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    Dave's Picks Vol. 51: Scranton Catholic Youth Center, Scranton, PA (4/13/71)

    Look out Big Boss Man, Pigpen's on the loose! We're shedding our lovelight on the not-to-be-overlooked Spring 1971 tour with DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 51, featuring the complete unreleased show from the SCRANTON CATHOLIC YOUTH CENTER, SCRANTON, PA 4/13/71 AND the 2nd set from the previous night at the Pittsburgh Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, PA on 4/12/71.

    These gems find the original Grateful Dead quintet delivering some of their most inspired, energetic, and tightest performances. There's a dab of WORKINGMAN'S DEAD, a splash of AMERICAN BEAUTY, a great foreshadow into what would soon appear on SKULL & ROSES. And you'll need nearly all those fingers (or those toes) because - count 'em - there's eight classic covers ("Mama Tried," "Hard To Handle," and a rare "I Second That Emotion," to name a few) done as only the Dead could do them with Mr. McKernan and his magical harmonica.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 51: SCRANTON CATHOLIC YOUTH CENTER, SCRANTON, PA 4/13/71 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

    P.S. We had a little extra room on Disc 2, so please enjoy the final five DP48 bonus tracks to complete 10/24/70, St. Louis, MO.

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  • Dennis
    Joined:
    That Mike and the Munsters

    I really don't watch these 60's comedies anymore (not while the Rifleman and Adam-12 is available)

    But, caught a Munsters the other day, only part, but. Grandpa and Eddie are making a robot for the school science fair.

    Meanwhile Herman is reading a "joke" book and learning jokes.

    They get to the science fair and another father is concern Eddie will win. So in usual tv/movie fashion, he drops a wrench into Eddie robot. Why are wrenches, no matter where they are, are always the size you need to remove a Rail Road train wheel. 18" long and usually a 1.5 inch size,,,,, and they're at a watch factory!

    Anyway, the robot is down, so they send Herman out to amuse the crowd while they fix the robot.

    Herman starts telling jokes and the crowd, of course, thinks he's the robot.

    Funny old joke Herman tells makes me laugh. Recently told to a kid at Autozone.

    Did you hear about the new sound suppressor for the car?

    It fits right over her mouth!

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Sign Your Herbie Hancock

    Get Smart, The Munsters, & The Addams Family were 3 of the funniest shows on TV as a kid, and thanks to DVDs, they remain in regular rotation here.
    A Cone of Silence built into your music room that doubles as a listening booth would be pretty cool, unless of course, like the series, it never worked. Dennis, take note.
    Floor seats for Herbie Hancock are approximately $150USD each, at the always fantastic Massey Hall, with their great acoustics. One of the greats, and a Miles sideman of note. Decisions, decisions.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Kill, Kill, Kill...

    ..back when pop songs had deep meanings!

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Jim & Secrect lair

    I had to modify my copy of the Control entrance,,, no more phone booth,,, my knees couldn't take it.

    Speaking of Scared Cows,,, no one was it it, sorry no Jorma.

    But the Groovy Guru was Agarn from F-Troop.

    Speaking of F-Troop,, they had a band on once "the Bed Bugs" (real name The Factory), that band had Lowell George in it!

    My speciality is stuff duck.

    What do you stuff it with?

    Another duck, that's why I need so many.

    -Agarn

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Get Smart

    Buck Henry, born (Buck) Henry Zuckerman, won an Emmy for outstanding writing for that comedy series. Way ahead of the pack in that era of TV indeed Jim. I'd forgotten his co-creator was none other than Mel Brooks! Buck's movie writing credits are also top tier and include an Academy Award nomination for best adapted screenplay for The Graduate. And another shared Oscar nomination for best director with Warren Beatty for Heaven Can Wait. He was way more than the guy doing hilariously creepy weird character skits and recurring characters on SNL (10 appearances) including the straight man to Belushi's samurai where John once cut him on the forehead with the blade. His wiki is an interesting read to say the least.
    Cheers

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Groovy Guru

    Yes to Buck Henry, one of the better Saturday Night Live hosts a half decade later.

    I guess I had this image that Dennis' music room should be some clandestine secret and it reminded me of the cold war spoof that once was. Clearly Chaos want's his box set and at least a small piece of his vinyl collection.

    How does this relate to the Grateful Dead?

    The opening lines of that episode show two agents exchanging secret code language to ensure they are who they say they are and have not been infiltrated by traitors. When I first heard this there was no rewind, but it aired years later and I had to do a double take and rewind. It first aired in January 1968.
    ___________________________________________________
    Wanda : [sign] The Grateful Dead are alive and living in Beverly Hills.

    Maxwell Smart : [countersign] Simon and Garfunkel fell off the Tallahatchie Bridge. Agent 86.

    Wanda : I'm hip. Courier 12.

    Maxwell Smart : Did you get the information on the Groovy Guru?

    Wanda : Enough here for the fuzz to peel and freeze.

    Maxwell Smart : Huh?

    Wanda : Square city. You know, enough to put him away for life.

    ___________________________________

    At the time the Grateful Dead were alive and well but living in Olompali, not Beverly Hills. Still.. for January 68 I'd say they hit the mark for a rinky dink sit com. This was two weeks before what is perhaps my favorite show, February 14th, 1968. Pretty cool for a B+ sitcom of the day. Beats the crap out of Rosanne or Dancing with the Stars.

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Dennis’ shelf photo

    Is that the one when he’s wearing his awesome tie-dye suit?

  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    The Sacred Cows

    Had to look that up Jim as I was not a huge fan of Get Smart and I'm sure I never saw that episode. Great set with mood lighting including neon signs spelling things like Kaos, Obey, and Kill. Uncredited musicians are Ben Benay, Jerry Scheff, and John Greek. Larry Storch as The Groovy Guru trying to take over the world as all of Maxwell and 99's opponents do. Wasn't Buck Henry one of the writers? The song was... interesting?
    Oddly there is a current local band somewhere with that moniker. I saw clips of them on face book. They claim to be a bunch of dads trying to be rock stars. But how can they top that 60s hit song Kill, Kill, Kill?
    Cheers
    Hmm... Max and 99 save the day by taking some sort of pill. Was that still legal then?

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Thank You

    Thanks to all for the very kind words. Such heart warming thoughts from a very special bunch of freaks.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Picture

    I might have seen the same photo.. I cannot recall the specifics.

    I do have it on good authority that the security system and series of doors one must pass to get into the secret lair with the vinyl and box sets was modeled after the secret system used to gain access to Control headquarters as seen in the opening credits of Get Smart.

    Coincidentally, Dennis was last seen driving a red 1965 sunbeam tiger mark 1 convertible and his wife answers to 99.

    But does he have any records from the Sacred Cows?

    (sorry to the 95% that probably don't get these references.. but for those that do, the Sacred Cows rock. I swear it's Jorma on guitar)

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3 years 4 months

Dave's Picks Vol. 51: Scranton Catholic Youth Center, Scranton, PA (4/13/71)

Look out Big Boss Man, Pigpen's on the loose! We're shedding our lovelight on the not-to-be-overlooked Spring 1971 tour with DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 51, featuring the complete unreleased show from the SCRANTON CATHOLIC YOUTH CENTER, SCRANTON, PA 4/13/71 AND the 2nd set from the previous night at the Pittsburgh Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, PA on 4/12/71.

These gems find the original Grateful Dead quintet delivering some of their most inspired, energetic, and tightest performances. There's a dab of WORKINGMAN'S DEAD, a splash of AMERICAN BEAUTY, a great foreshadow into what would soon appear on SKULL & ROSES. And you'll need nearly all those fingers (or those toes) because - count 'em - there's eight classic covers ("Mama Tried," "Hard To Handle," and a rare "I Second That Emotion," to name a few) done as only the Dead could do them with Mr. McKernan and his magical harmonica.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 51: SCRANTON CATHOLIC YOUTH CENTER, SCRANTON, PA 4/13/71 has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering.

P.S. We had a little extra room on Disc 2, so please enjoy the final five DP48 bonus tracks to complete 10/24/70, St. Louis, MO.

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Does anybody remember a daytime show, in which Jerry, screwed up a part of China doll, and said to the audience "wait a minute, that's *ucked up."

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7 years 8 months

In reply to by wissinomingdeadhead

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Well, for three of the last four years, the last DaP of the year was a later-era show - Vol. 36 was 1987 and then Vols. 40 and 44 were both from 1990. So it seems a reasonable supposition to think he might dip into '91 for Vol. 52.

On the other side of the coin, this year Dave already cracked open 1985 for the first time (Vol 49) - you have to go back to Vols 35 and 36 for the last time he broached two new years (new for the DaP series, that is) in one calendar/subscription year. Would he really end the year with a 1991 release? People have been speculating about 9/26 for some years now, but it never really sounds like informed speculation but just more of "I was there" and "this was the best night of the run" chatter. And ofc one of Dave's first releases when he took over the Dick's series was 9/25, so he surely considered the 26th back then but passed.

My own feeling is that while '91 is the last strong year for the band, the energy did wane as the year went along. I think the March shows, or perhaps Vegas in late April, have more to offer. The August Shoreline shows have some fire to them. But for any of these it's not hard to imagine that Rhino will struggle to shift 25,000 copies. And if they are willing to risk a Fall '91 release, one of the MSG shows (8 still unreleased) seems a safer sales bet than Boston.

But there's still no Dave's from 1989, nor '88. Either would likely sell better than a '91. And I note that the last '76 released (notwithstanding the 2020 box set) was Vol. 28.

Oh well, I'm always wrong when I play the "guess what Dave will release" game. Since I didn't mention it, it will probably be '73.

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In reply to by Obeah

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Not sure about a China Doll - maybe you're thinking of Brokedown Palace at Telluride 8/16/87? Double encore - as they start Brokedown out of Touch It slowly grinds to a halt and Jerry exclaims something to the effect of - "Wait a minute! This is all fucked up! We're in then wrong key! You folks are used to this - oxygen deprivation. Forget that all happened!" And they start Brokedown fresh.

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7 years 10 months

In reply to by bluecrow

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Obeah,

The one thing we know for sure is Dave can be unpredictable at times. Never thought he would release another 71 show for #48 and release this Scranton show two releases later. Who knows, maybe he will release another 71 show for #52.

Would love to see an 88 or 91. It is time.

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7 years 4 months
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That's it, thanks. Believe it or not, but I typed in BP first but China somehow came to mind. It's pretty rare to hear Jerry talk much at shows, except for his sweet lyrics.

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10 years

In reply to by carlo13

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They muffed the beginning of Brokedown Palace when they played it as an encore when I saw them on 3/27/81, too. Looking in The Taping Compendium to jog my memory, after playing the opening chords, Jerry came in with the wrong verse. To quote the good book -
""Sorry! Premature senility," says Jerry with a grin, before playing and singing it so soulfully that I'm reduced to tears for the second time in one night."

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7 years 8 months
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Good points, all, Deadvikes. Dave is indeed unpredictable.

It probably surprises no one to observe that 1977 leads the way in the DaP catalog of releases with 8 shows to date. And it's most welcome to note that 1974 comes second with 6. But 1971 now has 5. All three of those years were represented in the very first year of the DaP series, so empirically it might seem that Dave has a strong affinity for each one.

And yet I also recognize that some of his decisions were governed by what's in the vault (or maybe what was repatriated to the vault!); what is available in a very high-quality recording; what was already released in other series or box sets, and so on. One thing we can probably all agree upon, though, is that Dave truly has one of the most interesting jobs in the world. He's like a real-life version of that Dos Equis guy. Except Canadian and clean-shaven.

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