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    joennn24
    9 years 5 months ago
    Mix
    Listened to KFOG replay and the mix had Trey so out front I couldn't hear the rest of the band. Could just be the radio replay, but I wanna hear Phil, Bobby and the rest of the band. Can't wait to see it at the movie theater on Friday (and maybe Saturday and Sunday)
  • goverlid
    9 years 5 months ago
    Write on, Bros. Stephen & Eric!
    Thanks for my morning eye-opener!!
  • Eric Abrahamson
    9 years 5 months ago
    Fare Thee Well Grateful Dead, Pt. 2
    Watch 'em knock 'em dead in Chicago. I must've gone to at least 100 shows. The first one was in 1966 in the Golden Gate Park Panhandle, or the Furthur Fesival at San Francisco State College, whichever was first. I actually felt like Phil was addressing me personally when he made his speech at the end and thanked everyone for coming out, because I tried to get tickets to as many Phil Lesh and Friends at Terrapin Crossroads shows as I could. He came up to me there and let me say, "Hi," which rock stars don't have to do. However I couldn't afford to follow Bobby around like I used to, and he always lets me know, which is flattering that he invited me. He sang a song about losing money, which is true. He sang some other songs which might have been directed at me, and I instinctively responded by singing along. Then, at the beginning of the last song, "Fare Thee Well, My Honey", "Brokedown Palace", I thought he was like, he wanted me to sing along, so I did, and then he ended it abruptly, got in line with their arms on their shoulders, did their bow, and it was over, but I'm planning to see the live stream of all 3 Chicago shows at Terrapin Crossroads. When I went to UCI in 1987, my dad gave me $100,000/year, an apartment in grad student housing, a car, and a bunch of credit cards on his account. They tracked me into the Information and Computer Science major. Then he came down and took some of the credit cards back, and my sister took all 6 of my Irvine Meadows Grateful Dead tickets. Like William Burroughs wrote, "When did they ever give anything that they didn't take back if they could, and they always could!" and he went to Harvard. I went out and bought 6 more, at the inflated price of $50, for $300, and canceled the aftershow party at my apartmnent I'd posted on the Well. Because of losing the credit cards, I got a bad grade and had to go to CSUB. Laurie Senit moved in, and life was pretty good. We lived across from the campus in an apartment complex with 4 swimming pools and 4 jacuzzis, the 2nd best in town. My parents bought me a brand-new Toyota Tercel. Then my mom said, "We're going to send the two of you to Hawaii. Pick out a hotel from this brochure." I picked the Big Island because I'd been to Maui, and the Kona Hilton because the Dead liked Hiltons. In nearby Paradise Cove the scuba boat captain claimed he was on a first-name basis with Jerry. When Jerry died the Rolling Stone article said his house was in Kona, which I didn't know, and gave the name of his dive shop. I called information and the dive shop, they said it was across the street from the Kona Hilton, and Jerry probably did used to go scuba diving at Paradise Cove. They were showing videos of him scuba diving tonight. That's why I wanted to do it, but I had to do it straight, not being a rock star. I proposed to Laurie on the beach in Kona. We stopped at my parents' house in San Francisco on our way home. My dad, James Abrahamson, had 3 restaurants, Pam Pam East on Geary and Taylor, Rosebud's English Pub next door, and Biff's Coffee Shop on 28th and Broadway in Oakland, and he sold institutional furniture, commission contract sales, for Thonet and American Chair Co., and later Serta Mattress, in the Merchandise Mart on 10th and Market. My mother, Lucille Abrahamson, was elected to the San Francisco School Board twice, two years as President, worked in Mayor Dianne Feinstein's Office of Childcare, and was appointed S.F. Human Rights Commissioner by Mayor Frank Jordan, the former Police Chief. I told them we were engaged and my Dad said, "Don't marry her, I can't afford it. We sold the restaurants to Mama's, they went bankrupt, didn't pay, we went to court, the judge fined me $160,000, and they wanted me to declare bankruptcy." My little brother said later it was his half-partner, Bill Munro, the manager's fault. He abused the help, especially the head cook, who really ran the place, the union went on strike, won so many benefits they had to go out of business and sell it. Munro had cooked the books, the judge saw it, and hence the fine. My dad said it was because I had spent too much money on Grateful Dead concerts, but I don't think that was correct, although I may have spent too much money. They wanted me to go to this psychiatrist in Bakersfield, Dr. Perelli-Minetti, who was a nice man. He said the Grateful Dead was OK. He was always telling me expensive restaurants to which to take Laurie, like where he took his wife, and encouraged me to spend lots of money on her, buy expensive dresses, jewelry, etc, so I thought it was OK. He gave me Risperdal when it first came out, in 1994. We didn't really go to that many Grateful Dead concerts. My dad didn't like the Grateful Dead and Bill Graham for other reasons. When I first got back from the New Mexico Hog Farm after Woodstock, I tried to turn him on, he thought about it for a minute and decided no, he was afraid to get busted, he was too square to get on the bus. Later he said that Bill Graham had applied to join their Jewish men's club, the Concordia-Argonaut, on Van Ness and Geary, and that he was going to vote against him. Not only was he a hippie, and made his money that way, but he was an orphan, an immigrant, and a Holocaust survivor. What it really was is that Graham was more successful than him in the role of Jewish businessman. My brother moved to Mill Valley, said he saw Graham's house and was impressed. Graham made more money than all of them, and he started as a hippie, and that filled squares like my dad with jealousy, anger, envy, and rage. My dad said, "I wish the Grateful Dead were dead," in his outrageous way. When Bill Graham's helicopter crashed on the way home from the Concord Pavilion and they had his funeral in my dad's temple, Temple Emanu-el, my dad said, "I hope it didn't hurt the helicopter!" He even hated them during the Haight-Ashbury and helped the City Fathers drive them out of town. My family was spending a lot of money at first, and I thought they were encouraging me to emulate them. When he first gave me the $100,000/year, the credit cards on his account, and sent me to UCI, my dad was acting like he could afford for me to buy anything I saw that I wanted. Then he told not to buy anything over $200, and I complied. They were all spending lots of money. He had 2 new BMW"s and a new Mercedes-Benz. He and my mom went on a temple tour of Eastern Europe and stayed in the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, she said it was a five-star hotel. My sister went to Yale after me, in Art, then got a Masters in Art Education at Stanford, an Ed.D. at Harvard, a J.D. at Cal, got a job in the White House as Assistant Chief-of-Staff to Vice-President H.W. Bush in the Ronald Reagan White House and then Founding Chairman of the Barbara Bush Campaign For Family Literacy (me at UCI) in the President H.W. Bush White House. There's a photo of her and Vice-President H.W. Bush having an audience with Pope John Paul in Sweden, and she is shaking hands with the Pope. That dress must have cost something, not to mention the travel. In her closet I saw hundreds of French gowns, and more shoes than Imelda Marcos. She met this guy from the Council of Foreign Relations in Washington, D.C., a USC Professor of International Relations, Jonathan Aronson. He went to Harvard and Stanford in Political Science, and his father was a rich St. Louis banker. They bought a mansion in Bel-Air near the Reagans', put in an Italian marble bathtub, baby grand piano, swimming pool, his self-portrait in the living room, pirates' table, Persian rug, and he drove a Jaguar S3. He said, "We're going to Paris for 2 weeks," "I'm going to Thailand to speak," and they had their son's Bar Mitzvah in Bali, so they didn't hold back on the spending. They took the whole family, including me, to the Club Med in Ixtapa, but they went bankrupt because I spent too much money on Grateful Dead concerts! My brother spent $2000 of my dad's money for a Rolex watch to keep up with the other Oshos and flew back and forth to India every few weeks for years. They flew me there, to Europe twice, and to Hawaii twice. I guess my dad was having problems, and he asked me to spend less money, but he didn't really communicate that I should spend less money because he was having financial problems. I was spending too much money on Laurie. So I ignored him. So he took away some credit cards, and I kept spending at the same level. I couldn't comprehend that commission contract sales is an up-and-down business. Then two new credit cards, each with a $5000 limit, came in the mail. I should have sent them back, but I couldn't resist the temptation. Soon I realized that I couldn't let my dad find out about them, because he would take them away, too. I set out to get revenge on him for taking away my credit cards by charging even *more* money. The first thing I did was take Laurie to the most expensive restaurant in Los Angeles, Spago's, $140 for salmon for two. Then the 2nd most expensive, Palms in West Hollywood. Then dresses, jewelry, and when we went to Hawaii we did the same thing with the recreation. Maybe *that's* what drove my dad into near-bankruptcy, not the Grateful Dead concerts. We really didn't go to that many. I just spent a lot of money on her. She just liked to go to movies, comedy clubs, country-western dance halls, miniature golf, roller skating, she was always thinking of something. They cut my allowance from $100,000/year to $40,000/year, my sister and brother-in-law, Joan and Jonathan, became "trustees of your trust fund", keep the Blue Cross PPO. They took away all 12 of my credit cards and defaulted on them, leaving me in debt to the credit card companies for $15,000, with bad credit to this day, since 1993. They raised it up to $60,000 and I moved to New Mexico, near the Castagnas who used to live at the Hog Farm. Alberto asked me to call my mother, father, sister, and brother-in-law and ask each of them for $10,000 for a liver transplant for his Hepatitis C because his job as Director of Taos County Ambulances, working his way up from paramedic and EMT, didn't have good insurance. They said no. Maybe that's what set 'em off. They asked me to go to a psychiatrist, who dismissed me. Then Laurie wanted me to come back to Los Angeles and move in to her apartment. They wanted me to find another psychiatrist. I found psychedelic therapist Dr. Robert Newport online at the Island Group in Santa Cruz, referred by Bruce Eisner, but my sister fought with him and he lost his license for prescribing medications, including Risperdal, without seeing the patients. I called him and he said, "Did your sister let up on you yet? I'm not a psychiatrist any more, I'm a painter." So they took me to Dr. Lisa Fine, who also gave me Risperdal, which gave me diabetes. Laurie got it too, from Seroquel. They found the diabetes when a cardiolgist wanted to do an emergency heart surgery,an angiogram and an angioplasty. My brother drove my sister-in-law's Ford Escort to L.A. from Sedona. They said they were going to give it to me. He showed it to me and said, "This is your car." They said they were going to give it to me after the surgeries, but they changed their mind and never did. My car had totally broken down at a job interview in Irvine just a few days before my appointment with the cardiologist, who decided I was going to have emergency heart surgery. When I recovered I stopped by at some friends from the Cubensis shows and they talked me into starting going to shows again, to the Phil Lesh and Friends show and the Ratdog show at the Wiltern, and the Ratdog show at the House of Blues. I'd told Richie on the phone I'd stopped going to shows when Jerry died and he'd said, "I did too." They had a picture of them with the 4 original members in an airport on the way to a concert called The Dead. After that, this psychologist Eric Asa-Dorian from the Life Adjustment Team, probably a drug rehab, they said her mother called, shows up in our living room, posing as a Deadhead, except with more, better tickets than me. Then they got me to go to LAT and I never knew it was a drug rehab, it was disguised as marriage counseling or something. In the end they took the $60,000/year except for meds, medical bills, Anthem Blue Cross PPO, SSI, and put me in Brentwood Manor board-and-care home for two years, I think illegally, before I had learned how to treat the diabetes, so it had developed another complication besides the heart disease, metabolic syndrome, diabetic neuropathy, or diabetic nerve pain, or "burning feet". When they moved me out of Laurie's apartment 12 years ago with the Comcast that was the last time they let me have cable, except for a brief period. No police, no arrest, no charges, no hearing, no trial, no sentence, no jail, no prison, no due process. No evidence or proof that *I* ever did anything wrong, as far as I'm concerned, frames and smears I've never heard, let alone allowed to answer. I said I'd sue all of them for $2 billion for attempted murder, elder financial abuse, false imprisonment, psychiatric torture, medical malpractice, emotional anguish, pain and suffering, and my attorney, Bruce Margolin, who'd been Timothy Leary's attorney (I went to a fundraiser they had at Timothy Leary's house in Beverly Hills when he was running for State Senator), said, "Where'd you get the $2 billion?" so $200 million is more in the range, I think. I had to get a job selling Sprint phones B2B to small businesses in the South, work my way out of there and get some financial aid from Cal State East Bay. I'd been a junior Computer Science major at Cal State Northridge when I was living with Laurie before the surgeries. And Tina Kimmel, a Cal Ph.D. in Social Work I met at the New Mexico Hog Farm after Woodstock got my sister to give me a $68,000 annuity that my dad left me, so that was pretty good, so I got to go to Monterey and Camp Winnarainbow, and they're paying for a lot of things now. That's my story and I'm stickin' to it. I'm still a senior Computer Science major and pre-law. Afterwards Alberto died, I called Richie from the board-and-care, he called my sister, I called him back, and he had terminal liver cancer. Alberto flew out and carved his tombstone, and he picked out wood for Tinker to make his coffin, but my sister wouldn't give me $100 to visit him at Camp Winnarainbow before he died. Steve had died of hep C. Then Hunter Thompson committed suicide. When I was going to the LAT psychiatrist to whom they forced me to go, I emailed Cap'n Skypilot to post something I could show him on his office computer, and he wrote a story about a man whose parents he said were responsible for the death of Ken Kesey and the assassination of JFK. When I got up here Vince Welnick committed suicide. I ran into Lou Todd, then he got sick and died, and then Tinker, who I once saw drive the Furthur bus. Charlene said her landlady wouldn't rent her house anymore, she moved in with her daughter; her other daughter got accused of murder, and she didn't do it. Laurie's elementary schoolteacher friend's apartment caught on fire and they blamed her. My Deadhead lawyer friend said his SUV caught on fire. I can't figure out the reason for all this. I would be interested if anybody, especially with legal knowhow, had any helpful advice. I'm thinking of appealing to my Yale classmates, to see if any of them are big-time lawyers yet, and I don't think any Democratic politicians have seen it, since most of them don't have email addresses. They were telling people I was dying, but the doctors said my numbers were good, so you can't die from controlled diabetes, maybe it was just wish-fulfillment. And Jerry famously died of a diabetic heart attack in a drug rehab, maybe someone got ideas. While I was in Brentwood the lawyer sent me a copy of the trust instrument where my parents had initialed that when my mom dies, the inheritance, which it originally says was divided into thirds between me, my brother, and sister, they rubbed me out and divided it in half between my brother and sister. She'll get my mom's house worth about $2 million, and she has a $4.3 million house in Bel-Air, and a house in Telluride, and my dad bought my brother a house in Sedona. I was living in Laurie's apartment. My brother will get my dad's commercial property in Oakland, a tire and party store. And there's some money they'll divide in half. Eric Abrahamson Yale University Class of '71 Pierson College
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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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"how do you make a money transaction with someone you do not know who does not yet have the tickets themselves. Seems like a big risk and very uncertain about the outcome (a lot moreso than sending MOs to GDTS TOO which apparently had its own risks as well)." Ticketmaster allows free transfers: http://www.ticketmaster.com/transfer So you could pay them with PayPal (which has purchase protection), and have them transfer the tickets right away (assuming that they got them via TicketMaster). You'll know that the tickets are legit and they'll know that the payment is legit.
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"how do you make a money transaction with someone you do not know who does not yet have the tickets themselves. Seems like a big risk and very uncertain about the outcome (a lot moreso than sending MOs to GDTS TOO which apparently had its own risks as well)." Ticketmaster allows free transfers: http://www.ticketmaster.com/transfer So you could pay them with PayPal (which has purchase protection), and have them transfer the tickets right away (assuming that they got them via TicketMaster). You'll know that the tickets are legit and they'll know that the payment is legit.
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I sent my goodies in as well on 1/20/15. Like you, I am in the same boat, the Ship of Fools. I have no E-Mail (maybe I spaced the E-Mail address?). I also have no rejection. I live in South Florida, where the climate suits my clothes. Maybe the rejection just hasn't reached me yet due to the geographic seperation from Northern Cali.Yes the suspense is killing me. There is a web site you can go to to see if your money order(s) has been cashed. mois.usps.com Keep The Faith
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13 years 9 months
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Dude....TM seats may be protected under PayPal but unless you buy sec 124 @ 7+ grand each for a 3 day, and who the fuck owns those 2 seats....I may take a walk over there to find out....stay home and I will text you the set list....you can buy me a beer later....the CID and GDTSTOO to my best knowledge of seat location, CID is will call, meaning you find out in July, GDTSTOO is June....everything else is side stage partial view or behind stage, monitors.....don't let that deal go down....oh no.
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I have a seat (TM) but I will be standing on the moon.Still waiting for my pinky or email. checked again today with 8 friends; 3 pinkys, 5 in limbo
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Could be worse... Congrats....maybe you'll see the gulf of San Francisco.....
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Hey, thanks for the site to check the MO. I am also in SW Florida; no pinky- no email. I decorated my envelope, my MOs were just right....tried CID then TM and failed. No tickets - No pinky - no email.. Last week I checked my USPS MO serial #s via the phone # posted here and it said the MOs were in the system. Now when I checked again...(by the website you posted) it states "No information is available". Does anyone know what this means?? Could I still be in the running to get tickets? OMG...I will freak out!! Since TM, I'm still resisting the urge to purchase tix from a reseller....I'm in a bad spot! I have got to go to this show!!!
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9 years 9 months
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That site has consistently said that "No information is available" for my MO's, while the phone number says that they are int he system. The website does not work.
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9 years 9 months
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Yeah... (sigh)....I just checked the MOs with the telephone number..it says the info matches. MAN- it's like someone took the wind right out of my sails......bummer!!
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9 years 9 months
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thinkin still may have ticket on that magic bus no news on email,pinky or usps just hangin on the bumper all the way from ky
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After getting all teary on my way to work this morning listening to channel 23, I changed that channel to jam on, heard one of my favorite string cheese songs and try to console myself with, well at least there is that in July at Red Rocks but still doesn't soothe the wounds...still in limbo which I realize could be a good thing so I'll just hold on a little longer... Regarding the 95 or 99$ tickets, they were MO right? When I sent mine i asked for GA Pit or the less expensive reserved which came to 95 something, after looking at the seating chart I guessed it was the reserved second or third down from the top. Not sure if that is the case but seems to make sense. MBarilla, has the cry to rally been posted on Facebook? I think you said you don't facebook...would be happy to post it but not my words...also would be happy to gather a collection to post it in newspapers around the country or maybe we could each post in a paper in our own state. As long as we stick together we, "can be the change we want to see in the world"! Love the birthday story! Reminds me of the time my husband and I didn't have tickets to get into a Red Rocks show (not the Dead) and they weren't allowing people up to the parking lots without tickets so we had to get out of our friend's car. We decided that we could put on the cloak of invisibility and just sneak on over through the shrubs and hike a very open and steep hillside. In between laughing fits and feeling like we might pass out and roll back down we managed to stay invisible and reached the top. We knew we were truly magical for not being spotted, especially since I was in bright purple. We never got into the show but had a great time listening in the rocks. Gate crashing aside, maybe we can find that cloak again.
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Well, you may have lost wind, but at least you're still sailin'. I just got home and found my pink slip. Bummer. It's actually a big relief, though sad. I'm still hopeful that I'll get at least one ticket though. Good luck all.
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15 years 10 months
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Last email batch I heard of was #458 , anyone have a higher number they know has been received?
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Just to let everyone know, i was in limbo, checked MO's and kept seeing "No information is available for serial number." I did receive my confirm email #410 on feb 27th from the dead that i will have my order, but my USPO money order has not changed status, i googled "results for USPS, how to track money order" and I believe this site only validates that it is a true money order.. I typed in other numbers ambiguously and it states they are not a valid money order. Im not sure you can use the usps money order site to see if they have been cashed. You would have to pay like $6 to find out. Cheers and Peace to all, i hope this helped in some way.. In my personal opinion there will be a lot of tickets released to mail ins as soon as they can dot the I's and Cross the T's with what they have fulfilled. In the time hoping GD Tickets releases info as they can. Here Come Sun Shine!1
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I beleive "in the system" means they were sold. USPS lags 30 days in posting cashed MOs hence the "no info available".
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Hi all - been lurking here without posting since the TM fustercluck, stuck in limbo, wondering about MO and the like. Was truly blessed to be offered Sunday tix from a fellow Head, so I've got no grounds to gripe and I won't (sure would like to see the whole though). I've got this happy little delusion that all of us still waiting for word are going to get some miracle SASE saying "sorry for the delay, had to do some advanced scalper filtering, all those canceled pre-sale tix are for you guys, enjoy the show". Thought I'd share a happy show memory, Hampton Coliseum 3/27/88 My first show. My sister had been on the bus for years and got me a ticket for my birthday. I hadn't seen her in about a year and honestly was more excited to see her than the band. I knew Casey Jones & Truckin', was more into metal at that time and not expecting much. I got to the show minutes before it started, couldn't find my sister and thought great, alone at a concert. Then the band came out, broke into Iko and the place blew up! This was my pre-wharf rat days and I may have been a bit distorted but when I saw everyone just start dancing like mad and the swirly colors and the energy, and wow! Instant convert. The vibe from those around me was so positive and life affirming, it was so unlike any show i'd ever seen. I was afraid to let on that I knew not to much about the Dead, but the folks next to me could tell I was a rookie and were just so friendly and welcoming. They were getting off seeing me discover what it was all about. Its the people, the music, the band, all moving to some primal bliss. That's what made me a Head from that day forward.
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I got inspired with the stories…the greatest show of my life: 3/29/90. Eight of us board my buddies' gold 1985 Toyota Minivan, about 3 hours trip south to Long Island, and the excitement in the car is overwhelming. People are hysterical, all talking at once, no one able to find what they're looking for…"why isn't the ice in the cooler!?", "where's my lighter?", "who brought smokes?", "put on Filmore '71!", "who knows how to get there?", "where's the map?", "why didn't you already get gas?!"….adrenaline and anticipation is turning the minivan into a rolling ball of anxiety. So, finally, someone lit one up. Serenity, smiles and the old TDK 90s filling the air with tunes for the remainder of the drive down past NYC….. I remember the rain- heavy before showtime, or maybe it was just a cold rain that made it seem that way. Huddled in the van, with two guys out gathering the party favors, getting soaked. It wasn't the best lot scene with the downpour, but you all know what happened inside. Magic. On the way home, loaded up from the successful pre-show procurement, we approach a toll booth somewhere on the way to get back into New England. Shit. They're pulling over about every third car. Somehow, we rolled through. I remember feeling so sorry for all the heads who didn't get through that toll (and pissed at the war on drugs), but I guess eight blackjacks were the hands we were dealt that day in the gold minivan. I'll never forget that day. See you all in Chicago.
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Basking in the afterglow of the Year of the Hare Chinese New Years shows at the SF Civic in '87, I trundled on down to the Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium to see the March shows. Seeing's how I was normally the designated driver for my bunch, it was an unusual set of circumstances that led me to drive solo to the Kaiser shows. Namely, a visit to my amiable but ailing Grandpa led me to hit the shows from a different travel vector, you see. A detour in the parking lot with some friendly folks that encouraged me to see the show in a different light led to a spatial anomaly that directly connected a Bucket/Scarlet/Fire second set opener with a post-show parking lot assembly cut short by the sketchy Oakland natives wandering the area. Being an unaccustomed driver in that particular state of mind, I was in dire need of a copilot to get me to Grandpa's house. Fortunately, as I was about ready to give up due to my directional deficiency, I saw an exit called St. Stephens Drive, and I knew immediately I was on the right path. Grandpa was sound asleep but I was hummin' tunes till dawn. I never did see St. Stephen performed by the Grateful Dead or the Dead, and when the Fare Thee Well shows were announced, I thought it would finally happen. I have since realized that St. Stephen didn't need to get me to a show, but he sure as hell got me home. That's probably what matters most.
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Hornsby says about Trey from Jambase... Bruce Hornsby has only played with Anastasio once, but it left a lasting impression. "[He has a] great level of musicianship on the guitar and also his having led one of the great bands of the last 25 years, Phish. He’s certainly a prime-time player. Whenever I see Trey, he has a joyful quality about his music making, a great exuberance – I think it’s infectious. That will be a huge plus with this band," Hornsby said about Trey. Bruce also revealed he did see Phish once and had a great time. "I saw them at the Hampton Coliseum. I loved it. I was up close and thought they were just transcendent. They have a real beautiful relationship with their audience, just like the Dead."
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Well here's my story then: I always discounted the dead for many years, wasn't my style, I liked Zeppelin Floyd Black Sabbath Rush etc. by the time I heard of the Grateful Dead. Then only Truckin and Casey Jones radio stuff. Didn't find it interesting at all. I was working late at a banquet on New Years '87-88 and my buddy was still up and ready to party I was getting off work and I stopped by. He was watching his taped Pay per view recording of the show at the Coliseum in Oakland, CA. I sat down and Terrapin Station came on. I watched and was quite impressed by the video. Decided to go to a show in '88 I think it was Shoreline was my first show. I was amazed. I tripped, it was very cool. I became a fan from that point on seeing about 20 shows total between '88-94 Jerry solo and GD and collecting most if not all of the studio recordings in 1 form or another - tape, vinyl whatever, and CDs. So yeah I haven't seen that many true GD shows. Saw a few later, the Dead, Phil and Friends birthday bash (phenomenal), Further a couple times, DSO a couple times (with JK). MoonAlice is really good too, original dead-style band. Their style of music is captivating and the shows were amazing, the scene was always a fun circus that whisked you in a timewarp back to the past in a very cool relaxing unstressful good time. Hard to put it into words. I am forever grateful to them for the beautiful musical magical sensory journey they gave us.
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How many are still waiting for some kind of word? How long will this continue? When will we know?
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I enjoy reading the stories about going to shows. I'm a little older than some of you people, my 1st show was 9-023-72. Anyway here's mine. Uptown theatre Chgo., I,m not sure of the date '81 or '82. the show was over just walked outside when I asked my wife if she had a t-shirt I bought. Left it on my seat. Left my wife and her sister outside and went back to get it. It was still there and when I grabbed it the boys walked back on stage. It's been about 20min. since the last song. I'm standing there wondering what to do, should I get my wife or just stay. I ran back outside yelling the Dead was back, getting F bombed all the way. Grabbed my wife and ran back inside just in time to hear them do Althea, couldn't have been 200 people still there. The boys didn't say a word, finished the song and walked off the stage. If I didn't leave my new t-shirt would have missed it.
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9 years 11 months
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Fantastic story! Very late getting on the bus...My friend, been on the bus 43 years, turned me on with "Listen to an Althea". Got into my soul! Thanks for sharing!
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9 years 9 months
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Ah, the pink slip is in our mailbox today. Bad news for us, worse news for the friend to whom we had promised our 3-day nosebleeds. So, we may be standing on the moon, but we're in the building, and grateful. See y'all in July! -- when in doubt, twirl.
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11 years 7 months
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Still keeping an eye on ticket prices from those bastards online and they are still dropping. Have come down about $100 to 500 since the weekend depending on where the seats are... As for my story (seeing as we are all sharing), I started out listening to harder stuff (being a child of the '90s) and the Dead were this silly hippy group. I should point out, I had a pension for the blues and always listened to stuff from the 30s to 60s if I could get a hold of it...Then I started buying some things from an older brother of a friend of mine who was a closeted head. I went over to his house one day and he had this whole wall of DATs...I asked what they were and he told me it was his tape trading collection of our fav. Long and short, I asked him to put his favourite on so I could here what the whole thing was about, and my god. It was something from spring 77, not sure what show, but it blew me away. Next thing you know I was getting him to make me as many copies as I could afford to get (being a poor highschool kid at the time I didn't have a DAT or a lot of money for cassettes). Been on the bus since then. Oh yeah, he was also the guy who introduced me to the mail order tickets. First show he got me tix right in front of the soundboard and tapers...the parking lot, drums/space and a head for acid made for a complete and utter no turning back convert.
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9 years 9 months
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Still waiting-There is a facebook support group for us in limbo, haha. Been an emotional rollercoaster
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9 years 10 months
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After my initial "discovery" of the dead and collecting of studio material, I started collecting live material via tape to tape copies, eventually burning CDs and downloading music to the PC. I have collected a decent arsenal of live stuff including some Dick's picks, vault releases, VHS and DVD movies etc. I had ties to the Beatles and ELO from my childhood so after discovering the dead this opened up a whole new (old) genre of music and revisiting of old classics. I got into the Moody Blues, recognized and got into the Rolling Stones ('67-74 being my fave period), then Janis, Airplane, CSN and sometimes Y, and all the psychedelic stuff (after being a metal head previously which I also still like). I frikkin' dug all of it and became a new hippie. Dead stickers all over my car, oh yeah, I loved it and still do. Only 1 sticker on the new car now though. So it wasn't just the dead I got into after finding them but all this other music I was missing. It truly opened up many doors for me musically and in my guitar playing. I feel truly blessed for the musical and spiritual enlightenment and thank my buddy for that night with Terrapin...
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9 years 8 months
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For anyone looking for rooms, they, The Marriott Ohare(look for yourself) have them for the 3,4,5 of July for $169/night, hardly worth trading your tickets away for(as someone on this site keeps posting that they've booked this motel, and can be had for tickets, but they mustn't be behind stage tickets, they have to have a view, no less,HAHAHAHAH). That just lends itself to the type of banter and intellect that KLOWNS on this site post. For realists, hold out on buying tickets until late may/early june and prices will have considerably dropped, if you want to go bad enough, you'll buy at least one night and call it a day, it isn't in the cards for all to go, all 3 nights. Good luck to the Realists, KLOWNS are as annoying, and ridiculous as SCALPERS.
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14 years 10 months
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FOS
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9 years 10 months
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Hey don't be a jurk, I know I have beat that DEAD horse to a pulp... I have come to realize that no one is going to trade Marriott space for a chance at a face value ticket. I would still appreciate if someone keeps me in mind if they end up with an extra that I can purchase for a reasonable price. Is that you, TT?
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9 years 8 months
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WOW! That might be more up my alley anyways, both are great, but like you said, with the demand..............who knows? Grisman, stu allen, if my memory is correct(i don't listen to panic) Jimmy Herring, plus the rest of the band, oh yeah and hornsby. It is a lot of acts for a one day event but it sounds intriguing.
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9 years 10 months
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Looks like I will have to change my avatar...(hee hee) I think I am starting to get my sense of humor back, a welcome thought for sure in these trying (to get tix) times.
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9 years 9 months
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Bought a ticket broker ticket for 1 "GA Pit" ticket day mail order started just to be sure I had a way to get into the party knowing full well the tickets were going to be hard to come by--Pd 600 but figured they would be way more later on secondary market. (Sorry I know the brokers are the problem here but I just needed to take action to not miss this show so I bought air and hotel same day could not count on mail order with 3 shows 3 days 1 medium size stadium and all of us wanting to be on the bus-- the numbers say it's just not possible and I'm not lucky at lotteries) This was before GA Pit was announced as mail order only, the presale cancelled, the other half of field turned from reserved into GA Field, and the on sale TM Hunger Games sale date postponed. Well, given the uncertainly of whether my Pit ticket would even exist or just be refunded like the Super Bowl Tickets people bought from brokers who had no seats I tried for 1 CID for 1 night and got it. Sect 140 front row. Stunned!!! I hope a broker has to pay a season ticket holder a fortune to make good on selling me a ticket he didn't ever have-- then I can turn around and hand that extra broker "GA Pit" or equivalent as they say ticket to someone who really wants to be there. Btw the CID tix are not supposed to be transferable since you pick up with Id and credit card and if reserved seating they did include seat # at time of ordering. Believe it if you need it if you don't just pass it on. Hopefully those of you in limbo will get good news, a miracle, or those who have all the gobbled up tix will be forced to sell more reasonably. Hope to see everyone there smiling and twirling.
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9 years 9 months
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thanks for the link, that is a lot of bands for a 7pm show,
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17 years 2 months
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Seriously, if I were dosed that clown just might send me off on a bad trip. That thing is freeking scary!
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12 years 11 months
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Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD., Thursday, 5/14/15 @ 7;00 PM. Tickets go on sale 3/13/15 @ 10:00AM EDT. Ticket prices range from $69.50-$500.00. For more info go to, merriweatherpostpavilion.com/schedule2015
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9 years 10 months
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It's from the Without a net CD...(so it's authorized)
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17 years 6 months
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My story about it (it's in Orinda, just the other side of the tunnel from Oakland): Many years ago (as originally reported in the Golden Road, I think), one of our show buddies, a guy by the name of Jack Romanski, was a pilot of small planes, and one day he ran into engine trouble... And landed the plane on the freeway, right by St. Stephen's Drive. Everybody fine.
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9 years 10 months
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An event like this one in MD in May might be exactly what all of us needed - MORE SHOWS!!!!! They won't be GD Fare Thee Well, but maybe they will announce other unique events like this across the country... I mean, the same people are pretty much there, plus more. Help out fans that got shut out of Soldier... Give geographical access to people who live far from Soldier... Red Rocks... Oakland... Is there something happening here...???
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17 years 5 months
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My somewhat lame story....The first Dead song I ever heard was a snippet of China Cat – it was on a television broadcast on PBS, I think called Go Ride the Music (?) in, I think, ’69 or ’70. I couldn’t get the riff out of my head; I realized this was the same band the Rolling Stone had recently written that great ‘put on the dead and spread’ review about, so I found Live Dead at a local department store…. and of course was hooked. WD then AB came out, and, like so many others, I never looked back. Then, it was ’72, and I was in the back seat of my parent’s Chevrolet - too young to drive, father in front driving – and we were in Baltimore to pick up some clothing he was having altered. I was staring out the back window, when a large automobile went by the other direction…. back windows down, and some long hairs goofing out their window. I told my parents, wow, they looked like a couple of guys from that group I like, GD. Anyway, got to the clothing store, and my parents were talking to the salesperson, wondering why a 'bunch of hippies' were driving around town in a limo, and I reiterated that they looked like those guys in the GD…. And the salesperson – I remember his words to this day – said, well the Grateful Dead DO have a concert in town this evening. ARRGH! I went nuts… I didn’t even know they were in town, but had just actually seen them…. I begged, begged, begged my parents to let me see them. They relented, we drove to the Civic Center, I bought ONE ticket, and we waited until showtime. They dropped me off, and said they would wait until an appointed time and pick me up (we lived a good ways out of town), and it was going to have to be early because I think the next day was a ‘school day’. I walked into my first rock concert ever, not knowing what to expect. Show started , and bam! If I wasn’t a convert before, that first few minutes did it. I had no idea that this type of music, feeling, camaraderie, was even possible. I sat through the first set, and as it drew to a close, I thought the show was over – until I realized it was only intermission. The appointed pick up time was drawing close, and I was furious with the band for taking such a long break. Then they came back, and I heard a little, but pick up time had now come and gone. I walked ever so slowly toward the exit, angry at having to leave, but without any option. I walked out with my head full of that music, but that feeling of the Civic Center door closing behind me with the music wafting in the air sucked beyond belief. It was many , many years later that Dick’s Pick 23 came out, and I finally re-heard the music, as well as the rest of the show I had walked out on!
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11 years 7 months
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That will work...happily go see that; I think it may be safe to assume that most will play together for at least one or two songs! That may be just what the doctor ordered! A lot further for me to travel, but meh, it is what it is!
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9 years 11 months
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marye that is amazing! I've made 20 jumps out of perfectly good airplanes but no near death experiences for me knock on wood...well maybe it's wood. Looks like wood anyway :-)
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16 years 7 months
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I mean really gang - WTF are we gonna do? Fore those of us who struck-out on M.O., CID and TicketBastard, how are we ever gonna get in the building? I guess the sobering reality is that after 50 years, there's a bunch of Grateful Dead loving fans that have wheel barrows of cash and if you have the money, well, you're show-bound. http://money.cnn.com/2015/03/03/media/grateful-dead-tickets/
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17 years 1 month
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Scarlett Bee..so happy for you! I wasn't so lucky. Just an aside..I used CID for the Philly shows in '09. They were really great. Had their act together. I had purchased a travel package. I ended up going alone but it was easy for me to off the second ticket. No..didn't scalp. Was looking to bring my 20 yr old granddaughter with me. Have a great time!! Do a little twirling (yes, I still can) for a 69 yr old devotee from the 60s.. SF Winterland, etc. days.
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15 years 10 months
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So Cool! I've been getting a world class ulcer over the Chicago shows and here they're bringing this like 20 minutes from my front door. Let's keep this a huge secret so the Rat Bastard Scalpers don't get wind of it. (So if you're a rat bastard scalper forget you read any of this, this show is ours dammit.)