• 1,006 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    "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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    John Cutler

    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.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Christmas Hits

    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

  • DeadVikes
    Joined:
    I bet

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

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Did Anyone ...

    get any new music for Christmas?
    Cheers

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Dolphins are in the playoffs....

    ....thanks Santa.
    Merry Jerry Christmas everyone!

  • nuclearabbit
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Snakefinger's guitar solo on…

    Snakefinger's guitar solo on The Residents' "Satisfaction" is one of the greatest of all time.

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    NHL Outdoor Classic

    The Kraken vs. Golden Knights on New Years day.
    PF vs. Vguy? This could be good!
    Hockey should be played outdoors.
    Cheers

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Calling from the Funhouse

    Crow-that's spot on, what you say about The Stooges and the MC5. I couldn't agree more if I'd written it myself. All manner of British punk bands tried to copy them circa 1977, but no one came close. They just copied the three chord thrash without any understanding at all. "Funhouse" is definitely my favourite Stooges albums. And that clip of the MC5 at Tartar Field is one of my favourite live videos of any band.

  • Danehead
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Purple..

    I saw them in 1993 - another "reunion-tour", which then turned out to be the final one with Blackmoore and they were still LOUD.. Happy Holidays all..

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Calling from the Funhouse

    Stooges were the birth of punk, IMO.

    From what I understand, they were more of performance art thing than a rock band in the beginning, playing homemade instruments and an amplified vacuum cleaner to create an enormous thumping drone as Iggy, dosed out of his freaking mind, slithered around and mumbled and screamed. They didn't know any actual "songs" when they got signed (by the legendary Danny Fields, who had come to Michigan to scout the MC5, who turned him on to the Stooges.) So for their first album they had somehow write and learn songs, and the result was stuff like "I Wanna Be Your Dog": relentless, droning riffs with lyrics that make the Ramones sound like verbose poetry students in comparison. In other words: punk.

    It was a huge break from, well, anything resembling "normal" music, really. And would prove a major inspiration for the Ramones, Pistols, etc. But the really great record is Funhouse. This is recorded about a year later, and they had actual songs and pretty amazing live set, which they just recorded live the in the studio for the album. Just pure, balls out, screaming, animalistic gut level rawk. It's just so incredibly over the top that it's difficult to compare it to anything of that era. Or almost anything since.

    The band got strung out after that, and broke up, and reformed with different personnel, and made Raw Power. Which is pretty great in its own right, except that it does sound kind of studio bound in comparison to Funhouse, and the recording quality is really thin and trebly and even after all this time no one's been able to fix it. But all three Stooges records are worth having, if you're at all sympathetic to punk.

    Nothing in Iggy's solo career ever came close to his Stooges stuff, IMO. Kind of amazing he lived long enough to do any of it, frankly.

    MC5 were incredible onstage, as numerous bootlegs demonstrate. None of the official recordings quite make it (Vox are so so, tunes are often run of the mill, IMO.) But man, they were a force to be reckoned with live. Go to You Tube and look up their Tartar Field performance and you'll see what I mean.

    Blue Cheer I only know the one record, Vincebus Eruptum or something like that. It's kind of crude sludgy garage metal, quite enjoyable for what it is.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 7 months

"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.

user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month
Permalink

The dictionary definition of trip is "the first or second stomach of a cow or other ruminant used as food." Pretty interesting, eh?

Hey Now!

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Agreed '79 is due, bring on 12.1

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I tried to keep it simple by only posting my last five listens. Seems like that was too radical.

This really sucks now!

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

?yaw siht ti yrt I fi tahW

user picture

Member for

4 years 3 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

Permalink

Ti yrt

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months

In reply to by simonrob

Permalink

..I mean yes - they cobbled my last 5 too. Maybe it's the choices that are too radical. Here's the last one -
A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Mind - volume 3 - Pagan Love Vibrations by The Amorphous Androgynous.
Put that in your pipe and smoke it, Deadnet!

user picture

Member for

8 years 6 months
Permalink

.. speaking hoping everyone is having a grateful new year so far, I would Love another News Years Release from the Vaults! Way over due! So many primo shows! in my deadhead !
I Love Everything they released so far! I listen to a lot of new years gigs every now a then. You always get something special. My last was at Oakland Coliseum arena! Special guests WithBranford Marsalis on tenor sapransosax! & Hamza El Din on Percussion! 1990! What a Rock’n Show!!! Or did they release this, I can’t remember? I’m getting old from my head to my cowboy boots! ;) Phil is playing awesome tonight! Really primo stuff!

Sadly Brent had passed away by this Tim. So they has keyboards and piano tonight

user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

thanks. Working on it.
user picture

Member for

4 years 1 month
Permalink

Just to test the Hey Now:

James Brown and the JBs: Funky People
King Crimon: Vroom Vroom
Herbie Hancock: The Prisoner
Little Feat: London show from the Waiting for Columbus box
Allman Brothers: A&R Studios

(Wot, no GOGD?)

I am STILL not a robot!

user picture

Member for

7 years 9 months
Permalink

Man, I'll probably never get that feeling I used to get watching Monty Python's Flying Circus. Or Fawlty Towers. English humor is... different, absurd, hysterical.

I had managed to never hear Taylor Swift (or know it was her) until this past Christmas Day at the in-laws. The wife and teenage daughter had Swift on in the kitchen while the lads watched football in the living room. The food was in the kitchen, so I was exposed to it a fair bit. I knew, in my mind, before I asked that it was her. It just had to be. A lot of acoustic, bland, dispassionate... I could go on and on with the negative adjectives but it wasn't like I hated it, like, say, Bro Country or Gangsta Rap, it was just mildly annoying because Taylor Swift music is so void of energy it can hardly alchemize into anything else.

Most people here are passionate enough about music to probably not be Swifties. I harbor no ill will at all toward her for her incredible industry success, she's a pop culture phenomenon and now with the Travis Kelce thing it's just taken it to the next level... beautiful girl, handles herself well in public and I do believe she has a large hand in creating her music, unlike, say, Britney.

Last 5:

Pink Floyd - Pulse (currently on next to last song on disc 2, Comfortably Numb. DG never gets old).
Montrose - Montrose
Van Halen - Women and Children First
John Mellencamp - Strictly a One-Eyed Jack (check this out! It is so far from Jack & Diane it'll blow you away)
Soundgarden - Down on the Upside

Be well, all of you.

\m/

user picture

Member for

11 years 3 months
Permalink

Dave's 37
Love this William & Mary show.
Never saw the Dead there, but I did see The Cure and Love & Rockets at the college.

user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month

In reply to by TN John

Permalink

Had it on DVD for years, got the restored and re-edited Blu-ray a while back.
Saw the same setlist second night at the Pontiac Silverdome (went both nights, on floor both nights).
Good stuff.

user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

....is up on the toob.
🥳.
Tela, Tela.
The 42 minute mark. Lordy.
If I ever want goosebumps, I'll play that.
Thumbs up to the production crew. 👍
Unsung heros.
Edit.
I tried to edit this with Swift/Football/Dolphins vs Chiefs and got hey nowed.
It was a good rant.

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

Great triple cd of John Lee Hooker on Ace records - "The Sensation Recordings 1948-1952". These sides have never sounded better.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

1 year 3 months
Permalink

Hi Proudfoot - are you from Denmark ? "Ja, gerne" means "yes, please" in Danish.. Happy new year - all..

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

George Harrison-Disc 5 from ATMP Deluxe box
Ambrose Akinmusire-Owl Song
Iron Butterfly-Live at Fillmore East-Disc 1
George Harrison-Disc 3 from ATMP Deluxe box
The Babys-Live From The Bottom Line 1979

Music is the Best!!

user picture

Member for

4 years 3 months

In reply to by Danehead

Permalink

I'm straight outta the USA

I do speak a good bit of German

Ja, gerne is German for, you guessed it, yes please

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

The Billerica forum tape was given to me from a guy named BJ in1987 who lived in Natick. We met somewhere and had a few beers, and a bone while hanging at his apartment. He was a die hard deadhead. I was pretty happy, because this was the first time I actually started to listen the dead. The set list was so great that we poured a beer over his cat. The cat didn't really care much. Maybe we did it since we popped a purple micro-dot.

Dennis - foundational. Check out "Burnin' Hell" track 22 cd 1. There can't have been many other records made in 1949 that sounded like that.

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

Permalink

Someone should remind my neighbour of that when she hears my guitar playing. She can be very judgemental. Ears like a bat.

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

The last 40 seconds alone is worth the price of admission!!

user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

Gettin' Hey Now'd on my reply but wanted to acknowledge how awesome a story that is!! If I can get my initial thoughts into this here 'puter without rejection, I will.
I know Marye is on it.

Sixtus

user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month

In reply to by Sixtus_

Permalink

Makes me want to go skiing.

Sounds like DaP51 filler will be the rest of 10-24-70 (at least that’s my interpretation).

user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

Permalink

....Sacramento 11.30.96. A show I happened to attend and it's a scorcher and the mix is spot on.
In fact, the last two releases were ones I was at.
Thank you Kevin Shapiro! (Phish's Lemieux).

user picture

Member for

7 years 7 months
Permalink

The funny episode where they had German guests, and basil took their dinner orders while making references to nazi Officers like one "eva prawn," one "herman goring", and two Colditz salads.

user picture

Member for

13 years 5 months

In reply to by carlo13

Permalink

That's some serious cold rain and snow.

Any favorite shows with Cold Rain and Snow out there? Love the phat chords in the 12/26/79 show in Oakland, for example. Show's with great Weather Report Suites fit nicely in the days when "Seasonal" weather goes a bit too far.

Edit: Notice posts with the work "Negative" flow right on through the crackpot evil algorithms developed by Dr. HeyNow.

user picture

Member for

7 years 4 months
Permalink

It’s always fun when a show you attended gets an official release. I was at the Brooklyn show in (2004??) and an Atlantic City show in (2010-2011??) I’m not sure if it’s drug/alcohol related but I can’t remember shirt anymore!!

user picture

Member for

10 years
Permalink

Mr. McGuire: I just want to say one word to you. Just one word regarding 51.

Benjamin: Yes, sir.

Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?

Benjamin: Yes, I am.

Mr. McGuire: Bruce.

user picture

Member for

4 years 3 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

They shouldn't play

user picture

Member for

4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

Mixed feelings about that show

Kinda good

Kinda meh

Listening on that u t oo b

To Led Zeppelin
Live
r n r into celebration day

Yummy

user picture

Member for

4 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

I am re listening to LTTR box

Nice

user picture

Member for

3 years
Permalink

44 years ago I was was up in Oakland for a show with the Grateful Dead. Also on the bill was Santana, The Beach Boys, John Chipollina, and Joan Baez, it was a Benefit show for Cambodian refugees. The Dead played great!

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

1 year 3 months
Permalink

Hello all - great day in Denmark; we have a new King - Frederik X - his mother (at 83) stepped down - and we have a new queen - Mary of Australia.. BW from (royal) Copenhagen..

user picture

Member for

16 years 4 months

In reply to by Danehead

Permalink

Check out the list of best Grateful Dead songs in the most recent Paste newsletter. Just give Paste a Google, enjoy the list and let the controversy begin...
I still like Wharf Rat the best!

When I think of best songs, I tend to think of the studio versions - of which "Box of Rain" and "Ripple" shine very brightly indeed.
Because The Dead's songs were so fluid, a more interesting question might be -which is the best version of songs.

Listening currently to 1 17 79

The recording starts with Bobby saying Garcia is sick and on a respirator and the show is cancelled and will be made up later. (From the cancelled Fall 78 shows )

Then the recording switches to 1 17 79.

Interesting.

For the most part I would agree - Live Dead is where it is at. But for me there are a few exceptions - I can think of 4 from American Beauty - Box of Rain, Ripple-Brokedown Palace and Attics of My Life. I don't think I have ever heard any live versions of those songs that I prefer to those studio cuts.
American Beauty as a whole is amazing, of course!

product sku
081227834630
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/en/grateful-dead/music/daves-picks/daves-picks-vol.-48-pauley-pavilion-ucla-los-angeles-ca-112071/081227834630.html