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    Anyone who has ever seen the Dead can testify that one of its shows will add quite a bit of color to the environment here at Stanford. Anyone who has not seen one of these spectacles should have the opportunity to do so. The Grateful Dead are an important part of the Bay Area's cultural history. Those of us who saw them last week can testify that the Dead are alive and well. The Concert Network would be hard-pressed to find an act which would bring Frost Amphitheatre to life as the Dead would. - The Stanford Daily

    As you know by now, we'd certainly have voted aye on this motion, so much so, that we've loaded up DAVE'S PICKS 49 with not one, but two complete Grateful Dead shows from the Frost Amphitheatre, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 4/27/85 and 4/28/85. The first shows from '85 in the series, these back-to-back hometown performances couldn't be more different while delivering the same level of passion and precision, five hours of it, in fact.

    In 1985, the band were celebrating "20 Years So Far," a feat that found them on these particular nights confident with invention in terms of both setlists and playing. There are old songs renewed, rare covers revived, undeniably nuanced Jerry moments, and a few surprises from Brent Mydland too. While it's impossible to select highlights, we can say with certainty that the overall clarity of these shows is unparalleled, courtesy of Dan Healy's recordings.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 49: FROST AMPHITHEATRE, STANFORD U, PALO ALTO, CA 4/27/85 & 4/28/85 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

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  • nitecat
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    Spencer Dryden

    New Dead Head TV now up on dreamswedreamed dot com:

    Close to the Edge with Spencer Dryden - 1989

    Spencer Dryden was drummer for the San Francisco rock band, Jefferson Airplane. In February 1971 Dryden replaced Mickey Hart in the country rock band The New Riders of the Purple Sage. In 1982, he formed supergroup the Dinosaurs with fellow Bay Area musicians Peter Albin of Big Brother, John Cipollina of Quicksilver Messenger Service, Robert Hunter of the Grateful Dead, and Barry Melton of Country Joe and the Fish. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 with his Airplane band mates, inducted by Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart.

  • dmcvt
    Joined:
    downloads etc

    For a nod to the Lions, listened to part of Oct 24, 1971, from the Easttown Theater, Detroit a few minutes ago. Great energy, early Keith show, Phil crunches it, a 71 DarkStar. Maybe since we can access and download anything on the archive, they would have to really clean up stuff to market it as download to us, since Charlie Miller, Sir Nick and others have done such nice work so far. Yet another reason I'll bang the drum for more primal stuff, from the vault, that has not been posted to archive.

  • alvarhanso
    Joined:
    Digital releases

    Dave's Picks was announced as a subscription model cd release. It has been more successful than the Download Series and the Road Trips Series. The last year's lack of sell outs is an aberration. I think part of the lack of sell out on 46 is they have it priced 10 bucks higher for some reason. It's priced like the 4cd releases, but it's just 3cds. Who knows what the sales numbers are on the box set downloads, but I don't think they themselves know what the sweet spot number is. HCS was the fastest box set sellout since Giants Stadium, and Get Shown the Light before that. Get Shown the Light has run through its "unlimited" All Music Edition as well. I'd be shocked if the download sales of that box come anywhere close to the immediate sell out of the original box, then an All Music Edition that apparently kept selling for 6 years. And that the Giants Stadium boxes sold out in weeks, and Listen to the River is still on sale goes to show you can't ever tell. If they want to start a download series, more power to them, keep Dave's a physical product.

  • Slow Dog Noodle
    Joined:
    The series has already been lagging in sales,

    Dude, you just totally made that up. Out of thin air.

  • Obeah
    Joined:
    Heads

    Reading marye's remembrance of high times at the Greek reminded me -- it was great to come across your name in Jesse Jarnow's "Heads". Just a great reminder of how this community got on board the electric bus with the Well (I tried to post what W E L L stands for, but I got hey now'd. Unbelievable.)

    I got my first internet account in the Fall of 1989 and promptly found myself spending an increasing amount of time over at rec.music.gdead, but The W ell seemed like this mythical place just over the horizon. Now that this is all going back decades, it sure is fun reading folks remembrances. Keep 'em coming, y'all...

  • L. Mo.
    Joined:
    Downloads

    By limiting the issues to cd, they're limiting their audience. When the series started, 12 or so years ago, everyone had cd players. Now, a lot of us don't. Not in my laptop, not in my car. And without a cd drive, I can't even upload the cds. So, I'd like to see digital release of the series. You'd think Lemieux and Rhino would be more forward looking. The series has already been lagging in sales, and those that do sell out, take weeks, not the minutes that it used to.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    1974 okay

    I wonder if they'll release much from this year later on, it being an anniversary an all. It would be good if they did. Buggers can't be choosers, though. I mean beggars.

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Where The Buffalo Roam

    Clever posting Oro! Amazed it let you post because this is so hit and miss.
    Poor guys like Scott Norwood or Bill Buckner could never live down their moment of infamy.
    Maybe you’re right - something stronger for the folks in Buffalo and WNY. Suggestions?

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Too soon Vince

    Too soon lol

    But hey, just like Scott, never should have come down to that…

    But what the hey, Go AVs lol

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Wide right!....

    ....I'm sure Scott Norwood was watching and his PTSD kicked in.
    Get it? Kicked.

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3 years 7 months

Anyone who has ever seen the Dead can testify that one of its shows will add quite a bit of color to the environment here at Stanford. Anyone who has not seen one of these spectacles should have the opportunity to do so. The Grateful Dead are an important part of the Bay Area's cultural history. Those of us who saw them last week can testify that the Dead are alive and well. The Concert Network would be hard-pressed to find an act which would bring Frost Amphitheatre to life as the Dead would. - The Stanford Daily

As you know by now, we'd certainly have voted aye on this motion, so much so, that we've loaded up DAVE'S PICKS 49 with not one, but two complete Grateful Dead shows from the Frost Amphitheatre, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 4/27/85 and 4/28/85. The first shows from '85 in the series, these back-to-back hometown performances couldn't be more different while delivering the same level of passion and precision, five hours of it, in fact.

In 1985, the band were celebrating "20 Years So Far," a feat that found them on these particular nights confident with invention in terms of both setlists and playing. There are old songs renewed, rare covers revived, undeniably nuanced Jerry moments, and a few surprises from Brent Mydland too. While it's impossible to select highlights, we can say with certainty that the overall clarity of these shows is unparalleled, courtesy of Dan Healy's recordings.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 49: FROST AMPHITHEATRE, STANFORD U, PALO ALTO, CA 4/27/85 & 4/28/85 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

I am really looking forward to Mars Hotel too! But It seems a better solution instead of boycotting would be to stop posting, just here. After that, move the party to a no hassle dead related forum. I ain't gonna little sweat the little stuff or waste time jumping thru silly hoops at my age. I'm going outside now. The birds are singing.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by daverock

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They love our money, I know that.

in the immortal words of Squidward, "whaaaatever"

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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Another illusion shattered ! It's ironic that a band that was anti-commercial and which stood outside the commercial dictates of "business", as far as they could and still survive, should be sold and promoted as they have been. The music will always be great - you just have to see through all the pap.

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BTK... a lasting and profound memory for me, of all the heads with the blazing tie-dye shirts inflitrating every corner of the Alladin ... the tables, the bars, the slots, the sidewalks ... it was a crazy visual (and yes, olfactory) experience like none other...as a Vegas regular, I've never seen anything quite like it since then .....and the show featured some of my faves ... jackstraw, Althea, scarlet fire estimated eyes other one!!! .......tcc

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2 years 4 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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I always thought this was widely considered to be not that great a show?

I always thought it should come out one day though...

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10 years 6 months
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Just got the e-announcement from dead dot net. . . Onethebus: The guy on Hoffman was right. Looks like the first road show with the Wall of Sound has only two songs from Mars Hotel. Nice show tho (and duly ordered w/ the green FTMH LP).

I think I finally figured out the Great and Powerful Hey Now: You have to humbly present the Wicked Witch of the West's broomstick on bended knee first. Onward.

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10 years 3 months
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Sorry could not post two sentences. Aargh!
Cheers

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15 years 3 months
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Boycott is not necessary, sales are already hurting: last 4 DaP are still available, #49, 48 and 47 sell for as low as $25 new on Ebay.
Listen to the River box, from the classic 71 -73 period, is still available; so is the MSG box.
I'm guessing this forum is not one of their highest priorities.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Cousins Of The…

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Getting 2 discs and m/o show.
Thought maybe rest of 6/26 or 6/22 maybe, or chopped up tid bits.
So maybe not a top shelf show, but another good 74, “which is nice”

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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It's got a great write up in the Taping Compendium.

Listening to "Natural Boogie" by Hound Dog Taylor and the HouseRockers as I type. Much joy.

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by daverock

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Proudfoot tried that a week or two ago.

He’s back…..

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I posted it here, but it got hey nowed.

Good Grief

This house of clowns seem to be non-caring and incompetent. (probably impotent to boot)

MaryE and Captain Dave excluded, without them we would be lost at sea

Fix the HeyNow nonsense already dimnet. I'm quite confident it's hurting sales

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10 years 1 month
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Truth is something you stumble into when you think you are going someplace else.
Jerry Garcia
Daily Zen calendar for 3-28-2024

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by billy the kiddd

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....Marlins are 0-1. Just as I like it.
Check out those new NFL kickoff and hip tackle rules. Also talking about extending the season another week and adding another bye.
Gets worse every year.

Are nothing but greedheads!
Now their going to get you to purchase more apps just so you can watch a playoff game, AND, back in Bu faf, their now requiring a private license or some BS ontop of the exorbitant tic prices for season tix. Know a lot of long time season ticket holders that aren’t going to reup…
So for u T u b e sub plus package not including extra app games, and it’s like a grand and you have to listen to their blowhards.
NHL package is like $64 and you get every game, (81+ )either audio feed!

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Oro - I read the (Dollar) Bills were introducing a seat licensing fee, and I honestly thought they already had it. The Leafs and Craptors charge an exorbitant Personal Licensing Fee ripped right out of TicketBastard’s book, that basically lets the owner of the teams control resale of tix. Gamgsters. This, of course, bleeds over to the concert industry, too, so that we get Taylor Swift pricing.
Why do they charge this Personal Licensing Fee? Because they can. Thankfully, there is enough decent sports coverage on TV to scratch my NFL or NHL itch, but when it comes to concerts? Woeful.

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13 years
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1990

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by wissinomingdeadhead

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....I'm all in on that good shit.
Shit apparently passes the hey now test. 👏

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17 years 6 months
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Hello,

a heavy sandstorm (it’s origin is the Sahara desert)) has colored the sky today, here in Southern Germany.

It supposed to be a sunny spring day with blue skies, the weather forecast said, with temperatures up to 20 centigrade.

But instead the sky was yellow, overcast and no sun at all. Temperatures only made it up to 12 centigrade.

Happy Easter
G.

How many miles/km did that sand have to travel? If I took a shovel full of sand and tossed it as far as I could, it wouldn't fall that far from the shovel. I can only imagine the forces at work to carry that much of something as dense as sand so far. Note to self, do not breath that stuff in.

Sand castles and glass camels, unusual occurrences in Southern Germany.

Nice matching 3/29 Nassau Coliseum Avatar, VGuy.

Two back to back postings without getting rejected by the HayCow demons

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Fantastic!! Raw electric Dead. Just part way into disc 1 and I'm enthralled. This ain't Dylan pluggin in at Newport. Plugged in band and plugged in home field crowd. You all will love it.

Salmon for dinner BTK [heart failure diet]
Ending the night with a few Coors, a tasty bowl, and DaP 25.
Peace

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12 years 2 months
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So the 4/8/72 Dark Star will be on a loop. That’s a given.

Other than that, what a joke.

Oro, you will appreciate this. Hotels in Buffalo are going for $900 a night. Normally around $200. For three minutes of darkness.

Dave, did you get that reference? Release 9/19/70.

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1 year 2 months
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abit late for yesterday

Sounds: 3/31/73 II and accompaniments
Food: pan seared sea bass, haricots verts, wild rice
Drink: arneis (white from piemonte), and always H2O
Convo: my wife

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11 years 8 months

In reply to by JoeyMC

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Interesting menus from yesterday, here: pork loin teryaki, brussel sprouts with onion confit, curried short grain brown rice, "special" chateauneuf du pape to go with. Burlington gets 3 minutes of total eclipse in a week, I know folks coming from as far as Boston heading there, a city of 45K will see another 50K plus visitors... ahem, will pass on that chaos and head up to the North East Kingdom where the word is Get NEKed and dance. Let's all get foolish today.

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10 years 11 months

In reply to by dmcvt

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Definitely not trekking up to Burlington, but having a slow day at the office in Rutland, so out of totality. Should be able to go outside and peek at the magic of the cosmos. Enjoy the NE Kingdom, the one trek my wife and I made looking for moose, it was stunningly gorgeous. Looking forward to going back in summer.

Since Hank Kingsley allowed me to post that, will add, looking forward to Dave's 50, mainly since it will be a new release, and a new Betty for one of the nights. Thought I had SBDs of both, but was mistaken. The non-subscribers may hate missing the bonus this time.

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My sister hosted Easter this year and she didn't want to do the usual ham and potato salad thing so she got tamales and enchiladas from El Molino. Friends, if you're ever in Sonoma, check it. Best mole sauce I've ever had.

Weird footnote to Easter dinner: my other sister, the really straight one who never so much as smoked a joint, was asking everybody if we've had mushrooms. Um, who, me? Why would you ask? Apparently, psychedelics are getting a lot of positive press in the mass media these days, and now she's all curious. So I told her, yeah, shrooms can really be of benefit in the right situation blah blah. You might see the light. You might laugh your ass off. Both, if you're lucky. So now she wants me to score for her. Mind you, this is a sister who used to tattle on me for smoking weed.

Weird. Life is weird.

Drove home through a massive downpour listening to the Wall of Sound edition of Road Trips. It was a good day.

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11 years 8 months

In reply to by Crow Told Me

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Mr. Hanso, You may not be a country music fan (slightly here) but the Marty Stuart Band soon come to Rutland Vermont's answer to The Capitol in Port Chester, The Paramount will be entertaining. He's a total show boat no doubt, but he came up playing with Lester Flatt and Johnny Cash. I came over for Les Brers a few years ago because I had met Bruce Katz master of the B3 who was playing with them, kindly invited me to sound check and show. I will get my bluegrass ticket punched soon seeing Tony Trischka doing an Earl Scruggs tribute, rumored to have Alex Hargreaves joining on fiddle. NEK is special, no doubt. Hill Farmstead, what can I say, one of the best breweries in the world. Holy Cow, no Nay How.

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10 years 3 months
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And his Fabulous Superlatives?
Wonder if Cousin Kenny is still with him.
Cheers

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Very aptly named band, all virtuoso(i?) musicians.
And yes, Kenny Vaughan is still with them.

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10 years 11 months
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Not a country fan. At all. Love bluegrass, but despise country. Exceptions are Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, some Waylon. But I love bluegrass, and I know how good Stuart is. I saw that on the Paramount schedule and thought about it. I like that theater, small, but decent sound. Railroad Earth was great a few weeks back. I also caught Bruce Cockburn there, and the intimacy of the place made that a really great show. Before that, found out hours before the show that my nephew through my brother in law was opening for Daughtry there, and so we got to see him, and left before Daughtry (who's from the same hometown, and now has a mansion less than a mile from where I used to live in high school and college). Will have to really think about Marty, especially if Tony Trischka is playing with him; he was one of Bela Fleck's early teachers/mentors. Let's survive the impending snowfall first. Another foot or so expected Wednesday after hitting 60 today.

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In reply to by alvarhanso

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My attitude to country changed about 1983, when I heard an album called "Miami" by The Gun Club. Righteous stuff !

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In reply to by daverock

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Punful... oops, Tony not playing with Marty, sorry. Will see TT down in Maryland hopefully. That's exactly it for the Marty show, excellent musicians. Neither a huge fan of the genre generally, do appreciate Brad Paisley for his PLAY recording chops, Robert Plant hit some nice notes with AK, great players like Alvin Lee, Danny Gatton, even Roy B had some country twang. Bluegrass, newgrass, Billy, oh yeah. Next live music up, acoustic, Doug Perkins and Patrick Ross in a tiny old town hall Friday night, if it don't snow too much.

Haven't heard that name in maybe 20 years. Trying to remember the band I saw him with (Smokin' Grass?), but I remember because he used to play with Mike Gordon, when Gordon did bluegrass things. A buddy from school was a Kentucky bred fiddler, and he jammed with Doug and a couple others at setbreak on Wheel Hoss and Blackberry Blossom. Thanks for that blast from the past. Guess I misunderstood on Trischka.

John Sinclair was the man whom Abbie Hoffman advocated for during The Who's Woodstock set that led to Pete Townshend hitting Hoffman in the head with his guitar. Hoffman's ill-advised speech was at like 4am, and he said, "I think this is a pile of shit, man, while John Sinclair rots in prison for 2 lousy joints" whereupon Townshend tells him to get off the stage. John Lennon then took up Sinclair's case with a song titled John Sinclair. RIP to a counterculture hero.

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16 years 10 months
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I still love country, at least what we call country music in the 70s, bands like Poco, Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds, Flying Burritos Bros, New Riders otp sage, emilou Harris and Gram Parsons. Nearby we had Folk (Pentangle, Fairport Convention, Bod Dylan, Donovan, Incredible strings band...) wich still goes on with Gillian welch or billy Bragg;
To me the first jerry album with the new riders stays a classic. I never heard about blue grass before Jerry Douglas & Allison Krauss, Peter Rowan, and discovering Old and inthe way, then Grisman or Tony Rice.
Nowadays it seems like everything like Country music comes into what is called Americana.
Elvis Costello gave a great Tibute to country music, and George Jones with Almost Blue . Johnny Cash is more like folk for me. All american recordings serie can match a small box of the dead.
Lucinda Williams began with country folk albums, but she plays also RnRoll, and ballads.
Only Blues don't change.
Anyway whatever we feel with good music is better than words.

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11 years 8 months

In reply to by daverock

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Saw Gillian a couple years ago with David Rawlings, outstanding concert. If we more broadly consider "country" as part of Americana, the tent is much larger. Vince Gill, good stuff, for example. The song that Plant and Krause covered, "Can't Let Go" is a personal hit, great lyrics, tune, put out there by Lucinda W on Car Wheels, a fine album. Doug Perkins moved up to Vermont years ago and performs locally and a little randomly, up in Burl and many other smaller venues, did gigs with Mike Gordon, adept on both acoustic and electric. He once tried to teach me "Good Bye Pork Pie Hat" but it did not take. Not your standard three cowboy chords...

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The “June ‘76” Box just might be the most under-appreciated box in the Dead canon, IMHO. The Boston shows alone are incredible, an energized band.
I’m not the biggest Who fan, but sometimes Quadrophenia at 11 Volume is exactly what you need. I got playing it because Phish covers “Drowned” on their recent live release, and quite nicely, too!
Last 5
Who - Quadrophenia
Who - Who’s Next
Weir - Blue Mountain
Art Blakey & Jazz Messengers - Just Coolin’
Neil & Crazy Horse - Down In The Rust Bucket

Late condolences to the very funny Joe Flaherty. RIP Guy!

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