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  • Deadicated
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    Jazz to Dead
    A day of eclecticity - it's a word? No se. Duke Ellington "The OK Ellington" 6/12/30 Anita O'Day "Anita" 6/12/55 Oscar Pettiford "Deep Passion" 6/12/56 (This one grows on you) Dinah Shore "Dinah Sings, Previn Plays" 6/12/59 What? Grant Green "Solid" 6/12/64 Hot, hot, hot!!! Grateful Dead Boston Music Hall 6/12/76 (the savory snippet from the Road Trips)
  • Anna rRxia
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    gogd 6/12/76 Boston Music Hall
    Mission In The Rain Jerry in sweet voice - possibly the best Mission the Dead ever did... 36 years ago today! (Hey GDean, did you get your ticket yet for Bobby, Zimmy and MMJ yet? Sounds like heaven for you!)
  • gratefaldean
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    Jason Isbell
    Southeastern On first blush, more singer-songwriterly than his previous albums. Isbell was always going to be the George Harrison songwriter in Drive-By Truckers, I think, so busting out of the band is looking like a pretty good career move for him and for us.
  • Parkas4Kids
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    Serge Gainsbourg
    So I was in the record store over the weekend (an actual "record" store; this place only carries CDs for local artists) and came across something that caught my eye: "1 2 3" by Serge Gainsbourg. The name rang slightly as something I've heard before, but what really caught my attention is the following description: "A collection of Serge Gainsbourg's legendary first three albums, originally released in 1958 (Du Chant à la une!), 1959 (N° 2), and 1961 (L'Étonnant Serge Gainsbourg), and all hailing from a time when Gainsbourg was still just another struggling chansonnier. In fact, success initially eluded the young Gainsbourg, but early classics like "Le Poinçonneur des Lilas," and "La Chanson de Prévert," give listeners a taste of the immense talent that was still lurking in the shadows of a smoky cabaret. Bonus CD of the albums!" The 12" 45 RPM LPs themselves are on 180 gram high-quality vinyl, though I have yet to play them on my turntable. The bonus CD does indeed contain all 3 albums, and they are absolutely magnificent albums. I'm a huge jazz fan and have been since I was a kid, and Gainsbourg's early work is very reminiscent of that music. If you can find this one and you're into that style of music, get this release. I can't speak a lick of French much less understand the language, but the music itself is out of this world!
  • Parkas4Kids
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    The Who
    Listening to "Live at Hull 1970," which, if what I'm reading is correct, was recorded two or three days after the legendary "Live at Leeds" album. I love this band, and I have since childhood. My mom actually got to meet the original members of the band back in the late '60s when they played Louisiana, and she has all their autographs. She's been a fan for YEARS. I used to have "Live at Leeds," which legitimately earned its title of "Best Live Album of All Time," and "Live at Hull 1970" captures that same level of energy that was heard at Leeds a few days prior. Where I feel this album falls a tad short is it provides a complete performance of 'Tommy' from beginning to end. The more I go back and listen to the Who's catalogue, the more I realize that Pete wrote a lot of great songs, a lot of really good songs, and a lot of songs that are just good. 'Tommy', while epic as one of the first "rock operas," has a lot of "good" songs that strive for greatness and, as a collective, come close to achieving said greatness, but make for a slightly awkward and rather disjointed live show as a whole. And the show concert gets off to a slow start, taking three or four songs to build up steam. Regardless, this is yet another powerhouse performance from one of the greatest bands on the planet. Probably not an essential show for the average fan, but collector's will want to get their hands on this one, especially those who crave any and every live performance they can get their hot little hands on. This was released previously, though, on the super deluxe edition of "Live at Leeds"; it's discs three and 4our, I believe. I guess someone decided it needed its own release (though I would disagree)....
  • Parkas4Kids
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    Pink Floyd: The Gilmour Era
    It took me about 30 years, but I've come to love the music of Pink Floyd. The quirkyness of their early Barrett days, the murkiness that led to "The Dark Side of the Moon" and their subsequent superstardom, and even up to their demise in the mid '90s. When you think about it, the band had a lot of staying power in spite of all the inner turmoil, and they came darn close to celebrating 30 years together before they finally retired the floating pig. David Gilmour is without a doubt amongst my Top 10 Guitarists of All Time, but I feel like he was a bit in over his head taking over the band after Roger left. To me, Mr. Waters is an underappreciated songwriter, and while Dave got to hang around with the core member of the band for a LONG TIME, I don't think he ever fully understood what the character of Pink Floyd was all about. He was, after all, primarily a blues guitarist, and "A Momentary Lapse of Reason" and "The Division Bell" have a distinct blues feel to them. For Pink Floyd, anyway. Don't get me wrong, they're solid records, and better than "The Final Cut," but they have a hard time bookending the band's overall catalogue. Personally, I almost prefer their earlier albums where the band was more prog and less rock, where they like to experiment with various sounds and how it all came together. "Meddle" doesn't get enough credit for its sheer grandeur. I just love those Side 2-long jams!
  • sherbear
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    --------------------(-----@
    http://www.dead.net/features/gdhour To Wednesdays~ Clink, ahhhhhhh
  • Parkas4Kids
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    Jethro Tull
    The 40th anniversary edition of "Aqualung" to be precise. I recently came across a beautiful little windfall of free vinyl a couple weeks back--one of the houses in my 'hood had a bunch of old LPs on the front lawn (among other stuff that failed to catch my eye) with a sign that said "Free, Please Take!". Which I did and came home with a nice armful of nigh-mint condition records (not the sleeves, though). Amongst my haul was 2 Tull LPs, "Aqualung" and "A Passion Play." I snagged the 40th anniversary edition from the library but haven't listened to the actual record yet. I should list the haul in its entirety in that new "vinyl fanatics" thread. And I should get back to listening to them when I have the time. To see these records, you'd think they were brand new!
  • eliotrosewater89
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    yonder
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8aEvRJPwE0
  • Deadicated
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    GOGD
    6/03/76 Paramount Theatre What a perfect time to resume their odyssey - it seems I'm always listening to '72, '69, '77 at this time of year, and then this rascal comes along for the old knuckle-curve-splitter!!!
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The real-time reports continue...
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12 years 7 months
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- Dandys Rule Ok- ...The Dandy Warhols Come Down - Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia - Welcome to the Monkey House - The Black Album/Come on Feel the Dandy Warhols - Odditorium of Warlords of Mars - Earth to the Dandy Warhols - Earth to the Remix, Vol. 2 EP - The Dandy Warhols Are Sound - The Capitol Years: 1995-2007 - This Machine In other words, THE COMPLETE DISCOGRAPHY. I absolutely love this band and have been in love with them since 2003 when they released "Welcome to the Monkey House."
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12 years 1 month
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Agitation Free
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17 years 2 months
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O' Be Joyful tell Kentucky how your turnip greens grow tell California everything you know tell New York, tell Tennessee, come to Carolina your drinks are on me Yes, indeed, come to Carolina ya's drinks' on me...
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14 years 8 months
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Favorite live albums:Dead Set; Reckoning Favorite Box set: Europe 72 Really love Ladies & Gentlemen, The Grateful Dead (Closing of the Fillmore East in 1971)
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12 years 1 month
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Shirley Collins
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17 years 2 months
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Regions of Light and Sound of God I have this nagging feeling that My Morning Jacket is going to go all Radiohead on me. This album doesn't do much to allay that fear. The fact that I like the album isn't much help, since I also liked "OK Computer," but hated "Kid A" and everything after. Naahhh, it'll never happen. Will it?
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12 years 7 months
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I gotta say, gratefuldean, I've listened to several My Morning Jacket albums as well as Jim's solo record, and they don't do a thing for me. "Rolling Stone" raves and raves and RAVES about them, but I just don't hear what all the fuss is about. Sure, they're a very talented group of musicians, but their music feels very formulaic to me and not at all psychedelic. They must be one of those bands you gotta see live. Studio albums just don't seem to do them justice.
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17 years 2 months
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I gotta say, Parkas, I'm surprised that I like them, at least in a way. You're right, though, I got hooked seeing MMJ live before I ever heard an album. On the other hand, Circuital is one of my favorite albums of the past few years, so obviously once I "got" them, I "got" them.
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14 years 8 months
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Dark Star. Love this compilation and wish I'd taken the time to order the full ten disc set while it was first advertized. There is a confident rawness here that is just rising to maturity.
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17 years 3 months
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4 07 72 It'd be nice to have the full Academy run, now wouldn't it?
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17 years 3 months
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4/08/72 Dead Solid Perfect.
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12 years 7 months
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I find it slightly odd that I had a sudden urge to listen to QotSA yesterday, which just so happens to be the same day the band announced the release date of their new album, "...Like Clockwork." I also hate that I like this band so much, what with Josh Homme being such an a**hole and all that. I guess you just can't mess with genius sometimes. Anyway, yeah, I breezed through their self-titled debut yesterday (the recent re-release, anyway), am currently listening to "R," and will finish up with their best album to date, "Song for the Deaf." I used to have "Lullabies to Paralyze" and "Era Vulgaris," but they've gotten lost in the ether of crashed harddrives, never to be heard from again....
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17 years 2 months
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TraceStraightaways Wide Swing Tremelo Cruising this week with the Son Volt discography ahead of seeing this year's version of the band at the Cat's Cradle on Saturday.
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12 years 1 month
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Rhythm & Sound
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12 years 1 month
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Infiniti
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12 years 7 months
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One of my favorite artists of all time, I just love his take on the blues. Got a bunch of his records on wax, which I recently converted to MP3s. Here's the playlist for today:- "Better Than the Rest" a.k.a. "Nadine" - S/T - "Move It on Over" (my favorite!) - "Bad to the Bone" - "Maverick" - "Live"
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17 years 3 months
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4/11/72 City Hall, Newcastle, England "From day to day, just lettin' it ride, you get so far away from how it feels inside. You can't let go , 'cause you're afraid to fall, but the may come when you can't feel at all."
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12 years 1 month
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Scientist
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17 years 2 months
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The post-hiatus albums Okemah and the Melody of Riot The Search American Central Dust Honky Tonk I'm not filling in the missing years with Jay Farrar solo. I really like Honky Tonk with that classic Bakersfield sound, expecting to hear plenty of that sort of thing tomorrow night...
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17 years 3 months
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Streaming to my phone from Dropbox. In a BART station. Ain't technology grand!
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14 years 8 months
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Johnny Cash greatest hits 2 disc studio versionJohnny Cash Bootleg Series III Bill Munroe 4 disc box ~ Give me that old time religion Its good enough for me ~ (Munroe is The man on mandolin)
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12 years 1 month
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Tod Dockstader
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12 years 1 month
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Matmos
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17 years 3 months
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4/16/72 Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark Rollin' (oh, yes, forgot about Numero 4, Tivoli - I became somewhat preoccupied ... it must have been the music)
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12 years 1 month
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Sun Ra
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12 years 7 months
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- "Cosmic Egg" by Wolfmother- "Frank" by Amy Winehouse - "Go to Nassau - May 15 & 16, 1980" by the 'Dead - "GarciaLive, Vol. 1" by JG
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17 years 3 months
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Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, Denmark 4/17/72 Glorious sounding good old Grateful Dead!!!
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17 years 3 months
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The quiet hum of my refrigerator. The FURTHUR show ended --- it was excellent, for sure! The neighbors can sleep now; we have been rocked. It was well needed, so indescribably so. "On my feet..."
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12 years 1 month
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Rhythim Is Rhythim
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17 years 2 months
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The Low Highway Nice! Lately I've been listening to "Ladies and Gentlemen, The Grateful Dead" in 20-30 minute chunks at bedtime. I have a way of neglecting the compilation releases sitting on the shelf, and it's been a while since I listened to this one. Reminds me why this is my favorite era of the Dead. Counting down to DaP6...what's the word on the bonus disc?
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12 years 1 month
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Thomas Fehlmann
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17 years 3 months
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Donor Rap The beauty of the night is tucked in so right with so few words, said just right. I would like to ditto that. If anything ever happens to me...I want to be an organ donor, xo.
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17 years 3 months
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4/21/60 King Curtis "The New Scene of King Curtis" 4/21/61 Thelonious Monk "Monk In Italy" 4/21/61 Miles Davis "Friday at The Blackhawk" 4/21/65 Lee Morgan "The Rumproller" 4/21/67 McKoy Tyner "The Real McKoy" 4/21/68 Joe Henderson "Four" 4/21/72 Grateful Dead Beat Club, Bremen, West Germany, Numero 7
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12 years 1 month
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F.C. Judd
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12 years 7 months
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Listening to the LPs I was lucky enough to snag on Record Store Day this past Saturday. Sadly, I missed the 'Dead's release as well as the re-issue of Pink Floyd's "See Emily Play," but I did get some pretty great records! There are a few other special releases I picked up that I haven't opened yet, too, like "The Animals Is Here" and "The Animals Are Back" to name a few. Managed to get quite the haul this year!- "The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars" by David Bowie* - "The Stars (Are Out Tonight)" by David Bowie - "Album" by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts - "Public Image" by Public Image Ltd. - "(The Night the Sky Cried) Tears of Fire/Farstar" by the Sword* - "Hammer of Heaven" by the Sword* - "The Madcap Cries" by Syd Barrett* - "The Only Way to Go Is Straight Through" by Thurston Moore and Loren Connors * non-Record Store Day releases
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Boards Of Canada
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17 years 2 months
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JJ Grey and Mofro -- This River Eric Burdon -- 'Til Your River Runs Dry Speaking of Eric Burdon, I also snagged one of those Animals RSD mono releases, sounded pretty nice. Also, Richard Thompson, Jason Isbell/Elizabeth Cook, Avett Bros/Randy Travis, Gary Clark Jr, Mike Cooley, Jimi Hendrix, all on vinyl (I think that I'm forgetting something here), and a pristine used vinyl copy of the Ramones "Rocket to Russia." But missed the Dead RSD release...
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Oh, man, that new Eric Burdon record is AMAZING! I've loved the Animals since I was a kid and managed to snag both RSD 45s. But yeah, "'Til Your River Runs Dry" is a stunning album and definitely one of the best I've heard in the last year or so.
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12 years 7 months
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"Blue Monk" from 'The Essential Thelonious Monk'
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12 years 1 month
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Ricardo Villalobos
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12 years 7 months
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"Kids" from the band's debut EP, 'Time to Pretend'. An interesting release but nowhere near the level of 'Oracular Spectacular' or 'Congratulations'.