair and get drunk. I am sure they are happy you are out there getting loaded for their rights. Thank you for the laugh.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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4 25 77 is in Passaic NJ
As on 6 19 76
There is the dude going "yayayayayaya!!!"

Something only a Deadhead would notice

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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....Louisiana and Alabama joined Missouri by passing trigger abortion laws the SAME DAY AS THE RULING!
Waste not, what not. Too bad they don't act so fast on other issues like Healthcare, welfare and mental health. The poor states are about to get a lot poorer. Seems like guns have more rights than women's rights regarding their bodies.
I'm sorry dead.net fam, but I am showing my pissed the fuck off side.
Sigh....I'm not a fan of this side of me, but if I get pushed....
Great hockey game though. Go Avs!
Edit. Good so see Charlie3 chiming in. Hello old friend.

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12 years 1 month

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I still think the Cup is yours, but I am a lot more uncertain than I was three hours ago. What a great game. We were watching with a buddy who is not really into hockey and even he conceded that it was tremendous excitement.

Good luck in game 6.

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