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  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Phish fans not sitting in their assigned seats?....

    ....I took that personally Mr. Ones.
    I prefer having a seat these days, but I'm flexible. Just bought Widespread Panic tix for here in March. Options for floor with no seats or loft with seats. I picked seats this go around.

  • 1stshow70878
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    The new kids in town at our house. Only shot of them together at the moment. They move too fast. Need to work on a beauty shot like Mr. Ones has. The ginger boy is Tigger (shelter name) and we're thinking of going with Hobbs or Otto. The tuxedo boy is Pepe (Le Pew? shelter name) and Checkers or Big Boy Pete are in the running. Feel free to vote on those choices. Both strays from the shelter in Ridgway and Tigger was one of those two days from death cases that made it. Tough row to hoe but it's all good now. So far they like the Dead more than classical.
    Cheers

  • Mr. Ones
    Joined:
    The Older They Get...

    ...The Harder It Is To Stand Up!!

    I almost hate to admit this, but these days, if I can sit and listen, I quite prefer that now. I realize that I cannot dance sitting down, but at my tender, advanced age, sitting and listening is good!!
    Occasionally, I'll get front row seats of this section or that, and really look forward to being able to SIT!! and don't you know usually, there will be rude, entitled fans up dancing, and blocking my view. Phish fans are notorious for going to areas that they have not purchased tickets for and feeling like they own the place.
    I know, I know, "Hey kids, get off my lawn". I guess I AM that guy now. Sad.

    Last 5:

    Chicago-Live at Carnegie Hall-Disc 4 of 4-disc set from early '07
    Jeff Buckley-Live A L'Olympia
    Jeff Buckley-Mystery White Boy
    Peter Gabriel Live '87, first of 2-Bonus Discs from So re-issue
    Monkees-Disc 4 of new Headquarters 4-cd box

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Greetings from the Jam Band Ghetto

    Kind of surprising, but not really, to see that the TTB's outstanding "I am the Moon" has been completely ignored by the Grammys and critics' year-end best of lists. It seems clear that once you get pegged as a "jam band" the recording industry and critics decide that there's no point in taking your music seriously, no matter how many people flock to your shows or how good your recorded output actually is. It happened to the GOGD, it happened to Phish, and to pretty much everybody who's gotten pegged as part of the jam band scene. Now it's happening to TTB, and it'll happen to Goose or whoever else comes along.

    Have to say: I've never understood this. Bands that can actually play their instruments in a live setting, and who can even improvise on them, and develop devoted audiences on that basis, they don't count somehow. Probably because their music doesn't lend itself to radio or tik tok, and doesn't have much to do with the trends that wannabe hipsters pride themselves in being up on. Meanwhile, you get "bands" that are basically one guy and his girlfriend with a laptop in mommy's basement, who would get eaten alive if they tried to play in front of more than a couple dozen people, and that's considered a cutting edge rock band these days.

    I guess it doesn't matter anyway. The jam band world is its own ecosystem, sustained by us die hards who like to stand up at concerts (maybe even dance) and who want to hear bands that can actually play for a couple hours without endlessly repeating the same three licks and the only groove they know.

    OK, end of rant. Last five!

    Charles Mingus: East Coasting
    The Meters: Look a Py Py
    ABB: The Cream of the Crop 2003
    GOGD: The Warfield October 1980
    Sturgill Simpson: Cuttin Grass

  • daverock
    Joined:
    How about lying down?

    If I remember rightly, a lot people used to lie on the floor waiting for Hawkwind to come on. And then struggle to their feet when the band came on. Maybe it was just me.
    I saw Pink Floyd in a huge air hangar on the Animals tour in 1977. After hours of sitting on the floor, the band came on, and one bloke in front of me stood up. The guy next to me shouted at him to sit down, and then turned to me and said, "The Floyd deserve to be listened to." It was partly this attitude that led to punk.
    Mind you, that was the opposite end of the spectrum . Short haired herberts jumping about, barging into you. You've heard of the blues - that was the black and blues.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Sitting down = NG

    Sixtus, a good 5-6 years back, Bonnie Raitt's show at Red Rocks -- for the first time -- featured reserve seats down front. With most acts in the past, including hers, the first 20 rows was Gen Admission -- and the rabid fans (why are you looking at me?) would line up at 8-9am on the east stairs for the dash into the front rows as doors opened at ~6pm. Long haul but that's the cost of the first few rows at the Rocks. This always guaranteed that the core audience really wanted that artist, that show and we (yes, '78 til, say, 3-4 years ago) made sure every artist we saw (GD, ABB, Dylan, Raitt, etc) knew we were in support.

    Fast forward to the first year that Bonnie made reserved seats out of the first 20 rows. We assumed it was a sop to an aging fan base. (I manned the stairs from my earliest 20s to my latest 50s before slacking off.) But with reserved seats, a lot of newcomers were really enamored of their oh-so-tiny territory and everyone remained seated. Bonnie delivered but was clearly mystified by the lack of froth coming from the audience. Oh well, everyone finally decided that it was okay to get up and boogey during the encore and Bonnie stayed for a few more tunes. But I was appalled at the lack of audience excitement and involvement in giving the performer something to work with or off of. Same thing once with a Lyle Lovett show -- apparently, it was date night. Lyle's Large (swing) Band hits the stage hot and I jump up and start dancing (in my peculiar way). Some woman behind me yells "Sit Down!" and I look around and I swear I am the only person out of 10,000 on my feet. Oh boy. Later, when it rained, it was "okay" to stand up...

    If it's a theater show, I've sometimes sat down. But outdoor arena ala Red Rocks?! Only for the occasional break from the boogeyinig. Thankfully, that was a one-off and Bonnie killed it this past summer. But that sitting down jive can sure kill the vibe.

  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    Scenarios

    Dennis, VGuy: I too have on many an occasion pondered how the world might exist if we were thrown backward technologically speaking; this discussion and Dennis' reference invokes the ever-awesome Twilight Zone post-apocalyptic episode with the guy who loves to read and gets locked in the vault when the world ends and finds he has all of the books in the world to read but then breaks his glasses.

    Same reason I still send my bills through the snail mail, people. That one has just stuck with me though more as a habit than really thinking the world will end; but these are heady times

    Recovering from COVID, tested positive on Monday but feel myself coming out of the swamp. The well of gravity was inescapable for the first 24 hours, then my antibodies kicked into overdrive - it was noticeable. Second time in a year (Jan'22, first timer) despite vax & boost, but hey, now I am super-vaxxed, amirite?

    Daverock - that's really cool you're falling into a Fleetwood Mac-hole. they are a solid pillar in the halls of music. Saw them about 8 or 9 years ago, Iggy got us tickets and while I loved the music at the show, I was astounded how everyone just sat in their seats. I haven't been to a rock show in a looooong time (if ever?) that no one was up and moving. It felt weird. But then again the demographic did sway upward, so I get it on that level. It was still weird. But the music was phenomenal as was the production.

    Be Well People.
    Sixtus

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Cheers, folks

    Thanks to all those who recommended "Then Play On" by Fleetwood Mac. ( and apologies to those who are sick of hearing about it). An incredible album - I can't believe I had never heard of it, or seen it recommended anywhere else in all these years. The cover reminds me of those on the early 70's Quicksilver Messenger Service albums a bit. And the first track reminds me of QSM of that period, too - slightly Latin in feel. That track is okay, but the album really picks up after that . Great guitar sound, songs, rhythm. Maybe I should have got one of the boxes featuring it...although I am guessing there is nothing else in their catalogue quite like this one.

    Last Dead, to keep it sweet, the second show in Dicks Picks 33. 10/10/76. Also great -I'm tempted to get the vinyl now.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Attention Proudfoot....

    ....I know you're a Motorhead fan. But if you are also a Vans footwear fan, check out the Vans/Motorhead collaboration. Pretty cool Christmas idea from Mrs Proudfoot?

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    ???

    What the hey?
    (Insert sound of crickets)
    Must be shoveling?

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Good morning my friends!!

Happy New Year to all, make it a safe, happy, fruitful year. And don’t forget to love……..

I draw from the absurd three consequences: my revolt, my liberty, my passion…..

Well, been going at it for a year with POTD posts, doing my best to highlight lesser known Dead shows, 40+ posts with varying results and reception. As the man said, my job is to shed light, not to master. And as I myself sometime say, despite my best efforts I can’t give it away………..

I shall carry on, I shall continue with this absurd endeavor. Needless to say I have many ideas already brewing for the coming year. Can’t promise that I’ll always avoid the Classics, and yes I’ll probably relapse into occasional 1971 worship, but you my fans and occasional readers must take the bad with the good. I’ll try to go a little more primal this year, see you on the mountain, try not to slip and fall…………..

The gods had condemned Sisyphus to ceaselessly rolling a rock to the top of a mountain, whence the stone would fall back of its own weight. They had thought with some reason that there is no more dreadful punishment than futile and hopeless labor…..

Rock on!!!!

Doc
Truth, like light, blinds. Falsehood, on the contrary, is a beautiful twilight that enhances every object….

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The only new year show where midnight came at 12:30. Bill Graham was at the Cow Palace with Santana at midnight, and rushed back to Winterland for the Dead.
A great rocking show, Jerry's guitar was loud and in overdrive. Check it out on the Archive!

Lifelong Elvis fan, hard to pick a favorite song, I like everything even the crappy soundtracks. Today I'll pick Follow That Dream, True Love Travels on a Gravel Road, Guitar Man.

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Happy New Year to all the wonderful heads on here! It's always a pleasure reading all the stories, thoughts and comments. This is my happy place!

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We had an epic rainstorm here in the Bay Area yesterday. Freeways flooded and all kinds of stuff. Looking out at the downpour and being really glad I wasn't out in it, remembered how sometimes when the weather was this bad, Bill Graham would take pity on us and let us in early.
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In reply to by marye

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Here’s to uncle Bobo, and hopefully a better new year!
Checked out 12/31/80 last night. Never saw that one, dug it, hot Estimated!

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Never really got into him growing up, but I’ve come to appreciate him as I’ve aged.

I’ll go with “suspicious minds” followed by “a little less conversation” as my back up.

Happy new year to all. Go Bills.

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Great fun movie! Love Bruce Campbell.

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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One of my resolutions is to go through and listen again to all of the box sets that I’ve purchased over the years. FW69 and E72 already get plenty of playing time, so I’m going to skip those.

I started today with the Winterland 1973 complete recordings. All I can say is, “Good Lord.” What an amazing release. The sound quality is unbelievable, especially for a two track recording.

All the best to all of you in the New Year! Stay healthy and enjoy the music...

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Happy New Year deadheads. Be excellent to each other.

so I will stir up the hornet's nest and say

there are two songs in the GD repertoire that I love to hate:

Lovelight
Looks Like Rain

I put in disc two of Thelma 12/12/69 this morning in the climate change mobile. I haven't memorized the track list. what starts up? LOVELIGHT. ugh.

how could they play that thing at every show and not want to vomit after the first 300 times?

on another note of w.g.a.s.: I have my own version of Fat Freddie's cat. She has decided to piss on the new couch almost daily. it doesn't look like rain, though. it looks like piss.

GRUMBLE BUMBLE.

phkin feline...

Try Natures Miracle, it worked twice for me. If she keeps it up it can be tough to manage a stubborn cat. Keep the litter exceptionally clean too. I had that problem once and it was the cat's way of saying Hey, FU.. I'm not going to do my business in that s#@thole you call a litter box, I'm looking at you, couch.

Lovelight comes and goes for me. Sometimes they settle into a groove and forget to take an exit before song boredom creeps in. Sometimes it's pretty cool. I especially like the 5/7 and 5/26/72 versions where they dance with GDTRFB.

Looks like rain isn't for everyone, but there are versions that do it for me. I'm a Row Jimmy fan too, which is sometimes received with exacerbated sighs and a mad dash to the rest room.. but there are songs I skip that some people really love which balances it out.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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I've read that Row Jimmy was one of Jerry's favorite songs to play; he even acknowledged it wasn't for everyone but I always gravitated toward the Jimmy's in the 90ish range, with full midi and those scorching rapid runs he'd take in there. Love the reverb on those fast runs too.

Row on, Row on people.
Sixtus

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in the Bay Area, and we need it badly. Hope it doesn't do much damage.

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always sounded great, even in the Dead songs I didn't like, and there were a number of them.

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Songs I skip: Corrina, Easy Answers, Looks Like Rain(though sometimes I do fast fwd to Jerry's solo), Easy To Love You.
I also apply a Slide Filter whenever necessary.

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You don’t have enough urine or fecal material in your house and you want more.

You really dig randomly finding cat puke all over the house in a variety of unusual and unexpected places.

You don’t like to sleep through the night and want something to wake you up every couple of hours, but you don’t want to have a baby.

You feel like it would be cool to have a greater potential exposure to Toxoplasma gondii, because it sounds like such an interesting parasite, and Toxoplasmosis sounds so fascinating. (See e.g., the wolves of Yellowstone and toxoplasmosis, google it, you’ll find the articles and it is interesting).

You enjoy finding the back half of mice outside your door on a regular basis. They always eat the head, never the back end, go figure.

You enjoy watching them slowly destroy a wooden post on your stairway railing by using it as a scratching post. It’s a long-term project for them, but you can see the steady progress, just another way to measure the passage of time.

Your wife and children left you out of the decision and you’re not quite enough of a cold-hearted bastard to get rid of them. The cats that is, not the family members, none of them have peed all over the house.

We have two cats. They are indoors and outdoors cats, and in theory they are using the great outdoors as a latrine, but that is not always the case, especially if it is too far below freezing outside. One cat peed on the living room couch on 4th of July a couple of years ago late in the night. Everyone else was asleep so I took the opportunity to take the giant couch outside for disposal. It was a large couch, and I am not large, but I picked up that cat pee contaminated couch and got it down the stairs and through the front door, barely, and outside without waking anyone up. Wife woke up in the morning like, wtf, where’d the couch go? The couch did not come back inside. Now I try to keep the cats in a travel carrier or outside on 4th of July to avoid a repeat.

Edit: Don't get me wrong, I like the cats, but they don't make it easy sometimes.

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In reply to by billy the kiddd

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Happy New Year again!!!

BTK yall be safe now ya hear. This storm is a beast. I know rain is needed but not that much that quick. All in California and the desert areas prepare. It cost so little to have a manual can opener and $20 of canned goods to make it a few days.

Any way, have to go back and read last couple of days to catch up, but here are some quick answers.

DeadVikes thanks for the warm return. It is appreciated greatly. Unfortunately, my own health which is pretty good, is clashing with folks health which is not so good. Won't get into details, but I refer to them as my progenitors, as the love has always been cold as ice. Yet now I have to eat up my own time watching after them (although with a lot of others help also). I will try to post more often.

Question of why 12/30/86 and 7/16/88 are important to me. AJS had the correct answer, because of the guest drummers during drumz. But it was the whom, in who were the guests. On 12/30/86 it was Hamza El-Din (&Jose Lorenzo) and on 7/16/88 it was Baba Olatunji. Both such huge influences bringing depth to Billy and Mickey's poly-rythmic structures during drumz.

So roughly here was weekend schedule. On 12/30/22 I watched 12/30/86 on the me-tube. Very nice video (probably band created) and soundboard synced up. I had watched once previously but this time it really hit me. That one show, along with 12/27/86 represents one of those closures and new beginnings. Both of those shows have the more heroin induced jams of the late Keith/Donna era shows. I did not get into 12/28/86 as we were shut-out. Maybe someone here, like BTK, can remember when they put the speakers outside for any stragglers and the Shakedown Street crew, which was small. The 12/31/86 sounds like more of the changing sound coming in 1987. Intense upgrades in computers and technology, less in the slow methodical heroin induced jam (I love both). But this time watching 12/30/86 was way more meaningful, to really see and focus on Hamza, and tie him back to Egypt and the tar and talking drum. I do love from "From Egypt with Love" and Ollin Arageed, that rhythm is intense and right up my alley as a former want-to-be drummer. So for me to realize 25 years later that I saw both Hamza and Baba creates a warm feeling all over. I do recommend if you have not seen the 12/30/86 on me tube it is worth a watch, although I think in is labeled 12/31/86, which it is not.

BTK - thanks for the kind words of friendship and comradery, they do mean much.

I have several days worth of reading to catch up. I just wanted to make sure I remember to finish previous thoughts, as that is getting harder and harder to do.

Ok, will post and read to edit. I know I need an editor, kind of like young reporters today whose story telling/reporting is not good.

G

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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So weekend was Friday watching 12/30/86. Saturday was listening to MaryE's first show which I enjoyed immensely, and then later in the evening I watched 12/31/85 which was a national tv broadcast that started at midnight Oakland time and 2am here locally when it was on. I still really enjoy that video, wish they would release that whole show video, "I'd buy that for a dollar." Then Sunday the 1st, I watched "Ticket to New Years," which I also attended that 4 day run. Then Monday, I watched most of "The Closing of Winterland." So lots of Dead watching, and I enjoyed all of it. I also went thru a couple of shows from the MSG box, nice!

G

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In reply to by Gary Farseer

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That and Charlie's description of responsible cat ownership cracked me up.

Thanks for that.

I, too, reserve the right to Slide Filter whenever necessary.

I generally do not have problem with the cat, and living in a 120 year old rodent-free Victorian, I have a few things to be thankful for. I keep the litter fresh and clean and they keep the mice (and river rats) away.

I'm really in the mood for 1/2/1970. What a great and often overlooked release.

....while I was getting a glass of water.
My bad. I forgot to let them out before I went to bed.
Rain is welcome in Cali, but what the southwest REALLY needs is snowpack on the western slopes of the Colorado rockies. For several winters in a row.

Lovelight. Not my favorite, but I’ll take it over the typical throwing stones>not fade to end the show if for nothing more than a change of pace. I never really got into the 30 minute versions either.

I can tolerate LLR. I’ll admit I have a soft spot because my inaugural show ended the first set with that right into a China>Rider. It grew on me over the years and I much prefer the latter day, more amped up versions. The early iterations sound like something Engelbert Humperdinck should be singing.

Definitely skippable are most, OK all, of Vince. Corrina, Victim, Easy Answers, Eternity. . . You see the pattern here.

I actually liked a lot of Brent songs when I saw them live. Unfortunately, I don’t think they’ve aged well. In fairness I probably haven’t either.

Passenger and Miracle are two older songs I never enjoyed.

As others have said, 12/30/1986 was an awesome show. Easily in the top five of all the shows I ever saw. Yes, they did have speakers outside for those who were not fortunate enough to get tickets. I thought it was a West Coast thing, but evidently not.

Can one train a dog to poop on the floor (or sofa) each morning at exactly 3am?

I thought it was just me that got borderline PTSD when a show ended with Throwing Stones>NFA encore: US Blues. Miracle and Mexicali are on my list with many of the late era new songs mentioned.

Fortunately, there are so many great songs they either wrote or covered that really made it difficult to have a bad time at a Dead show. There was almost always something special. So time your bathroom breaks with skip tunes, stay away from the brown acid and let the good times roll.

Before shows some of the folks I would travel with would voice out what they thought we were going to hear mixed with dream setlists and the occasional song that they best not play that night or else (in the spirit of that Sideways quote, "I am NOT drinking any f***king Merlot"). We are a spirited bunch aren't we?

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In reply to by JimInMD

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To me there is very little that connects seeing the band live to sitting at home listening to a live recording. To recap I saw them 5 times in 1981 and 1990. Loved all 5 shows, and they didn't play any songs that I didn't like. Some songs, that I hadn't been so keen on -Row Jimmy comes to mind - made much more sense in real time than it did on live recordings, or on Wake of the Flood. Drums and Space in 1990 blew my head off. It doesn't do that now, unfortunately. More interesting than mind blowing
On 10/30/90 I thought it was great when they broke into "Lovelight" - an actual song off "Live Dead". Sadly, I don't have this response now - in fact I have no interest whatsoever in hearing a Bob sung Lovelight now. Or a show from 1990, for that matter. But that doesn't mean for a second that it wasn't great at the time, being there.

Like everyone on here, I guess, there are some songs I have heard way to often, simply because they are played at shows which are brilliant overall. To skip them feels a bit like skipping a dull chapter in a novel - you want to, but it makes you feel a bit guilty if you do.

At the Capital building this morning, a leading moderate Republican Congressman, David Joyce (OH-14), was seen entering McCarthy's office wearing a "make America grateful" shirt with a Stealie (per Jake Sherman, Punchbowl News). Pushing back against the demands of the clown show crazy caucus it would appear. Turns out Jake's a deadhead and really dug it.

Happy New Years to everyone! Here's to 2023 being a year with much happiness, health, and prosperity for all of you and your loved ones, including all the fuzzy, furry 4-leggeds out there. Prosperity for the doggies? Why an extra meatball treat on a regular basis. Let there be songs to fill the air.

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Years ago we took a vacation and the "smart" cat peed on the computer, which luckily was covered with a vinyl cover BITD. She certainly let her feelings be known about being left alone. Never had that issue again or since with many other cats. Did clean the house thoroughly to get rid of the smells of the previous girl cat before getting our two new boys and no stray pees so far, knock on wooden head.
The dog was always good indoors but she would get so excited about going somewhere in the truck bed that a poop was inevitable by the time we got anywhere. Had to carry poop bags in the truck as it was almost guaranteed even if she was pre-pooped. Could excite her easily with either, "Go to the park?" or "Squirrel!". Border Collies are way too smart for their own good.
DaP 42 bonus disc (2-22-74) on deck. I get to crank it up today while the wife is at her craft group at the library. It's got that Slipknot jam in the PITB. Noice!
Cheers
Edit: Love Jake Sherman's reporting even more now that I know he's on the bus. Sen. Pat Leahy of VT still the highest ranking Deadhead in congressional history.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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my mantra for the future is

NO
MORE
PETS

fuzzy loveable money pit$

veterinarian$
food$
boarding$
anchor$ to home
clean-up$
grooming$

NO MORE PETS for me.

now I just have to convince my beloved

wish me luck, y'all

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Did realize there were people who didn't like Grateful Dead songs. This is a new experience for me.
Hmmm . . . .

Everyone knows the best way to bribe your wife besides jewelry is with a cat or a dog, which means our good friend Proudfoot is how do we say it ...SOL.

I'm on the road to less pets also for the same reasons. The ones I have were the result of relationships past and I was the only one to feed, clean up and $$$. Plus, they are gone and the pets remain.

But they do provide lots of stress-relieving affection. I'm a softy.

Jake Sherman does have a training wheels version of a Jerry Beard, more like a Jerry Beard in diapers. More Dead makes for a more better world.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by stillwaters

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I think in many cases it’s not so much folks don’t like some songs as we’re burned out on some.
Though I know there’s plenty of folks that have aversions to some.
I like big Lovelights but have to really be in the mood. And like AJS, Lovelight in later years was at least not yet another Stones/NFA…so it had that going for it.
Me & My Uncle is my biggest skipper mostly cause I played it in bands too much. The Vinnie songs are still tough, but not as bad as BITD where every song that wasn’t Dark Star etc was one less chance that night to hear it/them. Not up on all of Phil’s 90s stuff, but recall some being underwhelming?
I get folks aversion to Row Jimmy and LLR. At first they might nudge the grumpy (like some of these picks) but once I get into them they often are fully enjoyed, though I agree about the 80s LLR are preferable to the earlier ones..
But like DR said, often big difference live versus years later on tape etc…
I love Victim and most of Bobs stuff up until some of the 90s stuff, though those have softened a bit probably as it’s something different then the same songs he played to death? I guess biggest complaint some could kinda plod on.
But hey, what other band beyond description has some many songs to be picky about ; )

Still reelin from that game Monday.,please keep Damar in your thoughts.
Real curious how the leagues gonna handle the incomplete game?

Let there be songs to Phil the air!

EDIT: Pets, love em but Pedro don’t do poop, so between our unreliable schedule, the outrageous costs (I can’t even afford my own HI), and all the rest, at this stage of life I love em enough to know I can’t love properly.
Perhaps someday if we ever get some land that’ll change…
Luckily we have 2 beautiful crazy Husky pups next door so we can enjoy them without the responsibility lol

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The smell is coming from INSIDE the house!

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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I generally prefer faster songs to slower ones as the years have gone by. Maybe a bit contradictory -as you get older you might think slower ones would appeal more, but it doesn't seem to be the case. Not just with The Dead - its the same with The Stones, who I have also been listening to since the 70's. Songs "Wild Horses", or "You Can't Always Get What You Want" haven't really stood the test of time for me. Rockers like like "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Brown Sugar", on the other hand, still sound great .
Ditto with The Dead - only in there case it's more the interaction of the musicians in jams that appeal (or not), rather than specific songs. If you listen to the same bands for a long time, it may be inevitable that you like and dislike different things about them as the years pass.

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14 years 1 month
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Hey there Icecreamkid, would you recommend this doc? Is it a rip off or a worth while investment of 2.5 hours?

I'm not completely up to date on reading here, so forgive me if there has already been a detailed discussion of the doc's merits.

Yeah, me too…what gives Conekid, dont think I’ve ever heard of it?

HA! Captcha was wrong! Asked for taxis, showed a picture of a Stanley Steamer van but thought it was a taxi!

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15 years 3 months
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You can watch it on your favorite streaming service; just did a quick spot check, and it looks legit with video clips and interviews(Tom Constanten is there, for one.) Might check it out later tonight.

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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I got it on DVD years ago (I’ve even posted about it in past years), and I think it’s pretty good.
In fact, I had watched it many times before Long Strange Trip came out, and I didn’t really think that LST was significantly better.

It has good old footage, including stuff that isn’t on LST.

Edit:
Yes, TC is there, and it focuses more on everyone’s early music roots than LST does.

Oh, and why is Cutler being interviewed from his van in LST?

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Since most of my show going was after Brent (saw him 4 times), I used Vince songs as a Set 2 pee break so that I wouldn’t have to miss any Drums/Space.

Sometimes I skip LLR, sometimes I listen to it. I like LLR’s with Donna, and yet skipped one a while ago when driving.
It may actually be the fact that I’m driving and don’t really want to hear a certain song at that particular time, and that ⏭️ button makes it so easy.
Sometimes I skip FOTD, and other times I listen to it and think it’s really good.
I don’t skip Row Jimmy ever.
Will skip Vince songs except Baba>TNK. It’s not Vince himself, it’s that Hunter wrote cheezy lyrics. Musically the songs aren’t bad.
Sleazy Answers is a pee break.
Wave To The Wind…… well, I’m sorry for Phil with that one.

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7 years 4 months
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Nobody.
The last dozen or so comments have brought up a combination of memories & intrigue.

When I found a band that I liked, I would purchase EVERY release by that band, without thought. It never occurred to me that I might not like every song on the album. But I eventually became aware of the inevitability that the longer (most) bands continue on, it’s less likely that the music will continue to have the same quality as in the early days. It’s almost illogical to think musicians will continue ad infinitum forever. While there are certainly exceptions to this thinking (most of whom, to my ears, are bands whose sound is constantly evolving and changing), by and large, most bands fall into this inevitability. I had to chuckle when I read STILLWATERS’ comment. As much as I WANTED to like every song by a beloved band, as I got older, I realized it was OK to not like every song!!
Regarding the Dead, it wasn’t until Mars Hotel that I was taken aback by my distaste for a couple of those songs. And starting again with Shakedown Street, every album had multiple songs that I did not like.
As far as Me & My Uncle, it’s the most played song in the Dead’s canon, so while I truly like the song (a cover no less), I’ve simply heard it too many times.
Regarding my 3 all-time favorite musicians: John Lennon, Miles Davis and Bill Frisell, there are definitely songs by all 3 that I’m not fond of (although with Frisell, it’s pretty much only 1 album). Not going to list any, too boring, takes too much time.

Regarding our beloved critters, I suppose it’s always going to come down to time, expense or both. I just get SO MUCH from them that I’m more than happy to pay those two costs. As I age even more, I imagine I may change, but I find now that cats are less costly, and need me less than any dog would.
Sorry about being wordy, I just felt inspired to add my 9 cents worth.

Music is the Best!!

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7 years 9 months
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I always skip LLR. It's a bummer song. I don't know if D&C or Wolf Bros. ever covered it but I think even Bob mostly shades it now. Also hard to listen to Weather Report Suite until it picks up and Jer starts ripping toward the end.

Skip any song Brent sings lead on and for some reason, I usually do let the Vince songs play. I don't know why. There aren't that many, for one. He isn't a good singer but no one in this band was, ever... they grow on you. Brent is just too over emotive even singing background some times.

Always fast forward or skip Donna's horrible, atonal, unbearable screeching on "PITB," as well. It's embarrassing.

No band with any significant output was ever on 100% all the time. It's not important or honest to claim reverence for every second of recorded output of any musical entity, even the GOGD.

\m/

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by LedDed

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....well. That was unexpected. LLR? I enjoy the MIDI thunder versions a lot.
Like the one in the Dave's 44 Eugene release. Which I am listening to now.
But what was expected, is the fact that the republicans got the house yet have yet to decide on a speaker. The infighting is....embarrassing. If they can't lead their own party, how can America feel regarding them leading the country? Thanks trump. He is the dog poop on the foot of this country.
Make America Grateful Again!!
My political post for the month.

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