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    Golden era Grateful Dead in the most golden city in the Golden State? Yes, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 46 features the complete unreleased show from the Hollywood Palladium, Los Angeles, 9/9/72. Loosen that tie, this ain't a red carpet rodeo - it's the after party that legends are made of. Consistently excellent from start to finish, this West Coast groove showcases tracks that would soon debut on EUROPE '72, solo material from both Jerry and Bob, a riveting iteration of "China>Rider," a couple of Chuck Berry doozies, a bonkers 35-plus "Other One" that hits all the psychedelic highs, and wraps up with a "Casey Jones"/"Sugar Magnolia"/"One More Saturday Night" finale that'll have you wondering why you wore a tie in the first place. Hooray for Hollywood, indeed.
     
    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Owsley Stanley and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Oh, and it ships next week so you'll wanna grab a copy while you can.

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  • nitecat
    Joined:
    That mike

    that mike thanks for the Amazon tip. Will poke around.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Who needs mags…

    when ole nightcat is giving us some tasty treats!

    Though those that Daverock mentioned sound good…

    Ones: yeah, AI is only going to be as good as the “intelligence” it’s trying to learn, ahem…Lord help us…

    Musician and Modern Recording were da shite

    Go Nuggies!

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Garcia 20

    Nitecat - I ordered my Garcia 20 on May 26 from Amazon, exact same reason. I find sourcing Garcia albums on Amazon a little tricky, even if you have the name correct. But it’s there.

    DaveRock - I have read Vintage Rock, you’re right, it’s a good read. But I’m unfamiliar with Shindig, so I’ll check out an issue soon. Another great intelligent music-focused magazine that used to be around was Musician. I think it has gone the way of $6 concert seating, a real shame. PS - You mentioned Steve Hillage’s L album last week, and it brought a smile. The first time we ever dosed me and my friends played that album, just loved it. I recall it had a few great covers on it, including George Harrison. Sure sounded great then, have not heard it in the ensuing 45ish years.

  • nitecat
    Joined:
    Garcia live 20

    Looks like so far Amazon is not offering the new Garcia live 20 release. I save on shipping getting these through Amazon. If it shows up, give a hollar!

  • nitecat
    Joined:
    Dead Head TV

    Dead Head TV Alert!! New interviews released last week on DreamsWeDreamed dot com. Robert Hunter interview. Tom Constantin Interview. John Cipollina and Peter Albin interview. Shoreline 88 Report and Review. Deadhead comments on Rainforest and advice for the incoming President. Madison Square Garden 88 report. Rainforest message from the Dead played at the Garden. Lots of fun!! Check it out and tell your friends- DreamsWeDreamed dot com. More to be released soon!

  • nitecat
    Joined:
    Rolling Stone

    I too have considered canceling RS, I have to search for something interesting to read in them. No interest in the fashion stuff, come on! And the musicians talk to musicians is inane fluff. I like the environmental articles,and the movie and tv reviews, but I'm not sure if that's enough to keep me subscribing. I think I will try some of the other mags you guys mentioned.

    I've said it before, I feel for kids that want to see their fav musician these days, tix are out of this world.

    I stumbled into a Jimi show at the Monterey Pop Festival in1967. Too young to fully appreciate it, but I do remember seeing Jimi burn his guitar. Ha Ha I went with my Dad and my sister to see the Mamas and the Papas.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    A couple of my favorite mags from back in the day....

    ....was Kerrang. And Penthouse.
    C'mon man!

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Music Mags - UK

    My two favourite music magazines at the moment are "Vintage Rock" and "Shindig!". As you might guess the first is focussed on rock n' roll from the 1950's until the present day. "Shindig!" fulfills the same function, but for bands and musicians at the psychedelic end of the spectrum. That has 1966 as it's aproximate starting date and also comes up to today. Both mags also review films and books connected to, and reflecting the music/ culture in question
    "Shindig!" frequently mentions The Dead - in this months issue there is a heads up about "Here Comes Sunshine." Apparently it features " career spanning fan favourites, free-flowing medleys and extended jams honed during the previous year's extensive trips." Get your copy here.

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Music Mags

    When Rolling Stone was run by a bunch of aspiring journalists/hippies based in Sam Francisco, it was quite a great read, giving us some truly great music and culture journalism that was a step beyond the usual Tiger Beat kind of fluff that was so prevalent. Great “Random Notes” which often gave you a heads up who was touring long before the internet, and funny stuff, too. Not Creem magazine funny, which mocked itself as much as the artists it covered, but more in that delightful stoner humour.
    Unfortunately, musical tastes change, audiences change, and young people now do not embrace music as the life force most of us here here feel it was in it’s heyday. Music mattered - still does. Not so much to people my kid’s ages, in their 30s and younger. Their culture is different. So Jann Wenner moved things to New York, attracted a different kind of journalist, more up town, and suddenly there is shit like fashion spreads in amongst the odd article you want to read about Tom Petty. The irreverent humour was gone, and it was all a liberal, environmental, and hipster angle. Too bad, it was a great read for a long time, but now, even the budgie doesn’t want it lining his cage. There are some great British music magazines around, and you mentioned Mojo, Mr Ones - I agree, great writing, and no filler.
    New Dylan (Live) and a new Cowboy Junkies on tap tomorrow. I am playing a lot of Phish lately, trying to get my phishing legs - I think my dog is sick of hearing them around the house and car. Still no DaP 46. I’ve reached out to Customer Service, so here is hoping.

  • Mr. Ones
    Joined:
    What’s This World Coming To??

    Someone let me know if you figure it out.
    I subscribed to Rolling Stone from late ‘70’s to early ‘90’s. Dropped it for a few years. Re-subscribed late ‘90’s. Always enjoyed MOST of it. When they went to bi-weekly, and then changed the shape/size, they lost me. Not because of the paper quality or size. It was because the information contained within was just a series of bite-sized, People styled, empty “nuggets” of insipid “facts”. Yes, they do not cater to my generation any longer. It happens inevitably. When I want music info (articles, reviews, concert info etc.), I rely on my monthly subscription to Mojo magazine. Even articles about bands I’m not fond of are interesting, because the writing is intelligent.
    Regarding young ‘uns and concerts, it is irritating yes, but mystifying also, because I cannot fathom paying 💲💲💲just to have a conversation. I saw Edgar Winter in a club about 5 years ago. A young couple to my left talked (rather loudly) throughout the entire show until, at the encore, Frankenstein was played. At this point the couple filmed the entire song and seemed genuinely excited.
    I’m starting to understand that young folks are incapable of paying attention.
    Spoke with a nice lady yesterday who told me she was one of the chaperones on her grandson’s trip to Gettysburg. If you were born in this country, you know Gettysburg. When asked where he visited on the way home, the child could NOT name the town he had JUST visited, and when asked for ANY detail at all, he replied, “uhh, World War II??”. Combine this idiocy with the advent of Artificial Intelligence, and the End of the World seems nigh indeed.
    So this (topic redacted) is not relevant to the Dead, but it IS relevant to society as we knew it being Dead.
    And yes, we ALL have a bit of “get off my lawn” in our discussions, but I see that as just generational change.

    Without music, I might just be ready to check out of this “Hotel California”.

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3 years 6 months

Golden era Grateful Dead in the most golden city in the Golden State? Yes, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 46 features the complete unreleased show from the Hollywood Palladium, Los Angeles, 9/9/72. Loosen that tie, this ain't a red carpet rodeo - it's the after party that legends are made of. Consistently excellent from start to finish, this West Coast groove showcases tracks that would soon debut on EUROPE '72, solo material from both Jerry and Bob, a riveting iteration of "China>Rider," a couple of Chuck Berry doozies, a bonkers 35-plus "Other One" that hits all the psychedelic highs, and wraps up with a "Casey Jones"/"Sugar Magnolia"/"One More Saturday Night" finale that'll have you wondering why you wore a tie in the first place. Hooray for Hollywood, indeed.
 
Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Owsley Stanley and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Oh, and it ships next week so you'll wanna grab a copy while you can.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Saaaalute

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10 years 2 months

In reply to by PT Barnum

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PT - The last time I saw Tangerine Dream was during Edgar Froese's last tour with them. Very different frome their 70's epics, but still good. I will be interested to read how they are now live. If Steve Hillage plays in the club near you, I would highly recommend him. He is now, and for the last time, I think, playing the music he made from that celebrated decade, but with the hindsight of age, experience and technology. I believe he encored with "Are You Experienced?" last time he played in London.

Speaking of which - Thatmike - I can't believe it's 45 years since you last played L. When I think of the hours I have wasted...I mean enjoyed....listening to that album. Several live albums available by him worth checking out -Live Herald was the one that came out at the time.

Paul Butterfield - it doesn't seem to get mentioned often, but I actually prefer the first album to East-West. At the time it was made - 1965-66 - it was becoming a cliche for white bands to play the blues - and most of them now sound a bit amateurish - just an introduction to the real thing. That Paul Butterfield album was different - that WAS the real thing. And still is.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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To Vince!

Short version...
There seems to be a group who find it fashionable to bash the man, and it infuriates me.

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DaveRock - Unfortunately, after my pals and I got to “mixing up the medicine”, that particular Steve Hillage album disappeared, likely liberated by one of my friends. I distinctly remember having it on vinyl, and thinking it was pretty decent listen. I’ll have to revisit it in the future. Thanks for the heads up on some other listening.

Three cheers to Jim, glad to hear all is well. Health is everything. Family, music, great friends, etc etc can fight it out for second place.

And a nod to Vince Welnick, the somewhat forgotten Dead member.

Go Knights. It’s game time.

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Und

6 30 74

Und

4 2 73

Ja, gerne

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4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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$8.50 advance, $10.00 at the door

GD
Beach Boys
NRPS
Commander Cody

woooow...

Gone are the days, indeed

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28 years ago today would be the last time I would see the Grateful Dead I saw them the night before and really enjoyed the show. The last song I would see was a great version of Liberty.

....was my last time seeing the Grateful Dead live.
Great. Now I'm a little bummed out. 😞
My buddies and I mail ordered for our first east coast shows at MSG.
Needless to say, our money orders got returned.

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14 years 11 months
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I heard that that last Tangerine Dream tour with Froese was pretty good, sorry to say I never got to see the originals. Thorsten Quaeschning was Froese's student and has stated that they will continue along with Edward's latest concept. Should be interesting, 3 person band
Another toast to Vinnie, liked his work with the Dead, appreciated his work with the Tubes, his smile would light up the room, a real cool guy.
Appreciate the review of Dead and Company. Too bad they don't turn Mickey loose, melt some faces for sure.

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12 years 1 month

In reply to by PT Barnum

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Good luck to your G Knights.

I always get a little melancholy when the finals start, as the end is near.

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10 years

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Ditto

That was a replay of Holtby robbing Tuch. Only you benefited this time.

Update: that was a really weak penalty call. And the TNT guys already picked up on the Holtby save.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....just. Wow.
Set play at the steal your face off pays off for Florida.
Tip of the day here.
I checked ticket prices after puck drop.
Down to under $300 after fees.
Camp out in front of the arena and make sure your phone charged.

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17 years 5 months
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At the Masonic Temple Theater, nice place, had a good time... setlist:
Up on the Roof
David Makalaster (With Southbound Pachyderm tease)
Rumble of the Diesel
Long in the Tooth
Mr. Wright (The Claypool Lennon Delirium) (Tour debut)
Animals by Pink Floyd
Pigs on the Wing, Part 1
Dogs
Pigs (Three Different Ones)
Sheep
Pigs on the Wing, Part 2
Precipitation (Les Claypool and the Holy Mackerel)
Maple Leaf Rag (Scott Joplin cover) (Tour debut, per Les’ request)
Holy Mackerel (Les Claypool and the Holy Mackerel) (With My Name is Mud tease)
David Makalaster II
Encore:
Whamola
Cosmic Highway (With Wynona’s Big Brown Beaver tease)

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Nice game, VGuy. It was pretty tight until the 3rd. New respect for Adin Hill. Florida has a relentless forecheck, hard pressure on the D, but the Knights of the T-Mobile held fast. Great game, and a little rough stuff, which I like, too!

The new Dylan and the new Cowboy Junkies are on tap for today. Still no DaP 46, no response to numerous requests to Customer Service. Marye if there is anything you can do, much appreciate it. Help Is On The Way, perhaps?

DaveRock- Patience, it truly is the final series. I equate it to World Cup fever every 4 years. Toronto is a hugely multicultural city, so when the WC is on, bars are given special permission to serve liquor all day (to accommodate games played in far flung time zones), cars sport every flag imaginable, another neighbour puts dozens of Union Jacks in his garden, my neighbour paints himself in Dutch orange, guys that have a slight trace of Irish or Brazilian in their DNA are suddenly sporting T-shirt’s from their “homeland”, etc etc, and although I never caught the bug for the Beautiful Sport, I get the excitement it generates, and the fervour. Props to you for your patience and good humour about it!!

to get down, to the heart of the matter.
The end is nigh lol
What a game! I had 3/30/90, the other Nassau on during. Great show and a great game eh!
Serendipity, you bet, the Knights that say née scored that crucial third goal just as Bob was telling us how we needed a miracle, indeed…
New respect for Hill: in the first when they basically mobbed him and were cross checking him etc, I liked how he stood up to them and even threw a couple in the melee. But best part, he was laughing about it afterwards, while the Kittens were getting all worked up…PYSCH!!!

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3 to go. Yes, it seems ludicrous to swing at the goalie. He's well padded.
I was a bit worried when that first goal was scored shorthanded, good hustle.
Fortunes can shift but Vegas looks strong.
Never seen the pre-game festivities. The intro is laughable. Very Vegas, quite the show. Onward.
Cheers!
Steve Hillage research led to finding a Tonto's Expanding Head Band LP in the collection. Thanks

Thatmike - seems like great time to be hockey fan. Maybe I'd be one myself if I lived where you do.

Istshow- Tonto's Expanding Head Band are a group I can remember hearing about - but never actually hearing. I always imagined them to be an early electronic band - like 50 Foot Hose or Silver Apples.

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Yes, very early use of Moog and other new at the time electronics.
It's actually very good. Jazzy. Jan Hammer is the closest thing I can think of.
They don't go to feedback or the other hideous stuff electronics are capable of.
(Sorry Phil but I dislike Seastones)
Cheers

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My wife usually doesn’t watch sports with me unless it is “live”, but she was watching the pre-game build up (“They have cheerleaders!!”) and loving it. We both figure Las Vegas has a bit of experience entertaining a crowd! That T-Mobile was so electric, you could have charged your cell phone off the crowd while watching the game.

SeaStones? I’m with you 1st Show - hard pass.
Steve Hillage - Further investigation required.
Another early fan of the Moog that doesn’t get a lot of credit for it was Roger McGuinn of the Byrds. Early days for use of the Moog, so it can sound a little dated, but The Notorious Byrd Brothers - besides being a great album, and although they deny it, that horse on the cover was a funny shot at David Crosby - has some interesting Moog work. McGuinn was known for his fascination with gadgets and electronics. A truly great record.

....corny? Maybe. Entertaining? Definitely.
It's the entertainment capital of the world.
One shouldn't expect anything less.
They had some cirque de soleil members on the tethers last night.
We're on the world stage at this point.
Go big or go home.
During the second intermission, it becomes a club party with a pretty damn impressive DJ with awesome lights. I love my lights. They don't show that during the broadcasts.
I love every second of it. Very addictive.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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It was a great game. . . for two periods. It really was. Fast paced and Florida was pressuring Vegas hard. Then it unraveled.

I don’t think Cousins had nearly the opportunity that Tuch did years ago, but he still should’ve buried that puck. It didn’t look like he got very good wood on his shot. Tuch did. Tuch just didn’t lift the puck. Regardless, it was remarkable save by Hill.

And how about Thachuk. What kind of lazy pass was that across the middle of the ice? Give Stone credit for knocking out of the air and scoring, but that was all on Thachuk. I thought it was high sticking last night, but after watching it again today, I don’t think so.

Lastly on hockey, I’ve had enough of Koharski as the “expert referee.” The guy is as indecisive as they come and really doesn’t add anything. For me at least. And Jim Schoenfeld.

As for the pregame theatrics, I don’t mind them, but they’re a bit much for me. Edmonton having the entire crowd sing the national anthem is more my speed.

Seastones - no thanks.

Good luck tomorrow night Vguy. I think that Hill save changed the series in your favor. Sweet redemption after the same thing happened to your team while shooting on the very same goal.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Something like “Hey Koharski, have another donut you fat pig”
Yeah, not a fan. He was a shitty Ref and doesn't seem to be any better now?

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This would make a great box set! If not in the vault they will certainly be in the banana boxes. My friend went to 6/6/70.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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I have always likes idea of Seastones more than the reality of actually listening to it. The same goes for the live experiments of the same ilk during 1974. They never really seem to go anywhere to me. Maybe they aren't supposed to.

One fairly early album that I have always liked, which featured synthesizers to set it's tone, is "Man Who Sold The World" by David Bowie. Nothing else I have heard sounds quite like this - very eerie and other worldly. Critics often seem to describe it as an early heavy metal album, which I have never really agreed with. It sounds nothing like the heavy rock albums that came out around that time -1970. "Deep Purple In Rock" "Paranoid" "Led Zep 2" were heavy rock. This was much more woozy.

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VGuy , as we say in GB “ eyes down and look in “ best of luck tonight . On the night shift this week so it’s hockey all the way 👍🏻

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Eichel literally dove head first into a brick wall.
I'm shaking my head too. Ouch!
Even the replay is painful.
Do they even have concussion protocols in the NHL?
Cheers
Post game edit: Impressive win. They dominated.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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....yes. They do.
But Eichel is coming off neck surgery from the off season.
That looked extremely painful.
Aaaand. He's back and scores on his first shift. 💪

Not to jinx you, but congratulations. I don’t see the Panthers coming back to win this series. Not the way Vegas is playing right now. That long layoff seems to have taken away Florida’s momentum. Here’s hoping that Florida can win one at home so you get a chance to see the Cup in person.

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In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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....he started feeling sorry for Florida.
Yeah. Go over there.
And yes AJS. I'll be paying attention regarding the game a week from tomorrow.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Vguy72

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Looking good Winthorpe, feeling good Todd…
But I’m a little worried about the road trip.
Think the kittens are going to be brutal and shits gonna get weird…

Going back to that for a minute, one curious cd I've got is called "Forbidden Planets", which features early electronic recordings from the end of the 1940's to 1958. It features what might be considered low and high brow music-film themes and classical pieces by Stockhausen. Including "Gesang Der Juenglinge" by the latter. That's bad trip music if there is such a thing!
I saw Stockhausen live once, which was quite a strange evening. He gave a brief lecture, followed by a piece of music called "Hymnen" which is a cut up of various National anthems. They played electronic music on the public speakers in the bar during intermission. It was all quite formal though - it wasn't psychedelic in the same way that rock bands using electronic sounds were/are. I suppose if you were used to seeing classical music performed, it was quite weird. It was all very quiet. I can remember talking to a girl in the bar, who remarked how strange the atmosphere was - with the electronic sounds bleeping away in the background.

Electronic music was an interest of mine in the late 60s and early 70s, hand built small tone generators with Radio Shack kits in part to learn how to control touch tone phone switching. Though I had studied piano, when cut loose with a Moog Synthesizer in a class at American University in 1972, it was a total uphill curve. When viewed photos of early production Moogs, its all about patch cords, tone generators and filters had to be hooked together via external cabling before the keyboard could control much of anything. So there were dozens of phone jacks and cables to connect, spaghetti. Before the Moog, there was the Theremin, patented in 1928... both used by Lothar and the Hand People. When arrived in this area of Vermont eons ago, I came to know Will Wright who lives in these parts and played with Lothar and the Hand People back in the day, played shows with the Dead, the Byrds, Canned Heat, and Hendrix. Will was my guitar teacher briefly. New England Digital was born nearby as well, late 1970s developers of the Synclavier which was originally designed at Dartmouth. Pat Metheny, among others (Zappa, Genesis, The Cars, Herbie Hancock) began to use the Synclavier and since he was in the Boston area, came up this way multiple times to work with NED, gave some solo concerts at Dartmouth to explore it. Pat later developed his version of an Orchestrion, an electronically controlled "player piano" collection of instruments distant kin to synthesizers. Pat's playing locally tomorrow night in trio format, pleased to have a ticket.

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Mention of the theramin always makes me think of Clara Rockmore, who I had read about a few years ago, as one of the renowned masters of the instrument. I was always intrigued by her story, playing truly such a unique instrument, and her Lost Album is available for sale. However, I think the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations”, and the odd inclusion in my old Munster DVDs is probably enough for me.

Jack Eichel must have one sore shoulder today. It was a clean hit, though, by Tkachuk, but talk about rocking your world. It’s a rough game, keep your head up, Jack. When I was taking karate (Goju ryu) years ago, I was sparring a much younger guy, big fellow that played defence for one of the Junior teams (London Knights), where the NHL players get selected from. He hit me so hard, all I could see was my head rolling across the dojo floor. Keep your head up, and your fists in front of you, Mike.

Received “ Jerry Garcia (Reissue): The Collected Artwork” book today, will go through it over the next few days. I am always amazed by how many great musicians were also first rate artists - Garcia, Joni, Dylan, Ron Wood, Charlie Watt, George Frayne (Commander Cody), Lennon, etc etc. My holy trinity has always been music, art, and sports > there is beauty and poetry and good and evil in all of them. Real soul food.

Edit - I just read this: Clara Rockmore’s theramin album was produced by….Bob Moog. Yes, that Moog.

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In reply to by That Mike

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The first time I heard electronic music was in the early 1960's when I was about 5 or 6. "Telstar" by The Tornados, which still sounds wonderful to me today, and the Doctor Who theme by the Radiophonic Workshop, master minded by Delia Derbyshire. Some 10 years later, when I first heard "Meddle", the opening "One of These Days" reminded me of this music.

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1: Great Food, bbq, Italian, Mexican, Chinese, 2: Great Music, 3: Sports, (especially football), and great beer to go along with all of the above.

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