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  • jerrybearz
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    i miss my jerry bear...
    i miss my jerry bear...
  • marye
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    whoa...
    I'll say...
  • hippyjameZ
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    Tomorrow, maybe go beneath the ground....
    I was jammin out today to Dozin' At the Knick, listening to Jerry sing Black Peter .. and when he sang that verse, I pulled up the Annotated Lyrics page by David Dodd ... the bottom of the page says it was posted August 8th, 1995 .. literally on that day that verse, sad enough, rung true ...
  • jimizappa
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    jerry wept, a compilation of performances from the 1990's
    please watch comment and share. Thanks http://vimeo.com/19961875
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    $$$ is a good reason
    If they don't use the music of jerry or the Dead they pay no royalties, ergo an easy way to make a lot of money
  • ripple70
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    jerry garcia the movie
    I google jg news all the time and recently it appears there will be a jerry film, all sounds goodi scroll down, film will not include any music by jerry or the dead.Now excuse me a film about Jerrys life without his music hmmm Jerrys life was his music.Maybe im missing something and maybe they have good reason can anyone help with this ?.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    Benefit evolution
    I have not done an exhaustive search but it was clear that Jerry and the boys supported any number of causes that were both political and non-political. At a certain point in the early 80s they consolidated to the Rex Foundation and did shows every year to support that. Rex gives out grants and has an application process which you can check out on their website. I think there is a bit of reaction to the boys in the post-Jerry era supporting political candidates, which Jerry never did. To be fair, the only thing I've ever heard Weir say is "Get out and vote. We don't care who you vote for as long as you vote." Many people are uncomfortable with even voting. I think it's not hard at all to make the argument that the Grateful Dead, with Jerry and without, have a left-wing perspective. The post-Jerry boys are supporting the political process by encouraging people to vote, and even to vote for one political candidate -- that is where there is a powerful reaction. But you just can't invoke Jerry and say "they were never political" which is what a few heads are saying on this site. Supporting causes is political whether or not you are involved in electoral matters. This reminds me of Amnesty International people telling me they are not political. The mere fact of inserting yourself in a situation where human rights are being withheld is a bold political statement, like it or not. In any case, why would you feel that your favorite musicians have that much influence on your viewpoint??
  • ripple70
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    garcia guitar on ebay
    would be a nice purchase have checked my bank account and can probably bid on his plectrum.Anyone know who the seller is. counting stars by candlelight.
  • streamline
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    Jerry and Politics
    silentlyscreaming posted: "Apparently, your band mates and fans have forgotten your stance on politics." While the Grateful Dead didn't do fundraisers for political candidates, Jerry Garcia did shows to benefit the anti-nuclear movement in the 1970's. I recall going to one in Boston for example, December of '77, that raised money for the Clamshell Alliance. I don't think that what Phil, Billy, Bob and Mickey having been doing the past 10 years is at all out of line with that. "When it comes to humility, I'm the greatest!" - Bullwinkle Moose
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    Only 325k??
    Good grief, where is my checkbook? Can I write it off if I donate it to the archives where the Banana Slugs roam free?
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Jerry's topic.
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Hi Ed --I just finished reading your piece over morning coffee so this is off the top of my head without much thinking. I liked your piece. It is well written and is pretty thorough in it's treatment of comparing two runs of similar length by two different bands playing much the same material. I really liked the analogy of the copy of Dionysus' followers (dancing maened) made by the Romans even as I disagreed with it's import --that Furthur was as much of historical significance as the Grateful Dead. In this respect the two cannot be compared. Furthur will never have any of it's performances in the National Archive. Nobody (but you) is intimating they are good enough to have an exhibit in any museum, much less have their own museum (The archive at UCSC). The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in Cleveland would be the obvious place to honor Furthur and I don't think they're ever going to do it. Your summation at the end is the weakness of the entire piece. You don't really tie it all together and declare your finding. Were they comparable, not comparable or does the whole concept of comparing these two entities have any merit at all? As with all of these types of articles about the Grateful Dead it is easy for me to pick out the inaccuracies in fact about the Grateful Dead's historical performances. The Grateful Dead did Jack Straw in the second set on a handful of occasions, The Grateful Dead played LTGTR from 1989 to 1994 something like 30 times. The Grateful Dead opened with Space on 10/31/85 into Werewolves of London. I have been looking/calling for analysis of Furthur performances and I am grateful for yours. Especially your counting of the beats to measure tempo. There is definitely a slow-down there. They also speed up on a couple of tunes like Casey Jones and Cosmic Charlie. I do think you miss the main point when comparing Jerry and JK. I can't belabor the point here in as I've made it clear in other threads. I thought the most interesting point in the whole article is that Jerry thought 2012 was a special year. And Furthur will be playing on the evening of the transformation/cataclysm. That is something I have been saying for years. I think many of us flashed on that at one time or another between 1965 and 1995. We just didn't see it would be with Bob & Phil carrying the torch into that dark and stormy night... Well, maybe not necessarily "dark and stormy", but an appropriate ritual for a couple of aging warlocks!
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having survived the highly overhyped Harmonica Virgins (aka The Harmonic Convergence), I'm not so sure about the cosmology, but I'm kinda glad there are new fans coming along making an impassioned and closely reasoned case for the importance of Furthur on their own merits. I mean, for a while in my early days there I preferred the Jerry Band to the Dead, too. There are no right and wrong answers here... Also, I don't know about you, but I never saw Jerry without knowing how fleeting this was and how lucky we were (not that this was necessarily topmost in one's mind while getting soaked and trampled in the rain, but you get the drift), and I think the new Furthur crowd probably has some of the same thing going on, even though they've got a lot more options in the current festival/jamband/etc. scene.
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that Ed is a new fan, but a lot of the Furthur audience is. A growing number of that audience wasn't born when Jerry passed.
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at the harmonica convention (as a friend of mine called it) back in 87 at Telluride? Did everybody hold their breath and turn blue? I could tell a story about the supposed harmonic convergence but it wouldn't have anything to do with the Grateful Dead...
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that any one particular thing happened, but people sure had a lot of arcane theories about what they should be doing at any given moment. My vague recollection is that the actual convergence was closer to the Park City show than Telluride, but that may be an error. In the interim between those shows, I think.
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The Grateful Dead did not do a 15 show run at the Warfield. The entire series of acoustic shows totaled 17: Seven at the Warfield; Two at the Saenger; Eight at Radio City. the longest run of the Grateful Dead was nine. They did that twice at the Madison Square Garden in 1988 and 1991. The Warlocks, two months away from becoming the Grateful Dead, did a 30 show stint at the In Room in Belmont, CA starting in September of 1965.
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Actually, it did happen - I was there for most of 'em! 9/25 through 10/14, 1980 - 15 shows, 3 sets each (1 acoustic).
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Missing a page from Dead Base
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Hope you enjoy being reunited with your old buddy... RIP Tom Davis
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Hey all, I haven't been on here in a while. I wasn't sure where to ask my questions. Could I get some info about the Grateful Dead when they first started out as in the 60s? I do know they are dated back around 1965-1967? Was it Jerry that was actually singing some of the songs such as Can't Come Down, and Stealin' to name those two songs? Or who was actually the lead vocals at that time? I know people where I live doesn't believe it that the music I have on is the Grateful Dead. I'm guessing why they don't believe me is because it doesn't sound like the band, and it doesn't sound like Jerry. I'm just guessing why. Thank you,
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checking out some of the excellent books, e.g. Dennis McNally's Long Strange Trip and Blair Jackson's Garcia: An American Life, for lots and lots of info. Not to mention the latest version of DeadBase, which will give you a pretty good sense of what was played when. It's been a while since I've heard "Can't Come Down," but my recollection is a)yes, it's early and b)several of them are singing at once. Officially the band was founded in 1965. Various subsets of the lineup played together at various times before that, often with other people who remained part of the scene one way or another. To oversimplify a whole lot!
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Bob Weir gathers a whole bunch of musicians at TRI to celebrate Jerry's 70th birthday, and the whole thing streams live. Get the details here. We'll have lots of coverage after the fact, but hey, you can check it out for yourself too!
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marye, sounds good!
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My tears are not for you, they are for me as i remember.......Happy 70th Jerry! We still miss you so
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@marye, I asked my questions over at Lossless Legs as well. I purchased An American Life, and I like it so far. After I'm done reading that book, would you suggest for me to read A Long Strange Trip by Dennis McNally, and after that book would you suggest for me to read another book, and what book would that be? Or would it be at that point it's up to me to decide? I like getting recommendations from other people such as you and others.
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I'd get a copy of the Garcia: A Signpost to New Space book, which is an early-'70s Rolling Stone interview with embellishments, and is still kinda THE interview. Jerry just casually tosses off all kinds of amazing stuff. When I first found it it totally gave me sleepless nights, in a good way.
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Maybe even before you read McNally's GD book, read his Kerouac book, Desolate Angel. Good for understanding some of the roots of all this.
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Thank you. I was looking online to see if one of my local bookstores carries Desolate Angel, and I couldn't locate being in one of the local stores, but I believe it might be available online which I would need to pay in person, or unless someone is going to offer on here without charging me which I know that won't happen? I don't know where to find a copy. We have Barnes and Noble out here. We might have other stores, but I don't think so. I live in Bethlehem, PA.
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Order in the next 41 hours to get it by Tuesday, Aug 7.Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping. $18.50 $15.33 $8.93 $4.39 $24.0 That is $4.39 used, dude. No need to ask someone to give it to you. They'll ship right to your door. I'm going to order it myself...
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I don't have a credit card/debit card/checking account to order it. All my buying is done up front with cash. Sorry about that. I wish I could buy it.
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they have those overpriced but useful debit cards that you buy and load with funds at the store.
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Do you mean one of those pre-paid cards where you could purchase at places like Walgreen's? Here's another question. What are the chances that I could buy this book in person from a local bookstore? What would be a good bookstore that I could buy it from? I live in the Bethlehem, PA. area.
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Are you locked up in jail or something? Why are you asking us about stuff in the town where you live? Maybe the Amish can help you... Do they have social workers?
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yeah, those cards at Walgreen's. If the book is in print, the chances are pretty good that your local bookstore could order it for you; it'd certainly be worth asking. Hey, they'd probably take cash too!
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Thank you for the info! Would you personally recommend reading A Signpost to New Space before reading Desolate Angel, but once I read the whole book of An American Life? I just bought An American Life from my local bookstore, and I paid them with cash. barnesandnoble.com is the website. I do a Pick Me Up to only make sure they have the books in stock, but it uses a zip code. Off topic: I am still looking at deaddisc.com as for reference. I think you guys were right there would be no such thing as a reference site to categorized a complete discography. LOL.
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Watched timothy leary. Thanks for posting - Anyone been in touch with them? Have they gone further than anyone has ever been before?
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personally I'd recommend reading Signpost as soon as you can get your hands on it, but that's me. Some of it is a bit dated, which is not surprising as it's 40+ years old. But it's pretty great.
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Hi marye, I went to the bookstore yesterday to buy Signpost, but they were out of stock, so I ordered it and it's being shipped to my home. I paid for it in the store with cash. It hasn't been shipped from the time I am writing this, but it's being shipped today. I'll take your recommendating by reading Signpost before I read anymore of An American Life.
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Sometimes I'm positively glacial (which I guess is somewhat slower than real slow but somewhat faster than it used to be). Watching the TRI broadcast the other night, it suddenly occurred to me that the Jerry "hand" logo was of a left hand, not a right hand. Have I missed this all these years? Is there an explanation? The only thing that came to mind is that it was a rendering of a handprint, and therefore was a reversed image. So what's the scoop? Sheepishly awaiting enlightenment...thanks.
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it's a handprint, yes. I once had a t-shirt of the handprint, which I wore till it fell apart, and I'd sure love to get another. Not that I've seen one since the '80s. In the GD Movie, if I recall correctly, there's a cake backstage with the handprint.
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This is posted elsewhere too, but for those who missed it, it looks like the Jerry vault is open again, also with a merhandising store. http://jerrygarcia.shop.musictoday.com/Dept.aspx?cp=640_57727 and you can buy a new handprint T shirt too MaryE! Also coming is a new Garcia Saunders Keystone Box Set, with a handful of unreleased cuts. http://www.jambands.com/news/2012/08/01/merl-saunders-jerry-garcia-comp… exciting times
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I'll have to go back to the GD Movie and look for the cake! The "Garcia" album definitely has a disembodied right hand floating on the cover, though. Thank God for that. I saw the "handprint T" at the new Garcia store, am going to need one of those, I'm sure. Must be the "getting old" thing, but it's amazing how many details I've taken for granted through my life that suddenly come around and bite me in the butt...and then I scratch my head wondering how I could have been so blind for so long.
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I received my new book in the mail today which is Signpost. My next book would either be Desolate Angel by Dennis McNally (I believe that's the book), or I'll buy A Long Strange Trip by Dennis McNally? I'll probably go with Desolate Angel first? What does everyone think about buying that book first?
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Will someone please be able to answer my questions? I have been waiting for new replies, but I didn't see no new replies come in.
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you'd probably get the question noticed more if it were in the book thread, above, because that's where people would be looking for that sort of discussion. That said, I personally read Desolate Angel before Long Strange Trip because the latter hadn't been written yet, and I suspect you might have more depth with the latter if you read the former first, but really, it's all good and enjoy Signpost, which will probably keep you busy for a while as Jer is in rare form...
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you'd probably get the question noticed more if it were in the book thread, above, because that's where people would be looking for that sort of discussion. That said, I personally read Desolate Angel before Long Strange Trip because the latter hadn't been written yet, and I suspect you might have more depth with the latter if you read the former first, but really, it's all good and enjoy Signpost, which will probably keep you busy for a while as Jer is in rare form...
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I want to tell you about my morning with Jerry on his birthday a month ago. It started by Jerry playing a few songs for me, I've heard these songs before but this morning was different and there is no way i can put in words the reality of this morning. So after the heavens opened, we decided for a bike ride to the local park i ride to alot! Jerry and i shared Love with everything that morning and like i said, my typing does not discribe the whole, Real... oh i wish it could, but this few hours with Jerry was as Real as Real is, i am Happy and Grateful to be here, to know this Family! I Love you All more than words could ever say, Jerry is Eternal, in my opinion, this whole family is Eternal, and what a Blessing you are to life here on Earth. Thank you for letting me type, your the best, your better than Beautiful!
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17 years 4 months
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I have not seen any posts yet on the new Jerry album coming out available. Is anyone else excited about this beside me? I would love to hear feedback from this
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I really loved your post. It indicated tro me that you are close to something spiritually important. Call it Jerry, call it Jesus, call it whatever. Just keep hanging with it!
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but it's pretty great. What turned out to be Jerry's last film interview, at the Santa Clara Valley Historical Society:
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12 years 1 month
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Looking for some good music here in the holland. Just moved here recently and looking for some help from my deadhead brethren. Keep truckin
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17 years 6 months
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heading over to the Dead Heads of the Middle East thread. As I recall there are some folks in Israel.
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Has anyone noticed the new Jerry CD's release is delayed until Dec. 28? It should have been in the mail already.