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  • Eric Abrahamson
    9 years 5 months ago
    MY BROTHER BOUGHT ME TICKETS FOR BOTH NIGHTS!
    Eric Abrahamson At my age, it's already predetermined that I'm not going to go to all that trouble unless I like it. The glass is either half-full or half-empty. Nobody twisted my arm, put me in a headlock, and made me listen to it-I think it's cool. I asked my brother for money to go, and he gave me 2 tickets. My friend Billy "Buzzboy" Rose, "Wavy Gravy's adopted son", used to be a Grateful Dead roadie, he got me backstage at the first show I went to after I met him, so I think they're good to me. My other friend, Richie Shirley, from the Hog Farm, was in the backstage Crew, traveled around the country with them and sold official T-shirts, and his wife, Andrea, "Mom", the cook at Camp Winnarainbow, used to work in their office in San Rafael and they had an apartment there. I met Richie and Billy at Woodstock where the Hog Farm was the Security and the Please Force, so you kids who pan them, fuck you and your worthless idiot opinions. You've never even been there yet, if you ever get there, at this rate. I think they were the best rock and roll band that ever was, and the Rolling Stones was #2, and I've seen them both. Compared to what, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir? The technology is pretty good for playing in a stadium as big, new, and modern as that. They can hear everything you say and see everything you do, and my brother bought me a ticket way up in the back. In between songs this kid 10 rows down says, "Shoot him!" and I go, "I have a gun!" and immediately they started into "Loser", "If I had a gun/For every ace I have drawn/I could arm a town/The size of Abilene!" I don't like it when they get that personal, ad hominem, but I'm still a fan, because even if they ever had a bad day, they recorded plenty of *good* days, which can always happen, always *do* happen at least a little bit, and silicon is immortal. Great light show. The only problem is with the critics and nay-sayers, who have pre-judged it all instead of, "Judge not!"--like "prejudiced". They already don't like it, they were prepared not to like it--there is nothing the band could have done or could do that they would have liked or would like. It's against their religion. It couldn't be worse if they sang traditional Moslem hymns to Allah in Arabic. They probably know how. There was a day when *everybody* liked it, even my parents. They were the #2 top-grossing entertainment act for 2 years in a row; #1 was Bill Cosby, by concerts, not by record sales, by word-of-mouth, household names, I remember. Nobody listened to that thing about rock-and-roll being "the Devil's music", and if you play it backwards it says, "Hail, Satan!" In my opinion, the Church rejects dancing, "worldly", as opposed to gospel or spiritual music, commercial music, art, literature, drama, culture, one of the reasons, because it's linked in their mind with pagan religion, which certainly applies to the Grateful Dead. However, I would argue that when the Christians converted the Roman Empire and tore down the Pagan temples, later they incorporated some of the features of the pagan religions into their own, from what I've heard. For example, do they say that the gods and goddesses of the polytheistic pantheons of the ancient cultures like Greece, Italy, Egypt, Babylonia are really One, the Lord God of the Old Testament? Or it says on Wikipedia that the Lord God of the Old Testament was the war god of the Phoenicians, like Mars Hill, though I don't see why not the head god Jupiter, Zeus, Ra, or Aten, where Moses got it. Then the Christians say Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the Trinity is One, with Jesus Christ being the Son, a bow to pagan polytheism, but just 3. But they also have the Virgin Mary, who some say is Mother Earth, lots of saints and angels, etc. They say the 30,000 Roman and Greek gods were angels and demons, it's confusing, but some of them were like the Christian God in some ways. For example, Zeus sounds like "deus", which means "God". Jupiter, the Roman for Zeus, has also the name "Jove", which sounds like "Jehovah", which is translated "LORD" in the Old Testament. I read that the Christians used features from the Eleusinian Mysteries of Demeter, the Earth Mother in the Mass, the table, I think, maybe cups, candles, etc. to attract pagans. Some of the saints represent pagan deities from other cultures, and now they become Christian. The Greeks and Romans also had animal sacrifices like the Jews in the Tabernacle and Temple. Lots of their gods had wings like the Jewish angels, like Cupid, Victory, and Iris, the Rainbow. Maybe Moses got the snake on the pole from Mercury's Caduceus, and Asculepius the healer. The Elysian Fields is similar to the Christian Heaven, and Hades to the Christian Hell. Of course, there are just as many differences as similarities. Online I saw a book by the Church Father St. Clement where he uses Ulysses tied to the mast not to hear the Sirens' Song in Homer's "Odyssey" as an example of successfully resisting temptation, "Epistle to the Greeks". Of course, the Pope and the Vatican have always been in Rome. The Father represents Odin from Norse Germanic neo-Paganism, and Thor Jesus in a way. The word "Holle", "hell", isn't in the Bible, it's in the Norse "Eddas". *Valhalla* was their "Heaven". They mixed it with the Jewish Old Testament, the Greek and Roman paganism, etc. They included some of the old Jewish Mosaic prohibitions. Religion has art, music, literature, architecture, and Greek religion was somewhat based on plays. The Old Testament Tabernacle and Temple had a lot of art, sculpture, music, and architecture, and the Bible itself really is man-made literature. They just want a monopoly and no competition, and to control the State. A lot of art, music, literature, architecture, and sculpture got it's start in religion and then some Christians object for those artisans to become commercial, to use it for money, because they want to control the money, which is also man-made. It belongs to the person whose picture is on the money, who owns the metal mines, the mints, and who coins the money. "Render to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's." There *is* no picture of God. Some of the Caesars, Roman Emperors, made the people worship them as gods. Constantine himself was Apollo the Sun-God before he was a Christian. Go figure. Another reason the Church may prohibit "drugs, sex, rock-and-roll, drinking, smoking, and cussing", besides Scripture, as well as art, music, literature, theatre, and culture, science, technology, medicine, "the works of men's hands", the prohibition on idolatry, "make no graven image","bow down to no graven image", well that's another one. *Another* one, "God has made everything sufficient, but they have sought out many inventions." But the Church wants the money that people spend on entertainment, art, music, literature, plays, to go to them. Maybe they *did* think they were all being guided by *God* when they were on LSD and they were deceived by the Devil, "caught in the Devil's bargain", "Satan Himself appears as an Angel of Light to deceive if He can the very Elect," but they were experimenting and they thought they were right. Maybe if you got psychedelic by fasting 40 days in the desert those are true, not Satanic, visions. I think they came true for some of them; potentially could have come true for a lot more. Ram Dass called them "entheogens, 'theo', Greek for 'God', 'God-manifesting', you see God, become One with God, become God". "I am That I am." "I and the Father are One." "If you have seen Me, you have seen the Father." "I said ye are gods; nevertheless you shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes." "We are as gods, and we might as well get good at it." The only psychedelic church I ever heard of was the Native American Church in New Mexico, who had a cross on the altar. They converted all the American Indians to Christianity, but they can still do some traditional Indian things they all (or at least some of them) like to do, just to preserve the culture for posterity. People are always interested in what happened in the past; it's valuable information. The price of Indian jewelry has gone up at least 100x in my lifetime, as it becomes more scarce, as they become lost arts, and they were better before the Wasichus came. There's that Jesse Colin Young song, "Before You Came", how great the Indians had it. A lot of pagan spirituality is a lot higher than a lot of Western spirituality; it's the same thing. If you call the Virgin Mary the Earth Mother, or Father God, Mother Earth, or the Yin-Yang, that's Paganism, or different forms of it, generally speaking. Freud in "Moses and Monotheism", says the Egyptian polytheism was better than the Egyptian monotheism, because when Iknaton switched them to Aten, the One God form of the Sun God Ra, he made Pharoah Iknaton at the top of the "pyramid", with all the ranks of nobles, courtiers, priests, and common people. With the polytheistic system, Isis, Osiris, all that, even though it's true what the Christians say, they worshipped animals, crocodiles, cattle, ibises, hawks, birds, elephants, lions, etc., as the Christians say, "brute beasts", power was more diffuse throughout society, less centered in the king. And he says they were more prosperous, too, with polytheism, that their society declined with monotheism, they overthrew Iknaton, called him a heretic, and restored polytheism. That was why one of the reasons Moses had to get out, to preserve the monotheistic concept somewhere else by founding a new religion. He was raised by the Pharaoh's daughter. There are traces of the Egyptian roots in Moses' writings; he uses the Hebrew word "Elohim", "gods", plural, for "LORD God", and "Thou shalt have no other gods before me," admitting they exist, but fighting them, and "Who is like unto Thee, among the gods?" "You're the best!" I don't know; I'm not a theologian. I just had a year of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Yale, and graduated from Mountain Heights neo-Pentecostal Bible College in 1974. I saw the Jupiter-Venus conjunction in Leo tonight, the same as the Star of Bethlehem. It was out for about an hour. Astrology is from paganism, too, and probably the Dead used an astrologer when they set up the stadium dates as a Christian joke, although who knows how forgiving the Christians can be about that. The Bible accuses those who "worship the host of heaven upon the housetops" and they said that meant the pagan Babylonian astrologers. But the Christians reject a lot of other things the Jews said, like the rule against pork. Maybe that verse condemns the Roman astrologers, too. I read that not only were the Romans, and Greeks, into that, but they had augurs, or prophecies by things like the flight of birds, which might signify things like victory or defeat in war, or they'd read the entrails of animals they sacrificed, like tea leaves, or "sibyls" at the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi would prophecy the future in poetry, Socrates had a "inner god" that told him what to do. The Christians say "abandon all that" and then years later when you're "mature in the Lord" it wasn't so bad, and won't really hurt you, "all things are pure to him who is pure", "nothing is unclean of itself", etc. This issue is "if __________ makes my brother to stumble, I will eat no ____________," "Blessed is the man who is not condemned by the thing he alloweth," and something about the "commandments of men". I'm going to write more on another post so it isn't too long.
  • deaded2
    9 years 5 months ago
    Hehe gardenamesX2 :) I was
    Hehe gardenamesX2 :) I was thinking just the opposite... direwulf isinmyhead I hope they play it next week!!! Don't murder me I beg of you don't murder me Pleeeeeeeeeeaaase don't murder me
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    gardenamesX2
    9 years 5 months ago
    couldn't have said it better
    isinmyhead & direwulf
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<? // pull in news from "50th Anniversary" feature type taxonomy $news = views_embed_view('story_lists', 'block_50news'); echo $news; ?>

Grateful Dead Original Members Add Two Dates To Final Concerts

April 10, 2015

The original members of Grateful Dead have announced two additional shows at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California on June 27th and 28th, as part of their “Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead” run. Along with the three shows at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 3rd, 4th, and 5th, the run will mark the original members' last-ever performances toget

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I'm willing To bet that they will release Red Rocks Box set of some sort. It makes sense. The Dead played there lots and had some mighty fine shows there, yet Red Rocks and Colorado have only one release in the road trips series and a filler on Dicks Picks. We shall see...
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Dick's Picks 16 is my favorite from '69. Why? Well...I'm glad you asked. 1) The Tom Constanten / Pigpen Double-Hammond Assault Team 2) The 3-part Dark Star weave, which includes the only performance of Uncle John's Band JAM 3) Venue = Fillmore West, so you know it's hot. In fact, this show is like the Fillmore West box set on high octane, because it features the best songs of that early '69 run (i.e. Dark Star / St. Stephen / The Eleven / The Other One); PLUS a set of songs that made it into the live repertoire after the Fillmore West box set was performed (as this show is from November): Casey Jones, China Cat, Rider, Cumberland Blues, etc. I listen to this show sparingly, so as not to wear it out (kind of like Exile on Main St, Quadrophenia, & The White Album)
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Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but the Fillmore West (formerly 'The Carousel Ballroom') was located at Market and S. Van Ness whereas the Fillmore Auditorium (the venue of DP 16) is located (and still exists) at Fillmore and Geary. So they are not the same place. Doesn't diminish DP 16 in the least as a superb release. I just wanted to clarify things pertaining to venue a little for the prior poster in case things are unclear.
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Viola Lee Blues ; Midnight Hour (Midnight Hour is A+) BIODTL and a few other songs, plus a Jam with I believe Jorma and Jack Cassady. Seems to be very rare stuff. Dicks Picks 16. One of my favorite Dire Wolf and High Time. Wow 1969 shows that need to be considered. Has a lot so I will leave out box set stuff/compilation material runs like Ark, Avalon, other Fillmore West/East 2-7-69 Stanley Theater 2-22-69 Dream Bowl 3-28-69 Modesto 10-25-69 Winterland 11-2-69 Family Dog 11-7-69,, I think all these shows have Dark Star and plenty of other treats to offer. And anything from December 26-31, 1969. I will also take 1-2-70. The Dark Star is that good
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We always speak of the years and band formations and specific shows we'd like to find released. Just a mention that there are also many fabulous, storied venues which are unrepresented by official releases. This would be a perfect year to address that. The two that top my list: Red Rocks, CO The Avalon ballroom
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Yeah, favorite venues. Great idea! For me it would be the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago (acoustically perfect) and Alpine Valley Music Theatre, an outdoor venue in Wisconsin.
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I attended my first Grateful Dead concert, Philadelphia Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA., 1/5/79. This show as well as the one on the following Friday, the 12th were originally scheduled for November, 27 & 28, 1978 however due to Jerry's throat condition 4 shows were postponed & one was cancelled outright. Little did I know that 1/5/79 would change my life forever. My very first listen of the Dead was on 93.3 WMMR on a Sunday night in November 1977 when the Sunday night DJ I believe her name was Cindy Dru had a radio program that aired before the King Biscuit Flower Hour. Every Sunday she would play a complete album of a new release, I remember the week before was Pink Floyd Animals & also I remember her featuring Yes, Going For The One & Bad Company, Straight Shooter so up to her playing Terrapin Station in it's entirety I never listened to the Dead as I was and still am a heavy prog rock guy so the GD were never a band I listened to, however after listening to Terrapin for the 1st time I thought the Dead were a prog rock band, NOT!!! The very first GD album I purchased was Skull & Roses then I bought Terrapin. WALSTIB it's been for me personally. My favorite venue has to be Boston Garden. LIVE LONG & STAY DEAD!!!!!
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Good stuff from the fall '76 midwest tour. The 1st set from 10/3 starts with Sugaree, based upon known setlists and an audience recording. The Bertha, Mama Tried 1st set opener is from 10/1 Indy. Check the Taper's Section from 1/20-26/2014: it features a chunk of 1st set tunes from 10/3. The 2nd set from Indy is featured from the 12/9-13/2013 T.S. I like the tug-of-war between Bob and Jerry in and out of Dancin', notably after the Wheel. Cudos to the late Jerry Moore for making such incredibly good audience tape recordings.Let me mention 10/2: Cinci's excellent 2nd set is featured from the 9/28/2009 T.S. The LMA has Jerry Moore's 10/2 recording.
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12 years 1 month
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Read the comment below, when/where was there a leak on a new hits package?
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original post credit: direwulfamazon listing So the link on Amazon that you speak of is no longer active, however, I did find the listing on what appears to be the Dutch Amazon website and the track listing is given as follows. So if this is actually official and this is the track listing not sure about this one unless the 2015 remastered version actually brings some kind of new insight or dimensions to the music with the new treatment Disk: 1 1. The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) [2015 Remastered Version] 2. Cream Puff War (2015 Remastered Version) 3. Born Cross-Eyed (2015 Remastered Version) 4. Dark Star (2015 Remastered) [Single Version] 5. St. Stephen (2015 Remastered Version) 6. China Cat Sunflower (2015 Remastered Version) 7. Uncle John's Band (2015 Remastered Version) 8. Easy Wind (2015 Remastered Version) 9. Casey Jones (2015 Remastered Version) 10. Truckin' (2015 Remastered Version) Alle 19 Titel anzeigen. Disk: 2 1. Terrapin Station (2015 Remastered Version) 2. Shakedown Street (2015 Remastered Version) 3. I Need A Miracle (2015 Remastered Version) 4. Fire On The Mountain (2015 Remastered Version) 5. Feel Like A Stranger (2015 Remastered Version) 6. Far From Me (2015 Remastered Version) 7. Touch Of Grey (2015 Remastered Version) 8. Hell In A Bucket (2015 Remastered Version) 9. Throwing Stones (2015 Remastered Version) 10. Black Muddy River (2015 Remastered Version) Original post dated around December 18ish on the DaP 2015 thread
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...I'd put just about every song on there except for Money Money ;)
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....favorite place I saw the Dead? Cal Expo. Beer stations everywhere. Favorite venue that they played, but never saw them there. Ventura Fairgrounds. Saw Phish there a couple times. Turn around and there's the ocean. Freakin' awesome. Did have some sound issues though due to the winds off the beach....
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Sheesh. Twenty freakin' years. We miss you, dude. Check out the Facebook thingy with 12/30/77. That's a nice feature for the 50th. Thank goodness so much of the GD was recorded. Life would be very drab without it.
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This is from Amazon.de (I've also seen a cached page from Amazon.com but it's not yet on the site) The Best of the Grateful Dead [Double CD] Grateful Dead (Artist) | Format: Audio CD Price: EUR 20,99 Free shipping from 29 EUR (books always free shipping). Details All prices incl. VAT. Pre-order Price Guarantee more information . This item appears on 29 January 2015th Order now. Ships from and sold by Amazon . Gift-wrap available. Disk: 1 1. The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) [2015 Remastered Version] 2. Cream Puff War (2015 Remastered Version) 3. Born Cross-Eyed (2015 Remastered Version) 4. Dark Star (2015 Remastered) [Single Version] 5. St. Stephen (2015 Remastered Version) 6. China Cat Sunflower (2015 Remastered Version) 7. Uncle John's Band (2015 Remastered Version) 8. Easy Wind (2015 Remastered Version) 9. Casey Jones (2015 Remastered Version) 10. Truckin' (2015 Remastered Version) 11. Box Of Rain (2015 Remastered Version) 12. Sugar Magnolia (2015 Remastered Version) 13. Friend Of The Devil (2015 Remastered Version) 14. Ripple (2015 Remastered Version) 15. Eyes Of The World (2015 Remastered Version) 16. Unbroken Chain (2015 Remastered Version) 17. Scarlet Begonias (2015 Remastered Version) 18. The Music Never Stopped (2015 Remastered Version) 19. Estimated Prophet (2015 Remastered Version) Disk: 2 1. Terrapin Station (2015 Remastered Version) 2. Shakedown Street (2015 Remastered Version) 3. I Need A Miracle (2015 Remastered Version) 4. Fire On The Mountain (2015 Remastered Version) 5. Feel Like A Stranger (2015 Remastered Version) 6. Far From Me (2015 Remastered Version) 7. Touch Of Grey (2015 Remastered Version) 8. Hell In A Bucket (2015 Remastered Version) 9. Throwing Stones (2015 Remastered Version) 10. Black Muddy River (2015 Remastered Version) 11. Blow Away (2015 Remastered Version) 12. Foolish Heart (2015 Remastered Version) 13. Standing On The Moon (2015 Remastered Version)
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It ain't the best of the Dead if it only has one song from Blues for Allah. Not even Franklin's Tower? (Should have Help/Slip too of course). The retort might be, "well, then what would you remove to make room?" How about Miracle and Far From Me? Of course, this is all academic since this isn't aimed at us. But if I were trying to turn a newbie on to the Dead, I'd want some more Blues for Allah stuff... One thing is for sure - this is a reminder that their studio output is better than they get credit for, because there are a lot of songs that could be added to this list. You know, I think I'll pull out some of the albums, starting with Shakedown Street (I got a hankerin' for FRANCE!!!)
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More nuggets from one of the greatest time periods in music history. Dark Star > St. Stephen > The Eleven on Sirius today.

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10 years 7 months
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with 6/10 lets add 5/26 as well............73 is fine with me
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Yes, the Fillmore West was where the car dealership holds court at the corner of Van Ness and Market Street. There was a side door on Market street just a stones throw from Van Ness for admission up some stairs to the ballroom. The entrance to the door has been removed and plastered over. You can see the door and people in line for a show on the "Fillmore-the last days" concert documentary. (two great live dead songs in that film - Casey Jones, and JBG) I saw two shows there in my early days. I saw a Santana show before they closed it down, and an Airplane/Hot Tuna show after it was re-birthed briefly as "Resurrection". Cool light shows, cool laid back hang out on the floor scene. At the Santana show, I was moved by the intoxicating combination of sounds and light, and it literally changed my life. I have my Dad to thank for giving me and my date a ride to the show, waiting outside, and taking us home to the south bay. nitecat
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Claney, I so completely agree, where's the Help>Slip>Franklin's?
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Since we're experiencing a lull, I'll chime in . . . :) Back when the Europe '72 box came out, a friend who knew I loved the Dead sent me the news as it was breaking. Although I had ordered EVERY GD release EVER off Dead.net, I didn't receive the e-mail notice until AFTER the set had sold out (if memory serves), so I still thank my friend for allowing me to order the Europe box in time. Anyway, I was transitioning careers at that time, we were cutting corners, and I was pretty stressed out about not being much of a bread-winner. I almost ordered the box immediately (as was my pre-transition wont), thinking, "This is the greatest thing EVER!", but then thought, "This is the most RIDICULOUS thing EVER!", and changed my mind. Had I been making good money, the decision would have been easy, but I couldn't imagine spending $450 at a time when money wasn't flowing so freely. I agonized the entire day, then sheepishly mentioned it to my wife, who promptly and calmly stated that I would always regret not getting it, and that perhaps I should have it, given that music was my main passion, and that I was very careful with money on a daily basis. I sat down and ordered the set post haste, getting in just a few hours before it sold out. I love that woman! Someone mused as to why they couldn't love jam bands if they loved the Dead. I too have tried the Jam Band station (but rarely find anything of interest), and in 1991-1995 followed Phish and the Panic around, and even saw String Cheese at a CO bar for free with about ten other people on a friend's recommendation. But for me, the reason I can't get into the jam bands is the songs and the musical intent. Garcia, Hunter, Weir, and Barlow wrote songs in the Americana vein, reaching back into American music history for musical and lyrical ideas. And then they allowed those ideas developmental space in a jazz-minded manner. The jam bands to me don't have wonderfully-rich melodies, harmonies, and lyrics that I can bask in repeatedly. They seem to mostly be in a funk groove or heading as quickly as they can for a funk groove. That's part of why I haven't seen Phish since 1995--to my ear they went from being a spacey rock band to being a funk band (that, and the hordes of unwashed masses that started showing up at Phish shows during the Dead's demise). The other thing is that it's all about that bass, 'bout that bass . . . Phil's playing is beautiful and contrapuntal, whereas many of the jam band bass players just go for the funk, which gets tiring to my ears after a song or two. Garcia's playing is magnificent, but it's Phil's bass lines that make much of the magic, as Phil is playing something of an upside-down version of the melodies that Jerry is playing. The jam bands too often just are all playing on the same melodic line, which doesn't create a spacious-enough world for me, especially if I could be listening to Beethoven or Coltrane instead. And Claney--excellent perspective on how the countdown was to the celebratory year of our favorite band and phenomenon, NOT a countdown to a consumeristic opportunity! Happy New Year, all!
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Thanks for the kind words folks. Deadheadbrewer, you married well :) Was I serious about France, absolutely! I love that tune (but no, I would not put it on a "best of" collection). And, on the subject of studio Dead, it's also worth noting that a lot of their best playing in the studio came when they were backing other musicians. Jerry's pedal steel on songs like Teach Your Children and Southbound Train. Or Jerry, Phil, and Billy on Crosby/Nash's "Wall Song" - smoking stuff from Jerry there. Or on Crosby's first solo album. Or some of the Slick Kantner stuff..Or how about their playing backing up Bob on Ace (the jam in Playin' is peak studio Dead). Now that would be an interesting compilation...
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I have had many of my friends completely dismiss Phish. A lot of them say simply "I don't like the funk", or "Everything phish plays is funk". THEN I show them an endless amount of Phish that has no funk sound whatsoever. Even at their funkiest in 97/98 Phish was doing a bunch of other stuff including jazz, salsa, ambient, rock etc. So don't dismiss Phish just because its what your "heady/cool" "Deadhead" friends do. I found out over time that a number my "Deadhead" friends, had no idea what the Dead is all about and what goes on musically. The most "heady deadhead" and you cant sit through any of their deep improve, or a song that goes on for more than 5 minutes? Don't listen to any live shows, know any members or albums? I don't think so, I think you like how the skull looks and the association with drugs and being cool. This comment is not directed at anyone here in the comments, just describing some of the people I occasionally have to deal with in my city. I just get tired of poser Deadheads starting nonexistent hate/feuds with/between the Grateful Dead and Phish, its ridiculous and a waste of time. I can only hope that some of these people see the light and start listening to and understanding improvised music. Then a whole world of great music will open up to them. Sorry for the rant.
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On the songs 'Laughing' by David Crosby and 'Mind Left Body' by Grace SLick/Katner, is some of my favorite pieces of recorded music.
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15 years 2 months
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"I can only hope that some of these people see the light and start listening to and understanding improvised music. Then a whole world of great music will open up to them" Why assume that folks who do not like "jam bands" do not understand improvised music? In my opinion The Dead was never a Jam band; yes they jammed on a lot of their songs, but the songs all started as songs, good songs with melodies and lyrics that were not written with the sole purpose of a jam in mind. I get the impression that the opposite is true for jam bands, start with a jam, then write a song around it.
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16 years 3 months
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I haven't read all the comments here, how about a box set of these fabled shows? Granted, the sound check "show" of July 27th is much stronger than the actual event of the 28th, but I like both. All I have in my stash is a rather nice sound check show and an unusual compilation of soundboard, audience, and FM broadcast recording, and all are from multi-generational analogue tapes. A sonic upgrade in store.
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10 years 7 months
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I never stated the words jam band or anything like that in the comment. Improvised music can be in many contexts, I just meant these people I know don't understand what improv is and therefor cant fully appreciate it, or in many cases even understand when its going on or what's happening. Great improv can be found in Coltrane, Miles Davis, Fripp, Hillage, Fruscainte not just jambands. That's what I meant by a whole world of music.
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17 years 5 months
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Jam on Garth. Happy New Years one and all!
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16 years 1 month
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I'll tell you where the four winds dwellIn Franklin's tower there hangs a bell It can ring, turn night to day
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16 years 9 months
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The steam is starting to build on this year marking 50 years of this music we love. Phil is spreading the love at the Crossroads and many venues around the globe are joining in. We need a central spot to give updates and tell our stories. Moving around the different sites is a drag. Where is the TerripanStation?
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17 years 4 months
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Passenger, I so totally agree. The discussion is always best here when people gravitate to one forum (e.g., the Dave's Picks 11 forum). Critical mass is lost when discussions are spread across several areas (even, and especially, when people get "off topic" and bring up all sorts of things). I do not participate in online discussions anywhere else - I just tend to enjoy the comments from this group (not just about the Dead) more than other groups. So, for what it's worth, I second that call to make it easier for us to all focus on one area (perhaps this one).
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11 years 3 months
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great audio, a few cuts. New Potato Caboose and Thats It For The Other One are both very nice. The last few minutes of TIFTOO is classic Dead. I have had this set for quite a while as filler on my copy of 7-8-78 Red Rocks. It is great to finally hear what Dave has had access to. Morning Dew ; New Potato Caboose ; It Hurts Me Too ; Cold Rain And Snow ; Turn On Your Lovelight ; Beat It On Down The Line ; Cryptical Envelopment > The Other One > Cryptical Envelopment over the last few days Dave has sampled 4-24-66 10-22-67 8-21-68 ,,, all with hearty doses of Pigpen. 1-2-70
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17 years 5 months
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yo, could we get another countdown until something substantive is announced?
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13 years 3 months
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There are tons of bands/artists that stretch out songs and improvise on stage but they are never labeled as a Jam Band or heard on the Jam Band station or whatever... Why not? Who knows/who really cares? I think the main problem is that the bands that generally fall under the "Jam Band" Umbrella aren't the best at songwriting and place most of talents in the jam part...well, it shouldn't be a surprise that if you jam out a boring song, its still going to be boring. I say this but there are some "jam bands" I like but some really are just utterly boring, to me at least. Since I'm posting this post on Dead.net, I obviously think that Garcia/Hunter & Weir/Barlow are some of the best songwriters that ever lived. There were definitely songs that were built with heavy improvising being the main purpose but, for the most part, they were trying to write nice songs and the jams came later (I know some of this was already pointed out in previous post, but its correct). Playing In The Band, Dark Star, & Thats It For The Other One all started out as nice little songs, am I right? I don't really care if a band is considered a jam band or not or jams or not...if they write a good song, I'll listen to them and go to their shows.
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13 years 6 months
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Y'all are hitting the nail on the head with the jamband discussion. You're saying what I've been thinking -- that most of them are too quick to go for the easy groove without enough unpredictable exploration in the rhythm section. No one does it like the GOGD and that's a big part of it. The superior songs themselves are another vital ingredient. There are exceptions of course and your mileage will certainly vary. I'll take raggedy old space case Keith Godchaux over that Furthur virtuoso any day. Interestingly, there is a parallel discussion on classical music going on back at the Dave's #11 board (if you can find it). It also favors expression over technical "perfection".
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10 years 6 months
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The two things that separate the Dead from other bands, IMHO, are the songs of Hunter/Garcia and thewillingness of the band to go together wherever their collective or individual inspiration led, even if it meant they sometimes got lost along the way. It was that willingness to fail on stage that freed them to achieve the transcendent moments.
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17 years 5 months
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Did we really count down the days to get some wallpaper for our computers and phones? I think we were looking for an announcement about something. At least toss us heads a bone to chew on. Peace
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10 years 10 months
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"Did we really count down the days to get some wallpaper for our computers and phones?" Was hoping for some Ringtones! Have a new phone :)
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15 years 2 months
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Still waiting for a 30-minute Dark Star ringtone.
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15 years 10 months
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I'd like Cumberland Blues for my work iphone...

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10 years 7 months
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On an Apple iPhone and Mac, you can make any song you like into a ringtone.Not sure about android. Google it and it's easy to do.........I made a bunch for my iPhone with songs for each person
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10 years 10 months
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Now you got me... as I was half-joking with me post... but! google: apple iphone -- how to make any song into a ringtone? good search strategy?