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    "Basketball and music have always been alike for me, the celebration of life and all other good things. These two art forms represent the best of teamwork, constant motion, creativity, leadership, communication, focus, execution, friendship, loyalty, cooperation, hope, opportunity, purpose, sacrifice, discipline, honor, and fun. Fun to play. Fun to practice. UCLA and the Grateful Dead embody the highest levels of this celebratory joy. At UCLA, it was endless fun, every day, in every way. We couldn’t wait to get there, to get going — though it was never as much fun as when the Grateful Dead came to play with and for us." - Bill Walton
     
    Is there anyone who knows the acoustics of Pauley Pavilion better than Bill "Grateful Red" Walton? We think not, so we signed him on as a liner note scribe for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 48, the complete previously unreleased show from UCLA's Pauley Pavilion 11/20/71. He was there, after all, "driftin' and dreamin'" as the Dead shape-shifted through a first set of Americana classics from WORKINGMAN'S DEAD and AMERICAN BEAUTY into their second one featuring truly primal psychedelic jams (a 23+ minute "The Other One"). They peppered in hot takes on tracks from the recently released SKULL & ROSES ("Bertha," "Me And My Uncle," "Not Fade>GDTRFB") and road-tested tunes like "Ramble On Rose" and "Tennessee Jed" that would make the cut on the following year's EUROPE '72. It's all delivered with such precision that we've had to come up with some overtime for disc three. There you'll find 75+ minutes of music from the Kiel Opera House, St. Louis, MO, 10/24/70, with the rest of the show due sometime in the near future.
     
    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 48: PAULEY PAVILION 11/20/71 was recorded by Rex Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

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  • Gary Farseer
    Joined:
    Maybe

    given up on that post

  • hendrixfreak
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    Grieving is strange

    Proudfoot, I'm with ya. Took two big losses last year -- father and cat (laugh if ya want, we spent 20 years together) -- and grief seems elusive, it comes and goes. Everything is a-okay one minute, the next the tears rain down at the irreparable loss.

    As to "distant figures," meaning people I didn't know, I weathered Jimi, Janis, Duane, Roy, Jerry... then Gregg Allman's and Robert Hunter's passings really did me in.

    Here's to acceptance... though it can be hard to achieve. Sometimes I want to tell my father what neat stuff I'm doing, but I don't have that area code to connect with him.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    I Second That Emotion

    Thinking about emotions, and feelings of anxiety- or any psychological discomfort, reminds me of my own experiences of the same. 10 years ago, just after I retired, I learnt transcendental meditation from this teacher. Unexpectedly, at the same time, I started having slight panic attacks. I wasn't panicking about anything specific - but this wave of anxiety used to come over me with no warning and for no reason. Then it would go again - for no reason. I told this teacher about it, and he told me that I hadn't dealt with a lot of loss and grief in my life, and that because of this I had stored it in my subconscious. And it had been activated by meditating.
    I don't know how true that was. It still happens occasionally, and I just wait for it to pass, which it always does. Sometimes after a few minutes, sometimes after as long as a week. Hasn't stopped me meditating.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    10/19/71

    I don't know when they came on, I'm afraid, but that show would make a great Dave's Picks. As would 12/5/71. As would 11/7/71 I'm slightly surprised that we have had a few Fall 1971 shows released, and yet those have fallen through the cracks.

  • Obeah
    Joined:
    10/19/71 question

    Speaking of Keith's first show: does anyone know what time the band actually took the stage that night? I could have sworn that I read that they took the stage over an hour late, but I can't find a source

  • Obeah
    Joined:
    71 shapeshifter

    It's fun talking about 1971 and the Grateful Dead. I was baffled as a new head when I first started getting tapes from this year bc I didn't have the necessary knowledge to understand why their sound varied so drastically. In short order, I collected 2/18/71, what was labeled 4/29/71 (actually from two days of the run), 7/2/71, 10/19/71 and finally the show I always talk about, 12/5/71. I didn't realize this arbitrary span of selected dates included Mickey's departure... not to mention Pigpen's health and performance situation. I *did* know 10/19 was Keith's first show. And yet 12/5 was already an evolution, and it was only 6-7 weeks later. It still blows my mind thinking about how they created all of this ferociously distinctive music while undergoing all of this change.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    9 13 81

    A comfortable show

    The Brokedown made me verklempt

    Not looking for a pity party, but since my Dad's passing in September I have been hit by sudden, random waves of emotion. It's like aftershocks from an earthquake or like brief seizures. The human mind/emotion center is, well, mind boggling. Just out of the blue, about 15 seconds, then back to regular life.

  • billy the kiddd
    Joined:
    Anniversary show 11/3/84 BCT

    Fun show, great Cumberland, but they all are. Some not often played tunes. Next stop S.F.. Civic, New Years Eve Shows.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    in stock again?

    duhfuq

  • daverock
    Joined:
    1971-1972

    HF - I agree with that . From the moment Keith joined, the band entered a different era, and these Fall shows are more in line with the great shows to come in 1972 than the ones before in 1971.
    A highlight of the first set for me is Tennessee Jed, with it's great middle section. The Truckin'-Other One is the centre piece though.Totally reshaped from earlier versions to great advantage. From rock and roll to the stars and back again.

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"Basketball and music have always been alike for me, the celebration of life and all other good things. These two art forms represent the best of teamwork, constant motion, creativity, leadership, communication, focus, execution, friendship, loyalty, cooperation, hope, opportunity, purpose, sacrifice, discipline, honor, and fun. Fun to play. Fun to practice. UCLA and the Grateful Dead embody the highest levels of this celebratory joy. At UCLA, it was endless fun, every day, in every way. We couldn’t wait to get there, to get going — though it was never as much fun as when the Grateful Dead came to play with and for us." - Bill Walton
 
Is there anyone who knows the acoustics of Pauley Pavilion better than Bill "Grateful Red" Walton? We think not, so we signed him on as a liner note scribe for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 48, the complete previously unreleased show from UCLA's Pauley Pavilion 11/20/71. He was there, after all, "driftin' and dreamin'" as the Dead shape-shifted through a first set of Americana classics from WORKINGMAN'S DEAD and AMERICAN BEAUTY into their second one featuring truly primal psychedelic jams (a 23+ minute "The Other One"). They peppered in hot takes on tracks from the recently released SKULL & ROSES ("Bertha," "Me And My Uncle," "Not Fade>GDTRFB") and road-tested tunes like "Ramble On Rose" and "Tennessee Jed" that would make the cut on the following year's EUROPE '72. It's all delivered with such precision that we've had to come up with some overtime for disc three. There you'll find 75+ minutes of music from the Kiel Opera House, St. Louis, MO, 10/24/70, with the rest of the show due sometime in the near future.
 
Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 48: PAULEY PAVILION 11/20/71 was recorded by Rex Jackson and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

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10 years 2 months
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get any new music for Christmas?
Cheers

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8 years 1 month

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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I bet Dennis got a bunch of music for Christmas....…..

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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A Gift From A Flower to a Garden- mono vinyl - Donovan
Lets Go Down and Blow Our Minds - British Psychedelic Sounds of 1967 - various
Hackney Diamonds - The Stones

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14 years 11 months
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RIP John Cutler, a bit of a story, the Grateful Dead sent John ahead of the band and the rest of the bozo's and bolo's to Egypt for the "Egyptian experiment". When he got there (this is in the 70s now) the airport authorities were very skeptical and leary of all of the musical equipment so John had to disassemble every piece so the authorities could inspect it. The fore thought of the band to send someone weeks ahead of the scheduled shows was a brilliant thought and one that saved the show. There was a war going on between Egypt and Israel at the time so it was not real easy for anyone to get into Egypt, especially a hippy with a bunch of "equipment". At the time, Egypt was still quite a backward country and there was nothing on site that could be used by John to set up shop, so he asked for some cable, as the engineers thought they could use the great pyramid as an echo chamber so they brought him some, left over by the nazis in WW2. Of course the bulk of it was unusable and the echo chamber idea was shelved.
Needless to say, he did it, and the band pulled off a legendary show.
Fare thee well Mr. Cutler, and thank you, for a real good time.

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RIP Tommy Smothers tried to show us what was going down, and the censors cancelled him. A true warrior who will be missed. The Smothers Brothers comedy hour was ahead of the times and spoke negatively about racism, the president and the Vietnam war. They also had an incredible list of rock stars on the show, along with anti war folk singers. The Who almost blew up the stage when 3 explosive charges were put in the cannon inside Keith's bass drum and when it went off, caught Pete's hair on fire and sent a piece of cymbal into Keith's arm. All on network tv.
Thanks for the memories, now over 50 years ago.

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10 years 2 months
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ALERT: Only 150 left an hour ago.
Oct. 31, 1971. That's a show worthy of vinyl.
Cheers

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17 years 3 months

In reply to by PT Barnum

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There was no war actually going on between Egypt and Israel at the time of or preceding the Dead's Giza concerts. (There hadn't been since the October War/Yom Kippur War/Ramadan War in 1973.) What was going on, mostly secretly until signed on Sep 17 1978 (the day after the last Giza concert; also Ken Kesey's birthday), were negotiations mediated by President Jimmy Carter in Maryland
between (not usually together in the same room) Israel's Menachem Begin and Egypt's Anwar el-Sadat that culminated as the Camp David Accords and led to the Egypt-Israel peace treaty signed six months later. (That treaty made a formal mutual recognition and normalization of relations between the two countries, ended their state of war existing since the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, and led to Israel's departure from Sinai.)

oh, and I think it's doubtful that the inadequate cabling provided to try to wire up to the King's Chamber for echoing the concert feed dated from the Nazi era; that's probably someone's tale-telling exaggeration (I checked Rock Scully's entertaining but facts-challenged memoir Living with the Dead as a likely source for that, but it's not there. Maybe in Nicki Scully's or Kesey's accounts of the Egypt adventure?)

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the Camp David Accord ended all hostilities between the two countries, so technically not at war, just hostile to each other. Thanks for pointing out that little bit of history to us all.
My previous post was correct, just because one can't find the information doesn't mean it didn't happen. Do you think I made it up? 1979 Egypt was very primitive. I did not use Rock Skullys book, I did research it a bit and I stand by my post, the wire was ancient, probably left over from WW2.
The main point is that without forethought by the band and them sending John to Egypt these shows might not have happened.
Thank you John, and fare thee well.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by PT Barnum

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Just wasted a half hour and late for work trying to post about the Egypt thing, including quotes from Healy, but it’s all another effin waste as I can’t post it, I’m so over this BS!
Hey rhino, we’re giving you millions of dollars a year, how bout you fix your lame ass site!

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In reply to by daverock

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RIP John Cutler. Loved his recordings.

Interesting info. Alan Trist has a great write up in the liner notes of the Rocking the Cradle release. They used The Who's PA system from London. Quite the production to make these shows happen.

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10 years 2 months
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As Oro says, we are still experiencing censorship at a massive level trying to post. I tried a four sentence post and had to cut it to two. It was about Christmas albums, clearly dangerous stuff. I hope you can help. Thank you.
Cheers

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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We're being repressed!

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12 years

In reply to by DeadVikes

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My wife gave me 5/9/77 vinyl.

Everyone else gives me amazon gift cards.

So far I bought Dicks 4 & 5 (never bought the dicks when they came out)

so now I have 4, 5, 9, 14 & 29. Have 100 bucks left in amazon bucks. Looking for best deal on more Dicks

update edit.... surprised it let me answer that! Now will the update work?

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Page 187 GD gear

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Healy

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Purchased

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15 years 2 months
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One of my latest purchases was his recent release The New World on the Discus label

Just been hey nowed Several times so far

I had to delete much of this post to get it past the censorship

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In reply to by PT Barnum

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PT, I mean no personal criticism. But I believe it's not true that it was not real easy in 1978 for anyone to get into Egypt (though John Cutler with equipment may indeed have faced some lengthy inspection rigmarole at entry, not unusual).

I traveled to Egypt for the Dead's concerts among a small group of Californians who got there via flight and hotel arrangements coordinated by Brian Bisnett. We flew TWA from San Francisco to New York on Sunday Sep 10 (as I remember it), then again on TWA from JFK to Cairo, with stops in Rome and. Athens. That and entering Egypt was all easy enough and very travel-business-as-usual for any American with passport and visa and typhoid inoculations (or for Canadians or Europeans or Africans, say, with equivalent travel-doc necessities; if one were Israeli, or were to travel from Israel to Egypt, I can't say how easy or difficult that may have been). Tourism was a large, normal, and vital factor in Egypt's economy.

I had the means to go, and it was not particularly expensive. (I lack good partiicular memory of the cost, but I'll guesstimate something over $800 and under $1500 for everything. We were in Cairo and Giza for three-and-a-half days before the shows, throughout the shows, and for several days afterward went upriver to Luxor [encountering there Jerry and Mountain Girl, Donna and Keith] and Abu Simbel, then north briefly to Alexandria before return to Cairo and then home.) Again, it was fairly easily done, and we were just a bunch of anybodies doing it. I recall no remarks from other foreigners about difficulties getting in to Egypt.

Mark, wow, that is really cool you made the trip out there. That is dedication. Must have been a great experience.
Would love to hear more about the shows. I have the release and the bonus disc, and I always have enjoyed it all even though they were a little off at times. How did you all feel about the shows?

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really? this is still happening? can't post now, thanks deadnet

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14 years 11 months
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Mark, that's really cool to have been there with them all and got to experience the eclipse and the Bedouins, so cool.

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14 years 11 months
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that's Jambase, not bands

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In reply to by PT Barnum

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PT, so glad - really - that my continued pushing of my take on your comments didn't offend! I'll check out that Cutler interview at Jambase.

DeadVikes, and all:
One could maybe comment on the Grateful Dead Egypt experience to no end. At the moment, what I'd like to say is that the "Peggy-O" from the first night really resonated with me while we were there, thematically, and afterward; seems among the most touching songs they gave in Egypt, dire language of warfare and all. Had hoped it would have been included in the Egypt 1978 album, but perhaps Thursday's recordings were not as useable as the other two nights', or Keith's piano tuning sounded worse. There are recordings at archive dot o r g. Also, I should say that I think good audience recordings from the Giza performances (which I haven't researched enough to be able to name) really give the best aural impression of the concert ambience. I saw a few people with D-5s taping.

I would love, eventually, to obtain good recordings of Hamza El Din's sets at Giza, and also of a concert he gave at Moraga Hall in Santa Cruz in 1979, I think it was (I've looked for that Moraga Hall performance recently, found no evidence of availability; someone ran classified ads in Santa Cruz in 1979 or 1980 offering cassette tapes of it for around 8 or 10 dollars, which I didn't go for, stupidly!). (I run a Mac computer, and don't have audio software yet to deal with FLAC music files, which Macs natively won't play, so haven't looked to download any of the whole Egypt performances available.)

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In reply to by mark_mumper

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I’ve been repeatedly hey now’d trying to post 2 sentences.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Awesome that you made it to Egypt.

xACT will convert F L A C files to A I F F.

VLC (traffic cone icon video player) will play F L A C.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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FLAC and AIFF are banned words.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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When not using them to inform somebody of something.

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7 years 4 months
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Wishing all a safe, happy , new, year. The events of December has likely changed my entire outlook on the rest of my life. Another story for another time.

Last 5:

Mahavishnu Orchestra-Visions of the Emerald Beyond
Gov’t Mule-The Tel-Star Sessions
The La’s-The La’s
Miles Davis-Bootleg Sessions Vol. 1 Live In Europe 1967 Discs 1 & 2.
Frank Zappa-Overnight Sensation 50th Anniversary Box-Disc 4 Detroit May 12, 1973

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I guess the Sitegeist had had enough of long comments from me today, let's see whether this one goes through

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I can't declare on that for the others I traveled with, only about my impressions of their responses. Everybody mainly had a real good time, so far as I sensed. We didn't do a lot of or maybe any performance critiquing! (Nor were any of us who weren't couples necessarily in the same spots or areas during the shows.)

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What I most remember is how we enjoyed the scene and our experiences in it (discounting, in my case at least, some mild diarrheal trouble). Highlights included climbing the Great Pyramid to the top (eventually so, in my case - the first evening we were there, prior to the shows, some of the guys, especially, were hot to climb {up a side, to begin with, which everyone found isn't the better way to go about it], which I thought was a typically American response of conquering something before understanding it, so I didn't myself until a day or two afterward)

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If xACT is Exact Audio Copy, that software itself apparently won't work on a Mac.

I see that VLC will, I just haven't gotten around to this track of my digtal-music train journey

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for today
Posts 3c and 4 of How Our Group Felt About The Egypt Shows (And Around Them) to follow, maybe tomorrow, then I'll shut up, g'night all

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8 years 1 month

In reply to by mark_mumper

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Thanks Mark, appreciate you taking the time to comment about your experiences there. I can't imagine what that would have been like. I will have to check out some of those recordings. I did listen to part of Disc 2 from Rocking the Cradle tonight in the car. Love that Shakedown! Jerry just kills it.

Phish - Hoist (vinyl)
Dylan - The Bootleg Series 4
King Crimson - Thrakattak
Galactic - Ruckus
Tedeschi Trucks Band - I Am The 🌙. All four of them because they are all awesome.
.
Current. Road Trips Vol 3 No 1 12.28.79. Happy Anniversary!

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9 years 1 month
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I use xACT on Mac.
I also use Toast, but that’s not f r e e

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17 years 3 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Thanks for the clarification re xACT.

And I'd forgotten about Toast (Titanium - do they still call it that?).

I've got to get to this before dying...among other and more serious tasks

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