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  • daverock
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    Pink Floyd live

    That was my impression of Pink Floyd, that from DSOM onwards they basically played sets that were quite formalised, with no improvisation and no chances taken. They were the only band from that era that I saw, who played complete albums from beginning to end in concert. I only saw them twice, though. The first one, at Knebworth in 1975 was a bit more unpredictable. They played two sets - the first of which consisted of unrecorded songs that would later appear on "Wish You Were Here" and "Animals". In 1977 when I saw them they played the whole of "Animals" followed by the whole of "Wish You Were Here", with "Money" as the encore. I never felt like seeing them again after this one.
    In some ways they were at the opposite end of the psychedelic spectrum to The Dead. They were a bit wilder earlier on, before I clambered on board.

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Floyd uploads

    Not sure why they would want to extend copyright protection on crappy sounding AUDs.

    Floyd may have been another pioneering band in high quality concert sound, but they apparently weren’t smart enough to record everything.
    On the other hand, everything probably isn’t needed since they played basically identically night after night (which I read before was because the music had to match the visuals).
    I recall several years ago when I was trying to differentiate back to back nights of DSOTM, the difference was that in one of the recordings you could hear someone kick a glass bottle across the floor near the microphone.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Ramblings from the mine

    (Cue the instrumental version of Christmas time is here off of the Vince Guaraldi Peanuts Christmas album!)

    Since it’s supposed to be the season: just would like to echo the kindness/compassionate sentiment.
    As the world seems to be swirling down the proverbial shiter, kindness and compassion seem more important than ever! It’s the one thing every human can do, no matter what your situation or who you are.
    No matter how tough it might be for you, there’s always someone who has it worse, so even just the smallest gesture of caring can make giant difference in someone else’s journey. Just a little smile, to the right person, at the right time, could change someone’s life! It’s that simple!

    Think of how how vguy delt with that angry wing nut. Not so much the interaction itself, but hopefully perhaps the impression it made on those there that witnessed it. Maybe next time it’ll be one of them and in their subconscious they’ll now posses that ability to turn the other cheek, to let it go, to perhaps even have compassion for that guy who probably thinks he means well…forgive them as they know not what they done. Perhaps it’s all a test?
    All I know is as things appear to get more dire, the more I can try to feel kindness, especially in situations where it wouldn’t normally be the case, the better I feel. It’s like wining some kind of personal lottery to be kind, especially if the person “doesn’t deserve it”.
    When I was a doorman, one of the bellmen had this thing where if he checked someone in and they didn’t tip, or were cheap, instead of getting mad like the rest of us might do, and even go out of our way to not give them good service etc, this guy would spend the entire time the guest was with us trying to be even extra helpful and kind. Often, by the time the cheapskate left us, he’d actually end up tipping this bellmen better than if he’d just give the usual upon check in. It was cool to watch this guy take such a negative, and turn it into a positive, even if it didn’t pan out in tips.
    Like, the more folks are dicks, the more I’m going to be kind!

    So cue up Ryan Adams song Kindness, and think of at least one way you can make a difference in someone’s life today.
    Tamp down all the noise, especially at this time of year, open up that GD hippie sonar, and shed some positive light and kindness out there. I mean what else is there?

    Who’d a thunk Ain’t no time to hate, and are you kind? would become increasingly more pertinent over time.
    Yep that damn Hunter sure was a smart fellow to be sure. Although many great rock lyrics still resonate, one could argue that the Dead, especially Hunters lyrics could actually be more relevant now, 50 some years later!

    Quite the gift!
    So if some rouge bastard steals your sears poncho, or was that a real poncho? Maybe it’s just a test to see who the fallen angels are out there. Kindness tested, kindness sustained. That’s one of my favorite things about this dnet place. Oh sure we squabble and bitch about this and that, mostly nothing, but like family, we’re usually pretty cool to each other.
    So sorta like Mickey said, take these feelings, and put them out into the world and do some good.

    And please be careful and stay warm out there folks, especially those who aren’t used to this “winter” weather!
    Make like a Boy Scout and be prepared, cause like GOT’s winter is coming!

    Nice to see HF seemingly his ole self. Hopefully Nappy feeling better after another bout of sickness, and Jeff Smith and the Mrs too. Mr Jimmys had a tough year too, so hoping he and his, as well as all y’all have a safe and prosperous new year too! And anyone I missed? Oh yeah, I know DMCVTs had a rough year too!

    Ok, a couple more quick tunes before I head down the mine:
    Cue up 8 days of Hanukkah and Ain’t no Chimneys in the Projects, by Sharon Jones and the DaP Kings.
    I mean it is supposed to be a celebration and who knows how to celebrate better than Deadheads!
    Stay home, Be safe, be well, find somebody warm to snuggle with!
    Ho fuggin ho, and a Festivus for the rest of us!

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Happy Festivus

    My Festivus complaint is that I have to wait too long between Boxes.
    2 Boxes per year Dave/Rhino.

    -4 F (-20 C) here with a “feels like” -26 F.

    At this point a little Cold Rain and Snow sounds warm.

  • Pancho Pantera
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    Spreadsheet for GD shows.

    Jake R, can I ask you to please check your PM?

    Have a beautiful day.

    Regards.

  • hendrixfreak
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    Good sentiments, vguy

    The reason humans are living longer (though not in the barbaric US) is that, as toolmakers, we put a barrier between us and the environment, while wildlife, for sure, may nest and den, but otherwise they're out "there" and that makes for greater mortality. But it's vguy's tenderness in caring for others that I dig. And only 54?? (Spring chicken...)

    As for stormiest shows, I cannot recall the date(s), but more than one Red Rocks GD show was played in the pouring rain. I was pretty close and no one in front of me left. Behind me, all I saw was a multicolored collection of ponchos. (Ha! Deadhead story: I have two raincoats with me at the Rocks and it begins to pour. I grant a stranger one of them, which matched with rain pants. I.e., my valuable backcountry ensemble. After the show he walks away with the jacket. Two years later, same scenario and I see the guy wearing my jacket. So I said, 'Hey, I want that back.' He says 'Let me use it during the show.' I said 'Okay.' After the show he disappears again, forever this time. Today I recall the loss of gear, but do not want to let it make me less willing to help a fellow DH. Perhaps a faint echo of vguy's compassionate stance towards other creatures. But I'm still a little pissed!)

    Okay, by now, Dave L. has made his 2023 box decision. Mr. Norman is reviewing the tapes for anomalies and the artist is offering sketches of his/her/their approach. But will it be a box I can pass on or will it be a monster '73 pkg that recalls my first big, year-long outing (at least June to October)?? And when during the year will they drop the Wake of the Flood reissue? Early on, with the box later??

    I am the worst.............

  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    woke up this morning

    rolled outta those sheets
    looked out the window
    man, it was bleak
    5 degrees on the meter
    made me weak
    pulled back the curtains
    the sun streamed in
    rainbows everywhere as the sun shone through the ice
    then the wind began to blow
    I could see more ice in the wind
    looked up at the mountains
    covered in snow
    realized right then
    I had nowhere to go
    so I made some joe
    and turned on the tv
    they all said like a plea
    frozen in five
    think I'll just sit here and play
    dead all day.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    I have to credit my beloved for getting us here

    She planned this trip months ago.

    THANK GOODNESS.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Things Are Tough All Over....

    ....except in the southwest currently. Please. Be safe out there America. Frostbite in less than ten minutes on unexposed skin. Fifty degree temp drops in literally minutes. I worry about the homeless and the animals most of all.
    Climate change is the real deal.
    I'm 54 years old and have never heard of weather like this.
    Proudfoot chose wisely.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    "It's desert music, man"

    Name that movie!

    Spending some time in the Palm Springs area

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3 years 6 months
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Your first show was my brothers first show, and it should be released.

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10 years 1 month
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Love the new artwork on the cover for DaP 45.
Much better than cartoonish skeletons.
Double dose of '77 is OK by me.
Cheers

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2 years 11 months
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43 years ago today, I was up in Oakland to see the Good old Grateful Dead, put on a great show. I imagine my good old buddy Cousins was there, along with alot of other fine folks on this forum. It was a benefit show for Cambodian Refugees and the Dead played one great set. The Beach Boys played with their full original band, Santana & John Cipolllina sat in with the Dead, and Jefferson Starship and Joan Baez also performed. Garcia sang " Shake the hand, that shook the hand, of P.T. Barnum, and the Shah of Iran". Fun times.

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Confession: aside from a '68 tape that inexplicably landed in my inbox fairly recently, I don't listen much outside the official releases and am content to listen to official Vault releases as they come out. So I have not heard 1 & 2 October '77 from Portland. But as we all know, that fall tour has some ferocious shows and I anticipate that two (relatively) short shows in one 4-CD release will fall into that pattern. '77 keeps on giving and I've never tried to quantify what we've got vs. what was played, or guess at what might be left in the Vault (though I suspect plenty) from that stellar year.

So, looking forward to getting this one in about a week or so. And then ...... (drum roll please) 4 CDs from fall '72, including the fragment from my first show.

Meanwhile, gotta twist a few. I've got tons of Dylan, ABB, and blues to enjoy. To quote the sages who dwell here: Music is the best. To which I'll add: life is inconceivable without music.

Yes, Happy Birthday and also, Holly Bowling. I was not familiar with her music, such a blind spot. A friend sent the linq to her seaside concert: The Wilderness Sessions, Casco Bay, ME 10.22.20 on utu be. Wonderful setting, the Dead's music as launch point, with dog. Not distracted by sea birds.... Probably many of you know her beautiful music in a beautiful place. Came to know Casco Bay fifty some years ago, fell in love there, sailing, fishing, hiking along the coast, exploring the islands.

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Yes Billy, I was there indeed standing right of the soundboard; cheap tickets, considering the lineup, and not a sold out show if I recall, a lot of space on the floor. It was fun going to a show so soon after the of the 5-day Oakland run, talk about being spoiled in the Bay Area. Wasn't it the show where Jerry substituted PT Barnum for "the Shah of Iran"? 1980 was the year I saw the most shows, thanks in no small part to the Warfield run.
More rain the next 4 days here in Sacramento, it's getting old! Wife got me rubber boots so I can navigate the backyard and work our pump. Staying away from Wake of the Flood LP("And little change, the wind and rain" No thank you, Bob!)
Happy birthday Scott! Thanks again for turning me on to so many tapes.

You are going to love it Hendrixfreak. The return of Casey Jones to open the show, one of my favorite versions and Dupree's! Quite a few highlights. Looking forward to the full Norman of this Betty and 10/1/77.

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Yeah, I have two Trouble cd's, Manic Frustration from 1992 and another one just called, Trouble. It says 2009 but I think that's a reissue? I could Google it but I'm lazy.

Mr. White and Come Touch the Sky are pretty cool hard rock tunes. I saw the singer passed just a couple of years ago. Mr. White is a funny fuckin' song about blow, which we used to call "ripper" and "gagger." I'll save coke stories for another time but I'll bet this bunch has got a few. ;-p

So many bands like Trouble - good enough to light up a bar or small club and, back in the day, get a record deal, but never actually touch the sky. Shit, Dr. Hook never did make the cover of Rolling Stone did they?

Still in full on Jeff Beck mode. Normally I am cycling through Zeppelin, the Beatles, the Stones, Aerosmith, the Dead (of course), the Doors, Pink Floyd, Van Halen, and lots of jazz and blues pretty damn regularly. Beck has a certain weight about him now that he's gone, but like when Mark Lanegan left us, I realize their spirit will always be alive, always 25 years old and healthy and strong. Like Jer.

God bless everyone. Carpe Diem.

\m/

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by LedDed

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I'm going back listening to all my Jeff Beck recordings, too. Incredible range of music, and it occurs to me that even when he is playing a style of music I don't normally like, the way he plays it lifts it up. I normally prefer it when guitarists - any musician for that matter - serve the music and not the other way round. With Jeff Beck, he seems a bit as though he was the other way round - the music seems more like a platform for him to take off from. Possibly the only guitarist I like who did that. He didn't do that all the time - that Les Paul Tribute concert isn't like that- but he did it often enough for it to be noticeable.
A great one I played last night was "Who Else!" from 1999.

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I was driving yesterday with my wife and kids, so we ended up doing round-robin song selection (uggh - sometimes you just have to compromise :D My selection was the Jeff Beck / Rod Stewart version of People Get Ready. I was 13 when it came it out, and it was a staple on the Philadelphia airwaves. Beck's playing is perfect (great tone and creativity in his playing). My wife fiddled around with Pandora and came up with the Jeff only version (which I guess he recorded sometime later). I said no, if I get one pick it has to be the '85 version with Rod singing. I hadn't heard it in 3 or 4 years, so it was a great listening experience. Aside from a few Yardbirds tunes, I don't really know Jeff Beck's work. If anyone has song recommendations, I'd like to compile a dozen or so to see if it all grabs me. Did he sing at all?

Happy belated B-day Nitecat - I am behind in the message boards.

Yeah, life is inconceivable w/out music. It takes us to a unique place. I think of it with a perspective Robert Hunter said about his lyrics, when a fan once asked him the meaning of a song; he tried to answer, but ultimately said something to the effect of (paraphrasing here), "I hope that helps, but honestly, if I could explain it in plain words I wouldn't have to write a song." I hadn't though of it that way before. Lyrics as non-linear form of expression. I think it's the same with music - you feel an intense connection that can't be adequately explained in plain language.

Well okie dokie, that's about as philosophical as I'm going today. I hope everyone is well.

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Here are my recommendations: Beck's Bolero (just incredible), Freeway Jam, A Day in the Life, Got the Feeling, Situation, Going Down, Morning Dew, I Ain't Superstitious. There are so many more

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In reply to by Hey Pedro

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So hard to pick things out, however... have long loved what he did with Mingus's "Good Bye Pork Pie Hat" from Wired. Somewhere Over the Rainbow, so well known, shows his extraordinary evocative skills. As a single disc (video too) intro and supreme example of how to triumph a live show in a tiny cramped venue, Live at Ronnie Scott's is pretty special with Tal and Vinnie there too.

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Jeff Beck - Blow By Blow, by far my favorite solo album of his.
Jeff Beck - Wired, which led to more fusion...
Return To Forever - Romantic Warrior, four virtuoso players doing their thing. Lenny White is one hell of a drummer.
Billy Cobham - A Funky Thide Of Sings, clearly on a drummer thing here.
Jan Hammer Group - Melodies
All on vinyl and cassette.
Cheers for the weekend!

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In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Keithfan - Jeff Beck sang lead vocals on The Yardbirds "The Nazz Are Blue" on the album often referred to as "Roger The Engineer". He also sang on his hit single from 1967 "Hi Ho Silver Lining" - a song he always said he hated, although he seemed reconciled latterly, and even performed it live a few times. He also sang lead on "Tallyman" from 1967.

If you wanted to cherry pick from his career there is a great live blu ray disc out called "Live at the Hollywood Bowl" recorded in 2016. That features music from all stages of his career and features guest artists, which is fun. I'm not sure if it's available on cd - that might be a good place to start to get an overview.

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.

.... 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.

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

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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.

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.

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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!

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warms the soul! Good Sunday morning to you HF.
Similar era, Dad made Heathkit power and speaker kit.
Massive 15" woofer for the show tunes, classical, big band.
Older sisters had the Motown etc. My first 45s were pop-rock.
Like Paul Revere, The Turtles Happy Together, and the song Western Union from ?
Then big and little transistor radios and table top units Mom & Dad won golfing.
Like a Westinghouse that had a removeable little radio, like a docking station.
Later a Panasonic that had a cassette tape recorder and was portable.
Had to rock & roll myself to sleep and still do but with classical.
Mom would always stay up late and come in to turn it off.
At least the equipment has gotten much better LOL.
Thanks for the memory and cheers.

Edit: Found a picture of the Westinghouse on line. Had a high intensity lamp on it too. Blast from the past!

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Thanks Daverock & Co for the Jeff Beck recommendations. Jimmy Page / How Many More Times has that one arrangement that sounds very similar to the first half of Beck's Bolero. Obviously they were close from being in the Yardbirds - I guess the similarity has been acknowledged by them?

I also had a chance to get ìn Freeway Jam - another solid tune.

I saw a call out for the Closing of Winterland. I love this one too. It was one of my first Dead CD purchases and has a great mellow Dark Star, as well as what are in my mind, the best Miracle and Stagger Lee. Scarlet Fire is solid, From the Heart of Me, Not Fade Away, etc etc. Oh, how I wish they'd busted out Shakedown Street, but they played it the previous night (I'm so tempted to grab the one from Rocking the Cradle and drop into the Closing of Winterland folder).

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by KeithFan2112

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Keithfan-yes, you are spot on about Beck's Bolero and the Led Zep connection. Interesting that both Jimmy Page AND John Paul Jones played on it. The track "You Shook Me" appeared first on the Jeff Beck Group's "Truth" album, and then again, with very similar arrangement on Led Zep's First album. People used to say that Led Zep ripped of the Beck Group - and while I wouldn't go that far - they do sound as though they were influenced by them

Jimmy Page was always an admirer of Jeff Beck. Once when I saw him in concert, I spotted Jimmy Page in the audience.

.... anywho. I'm in a ska mood. Last five.
Sublime
No Doubt
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
The Interrupters
Madness
Just single songs from a playlist Spotify made just for me.
Practicing my shuffle dance.
Shuffling looks fun. The shufflers are always smiling. I think I could pull it off.
Music all day Sunday.
Edit on the fly. Small Axe by The Wailers. That's six.
Music is what keeps me sane.

Yes, you would have thought so. Bizarrely I have bumped into him on a number of occasions, and he seems to be a very humble man. He was at a WOMAD world music festival I once went to, and at a gig in a tiny venue in London called The Borderline, to see a band called The Pirates. Just standing shoulder to with everyone else. The last time was at a record shop, just flipping through album sleeves. A rock god amongst average Joes like me, acting like he himself is an average Joe.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Niiiice

Daves 43
Niiiice

2/15/69
Niiiice

Thelma bonus disc
Niiiice

Whenz the new Davez coming out?

Madness
Haircut 100
The Specials

and weird MTv videos

The messages on this board trigger some (maybe repressed?) memories

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by delhead

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The Selecter? too much pressure
English Beat? I just can't stop it

High school year book: we could have one fun image along with our formal tux picture. One dude's candid was him holding up his ska records. (this was 1982.)

OK, to the cell phone/youtube.

Ska Tuesday (in addition to Dave's 43)

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15 years 1 month

In reply to by proudfoot

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One Step Beyond was one of Prince Buster’s singles in the UK. I highly recommend the track ‘10 Commandments of Man’ by Prince Buster. It is particularly useful in enraging your female ( and right thinking male ) friends when they hear the lyrics.

On another tack, I notice in the Wolf Brothers show included with the latest version of ‘Ace’ that Bob(by) mentions some of his anecdotes will appear in his book. Does anyone have any info on this?

Edit: One more thing. Something I was reading a couple of days ago said that 17th Jan would have been Janis Joplin’s 80th birthday.

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So funny, I was driving a stretch Cadillac Limousine back in 1991. I drove 5 young ladies (dressed to the 9's) to the show, and as I pulled up to the old Baltimore Civic Center (can't remember the band, so let's say Motley Crue) all 5 gals, simultaneously pulled the biggest hair spray cans I had EVER seen out of their purses and began to spray in unison. I almost passed out!!
Anyway, it was so stereotypical that I always laugh out loud when I think of it.

Back to your newly created Dave's 45 thread.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

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....back then.
Watching Green Acres on Pluto TV. I love the characters. Good stuff. Especially Mr. Haney.
Pluto is pretty cool. And it's free.
And the commercials aren't that bad.
I usually mute them anyway.
Oh God. I'm becoming my dad.

....I pulled out Boxilla and dusted her off. Chose Augusta, ME. 10.12.84. Forgot how awesome the first set was.
Feel Like A Stranger
Roses 🌹
One The Road Again
Jack-A-Roe
All Over Now
CUMBERLAND!!
Music 🎵 Never Stopped....
Jerry was on 🔥

That is a great show. And as I have said before, if it hadn't been highlighted on here in the past it may well have slipped below my radar.

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13 years 4 months

In reply to by daverock

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Senator..

I'm rarely critical, but I believe you omitted the second freaking set.

edit: I love the first set too.

As you were......

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