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    joennn24
    9 years 2 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 2 months ago
    Write on, Bros. Stephen & Eric!
    Thanks for my morning eye-opener!!
  • Eric Abrahamson
    9 years 2 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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16 years 5 months
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Yeah, I live in So. Fla. so it's just "gator" down here... Anyways, brilliant "Let's Review" post brother. Spot-on.
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Nope, I want a view if go. Honestly dont think I will be making the shows at this point. I will not pay an outrageous price for tickets. All going have lots of fun!
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360 seating yes, no mention of 360 stage set up, of video screens behind the stage. 360 to allow more people in, but I dont believe view of stage or video will be any different than original design.
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From a previous post: "On the no view Shapiro himself stated "The sight lines won’t be the same, but you’re in. They made a decision to get as many people as possible into the show. There will be (video) screens and sound back there.” The key words in the paragraph don't have anything to do with sight lines. The key words are, 'THEY made a decision to get as many people as possible into the show'. I've been through this many times before at Dead shows, particularly at Alpine Valley and several other GA spots. Pack as many in as possible, regardless of audience comfort, safety, the ability of the infrastructure to handle it, and the overall experience in general. Shakedown Street has become 'tailgating'. Getting in to the venue suddenly seems to mean more than the music, and CERTAINLY more than the spirit of community that always made the whole thing so special. As to insane ticket prices for no view, if there will be 'screens and sound back there', why not see it in comfort on the PPV that we all know is coming? As Gramma always said, 'Be Careful What You Wish For.'
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Yeah, I hear you. The Rolling Stone writer took "going 360"' just like you said. Do you think the mention of "different site lines" means that there are indeed sight lines - just looking down over the back of the amps/drums?
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I heard someone ask the same question on The Siri dead channel, The answer I heard was that it is not currently in circulation because it came fresh out in the fall in a festival circuit and it wasn't picked up for distribution. I Didn't see it but it did play at at the toronto International film festival. David ganz ended the call stating he was going to call weir and light a fire under his Butt, as many people are requesting it.
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I heard someone ask the same question on The Siri dead channel, The answer I heard was that it is not currently in circulation because it came fresh out in the fall in a festival circuit and it wasn't picked up for distribution. I Didn't see it but it did play at at the toronto International film festival. David ganz ended the call stating he was going to call weir and light a fire under his Butt, as many people are requesting it.
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The last book Garcia read while in rehab was the Celestine Prophecy. This book while a interesting read gives you some insite into who Garcia And the dead are. the book is available as a free pdf or you can buy Jerry's copy from the Dead auction(priceless). I challenge all open minded to read this book. As you read the book see how it relates to your Dead experiences. I also need to put in a shameless plug for a miracle ticket.peace
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From another post: 'David ganz (SIC) ended the call stating he was going to call weir and light a fire under his Butt, as many people are requesting it.' If David said that, it's a good chuckle. I don't think many people making part of their living off what's left of the Dead Gravytrain are going to say spit if it goes counter to the Party Line. It's a big beef with me. The Dead have been as careful about their propaganda as most other corporations of their size, and certainly are these days. IMO, most of what you hear from The Golden Road dudes is talking points. That being said, I must complement David on his latest version of 'Brokedown'. I found it to be truly heartfelt, emotional and inspiring. Thank you for it, David.
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I've seen JRAD recently and Billy & the Kids this weekend. All I have to say is ditch Trey and use the Brothers Past guitarist, Tom Hamilton. He is the most dynamic and solid player/ vocalist I've heard play Grateful Dead music out of everyone I've ever seen. The guy rips and can really sing, something that as good a guitarist Trey is, Trey's vocals are horrendous. He gets away with it in Phish because Phish lyrics are meaningless drivel. Someone has to sing Brokedown, Ripple, Attics, China Doll and nobody wants to hear Phil, Bobby, Trey or Bruce sing it, although Bruce is probably the most capable. Or go for broke. Let Mickey sing.
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12 years 10 months
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3-day obstructed view tickets on Stubhub have gone from about $1,300 to under $900 in a month while supply has increased slightly. Ebay tickets are cheaper than Stubhub in general. Prices are still too high, but this trend leads to some hopefulness on my part. I just hope there isn't a frenzy at some point while the tickets are still priced too high. I'm no expert (actually far from it), but I'd guess that prices for the lowest obstructed will eventually drop to about $200 per ticket (single show) while nosebleeds/far away view go to $300-400. It seems like GA (not pit) will be the most overpriced because there is demand there and the tickets are selling at inflated prices. What I am surprised about is how much people pay for a view seat all the way on the other end of the stadium. You can't see anything without binocs. I've always been a floor guy, but I think a side view close to the stage or, gasp, an obstructed view is a better option for these shows. Is the sound really bad on the side or something?
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Boblob said: "What I am surprised about is how much people pay for a view seat all the way on the other end of the stadium. You can't see anything without binocs. I've always been a floor guy, but I think a side view close to the stage or, gasp, an obstructed view is a better option for these shows. Is the sound really bad on the side or something?" I've been to each and every show the Dead did at Soldier Field. I've been on the sides, and I wasn't impressed. A group of us usually took the skybox exactly opposite the stage. When Candace was doing the lights and screens and Don and Ultrasound worked the board, you got your moneys worth, even that far back. No real sound pressure, mind you, but still fun, and the view of the whole event, with the marvelous Chicago skyline to the north behind the stage, the lake to the east, sunset to the west, and GREAT fireworks all over the place at the end of the show, it left a lasting impression. This time, I have no idea who the people are doing the lights and sound, so All Bets Are Off.
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A behind the stage friday night ticket, sold for $371 this morning on ebay. They will continue to fall, especially if this levi stadium thing is real! Good luck to all!
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16 years 11 months
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I want to hear everyone sing. Everyone WILL sing. To believe any different is naive. You never heard Jerry sing did you? It isn't the voice so much as it is the delivery that matters
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15 years 8 months
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Section 325 ticket sold for $405. I however, continue to be shut out of all of my Best Offers. Some seriously delusional sellers on there
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9 years 10 months
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Whoever is on the stage shares a love and belief in the music that cultivates and by all means beautifies our lives still after all these years. One Love. To discredit or bring negative energy to the show for whatever reason, the scene in whatever form just is defeating to what brought us all together in the first place. The music. We are there to honor the songs and whomever graces the stage.
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I am going to bring hot sauce to the lot in Chicago and watch the scalpers EAT their tickets
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13 years 6 months
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Got to back up 3 days to Sir Klangs-alot essay on what it is about the Dead and their fans: " every type of person in between, are very tolerant and accepting" The crazy patchwork quilt / spicy stew / stunning mosaic that reflects both the musical menu and the faithful followers, was brought out when I brought my impressionable 17 year-old to a Phil show last summer. During the intermission I looked around at the crowd and remarked that if we were 100 yards away watching this crowd file past, we would NOT be able to tell what they had in common. A nattily-dressed, impeccably-groomed silver hair behind me piped in: Yes you would, they're Deadheads. Oh. Exactly. Klang it from the mountain top, Klang it in the valley, Klang it at noon time And Klang it in the quiet of night.
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What a terrible way to dieWhat a terrible way to die Still no news at the top of the week What a terrible way to die It's a sing-along. Everybody join in: What a .....
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got to keep the klangers on the path.....
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9 years 6 months
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Looking to trade my 2 Dear Jerry Lawn tickets PLUS CASH for just 1 GD50 ticket any night, anywhere. I would love to see the boys together and it would make me a very happy head. Keep on playin in the heart of gold band. Good luck to everyone in their search.
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Is that the one with his Dad's tickets? I didn't get anywhere with him obviously.
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it is
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I presume, Boo, it's a GDTS TOO, PL-1 ticket? Make sure he forwards you his Elvis e-mail with batch #. Not a screen shot or cut and paste.
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dude claims TM ticket, up front pit
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TM did not sell pit to my knowledge, just MO and CID
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He told me it was GA Field. Here's my correspondence. Me: Well, the price depends greatly on where the tickets are. How many do you have and where are they located? Him: They are in GA field we're asking 500 per ticket Me: I'm ok with that. What days? Him: we can get together this weekend if that works for you Me: You don't have the tickets yet. Plus, I'm not in Chicago Him: we got our tickets in the mail this week so how do you purpose we make this happen Me: My understanding is that no one has tickets yet. Him: he got them through the mail order I gave up at that point. Good Luck. Maybe they are real and you scored. Steve
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Scam scum
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9 years 6 months
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I just accepted the $400 offer, see what his next move is
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Everything you've read below is true so I wouldn't even waste your time with that jackass. MO and CID received all the floor seats: GA-Floor (PL-4's which are now GA-Field) and GA-Pit (PL-1's). No one has received any physical tickets yet (MO, CID or TM). I've read the rationale there was a June mailing to avoid excessive scalping. Yeah, I know....hind sight...
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Ithaca (aka Cornell) was great. Buffalo was better. IMO, YMMV, etc. ;p Why is the Cornell show generally accepted as one of the all-time greats? Several very nice recordings exist, where all the factors came together 'just exactly perfect'... The right mics, in the right place, in the right room combined with a wide distribution through the fanbase at a seminal time, is my best guess on the issue. What does exist of the Buffalo show is not as good a recording. The 'hockey barn' nature of the venue, combined with the less-than-directional nature of the microphones of the day capture more of the 2nd and 3rd reflections of the PA in the room which makes it "boomy"/"muddy"/"echoey". Even the SBD recording suffers from this to some extent. Similar issues exist in the Rochester War Memorial Aud. (Both buildings were built in the same 5 year period, to essentially the same plan. ) I had a great time at both shows, but it took a lot longer to put my ears into the 'sweet spot' in Buffalo. ;)
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Try Boston...trifecta....
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Musically its hard to find a '77 show that isn't worth listening to. Gawd knows I've tried... LolRecording quality, & technical issues are a different issue... :p
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15 years 3 months
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I am glad, for the most part, things are getting happier in here. I did see a couple of posts that made me smile, smile, smile, and for that I am grateful. Two things caught my eye, first, no one has tickets yet. I got an email from GDTS TOO saying I WILL get tickets, but not until June, when the rest of those who mail ordered and "won" get them. If there is some scum bag on ebay or elsewhere saying/claiming they have physical tickets to sell you, they are lying, period, plain and simple. Second, although I did not see the actual post, I did read someone saying, "Don't gate crash." I concur with that sentiment. 1995 was a bad year for me personally (I lost my father during tour and missed a couple of shows as well as missing my dad) and I missed seeing a show I was at, and had third row tickets in front of Jerry for because some clowns thought they were entitled to be dickheads, not deadheads. You gate crash in Chicago, and not only will you not get in the show, you will have your head smashed by a cop, spend the rest of the weekend in jail, and just may ruin it for the rest of us. I am pleading to all of you here, try to resist buying tickets from scalpers, for your sake, and for everyone that might be coming to town without a ticket. There will be tickets at the box office day of. There was for every Dead show at Solider Field except for one. (the second to last show). There will be face value tickets available from scalper scum night of each show. I guarantee this, especially if you resist now. I am also pleading to anyone who is thinking of gate crashing to not do it. You won't get in anyway, and you might ruin it for everyone else. Peace out, and I seriously hope all the people on this message board who need tickets and want to go, get them.
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9 years 6 months
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just got 10 shows on cd from my friend matt, thank you brother ... see you in Chicago
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9 years 6 months
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I have 47 complete soundboards from the 60 shows in '77. Barton Hall ’77 is considered my many heads as the best show ever? It is actually preserved in the Library of Congress. Well, I believe because a good quality taper came out of it and the quality was so much better than other taper shows of the time, that it got so much attention, along with the soundboard that leaked out in the early 80's. IMHO, Pembroke Pines a few weeks later is a superior show, and never understood why they made it a single disc in Dick’s Picks #3 and left out 8 songs. I have the compete SB show and it just smokes!! 05/08/77 Barton Hall (Cornell University) - Ithaca, NY – 20 Songs Set 1: New Minglewood Blues Loser El Paso They Love Each Other Jack Straw Deal Lazy Lightnin' Supplication Brown-Eyed Women Mama Tried Row Jimmy Dancin' In The Street Set 2: Scarlet Begonias Fire On The Mountain Estimated Prophet St. Stephen Not Fade Away St. Stephen Morning Dew Encore: One More Saturday Night 05/22/77 The Sportatorium - Pembroke Pines, FL - 24 Songs Set 1: Funiculi Funicula Music Never Stopped Sugaree El Paso Peggy-O New Minglewood Blues Friend Of The Devil Lazy Lightnin' Supplication Ramble On Rose Dancin' In The Street Set 2: Help On The Way Slipknot! Franklin's Tower Samson And Delilah Brown-Eyed Women Good Lovin' Sunrise Estimated Prophet Eyes Of The World Wharf Rat Terrapin Station Morning Dew Encore: Sugar Magnolia
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9 years 6 months
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Have tickets for al 3 nights, not in hand but email confirmation. Rented a 40 ft. sail boat to sail during the day and dance all night.
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9 years 6 months
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Cool, a Ship of Fools on the lake!!
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9 years 7 months
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Since things are "getting happier in here" I won't post ANYTHING to ruin it. So I won't post anything...
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12 years 8 months
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'THE' tape , was the Jerry Moore Sony ECM 33P Mics > Sony 153 deck. (Accept no substitutes. The after the fact matrix using that tape and the rediscovered SBD has severe technical issues, the master decks were not in synch & no time correction was done to fix the inter modulation & tape speed drifts between the two decks by the krew that did the reassembly)The Betty Boards are also quite nice, tho turning the low end down is probably a great idea unless you're listening on headphones. (Betty loved some bass, and the headphones of the day weren't all that good at reproducing low end. Something off on the kick drum channel that night too...) I'm kinda fond of the SM57 > Sony 152 source that surfaced a couple years back, taped from very close to the stage & about dead center. A lot of local conversation, but a real close feel to what it sounded like from that neighborhood at that time. :)
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9 years 5 months
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Phish tix for the Shoreline show go on sale this Friday. If rumor holds true, we should hear an announcement about the Dead shows in Santa Clara to be held during the last weekend of June sometime this Saturday or Sunday.Look for a corresponding drop in Chicago shows ticket prices. See you in the Bay Area!
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13 years 7 months
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Some of us are half deaf.... Glad we can read the setlists in Braille....
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13 years 7 months
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Like the make over....about time my man.... Sporting a nice logo... Faith my man...
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12 years 10 months
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I like the symmetry between San Francisco and Steal your Face. Very nice!
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9 years 6 months
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How'd you do it man? Funny, I've been trying to change mine to a 49er's SYF and it just won't update. Maybe the system doesn't like SF teams.
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9 years 6 months
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You're right. While the May 8 77 show is awesome, there are so many other great '77 shos, including the follwoing day (May 9) and, my favorite, Oct 16 '77, Assembly Center, LSU. Bur ro each his own. Promised Land Sugaree Cassidy Set 1 Loser Minglewood Blues Friend of the Devil Sunrise Dire Wolf The Music Never Stopped Set 2 Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain Estimated Prohpet > Drums The Other One > Good// Lovin > Terrapin Station > Black Peter > Around & Around encore US Blues
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9 years 7 months
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The trick is to DELETE your current avatar file, then WAIT a couple of days for the old one to "go away". If you try to load your new one over the top of the old one it just doesn't work. If you delete your old one and then load your new one right after, the old one keeps coming back. So if you load the new one and the old one comes back you haven't waited long enough to load the new one. Make sense??? (geez I am not even sure if I understand myself) When I figured it out with my Avatar, Moses came riding up on a Quasar.
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9 years 6 months
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I must admit I got confused in the middle, but tlhen it started to make sense.