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    marye
    Joined:
    New year, new update. Tell us of your musical adventures in real time!

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  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    4-23-77

    88401.miller

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    Allman Brothers

    Live at the Ludlow Garage - 4/11/70, Cincinnati, Ohio

    Original Polydor release, which is missing In Memory of Elizabeth Reed. Later remastered and released (including Elizabeth Reed) as bonus material with Idlewood South.

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    Railroad Earth

    Last Of The Outlaws

  • uncle_tripel
    Joined:
    Phil &...

    ...Friends are {Molo, Sless, Barraco, Scofield, Robinson}
    SHEA's BUFFALO 2005-12-03 SET 2...well, yes, you're right, I did say I was on SIESTA from GOGD
    until #50 arrives in my mailbox,
    but a day without some kinda JAMS is like a day without WATER!

    ROCK ON...space>shakedown>jam>althea>new speedway>fire>cowboy movie>jam>O1>lovelight>franklin's; E: bertha

    PEACE for ALL!
    uncle_tripel

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    10-16-89 vinyl

    Spinning now.
    RSD release.
    Sounds grate.

    Yes Cody, you’re being monitored……

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Jim Dandy to the resue

    Hand - I'd never made that connection - but yes, I would say you are right there.

  • hand etiquette
    Joined:
    Black Oak

    Dave,

    I think David Lee Roth might've copped a few moves off ol' Jim Dandy, to put it mildly!

  • hand etiquette
    Joined:
    Thanks

    A few people welcomed me which is amazing! I guess 'Reply' is not to an individual? I do not internet much. I will get there.

    This morning: new Guided By Voices single off the forthcoming record, and then a few times to "Sugaree" 5.22.77. That first solo. Jerry and Keith are just magical in that performance.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Black Oak Arkansas

    Speaking of mid 70's white Southern rock bands - the first American band I ever saw was Black Oak, supporting Black Sabbath circa 1974. You don't hear much about them now. Maybe their albums weren't top draw, but they were a hoot live.

  • TN John
    Joined:
    Marshall Tucker Band

    Together Forever
    Change Is Gonna Come is in my top 5 favorite songs.
    That freaking sax dueling with Toy!
    Peace

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17 years 3 months
New year, new update. Tell us of your musical adventures in real time!
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9 years

In reply to by TN John

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TN John - very cool! (a bc bday show not that I was there.) my FOTDs box set is crossing the Great Basin right now (i think) based on tracking. Hopefully by Tuesday next week.

6/14/94 - iwt and got here listening today via a circuitous route of JOTM (from 3/11/93 Rosemont) drive home last night which has a late period Masterpiece and this morning (gestures wildly) somehow saw the set list here and thinking "wow" I saw a Masterpiece in 94. And from there Set I etc. Very unusual set list Set II and a really fun and fine well played show. Posting now because Set II leads off with 45 second structured drumz intro to Victim and it caught my ears as something I had "never" heard (despite being there!) Victim into Lazy River Road. And then the second Samba In The Rain, which I will unabashedly say sounded great that night, totally new to me, and strong cool memory of Phil/Bob/Jerry/Vince singing the chorus and it rocked. Samba > Trucking > and a super chill That Would Be Something into drumz. Those late era shows in Seattle Memorial Coliseum kicked it.

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8 years 11 months

In reply to by TN John

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Sounds grate on my new speakers and subwoofer.

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10 years
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Whadja get?
And what is powering them?
Cheers

Starting the box today.

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7 years 8 months

In reply to by daverock

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At the risk of joining said society, I like the points you made, Daverock. I'm thinking of some live Quicksilver I had on cassette - absolutely ferocious playing, but the recording was not up to modern standards. Eminently listenable, though, and it broadened my mind to what that group was capable of. Or that Pink Floyd stuff from early '72, some early Doors stuff... that early '67 Thirteenth Floor Elevators concert (I think it later got released properly)...

So those Sept 1970 Fillmore recordings, what exists of them, should absolutely be made available to the public after Dr. Norman takes his best shot. "What's to lose / We're NOT confused/ You can call this set / The Fillmore East blues."

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8 years 11 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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RP-500M II speakers
R-120SW subwoofer
12 gauge 99.9% copper speaker wire

Powered by a Cambridge Audio AXR100 receiver.

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9 years

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Live At The Roxy (Hollywood - 5/26/76)

Been thinking for a long while that I need to upgrade my system in certain key points. Slowly making my way to that move. Thanks for sharing ConeKid.

The model I got is over 50% off because it has been replaced with a newer model.
12-inch sub is spectacular.
I highly recommend it as does Vguy.
Grab one while you can.

The speakers were also on sale. They are really nice. I would also recommend them, and they’re still on sale.

Nice at the time

Will listen again someday

I was so glad they were in Seattle (first time since 1983)...Tacoma 88 kinda counts....

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4 years 1 month

In reply to by proudfoot

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8 18 89

Then 8 19 89
Warlocks 89
3 10 81
10 30 73
Europe 90

With April 78 sprinkled here and there

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2 years 1 month

In reply to by proudfoot

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9/18/87 MSG

Before that was 5/2/70 and

February 13 &14, 1970 that I now have in my collection thanks to a kind and generous person! :)

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9 years

In reply to by JoeyMC

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The bonus disc that came out with After Midnight - JGB at Kean College 2/28/80.

Kick ass little disc, 4 songs from next night 2/29 (a leap year!) and 1 from 3/1. I got to thinking how "freaking good" this sounded compared to, say, some 1980 GD sbds and on an old Steve Hoffman forum thread heralding and dedicated to the After Midnight release it mentions that Kean is from 24 track tapes(!!) and I'm like what the heck is going on that a JGB show at Kean is being recorded with a 24 track rig?? And yes I'm very thankful that it was so beautifully recorded. The After Midnight > Eleanor Rigby > After MIdnight from Kean enters a musical space that is crazy beautiful and otherworldly and that pretty much has me with tears in my eyes every time.

They are a strange beast in a way. When I started going to concerts, back in 1972, the music was only part of the experience of going. All sorts of things happen when you go to a live gig - especially when you are young. Live recordings omit all that other stuff, and all you get is the music played, presented in isolation. I wonder if this is partly why late period Dead shows are popular - if you were there you can fill in the gaps. If you weren't, they might not sound as special because they lack that "x" factor of experience.

As opposed to 2/13/70, 2/14/70 and 5/2/70 - some of the best live shows of all time. You don't need to have been there to enjoy those recordings - you just need a pulse.

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2 years 1 month

In reply to by daverock

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Do we like 2/28 or 3/1 better?

For some of the later GD shows, you can feel the energy of the room and those are the ones I like.
Maybe its just Healy's recordings but not always...

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11 months 3 weeks
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...you will find me on a marathon listening party
of the HC Sunshine Box...
beginning at Des Moines State Fairgrounds
May 13th 1973 :)

everyone have a GRATE week!

Peace for All!
uncle_tripel

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7 years 8 months
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That lil' 5-song disc is indeed lovely! Just a fun bonus to have in the collection.

Live Recordings do have all of that extra "metadata" if you were in attendance. I can picture the Dragon dance/parades from Lunar New Year shows; the costumes at Halloween; the shimmering desert air in Las Vegas; the central lot at Shoreline back when you could arrive early and get your vehicle in there; and so on.

My younger brother is just old enough to have seen a few Grateful Dead shows, but he doesn't like collecting shows and he really won't listen to live GD *unless* there's a video. He wants to see the musicians and the crowd and the venue. He was the person who first turned me on to Christopher Hazard's channel because that's his jam.

In a way, listening to the Dead-live recordings-is something of a disembodied experience for me. I don't relate the shows to physical events that actually existed - which may be strange as Phil once said in interview, around the time of going to Egypt, that place was important in influencing the show. Apart from the shows caught on video, every show I listen to takes place at the same place, which is my living room. With one attender.

One of the best listening experiences was during my one and only trip to America during the summer of 1990. We were on a "fly drive" holiday exploring the West Coast of America. I only took one tape - 9/28/72 - and it was great listening while driving (( being driven to be exact - I couldn't drive then) through all that amazing countryside. The music really did seem to reflect the country - not the people living in it at that time, but the actual landscape.
I can also remember listening to "Playing in the Band " from this show as we drove over the Golden Gate Bridge.

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11 months 3 weeks
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...started with
May 20 1973
at UC Santa Barbara stadium

really enjoying garcia's
1st set guitar work vs. yesterday
at Des Moines State Fairgrounds

Peace for All!
uncle_tripel