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    What a setlist!... Made me jealous of those who saw this era live. Great sound… like ‘77 was yesterday. @derekb192 on 10/1/77, YouTube

    Wow! Just as when you think eyes is gonna go to drums out of the bliss comes dancing! One of my all time fave moments! Not just classic 77 but classic ever dead! - @emrysdavies1215 on 10/1/77, YouTube

    ...this show was off the hook from the very get go. The Casey Jones is the best I've heard... beginning a jam that goes through each member going off on an instrumental solo. The end has them jamming so hard you can no longer hear them singing through it. Now you know you're in trouble (The Good Kind) when a show starts like that... Weirtheir on 10/2/77, Dead.net

    Holy hell, the 10/2/77 Betty Board sounds incredible... I just wanted to pay homage to this unreleased gem, which features the lovely, tight playing you'd expect of a 77 show with some of the highest audio quality I've ever heard ... What a treat. u/monsteroftheweek13 on 10/2/77, Reddit

    I told my mother I was going into Portland with friends. I never told her where I went... @jamesmoore3694 on 10/1/77, YouTube

    We know where you've been and we're taking you back with the twice as nice DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 45: PARAMOUNT THEATRE, PORTLAND, OR - 10/1/77 & 10/2/77. Back-to-back complete previously unreleased shows on 4CDs? You betcha! Why? Because we couldn't pick one over the other of these two nights that have been described as "fire," "mind-frying," and "crispy" (bit of a theme here) too many times to count. Witness it for yourself when you dig into the inventive medleys and pristine sound, not to mention the first "Dupree's Diamond Blues" since '69 and the first live "Casey Jones" since '74.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson (with a boost from Bob Menke, more about that in David's video) and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

    *2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    My political post of the month....

    ....imagine the look on my face during Bidens state of the union address when he called out junk fees regarding hotels, flights, sporting events and CONCERT TICKETS.
    Hell yeah! Get their asses. Hear, Hear!!
    Meanwhile, McCarthy sat back there just shaking his head and didn't even acknowledge it. Douche.

  • Jason Wilder
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    This was a fine release…

    This was a fine release. Really dug it. In terms of thoughts on other stuff:

    Box for 2023: Gotta be '73, right? Wake 50th + a compete show would be fantastic. 2/9 or 2/15. The Kezar/RFK run in a box would be even better. Though I would point out that 4 of the last 5 boxes have been multi-year stuff (PNW '73-'74, Giant's '87/'89/'91, Listen to the River '71/'72/'73, and In and Out the Garden '81/'82'83). June '76 is the only single year box since Cornell & Co in 2017. Either way, I think '73 is involved. I'd love a great '69, Carousel '68, or a Summer '89 (Alpine!/Meetup at the Movies) box, but I don't think this is the year. Nor next. Gotta be a full Oct '74 box on the 50th of the first farewell, yes?

    Red Rocks is awesome. Saw 3 of a 4 show run there in 2016 or so. Got a Branford appearance one night. Wonderful.

  • alvarhanso
    Joined:
    Pole guy

    Sorry to rehash it, HF, but I was already planning on mentioning him, as I found it funny to be listening to Veneta the last two days of commutes, and during Bird Song today, Pole Guy was seared into my mind driving home down I-95. But my original thought was to come and give my own personal reasons for loving both Veneta and Cornell. To wit, Veneta just has some of the top versions of Dark Star, China Cat > Rider, Jack Straw, Bird Song, Greatest Story, Playing in the Band, and Sing Me Back Home. I'm sure this show was fueled by the finest Owsley had for special occasions, because they simply destroy that baked field of fried, naked hippies.

    As to Cornell, I, as I supect many, got on the bus thanks to Cornell. As a high school senior, a fellow member of the quiz bowl team tried his darndest to get me into Phish. It wouldn't take. Until we left an Allman Brothers show in Charlotte and he put on the album Billy Breathes. I loved the title track, and gave them a fuller listen. He got me started on Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, Medeski, Martin, and Wood, and, more importantly String Cheese Incident, who have been the band I've caught the most at 69 Incidents (including a trip to Oregon when they also had 98 degree heat, until a thunderstorm cooled things off and muddied up our campsites in the woods), but among the tapes he got me started with was set 2 of Cornell. Unlike the Phish that took a while to hook me, that set of Dead left a smoking crater of my mind. 25 years later, I totally get why people who were seeing the Dead before 1977, or even from 1993 or 1995 only would have known the ever changing nature of the songs and the looser feel that the Dead were known for, not the far more precise Dead of May '77. And I very specifically say May, not Spring, or the rest of the year, because in that off day between New Haven and Boston, they had rehearsal with Keith Olsen, and they tightened up. That tight Dead (in amazing sound fidelity) is particularly appealing to newbies, whereas a Europe '72 Dark Star or The Other One would be likely to send some for the exits without much further exploration. It was the type of thing that people used to put down the Dead, calling it "noodling", which shouldn't be an insult since it was first used to describe young Mozart's piano playing. My dad couldn't stand the Dead. Or so he thought. I finally got him to listen to Cornell's second set, and he said after Fire On the Mountain concluded, "I wish I had heard that back then, I would have gone to see them when they came around!" He had never thought they rocked like his musical heroes The Who and The Ramones, and he admitted they did indeed rock when he heard 4/15/70's Soul Sacrifice Jam> The Other One> Dire Wolf, and loved the odd segue into Dire Wolf. Basically, that's all just to theorize that Cornell can both be overrated and still be a great show. I still go back to it, especially that Scarlet> Fire. From the unique intro, that I didn't know was unique upon first listenings, to Jerry's remarkable solo that peaks around the 4:20 mark that is still my favorite Jerry solo, to the raging ending of Fire that my best friend says has HIS favorite Jerry solo. Later I came to have and appreciate the first set as well. Olsen's dictatorial style apparently yielded results that lasted the last 3 weeks of the tour, and may have had shows that bettered it, but it's still pretty darn good.

    Still have yet to get into DaP 45, will do so this weekend. Had a scare when ripping as the first disc wouldn't read at all for the first few times I inserted it, then had to use an old program I first got nearly 20 years ago to rip it. Luckily, it played right away in my Denon cd player, as did the other discs, which ripped easily in Windows Media Player.

  • estimated-eyes
    Joined:
    jeopardy

    Vguy, funny reference as my son has one of those Jeopardy daily calendars where you rip off each day, which has a question (answer in Jeopardy parlance) on it. He pits me against his mom every day and yesterday's question was in the category "Playing in the Band" for $400-- This band featuring Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir performed a version of "Playing in the Band" that clocked in at over 25 minutes in 1972. I obviously had the answer after JG, but was finishing the question off incorrectly as I figured the question should have been "45 minutes in 1974."

  • daverock
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    Walk On By

    You could always try The Stranglers version. On second thoughts....maybe not.
    Last 11
    Chocolate Soup For Diabetics Volume 1-5 (82 UK Psych classics)
    The Perfumed Garden Volumes 1-5 ( 82 Rare Flowerings From The British Underground 1965-1973)
    We Want Billy! - Billy Fury

    Never mind Dave's 45, that Billy Fury is a great live concert from 1963, complete with background vocals from screaming girls. I was only lucky enough to be part of such a crowd once, when I saw T.Rex in 1972. People may have screamed at Black Sabbath concerts - but if they did, you couldn't hear them.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Thanks for the visual...

    Somebody had to mention "naked pole guy," which must be my karmic spanking (ooh) for commenting on Cornell in less than ecstatic words.

    I had put NPG out of my mind for years! Now he writhes, rent-free, in the visual quadrant of my brain.

    What else ya got?? Mentioning NPG is like going nuclear!

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Dennis

    No, you cannot go wrong with a 12 minute Isaac Hayes version of Walk on By. At least not in my opinion. I gave a listen to ...To Be Continued after my post, and that Look of Love just cooks, such a big, lush sound. Heading over to put on Hot Buttered Soul now so I can hear that Walk on By again. Dionne Warwick does a cool cover of Walk on By with a totally different feel than the Isaac Hayes version. As far as Johnny Mathis, I've been close to picking up a Johnny Mathis greatest hits album a couple of times now, and seeing your post pushes me one step closer. Chances are...

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    re; Veneta being drab....

    .... I'll take "things I thought I'd never hear a deadhead say" for $500 Alex.

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    The Mailbox isn’t just for the property tax bill anymore

    MCCCLXXXVII has arrived.

    Dennis - How is the job hunt? Your wife asked me to tell you to stop posting, and get searching out work! (Women, right?…)

  • JJ Fehmarn
    Joined:
    #19541 arrived in Germany

    Arrived this morning in the northern part of Germany. Additional taxes and service fee of EUR 13,54.
    Have the 10/02 show since years as sbd in my collection but never have thought about the day before.
    Will listen to it later cause i'm still working on tranfering my ABB Roskilde 91 recording from tape to CDR.
    Last five:
    Years After (vinyl)
    Late September Dogs - Burg Herzberg 2001
    Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets - Live At The Roundhouse (vinyl)
    Robert Randolph - New Orleans Jazz Fest 2006
    Neal Casal - Fade Away Diamond Time (vinyl)

    Peace & Love
    JJ

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What a setlist!... Made me jealous of those who saw this era live. Great sound… like ‘77 was yesterday. @derekb192 on 10/1/77, YouTube

Wow! Just as when you think eyes is gonna go to drums out of the bliss comes dancing! One of my all time fave moments! Not just classic 77 but classic ever dead! - @emrysdavies1215 on 10/1/77, YouTube

...this show was off the hook from the very get go. The Casey Jones is the best I've heard... beginning a jam that goes through each member going off on an instrumental solo. The end has them jamming so hard you can no longer hear them singing through it. Now you know you're in trouble (The Good Kind) when a show starts like that... Weirtheir on 10/2/77, Dead.net

Holy hell, the 10/2/77 Betty Board sounds incredible... I just wanted to pay homage to this unreleased gem, which features the lovely, tight playing you'd expect of a 77 show with some of the highest audio quality I've ever heard ... What a treat. u/monsteroftheweek13 on 10/2/77, Reddit

I told my mother I was going into Portland with friends. I never told her where I went... @jamesmoore3694 on 10/1/77, YouTube

We know where you've been and we're taking you back with the twice as nice DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 45: PARAMOUNT THEATRE, PORTLAND, OR - 10/1/77 & 10/2/77. Back-to-back complete previously unreleased shows on 4CDs? You betcha! Why? Because we couldn't pick one over the other of these two nights that have been described as "fire," "mind-frying," and "crispy" (bit of a theme here) too many times to count. Witness it for yourself when you dig into the inventive medleys and pristine sound, not to mention the first "Dupree's Diamond Blues" since '69 and the first live "Casey Jones" since '74.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Betty Cantor-Jackson (with a boost from Bob Menke, more about that in David's video) and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

*2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

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Been away for a few days. Thanks for the help. Read the interesting article. Downloaded the great music.
David and the Dorks indeed!!

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Leapin' lizards Sandy! Just exactly HOT!
It's all transitional with a band that evolves constantly.
Peak K & D era with everyone in fine voice on this.
The TMNS is exceptional in this fine foursome.
I said I wouldn't pre-listen but glad I did.
Cheers

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I’ll give my current top 5 Dave’s “Desert Island Bonus Discs”.

2020 Bonus Disc- 6/22/74
2015 Bonus Disc-3/21 & 3/27/72
2013 Bonus Disc-12/21/69

and these last 2, I can’t decide which is best

2019 Bonus Disc-1/3/70
2014 Bonus Disc-12/11/69

Some highlights:
6/22/74-29 minute Playing in the Band
3/21/72-Truckin’>Drums>Other One>Wharf Rat
12/21/69-2 minute Good Lovin’>Drums>Other One>Cumberland Blues
1/3/70-Entire Disc
12/11/69-Entire Disc incl. Cumberland!!

Did someone say Cumberland??

I dare anyone to play ANY of these discs and not lean back, relax and smile!!

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Box set '23
From Egypt With Love '78
I don't see TPTB going with a '73 box set as it would just a bit to obvious.The other day I posted about a stand alone release I have a very good prediction for a standalone release that's very timely, Bear's Choice Volume 2.

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Where is the setlist?

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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I planned a road trip around the Dead "on the Rocks" in '82 and a couple of weeks later, caught the Jazz Festival in Telluride (a week or so after their big BlueGrass Festival). 40 years ago, I thought Telluride the best, now I might consider it a draw! Unfortunately, I passed on the Dead in Telluride in '87... and after all these years, I made it back and the venue hasn't changed much at all (good!). From my notes from summer of '82 (be kind, this was a long time ago and I was young!).........."The amazing thing about the whole area is that it is in a bowl, so the weather really forms in the bowl. Spontaneous is the next best word for Colorado weather. And the sound of the music could be heard bouncing off the walls split-seconds after it is heard from the speakers. Personally, I like this whole amphitheater best of any I’ve been at to-date, including Red Rocks. So at one point in the evening, the sky clouded and lightning lit up the sky directly behind the stage. It was incredible and the crowd loved it. Then, the thunder would boom and bounce off the walls of the bowl and literally rumble. YEEEEAH! And between sets, they shot off fireworks off the hill right above the crowd/stage. Was incredible to watch the trails shooting all over the sky. Too much - lightning, thunder, fireworks, jazz!! "

vguy...same thing happened to me when I acquired Garcia 18; I had never heard Valdez in the Country before, and when I popped that one in, the jazzy nature of it really struck me. It's god a really cool groove and Jerry rips it up with his comrades. It's a good one and now you're making me go bust that one out and have another listen.
Funny how things work like that, eh?

Be Well People!
Sixtus

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In reply to by carlo13

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1977-10-01 - Paramount Theater - Portland, OR

01 - Promised Land
02 - They Love Each Other
03 - Mexicali Blues
04 - Dire Wolf
05 - Cassidy
06 - Deal
07 - Passenger
08 - Tennessee Jed
09 - Minglewood Blues
10 - Peggy-O
11 - The Music Never Stopped
12 - Bertha ->
13 - Good Lovin'
14 - It Must Have Been the Roses
15 - Estimated Prophet ->
16 - Eyes of the World ->
17 - Dancin' in the Street ->
18 - Drums ->
19 - Not Fade Away ->
20 - Black Peter ->
21 - Around & Around

1977-10-02 - Paramount Theater - Portland, OR

01 - Casey Jones
02 - Jack Straw
03 - Sunrise
04 - Brown-Eyed Women
05 - El Paso
06 - Dupree's Diamond Blues
07 - Let it Grow
08 - Deal
09 - Tuning
10 - Samson & Delilah ->
11 - Scarlet Begonias ->
12 - Fire on the Mountain
13 - Finiculi Finicula
14 - Playin' in the Band ->
15 - Drums ->
16 - The Wheel ->
17 - Truckin' ->
18 - The Other One ->
19 - Wharf Rat -.>
20 - Sugar Magnolia
21 - Johnny B Goode

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Seems like they raised the price a little this year, wasn't it $30 or $35 last year? I'm lucky I subscribed but I'm guessing the shipping is $10 still. So nearly $50 for each Dave's picks seems like a little too much for the casual gd fan to shell out, can't say I blame em. This is a top notch show that I expected to sell out fast so I'm surprised it's still available, but with the price bump, I suppose it makes sense. Regardless, I'm psyched for it to land in the next week or so.

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I think the four disc releases have always been more.
You don't have to pay that difference or any shipping if you subscribe early.
A value for sure.
Cheers

Topchinacat, It seems it always rained at some point in every Telluride Bluegrass but I did see two dry Jazz Fests. The setting is impressive surrounded by those tall peaks. Even more impressive from the top of lift 12 which is said to rival Swiss views. The best ski area in Colorado all things considered. "It was great. But don't tell anybody" - Mike Dolgushkin in Deadbase X re: the first Red Rocks shows.

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Instead of just having a box set from 1969, I think it would be great if they released a box set that included shows from 1967, 1968, 1969, & 1970, two or three shows from each year. They could start with 3/18/67 the original Grateful Dead 5 members . Also include acoustic music from 69/70 shows. That would be a killer of a box set!

Even the rains better in America. There were no trippy natural psychedelic effects when it rained at festivals in England that I can remember. Unless you'd taken some, of course. Knee deep in a muddy bog more like. You can see it in the photos of Bickershaw.
I thought that was a strange notion mentioned by Strang3 - a casual GD fan. Then I wondered if I was one myself in the context of this board. I typically listen to 3-4 shows a week. With no missed songs.

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can't seem to stop playing these:
If I could Only Remember My Name
It's All Coming Back To Me Now
4-way Street
CS&N
Crosby & Nash Wind on the Water
Deja Vu
Miss you David, Vaya con Dios, mi amigo
I will try a pallet cleanser with 2-21-71 Grateful Dead live at the Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY

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In reply to by PT Barnum

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PT - I am the same way the last few days. Lots of Crosby being played. A hell of a talent, for sure.
You’re right - a little Dead might just be the tonic. Perhaps a ‘78 vintage.

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Me and Oro have been banging the drum for a primal box defined as you have: 67, 68, 69, 70.

I have a feeling they're seriously light on '70 shows. But there's only so much time.

It was interesting around 2003 when The Dead and The Other Ones toured. I met so many people who were there for the live thing and the scene but had no idea about the archival releases. As we've discussed, those are two different experiences. I like both. Especially the very early GD I missed in concert.

Man, I'm a little crisp as it is. I took a fair amount of LSD in the 1973-1979 phase, and this is my 50th year of continuous use of psychedelics: first lysergic, then (due to its absence) the shrooms -- point being, I'm kinda glad I missed those early lysergic fests cuz I'm crisp enough as it is.

Rambling, as always. As you were.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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.... but, Valdez In The Country.
Outstanding stuff.
So is The Last Of Us.
I beat that game.

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Should definetly be part of the BIG 1960s DEAD BOX SET. Would also make a great dual release along with 4/5/69.

I used to think I'd have loved to be in say, London or San Francisco around 1966-69 when acid first appeared in large quantities. I'm glad I wasn't now. I think I'd have been swallowed up whole. It was 1976 when I first collided, the last year ( I think) before acid was scooped up in the infamous Operation Julie drug bust. It was still around, but it seemed a bit weaker - different in some way. Mushrooms seemed far better, to me, but I stopped for about 6 years anyway.
Then I moved into a flat surrounded by fields of mushrooms, and I thought I would see what would happen if I tried a few again - this time on my own. It felt very different taking them in my 30's to how it had been in my teens/early 20's. My last trip was when I was about 36. I used to get flashbacks, which I quite enjoyed, until I was about 43. They just seemed to fade away in time, and I realised one day that I was no longer so visited. I can't imagine what I would now be like if I had continued to take them. As it is, I am often criticized for seeming to be in world of my own. Hard to know, one way or the other. Who wants to behave like everyone else anyway?

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Interestingly (probably to me alone) I have never had a flashback. I have memories of key insights or phenomena but no flashbacks. I have a few memories of tripping to the GD still emblazoned on my soul. The mushrooms in the backcountry erase the barriers between me and my surroundings; I "understand" the rocks and the vultures... Funny, they always circle at least once and dip low, probably to size up whether I'm potential carrion -- which of course every living thing is. I had alienation in teen years but these days I feel pretty good about life. I do not take psychedelics for pleasure or fun; it's always a day of reckoning and resolution. It still takes a little courage for me to face the truth. But it makes me a better human being. Didn't Paul McCartney once say something like that?

Okay, another TMI from HF. SOP!

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There was that fugue state for days after 7-8-78 but I've written that off as tripping while still ill with flu. Not advised. Early hallucinogens were all for fun but did provide some clarity as to purpose or more accurately satisfaction with the current state of myself and the world. That unease with what you're doing with your early twenties life and realizing you're not going to change things by luck. Got me off my butt and to a better place. But the clarity of thought and the hilarious happiness was always a bonus benefit. When it all clicks and you see the wheel is turning and it can't slow down. Hard to stay in that mode when it wears off but that is the challenge of learning. It takes practice and still does every day. But I digress.
I want to live where DR was with the magic growing in your back yard. Just make sure you're eating the right ones!
Cheers
And HF, I'm a Littleton (unincorporated, now Centennial) product as well. Arapahoe & University area from 1967, when I was 10, and my sister still owns the family home there.

No, during those years I didn't take mushrooms as a party drug. I liked it best taking them on my own, in my flat, on a Saturday afternoon, and then going out to meet friends later in the evening. I did take them when I went out occasionally - The Dead at Wembley being a case in point, but those at home were the best. I felt I made all sorts of positive changes in my life at that time, too. I started doing voluntary work, which I loved, went to University to get qualified and started going to meditation classes with the local Buddhist organisation. Something I have done virtually every day since. I also got engaged to be married - so it wasn't all good.
It was what I call a happy accident moving into the flat a short distance from where mushrooms grew. Once I knew exactly what to look for - I was a bit tentative the first time, I seemed to see them all over the place. The local reservoir was the main picking ground, and the cricket pitch about 100 yards from my flat was a good resource. I stopped because I left the area, not because I felt I needed to, or because I felt I was harming myself in any way. Suddenly, I felt the time had passed.
Those flashbacks, if that was what they were, were just visual, and a bit trivial. The look of my face used to change in the mirror when I was shaving. Like watching Dr Jekyll turn into Mr Hyde. The same thing with other people's faces, if I looked at that them for long enough, their looks used to change. Doesn't happen now.

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I only surface around release time, but I am curious, anyone get a shipping notification yet for this one?

Edit: I just got a shipping notification 8pm EST

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It's like the Golden Rule -- so simple, yet so difficult. Taking the fabric of love and oneness from the psychedelic experience and hanging onto it for application in real life is, I think, the big challenge. I was a cocky kid and 50 years of tripping combined with life's knee to the groin has humbled me considerably. I can still be a pompous ass for laughs with friends, but the preciousness of life, empathy for others' struggles, and lending a helping hand ala Daverock is what it's all about. Some people know that without psychedelics, so I just need consistent reminders.

1stShow, are you still in Littleton or I thought maybe Montrose? Let me know. We'd have a hoot together.

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...now HF. Since '79 actually with a stint in PHX '90-95. Montrose after that.
Can't do Denver anymore. Lots of history like jumping cars off the whoops on County Line Rd. at 70 mph. Gunnison was my refuge. Ft. Collins twice too. Great town. Jose's Mexican restaurant downtown Littleton. Tortilla Flats on Sante Fe was better. Arapahoe H.S. tribe of '75. Maybe I'll come back for 50th, LOL. But I digress.
It would be a hoot! If I am coming your way I'll let you know, likewise if you are on the Hwy 50/550 tour let me know.
Cheers

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Thanks. That's a sweet set list (2).

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Maybe they will release 2/13 & 14/70 as complete shows for Bear's Choice 50th anniversary, remastered and in the order the show was played, that would be a knockoout!

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In reply to by adedhed68

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Nothing in my inbox yet. Good to hear you got one. I am guessing this weekend isn't happening. Not sure what the release date even means at this point.

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Brilliant suggestion. Typically, anniversaries don't move me -- unless they're personally conveeenient! Like an expanded Bear's Choice, or a monster '73 box. Even better: both + WotF expanded.

A man can dream. As I do, regularly.

1st Show: I spent several years in a cabin the Spanish Peaks on the New Mexico border. (I'm sure you can figure out what I was doing there...) After a bust, moved to Steamboat for years, drove dog sleds for cash and adventure. To Chi-town for school. Back to Pueblo, CO, for a book on Spanish colonial exploration, then up the Front Range to a dead end road in Littleton. Spend most of my free time in the Dinosaur Country in NE Utah, NW Colo, SW WY. Love my home and web of life here but unsure of next step. (Probably another GD show!!)

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Spent a lot of time there too. Vernal has become a fossil fuel nightmare though now. Wells everywhere. I liked it better when the tar sand experiment went bust, say early 80's. The laundromat has special machines for oily Gilsonite rags. We said wtf is Gilsonite? Wife did her masters thesis on the rock art of Nine Mile Canyon. Love the McKee Spring area next to Dinosaur Nat'l. Mon. and of course the Ashley- Dry Forks petroglyphs too. Let's roll! And Steamboat! Ski The Glade. Sweet in fresh powder which they have plenty of. Many a day there when I was in Ft. Fun but a long drive.
Cheers
Now back to our regularly scheduled program: Why is 45 not sold out? Have they not listened to the listening party? Just exactly hot! It has been slow here in these parts since about the holidays.

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I mean, like a ham on rye....

I prefer to think of myself as Snidely Whiplash, from the Dudley Doright cartoon. Tying damsels to train tracks is SO much fun. Especially the ex- .... KIDDING! (A little.)

1st Show, I've spent 35 years trying to cover about 3000 sq miles of Dinosaur backcountry, scribbling away now. We've taken up pack-rafting -- the one-man inflatable rafts from Alpacka -- for the Yampa, Little Snake, Green etc. Up to Class III.

I think the $40, 4-disc format might slow sales. Who cares? A lot of people are missing out. Wait, I care, cuz the success of the Vault program keeps it going. If I gotta buy one at retail, so be it.

That would be a great release, the whole run in the order it was played. Including 2/11 - although the fact that the Allmans and Peter Green joined in on that night might make it more difficult to release. Maybe not, though - an Allmans set from this run has already come out.

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... Nyah-ah-ah! You well dressed dastardly ne'er do well. We got as far in as Echo Park one time camping and looking up at Steamboat Rock. Truly awesome, and I don't use that word much. You are taking the early explorer's super highway, the rivers, to see what would be very difficult to get to otherwise. Very cool. Not many do that.
Cheers

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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why do you think the reindeer can fly?

(actually, according to Beavis and Butthead, it's because Santa beats their asses with a whip.)

I can retire in 6 years...

BACK TO WORK , PF!!!

The myth I heard decades ago was that reindeers in Siberia ate amanita muscaria hallucinogenic mushrooms. Their urine was then drunk by Siberian shamen and both parties then flew off into the night. According to this myth, as I remember it, Santa Claus was not a person, but a magic mushroom.

.... according to Cheech & Chong, reindeers can fly because of some magic dust Santa gives them.

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17 years 6 months
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The trend seems to be three year periods. If a '60s box is on the potential consideration list, a set with shows from '67-'69 wouldn't be out of the realm of possibilities. '68-'70 or '71 would basically still be the same general band.

Certainly WotF will be big. So many possibilities. A February FE complete set for Bears Choice would be awesome, but don't see that happening as the meat of those shows was a Dicks Pick.

Whatever they release it'll be cool. Hoping to see some late 1990 or something from 1991 in the Dave's Picks series later this year. Well overdue to break that seal.

Sounds markedly less appealing than licking toads.

I'm out, but I like your spirit.

Apparently, there is documentation of people in Siberia that boil fly agaric, discard the water and then prepare/cook/do whatever to the mushroom which includes tripping. I also heard there is a subspecies in the UK that is not as toxic as those here, but was unable to find documentation on the web as I wrote this (which probably means it's BS, i.e. do not eat this mushroom, repeat DO NOT EAT IT). Anyway, interesting stuff.

DO NOT eat the red mushrooms with white dots. Repeat, do not eat the mushrooms that make you puke.

My brother knows his mushrooms (and birds, lizards, dragonflies, reptiles, well he puts Mr. Wilson to shame a regular nerd but loves the GD and I both got high and tripped with him for the first time, but I digress) anyway we were walking up the river trail from my house one day perhaps 8 years ago or so.. and he reaches down and pulls up this tiny mushroom and says, this might interest you Jim.. I can't be sure here but I think it's a psilocybin species. He twisted the tiny stem and it immediately turned blue.. which interested me to no end (oh the thoughts).. he said, don't get your hopes up, when dried this is probably 1/100th of a gram, good luck finding the other 99/100th. Still, this area is not known for magic mushrooms but I believe he was correct.

I love mushrooms and still do them, not for fun, more like brain maintenance.. focus on introspective and self-regulating, a brain cleanser.

anyway... As you were with the newfound wisdom not to drink reindeer piss, lick toads do not eat red mushrooms with white dots, aka live long and prosper and Play Dead. Been channeling the Swing lately.. I really haven't listened to it since it's release.

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15 years 2 months
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I have a shipping notification. The email no longer contains a tracking linq and the tracking number isn’t recognised by USPS. The order info in the store also doesn’t appear to allow tracking. Watching the package move across the US and then disappearing for a week or two added to the fun of the delivery. The new store info also doesn’t show the expected shipping dates for the items any more. How is this an improvement?

Edit: As suggested above I tried UPS. They are aware of the item. I look forward to its eventual delivery. The new Dylan box is dangerously close to me in Manchester but the delivery isn’t expected until tomorrow.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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I don't know of any mushrooms that grow in the UK that are part of the amanita group, and are less toxic that the muscaria one. There is another called amanita pantherina that is even more toxic. That one is nicknamed the death cap. As far as safety is concerned, the clue is in the name. As I understand it, none of these contain psilocybin, and the effects are completely different from those that do. The amanita group seem to cause delirium. Not really psychedelic at all.
I have always liked the look of these mushrooms, red with white dots. A real emblem of otherness. But I wouldn't eat one. At best the effects sound ghastly. At worst they could kill you.
The most common psychedelic mushroom in England was the psilocybe semilanceata. In the early days I used to look out for bluing of the stems, too, as an indicator I'd picked the right ones.
As ever, and as with most illegal drugs, their illegality adds greatly to the dangers of taking them. There seems to be a steady accumulation of scientific evidence that indicates psilocybin is of benefit in helping to alleviate all sorts of medical conditions. As well as something that spreads joy to those not diagnosed with anything.

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by Colin Gould

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My email does have a tracking number which I pasted into the UPS app:
Says expected delivery next Tuesday.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I was quite surprised to get this last night. Came quicker than I was expecting. I notice it does have a reference and a tracking number in the email. I don't bother trying to track things I order, unless a month or so goes by, and whatever it is hasn't turned up. As I often forget what I order, it's always a nice surprise when the postman knocks on my door with another parcel. What's this, I wonder. It's usually a nice surprise, anyway.

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13 years 10 months

In reply to by daverock

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I have read that picking magic mushrooms is illegal in the U.K. and that people have been 'busted' while out looking and picking them. I think it is the same here in New York state not that that the cops go looking for 'criminals' doing so. Regarding the medical benefits, Big Pharma will swoop in if they are legalized to isolate and patent and profit. We can count on it. Government agencies which claim to be separate, independent and not part and parcel of a for profit corporation will authorize all of it too. Maybe they create a drug that will help my occasional cynicism and sarcasm?

Oh, by the way, got a shipping notice a few days ago. Nothing left to do but smile, smile, smile!

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12 years 2 months
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Are the best. I did them constantly in college. Decided to stop for no other reason than the belief that something that much fun eventually had to have some side effect.

More recently, John's Hopkins is running a study using mushrooms to help stop alcoholics from drinking. It has proven to be very successful. There is also a cool documentary, Fantastic Fungi, about the relationship with mushrooms and trees. Well worth checking out.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by deadegad

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Yes, possession of mushrooms containing the active ingredients psilocin and psilocybin is illegal in Britain. It's illegal to pick them now, and possession can lead to a 7 year sentence. If you are caught growing them you could get life! I don't know if these sentences have ever been handed out though. Bizarrely, it isn't illegal to buy grow kits - the spores aren't illegal, it's just once they start growing you've broken the law.
Up until 2005, it was legal to pick them and take them home. But illegal if you then prepared them for consumption. Around 2004 there were several shops in London selling them fresh, from all around the world, cashing in before the law changed.

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