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  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Earliest memories of music...

    My folks had a vintage turntable and a large speaker encased in a piece of furniture my dad nicknamed "Lenin's Tomb." Shoebox shape, they had lamps on it. This is circa 1962. They had some classical albums, but it was the soundtracks to Broadway shows that I liked most, due to the catchy melodies. I remember Camelot among them. Also Herb Alpert. When the Beatles hit around 1964, I was six going on seven and the grocery store had bins at checkout with the first Beatles album. I begged my mom to buy it for me (even though we were taught to not want things - parents grew up in the Depression), $1.98 I seem to recall. At home, I put the sacred record on the turntable and put the volume low (a) to not bother anyone, but (b) also because this was powerful, radical stuff and I felt conspicuous for getting excited over it. Then I'd sit by Lenin's Tomb and quietly rock out.

    A year or so later, they started coming out with handheld transistor radios and a Washington's Birthday sale had 'em for like $10. Again, I begged! I would hide it under my pillow when it was bedtime and sit up listening to AM radio stations out of NYC, dominated by Beatles and Stones but also Ray Charles, Temptations, Motown, Aretha -- the works.

    By around '71 (now age 13) the Chambers Brothers were playing nearby and I got my mom to drive me to the show with two friends and pick us up afterwards. The Brothers played "Time" and other hits and I was hooked on live music. I later found out that Duane and the ABB had played there around the same time, but they were not on AM radio and I had yet to delve seriously. (Opportunity lost, like missing 6-10-73!)

    Although, my entree to the blues (my real home) was looking at the credits on Beatles and Rolling Stones albums. I could understand credits like Jagger-Richards or Lennon-McCartney, but "McKinley Morganfield"? "Chester Burnett"?? Well, I figured it out and by age 14 was mixing my purchases between transient pop of the day with Chess records.

    The following year, one month after turning 15, I went to my first GD show and, man, it was like some kinda crazy carnival that I marveled at but didn't quite get. Everyone seemed to be in such a strange mood... I knew drugs were involved (older brother) but was yet to be "experienced." (I think spring '73 began my "experienced" years -- hey, that's 50 years ago coming up!) As I've said before, after a couple hours of loud rock 'n roll by the Dead, I was good to go home, but the band kept playing and playing!! Good early training. Eventually, I caught on.

    Like most of my posts, perhaps TMI. But it's Sunday morning and the coffee (w/Jameson) is good. Cheers!

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Dylan on The Dead

    Excellent article on The Dead in Bob Dylan's recent book "The Philosophy of Modern Song". It's nominally about "Truckin'" but it also touches on why the Dead were a dance band rather than a rock band, and touches on the players various styles. If you want to know how different women looked from the stage when playing with The Stones and The Dead, he tells you that, too. He may not tell you anything you don't already know, but I have rarely seen it put so well.

    Regarding the actual song, "The guy singing the song acts and talks like who he is, and not the way others would want him to talk and act." Way to go.

    MR ONES - yes, both Live+ and Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop are top drawer. I think it was the way he played that was so magical, irrespective of the song or musical form he chose to unleash it in.

    Deadfeati - that is quite something, seeing Gene Krupa live. I wouldn't think there are many around now who could lay claim to that.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    I enjoy and appreciate a few things in life....

    ....but music is tops.
    Chicken noodle soup is currently second because I'm eating some.
    My Charger friends are awfully silent. Except one, who is asking for the coaches head on a stake.
    There's always one.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Recommended cinema

    The Banshees of Inishiren

    Heavy flick

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Sportskickindanads

    Seahawks lose (no shock)

    Chargers blow 27 point lead

    Rrrrrright in the tenders

    Thats a looong flight home

  • Mr. Ones
    Joined:
    Jeff Beck/Music is Life

    Fantastic comments from everyone on here. Regarding Jef Beck, I always favored the trio of albums beginning with Blow By Blow thru Live with Jan Hammer Group. Of course, there are many, many more excellent releases, Who Else, mentioned by DAVEROCK, Live +, and Jeff Beck’s Guitar Shop to name just 3. As far as songs, I HAVE to put in a good word for ‘Cause We’ve Ended As Lovers, a killer cover of a great Stevie Wonder song, Led Boots, Diamond Dust and Big Block. Too many really, to choose just a handful.
    This will probably come as no surprise to anyone when I talk about how much I love music and what it means to me. I guess the shortest way to put it, is that life before the Beatles was black & white. After the Beatles, my life went full technicolor, without doubt.
    I can get goose bumps just from a well placed chord, a vocal harmony, or a well written lyric.
    I don’t believe life for me, would be worth living without music. I feel blessed.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Better late....

    ....than never deadfeat.

  • deadfeat1
    Joined:
    Gene Krupa and 1/5/79

    I'm always a little late here, but here goes...

    I saw Gene Krupa when I was about eleven years old. Was with my family on one of our trips to the New York's World Fair. We were walking around at night and stumbled upon Krupa playing at the Metropole Cafe. Stood in the doorway and watched him pound it out. All I can say is wow - one of my all time favorite musical memories...

    1/5/79 - The Spectrum - I remember that a good time was had by all and it snowed - only audience tapes of the show as far as I know

    Last five-ish - The Dead - Closing of Winterland - What a fine performance and excellent recording!
    Still listening to Dave's 43 and 44
    Working my way thru In and Out of the Garden -
    Non Dead - The Kinks - On the Road
    Hendrix - Groovy Children
    Africa 2 - A compilation that came highly recommended, but was somewhat redundant for my tastes -
    good dance grooves though
    Melissa Aldana - 12 Stars
    Tom Petty - Live at the Fillmore

    Still in a sipping, not chugging listening style...

    Be well and enjoy the music!

    And of course playing homage to Jeff Beck listening to a variety of his recordings - Always liked Beck-Ola

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks....

    .... are going to perform the national anthem at tonight's Jags/Chargers game. Pretty cool.
    Shakedown Street going into commercial during the Seahawks/Niners game!
    I bet Fox plays some Phish too.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    HF - Life without Music

    Harry Chapin sums it up best

    Old friends, they mean much more to me than the new friends,
    Cause they can see where you are,
    And they know where you've been.
    Music, has been my oldest friend, my fiercest foe,
    Cause it can take me so high,
    (High...) Yes it can make me so low.

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3 years 7 months
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One of the best first sets I've seen! Billy will confirm.
12/28/76: the great Freddie King departs

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43 years ago today, I was at the Oakland Auditorium for a knockout night with the Good Old Grateful Dead. This show was released as Road Trips #3 vol 1. Big Fun! Garcia said that Freddie King was big influence on his early guitar playing.

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8 years 1 month

In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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Nice first show Mary. I am sure that was a blast. I always thought these last five shows of the year would make a great box with the three set 12/31/80 gem,
to close out a great year.

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Wish I could write this well! She wrote: "My first show, and look what happened..."

That captures the contagious maelstrom that is frequently one's first GD show. At my first show, being real young, I had no idea what was going on, but I thought it bore further exploration -- i.e., more shows! Another show -- my second show -- and the hook was set. Maybe we need to review a round of our "second shows"?

BTW, in my spare time in my basement (mixing up the medicine) I've been concocting scenarios for a '68 release. That the setlist will be repetitive will be its strength. Put three shows on a Dave's Pick, all featuring Dark Star > St. Stephen > The Eleven > Lovelight >Death Don't > New Potato Caboose > The Other One > Feedback. Now "they" (whoever the hell "they" are) have a recently unearthed June '68 show, thanks to Bear's banana boxes. Dave released 20 Oct 68(?) with that goofy cartoon book (but no CD available) and I have in my hands a booot with a clean 12 October 68. That might even be enough for a Pick with bonus tracks of 68 fragments. (Even if they have to re-release a couple fragments to make it work.

I doubt there'd be much squawking!

Okay, just tidying up the medicine vat... I'll reemerge in the New Year when it's safe to venture forth.

P.S. Vguy: how do you do it?? You have a handy bookshelf, access to that "internet" or a superb memory. Inquiring minds want to know. (And you'd be wise not to say, it might diminish your powers...)

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42 years ago today, Cousins and I were rocking out to the Good old Grateful Dead at the Oakland Auditorum. Cousins I agree, it was a great show , with a Casey Jones encore! Fun times for sure!

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by hendrixfreak

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Buffalo keeps appearing on the news here, covered in snow with freezing conditions. It's a place I would never have heard of if The Dead hadn't played there. Never let it be said that listening to them isn't educational. I hope everyone is keeping safe who lives there, too.

Freddie King ! A nice run through Hideaway by The Dead at the 11/7/71 show. They don't make a meal of it, just a bright and breezy nod to a great guitarist.

Truckin' up to Buffalo
Buffalo gals won't you come out tonight
Shuffle off to Buffalo
Flint, Ford auto, Mobile Alabama, windshield wiper, Buffalo NY
We always hang in a buffalo stance (ok, that one doesnt officially count)

I would not choose to live there
COLDAF

Well sorta. As a former “west coaster” or WNY (western New Yorker) I can say that it’s as much Canadian as American, and I mean that in a good way! In fact, many affectionately call it southern Canada as we’d rather identify with them instead of with “the city” ahem lol Not quite east coast, not quite mid-west…
Yep, their getting pounded pretty good this year, relatives all good so far, just getting antsy being stuck due to driving ban. Must be pretty bad if they still haven’t been able to get the roads going, one thing that place truly excels at, snow removal, much better than here!
Place has made many positive changes over the last years, and most of the people are hard working down to earth types with the best and most loyal fans anywhere, Go Bills!
The Dead always played well there too!

Mine was 12/27/86 - Kaiser/Oakland Auditorium as I have posted about several times. Walked in and the Neville Brothers were wailing.

12/28/87 Oakland Coliseum - another very well played show, boys looked like they were enjoying themselves. Smokin 2nd set Cumberland. Seems we have a few around here that love 2nd set Cumberland, I do too.

See if any can get. One of my favorite shows was 12/30/86. Something happened there that later meant so much more to me. Can anyone put together why 12/30/86 (Kaiser/AO) and 7/16/88 Greek mean so much to me?

That was by far the best show of the four night run. Those were my first West Coast shows and the only shows I saw at the Kaiser. What an awesome venue.

My guess would be that both shows had guests sit in during drums. Either that or you could take the BART to each venue.

I have no idea what the weather gods have against Buffalo, but they’re wiping that place out this winter.

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41 years ago tonight, I was at the S.F. Civic for an absolute blast with the Good Old Grateful Dead! This is one of my favorite Dead shows that I atttended. I hope this will be an official release one day. Big Fun!

Metal Church - Metal Church
Keel - Lay Down The Law
Exciter - Heavy Metal Maniac
Venom - Black Metal
M.A.R.S. - Project : Driver
Never forget your roots.
Some are skipping. Looking up vinyl cleaners. Baby steps.
Any recommendations from you vinyl heads?
Buffalo videos I've seen look terrible. When there is a "no driving ban" you know it's bad. Ugh.
But I'm all in when mother hen Marye checks in. When I look at moderators on social media, she gets the crown.
I'm not banned, so yay!
Hope you are doing well Mary. Excuse my banging head.

Get a Spin Clean record washer.

spinclean . com

So, what’s your first purchase of new vinyl going to be?
Looks like 3-1-69, 12-10-71, and 6-17-91 are available for reasonable prices on Amazon.
Also, the LST Soundtrack has 2-14-70 Dark Star and 6-21-71 Chin Cat IKYR.

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This should probably be on the other thread, but I think that maybe we do Mary's first show as a pick of the day, whatdaya all think?
Carlo, Judas Priest Rocka Rolla the only Priest lp I own, more rock and roll than metal played it alot back in the 80's.
Never used Clean Spin so I can't recommend it or not, but I have used the discwasher system for decades and it has always worked well for me. Now some lp's may need deeper cleaning and that would require extra applications of their liquid and further cleaning, but it has brought back many an old lp for me that really did have a lot of clicks and pops that were removed. It, and I don't think any product, will fix a scratch or a skip but discwasher will do wonders on all that "surface" noise that can collect in the grooves of a lp. not that expensive either.
Last 5:
Jethro Tull Stand Up
Spirit Rapture in the Chambers
Ten Years After Cricklewood Green
Led Zepplin II
Jimi Hendrix Experience Axis Bold as Love
Bruce Hornsby live 12-5-93 Has a China Doll, Scarlet Begonias>Fire on the Mountain, Aiko Aiko, Dark Star, Not Fade Away, and Across the River, Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys and a Wearwolves of London. It's a good show with some Christmas music thrown in for good measure. (Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, God rest ye merry gentlemen)
oops that's 6

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by PT Barnum

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Last 6
Pulsing Signals Gong
We Are Looking In On You Hawkwind
Complete Recordings 1929-1934 cd3 Charley Patton
Fillmore East 12/31/69 1st set Jimi Hendrix/Band of Gypsies
Heroes of the Blues Mississippi Fred McDowell
Conversation Pieces cd3 - BBC 1968-69 David Bowie

last two Dead - 10/17/72 from the box - a great recording - Bob's guitar really comes through nicely on this. And Daves 10-Thelma 12/12/69.
These recently released Dead shows on vinyl suit me to a tee - although the Dicks Picks ones cost a small fortune. 2/27/69, 2/28/69 and 3/1/69 were the last ones I played. All fantastico in every respect. Be great if 3/2/69 comes out next year on vinyl.

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38 years ago today, I was at the S.F Civic, along with a lot of other cool people who post here on the forum, for a High Time with the Good Old Grateful Dead. Start off with Sat Night and finish with Broke down Palace, with a rocking Big Rail Road Blues, and it is BIG FUN!

First, sorry about lil Violet and not responding sooner!
I’m extra worried about Mr Jinx now without any supervision.
Dbl passwords I tell ya!

Second, just read Rosie McGee’s Dancin’ with the Dead. Apparently she lived at the GC for a number of years.
Wonder if you ever crossed paths since you’ve met and seen damn near everyone!

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17 years 6 months
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In the UK vinyl nows sells more than CDs, DVDs and everything else except Nintendo Switch games.

This is not yet the case in the US as Vguy is still sitting on the fence.

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9 years 4 months

In reply to by simonrob

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Bought first vinyl since 1986 this year. Dave's #1 and then Little Feat "Waiting on Columbus" autographed by 3 remaining who played on the original i.e. Bill, Kenny, and Sam. Researching there history before they played here shows a long winding road of create, break-up, reform. It was a fun night, at one point I got up from my seat and walked down to where the second row of seats are. Kenny Gradney saw me and started laughing and gesturing to Bill Payne. As I have written before, when my hair and beard are the right length, I look like Jerry. While at Govt Mule, I was told 5 times I look like Jerry. So any way, when I walked down, my hair and beard were perfect. So did he laugh at me or with me? Not sure, but I was wearing an R. Crumb "Keep on Truckin" shirt. They were playing "Willin." I think they got a kick out of that. I am almost 60, but we were babies compared to the other audience members. I am sure the average age was approaching 70. Some had to be wheeled in and looked frail - go guys, hell yeah.

Have not listened to either or any other of my extensive collection since 1987 or so. I still have my old turntable but have not hooked it up.

I am sure many follow to some degree Jack White and his move to Nashville, and buying an old press plant there.

Simon glad to bump into you again. Hope all well there for you and yours. Hope a Happy and Prosperous New Year to you, yours, and all here as well.

BTW - was 6th time seeing Feats, not bad when you consider their broken history.

Not sure of official stats, but most know a December 29th show was very rare, I think.

12/29/87, off night, friends and I walked to the mid-point of the golden gate bridge and stared at Alcatraz and surrounding areas thinking about the escape. All while freezing our asses off. Wasn't that cold, probably mid 50's, but the ferocious win made the wind chill I am sure, near freezing. We had no idea how long it would take us when we left, but from my old memory, I am sure we were out there at least 2 hours. Great time to remember, would never attempt again.

G

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3 years 1 month
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Gary, your so right, not many 12/29 Dead shows. Gary I hope you have a great New Year, your a friend and a cool cat.

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10 years 1 month
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Sorry to hear Ian Tyson has passed at 89. Ian, along with ex-wife Sylvia, and their band (Great Speckled Bird), were aboard the infamous Festival Express, and we all know what happened aboard those rails all those years ago!. What a ride for the ages.

Tyson’s band had a few great players go through it in their day, including ND Smart (Gram Parsons), Buddy Cage (NRPS), Amos Garrett (who played on Garcia’s 2nd solo record, and was a favourite of Jimmy Page), and Ben Keith (Neil Young).

May the Four Strong Winds carry you home, Ian.

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17 years 6 months
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At the Festival Express screening I'm sure I embarrassed my pals going "Holy crap, it's Ian Tyson!" Some years later, he was playing the Freight and Salvage in what may have been his last tour here but maybe not. I got some CDs and after he had signed those I asked him if he'd sign my Festival Express DVD. He looked startled. His band, a bunch of young Canadian dudes named Gordon, were mystified. "It was another time," he told them, as he signed it. I dunno how many copies of Festival Express are out there signed by Ian Tyson, but it was definitely a moment.
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17 years 5 months

In reply to by marye

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....I passed that one around to a few of my friends. Going to look and see if it was returned.
Library Vguy here stamping check outs.
Gimme a minute.

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10 years 1 month
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Marye - I love the Ian Tyson story.

VGuy - I had an album by Spirit that was like your Festival Express DVD - I ended up buying three (vinyl) copies of it over time, as friends kept borrowing/liberating it, and I could never remember who had it.

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Read his obit and learned much I didn't know. He seems like the rare person who has their brush with Pop fame, yet regrouped, returned to who he truly is, and from a down-home perspective then created a new musical persona and put out music of real substance over the majority of his life, while keeping a ranch running. (The days are 6am to 6pm -- no good for an HF slug.) I think that's more rare than one might think.

Marye, way to go with the Festival Express DVD. Kids these days, they don't know #@$%&!

Maybe you just started a "Whose autograph did you get" thread. I go to see Charlie Musselwhite years ago (many times, but in this particular instance) my buddy and I wait in line to get my CD of his first album signed. One of Charlie's endearing (and profitable) schticks is to stay after the show and sell and sign CDs til the last person straggles out. We tell Charlie that we're learning to play blues. "It's never too late," he said, charitably. (We probably looked like stoned, middle-aged wreckage...)

So after mine is signed, I walk over to his guitarist, Kid Anderson, who played a Gretsch 6120, because I happened to own one. We talked strings, action, etc. Then I asked if he records his own CDs. "Why ... yes," he responds, and reaches into his guitar case with one eye on the boss's signing table. Charlie wasn't watching, so the Kid sells me a CD from the stage while Charlie is banking coin at the card table. A cherished memory... Kid Anderson now runs and owns Greaseland in San Jose, where a lot of blues people (Charlie, Elvin Bishop) record.

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by hendrixfreak

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4/5 of the David Grisman Quintet, 10-17-97.
Grisman, Eakle, Craven, Coria.

They played Nightingale Concert Hall, University of NV, Reno as part of the Performing Arts Series where people buy season tickets and see a variety of music over the year. There were a lot of older people dressed nice and then 20-40 people in tie-dye. There was a single taper with a DAT deck (the printed program says “the use of photography and recording equipment is strictly prohibited”).
The printed program has a brief bio about each musician (also says that a family season ticket is $75 for one adult and one student under 17; not a bad deal if you want to expose your kid to a variety of different non-rock music).

I got the autographs on the printed program.

I was looking at my Festival Express DVD this week and decided that I will watch it this weekend some time.

I stopped loaning out my CD’s in the late 90’s when I realized that my friend would just set the CD’s on the table rather than back in the jewel case. A couple CD’s came back with sticky residue on them, and he wondered why they skipped.

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10 years 2 months
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I only have two autographs I can think of.
Both sports related.
Carl Mecklenburg - ex-Bronco lineman. Came to where I worked for a tour of the Scott fly rod factory and signed with a bible verse that currently evades me.
Justin Leonard - pro golfer and all around good guy. Helped him with a ski tune and rentals for his folks at Telluride. Have a great story about talking him into getting his bindings checked with my, " I met Phil Mickelson when he was on a patrol toboggan with a broken leg at Snowbowl - Flagstaff, AZ" story. Justin is somewhat short but skied the biggest size Rossi Bandits they made (then likely a 193 cm).
Never bothered to get any stars' sigs as they come to Telluride NOT to be noticed, unlike Aspen. Only famous music one I can think of would have been Alicia Keys who I didn't know from Eve anyway.
Cheers

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3 years 1 month
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43 years ago tonight , I was at the Oakland Auditorium for a Sunday night show with the Good old Grateful Dead. Part of this show was released on Road Trips, Fun Times!

Nice 1stShow,

Carl Mecklenburg, a MN native. Played high school football here and made it to the big time.

Love those 79 shows from Oakland Billy. I different band from the previous year's closing shows.

Good to hear from you again Farseer. Where have you been?

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10 years 9 months
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three feet tall (1/2 scale) to play that wall of sound? With a guitar with 11 frets?

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3 years 1 month
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42 years ago tonight, you know I was at, having great time with the Good old Grateful Dead! They played a real nice second set China Doll, real fun show.

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3 years 1 month
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Crazy fun times. Three of the years were in Oakland, one year was in S.F.. In 1982. Etta James & Tower of Power came out and played Hard to Handle and Tell Mama for an encore. The shows on the 30th always seemed better then on the 31st, everybody was probably tired by then.

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10 years 9 months
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So the 21 Oct 68 release with the cartoon book is 38 minutes long. They've sold whatever amount of those silly books as they're going to. Time for Dave & Co. to throw the fans a few '68 bones! Give us the new June '68 show discovered by OSF, tuck in 10-21-68 and a bunch of fragments and THEN I'll stop! (If that sounds like an extortion threat, I'm okay with that...)

Oh, and, Happy New Year everyone... I've been listening to Canned Heat doing "Let's Work Together," a take-off on Wilbert Harrison's "Let's Stick Together."

Make someone happy
Make someone smile
Let's all work together and
Make life worthwhile

That's my motto for 2023 -- or else!

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7 years 9 months
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Giving thanks for many blessings in 2022. Many were not so fortunate.

I am looking forward to seeing Dead & Co. in Boulder this coming summer for what looks to be the last times.

Last 5:

Paul McCartney - Egypt Station
Led Zeppelin - Celebration Day
Jerry Garcia - Garcia (expanded)
The Kinks - Low Budget
Eric Clapton - 461 Ocean Boulevard

\m/

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10 years 1 month
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Currently Watching:
- Jack Ryan (Season 3)
- The Rolling Stones - The Biggest Bang
- The Rolling Stones - Steel Wheels Atlantic City
- David Crosby - The Capital Theatre
- Hockey, hockey, more hockey

Currently Playing:
- Blondie Chaplin
- Rolling Stones - Tattoo You (Deluxe)
- The Nels Cline Singers (Share The Wealth)
- Tinariwen - Live in Paris
- Flying Burrito Bros - Live In NYC 1976

Favourite Releases 2022:
- Tedeschi Trucks Band - I Am The Moon series
- Tom Petty - Fillmore 1997
- Miles Davis - Bootleg Series Vol 7
- Bruce Hornsby - ‘Flicted
- Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot Deluxe Reissue
(Lots of honourable mentions)

Favourite DaP 2022 Release: DaP 43 (Two great 1969 shows from a band on the way up)

Personal Rating of 2022: 1.5 out of 5

If I Had One 2023 Resolution: Do better.

Best wishes to all for a wonderful 2023.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by LedDed

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Fortunately, on 12 30 91 I and my beloved made it to the Bay Area snd this GD show. Uuunfortunately, the show itself suqt.

"Lets work together"...I performed that song for my school earlier this year at an assembly. They dug it.

Watched a movie "Wild" with wife and daughter last night. Its 1995. Reese Witherspoon copes with mothers untimely death first by turning to heroin and then ho'in' around. Then she up and hikes the Pacific Crest Trail. When she arrives in Ashland OR it is when Jerry died. A few wookies are shown singing Box of Rain and then Ripple. She meets a guy organizing a Jerry memorial and after the event they get busy in a yurt. (Luckily for him, she had showered earlier in the day. We the audience got visual evidence of that.)

Very long story as to why, but I drove a car from Salem Oregon to Seattle yesterday with a nasty ear infection and only '50 Elvis hits" as CD accompaniment.
Elvis was great at times, so-so at times, and cheeeeeezzzeee at times. It was a memorable ride, nonetheless.

Elvis faves for me:
I cant help falling in love with you
Are you lonesome tonight

Those two always make me verklempt...

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10 years 6 months
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[Check out the "dead dot net / forum / what-are-you-doing-new-years-eve" thread. I first posted this there, but there are more crickets than posts right now, so I'm reposting here. Head over and check it out.]

I suspect that many of us here are past those riotous, public celebrations of New Year's Eve of our youth ("Hello!" Edie Brickell in Deep Ellum!). . . Right now (10AM) I'm spinning "Hundred Year Hall" – that's the album that finally ushered me onto the bus after years of dabbling with mostly studio albums. I've got other stuff to do this afternoon, but "Hundred Year Hall's" got me thinking about cueing up SonicWallpaper's mix of all (but 1) of the Dark Stars from 1972 so I can whistle while I work. It's almost 12 hours long, so we'll see how far (out) I get. Not sure if we're going to have to make an appearance at some friends' house this evening, but later on (back home well before midnight in any case), I think I'll dust off "Infrared Roses", fire it up, step out on the deck with mi espousa, and twirl up into the Milky Way – should be a crystal clear evening! I know, these aren't new year's eve shows, but I'll catch back up with them next year, sometime after I get back from the greater galaxy. . .

Here's to a Happy (and maybe not quite so Incomprehensible) New Year to us all!!! Onward.

I'm still amazed and laughing from that 1/2 scale version of the Wall of Sound. Cheers ICECRMCNKD!

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10 years 3 months
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A tip of the cap to PF!
- Suspicious Minds - Got Donna Jean clearly heard as one of the backing vocals from the Muscle Shoals era
- In The Ghetto - Social conscience Elvis
- A Little Less Conversation - Great vibe and it rocks
So many to choose from.
Best wishes for a happy new year to all.
CHEERS!

A full size Wall of Sound needs to be built in Vegas.
Vguy would buy an annual pass.

Staying in tonight.
Going to watch the Red Wings, then 12-31-78 DVD.

Last 5 - video
Bonus disc - Long Strange Trip
Festival Express
7-4-89 Truckin Up To Buffalo
Gimme Shelter
Dawn of the Dead (GD and rise of San Francisco Underground)

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11 years 8 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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All the best to everyone for 2023. Fled Vermont winter for a few days, southbound to the Chesapeake Bay on a warm sunny Thursday, road tunes on the descent into the megalopolis and NJ Turnpike provided by June 14, 1969 show at Monterey Peninsula College, a peak 1969 by many accounts, prelude being a recent TTB show thanks to ATTICS. Doc11 excellent suggestion 12/31/69 Tea Party show in the shadow of the Green Monster. Tonight staying in, wine and dine, toot some horns with my big little bro and his wife. Great to hook up with some old friends from back in the day, watch bald eagles soaring over the Chester River.

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You all make this forum a really fun place to hang -- and rant and rave about nearly anything, including, amazingly, the Grateful Dead -- and, ala Duane Allman's famous note-to-self, I will strive to be a better person this coming year, with understanding and kindness to all. Man, the Golden Rule is a life-long project and I'm still not there. But I'm trying like hell. All I can do, is do my very best.

A few of you mentioned Elvis. If anyone here has not seen Bubba Hotep the movie, I heartily recommend it. Best to toss down a few gummies beforehand. I found it deeply hilarious and kinda sick. Just my kind of movie.

I'm in the lock-the-door and bust out the goodies New Year's crowd. Enjoy all!

Sun Records was a rocket to the moon, but off the radar Elvis records I have always liked are "Just Tell Her Jim Said Hello" and "Tomorrow Is A Long Time" - the Bob Dylan song. Dylan has gone on record as saying it is the favourite cover version of any of his songs. If you ain't heard it and you decide to , then you are in for a treat.

New Years show for me-10/18/72. Hope everyone is well and happy out there. Cheers!

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45 years ago today, I was at Winterland to ring in the New Year with the Good Old Grateful Dead. Bill Graham rode down from the balcony on a motorcycle dressed as a skeleton. Big Fun!

....and consumed a little fungus for the occasion. Which is also as tradition.
This year, they are stepping up their live stream game with one of those NFL type sky cams. It's badass.
Happy New Year to you fine folks as well. I'll see some of you again down the road, I'm sure of it.

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