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    marye
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    You know how some songs, and not just Dead songs, transport you back to a certain time and place whenever you hear them? Maybe you didn't even like them at the time, but three notes and there you are driving back from the beach when you're 16, or whatever.

    And some songs just come to embody a particular time and place forever after.

    What are yours?

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  • Deadicated
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    # 1. One Particular X-mas
    X-mas morning, all sitting around the dining room table for breakfast just so, including Grandma and Grandpa. This wan't, however, just any X-mas; it was 1969. Rascalion older brother decides he's going to put on his favorite new record album to serenade us when out from Dad's Bic-Venturis burst, "Gimme an F, gimme a U ..." "Where does the time go?"
  • c_c
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    Maybeline
    1 off hand, Maybeline by Chuck Berry takes me back to my days drag racing my big ass, souped up 71 Buick Riveria for cash or pink slips. if that song comes on, I can't help but put the pedal to the metal. "But officer, Maybeline was on the radio" is no defense. mine was maroon, with a white interior. Maybeline was not on the afternoon that I totaled that car in a really bad wreck, which I was really, really lucky to walk away from. I ended up on someone's land, hitting a hundred year old stone wall. The wall won.
  • Marshun
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    songs of the times
    Cool thread for time trippin' and checking out the amazing power of songs to open memories buried deep as a compass may find a specific star in the scattered sky of moments. I don't know if it is self indulgent to reminisce and look at some long past scenes of another time as though through an innner television of different times, people and scenes. Or just to feel like it was if just for a few fleeting seconds that live in chords and notes in time and harmony of nostalgia. If a song can take you there to smile and relish a certain memory then sing it and smile and cry if it makes you. Got caught with a space gaze into another place when I heard The Stylistics sweet jam today on "I'm stone In Love With You"...what a voice...Cars were big and so were the '70's. Uh-Oh I'm back in a gas line...but jammin'! Also had to blast out "Luka" when I heard it this wekend. It is a great jam and Suzanne Vega's voice is mesmerizing... silk and strong to tackle the difficult subject matter of abuse and deliver it through a child's mind and voice, make a challenging point and rock out with this vulnerable strength is amazing. Took me back to the 80's and my old girfriend who I only wish the best for...but man, I never knew this song was so good 'til I turned it up loud...the bass and rhythm are amazing and the structure is tight with a loose break that they cinch perfectly. well, I love time travel and songs of the times that just take you right there if only for a fleeting moment is so cool...so I can't wait 'til the next trip. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Sun comes up blood red Wind yells among the stone All graceful instruments are known" Bobby Petersen ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  • marye
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    a few of mine...
    The Golden Road to Unlimited Devotion-summer of '67. I was not a Deadhead then, I was just a college student who'd tasted the joys of the Bay Area and was suffering mightily in SoCal. I still have the vinyl of the first album. I bought it from a friend of mine who didn't like it. It had me from the first notes and joyous yelp of "See that girl..." The Supremes, Someday We'll Be Together, single version with Johnny Bristol's vocals, late 1969: Stuck in grad school, missing my Bay Area friends, driving my folks green Impala down the Newport Freeway. Gretchen Wilson, Redneck Woman, summer 2004. THE song of the summer. And it's true, I ain't never been the Barbie doll type, either. Gnarls Barkley, Crazy, 2006. Sums up the year pretty well, actually. (Yesterday on Acoustic Sunrise I heard Shawn Colvin's version, which I'm gonna get from iTunes forthwith. I've been singing the darn thing ever since. I'm not that much of a Shawn Colvin fan, any more than I'm a fan of whatever genre Gnarls Barkley may belong to, but when a song's got it it's got it.)
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You know how some songs, and not just Dead songs, transport you back to a certain time and place whenever you hear them? Maybe you didn't even like them at the time, but three notes and there you are driving back from the beach when you're 16, or whatever.

And some songs just come to embody a particular time and place forever after.

What are yours?

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when tons of steel is totally done it will stop and say replay, there are a bunch of little boxes below of other videos to pick from, click on the one with Brent with long hair, that's it. Glad you liked it!
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thanks!
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Holiday Inn First hotel I ever stayed at in my life, the Holiday Inn in downtown Portland, ME (across from the Civic Center, I'm sure a few of you know this one). Senior year in high school I was at a state CYO convention. We were the first occupants of this brand-spankin' new as-yet-not-open-to-the-public hotel. We were packed 6 to a room with an adjoining door to a room full of girls next door. One of my roomies scored some beer (legally -- he was 18) and reefer (not so legally), and we all spent the afternoon enjoying some definitely-not-CYO-sanctioned pleasures (including, sad to say, throwing the empties out the window -- a few stories down to a roof below-- to get rid of the evidence). Where oh where were our chaperones? Policing the dance that night, making sure we weren't, you know, getting too friendly on the dance floor. They sort of missed that adjoining-door loophole. Oh and you ain't seen nothing till you been In a motel baby, like a Holiday Inn...
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Im in my 79 bus, me and a friend just ran away from home. I loved her, she loved James Dean and Van Morrison. That song always puts me right back on the snow banked highway in New Mexico, far far from home.
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does it?
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we'll just have to wait until then to find out. Conversation is always more interesting than recitation, so speak your mind and not someone else's.
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The Earth is dancing with the Moon And there's a whole lot of shakin' goin' on
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seeing this movie ( DVD ) in a Theater is like entering a time machine ! went to see Crimson White and Indigo last night !I was lucky enough to actually buy a ticket from a kind person at the theater ! Thank You ! It was sold out ! because they used the largest screen at ' The Little' with a digital version of the film, for the screening, which is a smaller room, at the theater ( 175 seats ) The movie is wonderful, fantastic close -ups and completely focused on the show, the band, and the music ! very few audience shots, which made it truly feel like you were at the show. Its an intense experience- at the start of the film, when you first see Jerry. People were singing and dancing in the theater ( to the dimsay of some but most everyone loved the show -vibe, even though its 'the movies' ) They raffled off a copy of the DVD before the film, a friend of mine won ! The close ups are wonderful, you can see every bead of sweat and all the chords that they are playing. This show is a classic and it looks wonderful on the big screen. The audience was a 50/50 combination of old school Deadhead- family and those who never saw The Greateful Dead with Jerry. Just like when I'm at -an actual show, the only thing that bugged me, was a couple of folks in the back, that were talking, loud- all through drums and space. The camera work and photography is fantastic, feels like you are onstage with them. The audio is good too, though we did yell " Turn it up" at the start.. ( but ... we always do that up here ) and they turned it up for us ! I highly reccomend going to see this at a theater, if you are able. A few of the cities that are doing screenings have added extra shows, because of the great response/ attendance. There will be another viewing Monday night, at ' The Little ', here in Rochester. The setlist is so meaty ! This was truly a flowing show. One aspect of the fim, that is just a treat- is being able to really experience the spontaneous interaction between Jerry, Phil and Bobby and Brent as they go through the song transitions. Mickey and Billy too. My favorites were the closeups and seeing so much of the intimate shots of Brent and Jerry playing. "Liz Kemp Rock Reports" gives this film a 9+ play on see you at Furthur DC for Earth Day -next
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Back on the summer`94 eastcoast opener,at Highgate,VT,Jerry,methodically played,a beautiful SOTM.It definetly wasn`t the best rendition I had heard,but there was a moment,at which Jerry lifted his head from the stage floor,where he had been focused on for much of that evening.He peered from over his wire rimmed glasses out into the vast crowd,who was staring back with great intensity.As he sung,"..a lovely view heaven,but I`d rather be with you!"At that same time,his eyes seemed to encompass the world around me and he was,at that time,looking right at me!!!He was grinning from ear to ear and an overwhelming feeling of absolute happiness and satisfaction entranced my body and tears of joy flooded my cheeks.....So for me,"Standing On The Moon,"will always take me back to much happier times, when things were much less stressed,as they are now!It will always remind me of the time when Jerry and The Grateful Dead fully took over my emotional self and made me who I am today.
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...later in 94-95 became Jerry's good-bys to us all. I'm glad I wasn't there to see it even if every junkie's lie a setting sun -- beautiful before it fades to darkness.
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Sitting around my buddy's dorm room in the middle of the afternoon, door sealed against smoke leakage, shades drawn, lights out, blacklight on. My friend cranked the Who, and we were all having a fine time, or so I thought. Just as "Teenage wasteland/They're all WASTED!" blew through the speakers, my buddy's girlfriend jumped from her seat and kind of whipped her gaze around the room at all of us and yelled, "Isn't it the TRUTH!" And ran out of the room. She broke the door seal in the process, and briefly flooded us with light from the hall. We first recoiled from the light like vampires caught by sunshine, then rushed to reseal the door. My friend got up and moved the tone arm back to the beginning of the song...and gave the volume knob an additional twist to the right. I've thought of Baba O'Riley as a breakup song ever since.
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classic! I've always kinda scratched my head at "Baba" being coopted as a TV crime drama theme song. Teenage wasteland?
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though this didn't happen by flashback, i will always look back on this moment.. i was driving down the interstate, on my way to work... it was fall time.. and i was listening to the GD play 'Doing that Rag' ... and as i was driving...at the very moment Jerry was singing the verse, 'All the Winter Birds are Winging home now' - there was a long line of birds, flocked together, migrating south for the winter. Once in awhile you get shown the light!
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Teenage coming of age...Like a Rolling Stone (B Dylan), Purple Haze (J Hendrix), Eight Miles High (Byrds), Shapes of Things (Yardbirds),Volunteers (Jefferson Airplane), Light My Fire (Doors) On the Bus...Uncle John's Band, Me & Bobby McGee Jerry...Like A Rolling Stone (Keystone Berkeley/Stellar Blue (Oakland Auditorium) Getting through deaths, etc Alfie (Dionne Warwick), Let It Be (Beatles), Jersey Girl (T Waits & B Springsteen), Words (Missing Persons), Man of the Hour (Pearl Jam), That's Life (F Sinatra), While My Guitar Gently Weeps (G Harrison), I'll Take A Melody (J Garcia), Black Throated Wind (B Weir), any Krishna Das chant (always has world class musicians).
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...the last time they played in Golden Gate Park for the Bill Graham memorial. 18 years later Furthur takes the stage in the Park again with a huge amount of other acts over two days in a benefit for the SF Parks dept. Hopefully a greatful taper will have it up on archive soon.
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You're with me tonight on this dark highway We've run it together so many times We've run it for money We've run it for music We've run it to pay for our innocent crimes I took on my father and I'm still standing Took on all comers in some shape or form And I see with the eyes of something wounded Somethin'still standing after the storm Here's one to glory and survival And stayin alive It's the running man's bible I been next in line I been next to nothin' Been next to bystanders that should have said somethin' It was not in my vision It was not in my mind To return from a mission A man left behind Here's one to glory and survival And stayin alive It's the runnin' mans bible I don't speak of the times I've nearly died I don't speak of out lastin' those who are gone Or the things I've done I care not to remember Or the desperate measures That might have been wrong Here's one to glory Here's to bad weather And all the hard things We've been through together Here's to the golden rule and survival And to stayin alive
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I hadn't heard that song before this morning, but Sirius played FOTD so I went looking around on other stations and that song was playing, and it spoke to "me". Peace
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I've stopped thinking of this as "one" of Petty's best albums....started thinkin' it's his best album, period.
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Petty has always been one of my favorites since high school.