• 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
  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Phish

    Hampton Comes Alive's
    Weekapaug Groove

    High energy, bitches

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Phish Lore....

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

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Crow told me

    Zappa?

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

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

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Crow

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

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Bug!

    That video with Trey and the little girl.

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

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

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

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

    Last five:

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

  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    Robert Hunter

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

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Re: misc

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

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

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

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

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Motown

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

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Wall of Sound - Simonrob. Motown

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

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

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    48 Years Ago Today

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

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 5 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

4 years 1 month

In reply to by Vguy72

Permalink

Once in a while a person's gotta vent

Stay alert, y'all. Stay alert.

And...you know... ;)))

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by Pancho Pantera

Permalink

....I'm breaking out some Good Ole Grateful Dead. Dave's 34. Jai-Alai Fronton. Feeling better. Yesterday was it's anniversary.

user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

I browse through from time to time, and when I saw the Motown posts I couldn't resist taking a minute to encourage the acquisition and consumption of soul music in mass quantities. Here's a couple more - check out Gloria Jones' Tainted Love. Long before Soft Cell blew it up in with their cover of the tune with that total '80's sound, Gloria was throwing it down and spitting that song out with heat. Before there was a Yeezus, there was Isaac Hayes fantastic album Black Moses with the big, lush, sounds of his cover of Burt Bacharach's Close to You, sounds that envelope you like a warm pool of water. And then down the road, the Geto Boys sampled Isaac Hayes' Hung Up On My Baby for their track My Mind Is Playing Tricks On Me, and nothing against the Geto Boys, but the riff from Hung Up On My Baby makes that tune. Before NWA was telling people to Express Yourself, Charles Wright was saying it the first time, along with playing that funky groove that really makes both songs pop. There is always a risk you will find yourself drifting off into disco territory, but if hearing Donna Summer moan Love to Love You Baby for 17 minutes doesn't do something for you, I'm sorry, 'cause you're missing out. Mmm... soul, good for what ails you, just as potent a mood lifter as the Grateful Dead.

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by Charlie3

Permalink

....I recognize that name! Good stuff.
Music heals wounds. Auditory bliss.
My dogs sense my apprehension.

user picture

Member for

9 years 11 months
Permalink

(Applying white-out to lettering previously chiselled on Cup) C - O - L - O - R - A - D - O (dab dab dab) A -V - A - L (continues to cover letters)

Oro - H-e-double hockey sticks of a game! I still say your guys have this. The energy level was incredible. Kadri, though, is a loose cannon, and I keep thinking he is going to go Tuco at the wrong time, and cost the Avs big.

Trivia - Gloria Jones - American soul singer - of Tainted Love fame was mentioned earlier in the Motown discussion. She was an “unofficial” member of Brit glam band T-Rex at their height of fame, and was a committed partner to the late Marc Bolan (they had a son together), and Ms Jones was driving the night of Bolan’s fatal car accident.

Another guy, along with Zappa, who I never “got”, was Springsteen. The high school friend that turned me on to the Dead way back early 70s went and saw Springsteen at a local college field house roughly 1975, before all the fame, and Creem and Rolling Stone were starting to notice this guy, and he said “Watch out - this guy is really something.” I never saw it myself.

user picture

Member for

10 years 1 month

In reply to by Charlie3

Permalink

Charlie3 - great posts, cheers! I came across Southern Soul before Motown, as it goes. The first time was through buying an L.P. of Jimi Hendrix Live at Monterey. Only one side was Hendrix, and the other was Otis Redding at the same festival. I much, much preferred this to the Motown that was appearing in the charts at the time-about 1975, I think. It seemed almost rock n' roll to me at the time, and the two slow songs stopped me in my tracks.

But I didn't follow up the interest until about 7 years ago. I like blues and rock n'roll from Memphis, and reading books about them tipped me into the next chapters, which were focussed on Stax. A few years ago I saw, on separate occasions, Booker T. Jones and Steve Cropper in London and I got those three box set cd compilations of Stax/Volt singles around that time. Another great compilation is a 3 cd set called "Take Me To The River." The names you mention - Curtis Mayfield, Isaac Hayes...I am just getting into them really. But I seem to like the 60's music more than the 70's. "I Feel Love", by Donna Summer is a great record. God knows why I liked punk more than this at the time.
I know nothing whatsoever about Sugar Pie DeSanto...but there is a great track by her on a compilation I have called " Chess Soul - A Decade of Chicago's Finest" called "Soulful Dress".

Mr Ones - I have mostly been buying these Complete Motown Singles boxes from Discogs UK, second hand. The prices vary greatly - the 1966 one was the most expensive - about £90.00. The 1963 one was only £30.00, though-and I got that one new from Amazon UK. Usually they are about £50.00.

The only Zappa I really like is "We're Only In It For The Money". Then "Freak Out" a long way behind that one.

user picture

Member for

14 years 9 months
Permalink

a great Zappa collection and without the funky lyrics, he was truly a great guitar player. Thanks everyone for the well wishes, cost wasn't anything but a knife in the back....and more of the same. The ass hole who laid me off didn't even have the balls to tell me why he was replacing me, with two people who have no experience, for the same money. That's ok, the final insult was when he said he "might" call me back if things don't work out with the new hires or if one of them goes on vacation or if ..... Monkeys fly out my butt. That was the final straw, I told him that I ain't no flunky for his suckass friends and hung up on him. I'm 68 soon to be 69, Fuck work. I think I'll try welfare for a while, hell, why not, the country is going to hell and if the ones who did this yesterday have their way, we will all be slaves, made to breed, for their slave farms. They need the poor to do their dirty work, so, more poor ignorant folks, the better for them, so keep them barefoot and pregnant and stupid, the rights way of thinking will sink us all.

"Age-ism"

It's a real thing

Fuck the schmuck, PT.

Send him/her on a permanent trip to Phukem on the island of Phuket in Thailand.

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

....going to see Primus tonight. Rescheduled from 2020 due to covid. I've never seen them and my expectations are high.

user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

Favorite posters outside the supreme court yesterday.
Not that I would support such violins on television (Miss Emily Latella, aka Gilda Radner)
"Off With Their Dicks" and
"Dismember The Court"
Ouch!
And back to regular scheduling: Do we usually get an announcement of some kind before DaP43? I'm jonesin'.

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month

In reply to by 1stshow70878

Permalink

Lets hear about it, Dave!!!

Oops...

"No interstate delivery of recorded music"
"No travelling to California to talk with Dave (wait...he's in BC, methinks). NO TRAVELLING TO BC!"

user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

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

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Hahaha. See what I did there. 🤭

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by Charlie3

Permalink

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.

user picture

Member for

2 years 10 months
Permalink

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.

user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

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.)

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!

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

Still going with Boston Garden '91.

user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

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.

Brother!
Those were heady times to be sure. The golden age.
How fortunate we are to have so much great music to enjoy all these years later!

user picture

Member for

9 years
Permalink

...and now I'll soon have Mister Magic, Black Byrd, a Roy Ayers greatest hits, and Gil Scott Heron's Pieces of a Man, which came up as soul jazz, and which I have thought of grabbing a few times before. Oh, yeah, and Bill Wither's album Still Bill, 'cause I have wanted to pick up the song Use Me for a while, and at $4.99 I couldn't pass it up this time. Checked out the Donald Byrd tune Black Byrd online and liked it enough to take a chance on the rest of the album. I had looked at the other albums before, but just needed a catalyst to get me to follow through and pick them up, you were it Oro.

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

"Why Johnny Can't Post"

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

I thiiiink someone put something in the frosting...

user picture

Member for

9 years 11 months
Permalink

For jazz fans looking for something new to check out (Hello, Dennis), Blue Note Records is releasing a new Charles Lloyd box set, called “Trio of Trios”, which features Lloyd in 3 separate trio configurations, including players like the great Bill Frisell and Mickey Hart’s good friend Zakir Hussein. There is a short video with company prez and musical mind Don Was talking up the release with Lloyd, who has an impressive body of work.

Oro- I have really been digging the Dr. Lonnie Smith albums recently. I recently found his albums Boogaloo to Beck and Boogaloo to Beastie Boys, so cool to hear him do sets of covers of these artists. Just that opening track of Beck’s Paper Tiger is worth the price of admission.

I have just noticed that he is performing at Glastonbury Festival later today. He us sharing an hours coverage on the telly with Kacey Musgraves.

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

GarciaLive 18
Peter Rowan - Calling you from my mountain
Run C&W - Row vs Wade
Hacienda Brothers - Western soul
Doug Sahm - The return of Wayne Douglas

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Welcome back! Glad that got sorted.

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month

In reply to by simonrob

Permalink

I always hear Bowie

"On my TVC15
oh
TVC15"

Wilkommen
Bien venue
Welcome

user picture

Member for

11 years 5 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

tried posting something new a few ago, nada, captcha wasn't showing any pictures to ID, apparently a problem there, here goes again, testing

user picture

Member for

8 years 11 months

In reply to by dmcvt

Permalink

Led Zeppelin
How The West Was Won 3CD

The songs on the CD release were taken from 6-25-72 LA Forum and 6-27-72 Long Beach.

Anyone there? Nappy?

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

....so are Rush fans. Les called out the Rush peeps and told them that they would do their best to honor it. Apparently it was the final Primus show to feature it. Too bad Primus sucks.
They did a Master Of Puppets thing in the Tommy The Cat thing.
Apologies. Still riding the high.
Crowd was a pretty even mix of older and younger. Male/Female was pretty much 50/50. People grooving. Very nice.
I love concerts. I wore my "Make America Grateful Again" tee. Oh, the looks I get. 😍
Just fired up D'Yer Mak'er in honor of a Zepp reminder.
Rock on.

user picture

Member for

11 years 8 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

I went to the Long Beach Arena show...I was home because I had broken my arm working for the Cal Forestry...what a great break (pun intended) for me...a couple of weeks before the Zep show I saw the Stones at the same arena...I enjoyed the Zep show...the following year for the '73 tour they had worsened considerably with Page's boring bow solos and Bonham's drunken plodding playing...I've never understood the adoration for Bonham's playing...

user picture

Member for

11 years 8 months

In reply to by nappyrags

Permalink

Merry-Go Merry-Go Merry-Go Round!!!

Mom....Larry's singing in the shower again!!!

user picture

Member for

8 years 11 months

In reply to by nappyrags

Permalink

I thought I remembered that you had gone.
But missed Bowie 72 Santa Monica?

I stopped Led Zep and will finish tomorrow. Hockey on now, uh oh Oro…..

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

....I can't believe he's that old. Seems like a spring chicken! Good on you friend.

user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months

In reply to by Vguy72

Permalink

....watching the nhl finals muted. Sandanista in the forefront. Then a little TSOL.
Pairs up well.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

The Avs WIN the Stanley Cup!!!!

user picture

Member for

10 years

In reply to by nappyrags

Permalink

I liked about 30% of what Led Zep did. The short sharp rockers, like "Communication Breakdown", " Whole Lotta Love" "Heartbreaker" "Immigrant Song" etc. Where they fell down for me was in the extended soloing, the prog rock leanings, the lumpen drum sound, the baby baby baby vocals....But when they cut it short they were great. Of the longer tracks "When The Levee Breaks" is my favourite.

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