• https://www.dead.net/features/blair-jackson/perfect-night-movies
    A Perfect Night at the Movies!

    I have a slightly bizarre ritual when it comes to listening to shows I'm not familiar with. I make every attempt I can to not know what songs were played in what order, so when I hear them I get to experience them more-or-less fresh. I say “more-or-less” because working against this methodology is the fact that I have a pretty good memory for Dead shows, and with the post-GD groups, I make a point of going online the day after any Phil & Friends or Furthur or RatDog show to see what was played. But in the case of the first shows from the current Furthur East Coast tour, I downloaded audience recordings of the Boston and Connecticut shows to my iPod a couple of weeks ago, and then it was another week or so before I got around to listening to them. By that time I'd forgotten most of what I'd absorbed about the lists.

    I go to fairly extreme lengths to not know what I'm going to hear. I will download from Archive.org without looking at the song list (not an easy task), drag the songs into iTunes “blind,” and then transfer to my iPod only looking to make sure that the entire clump of iTunes with the correct date goes into a pre-labeled playlist, sometimes even covering up the song list itself on my monitor with a 3x5 file card.

    I do the same thing when I write liner notes for archival releases of Grateful Dead shows I don't know off the top of my head (which is most of them). I love to be surprised by what comes next, and it really does make the experience like being at a show, where you're listening closely and maybe thinking, “This sounds like it's headed for 'The Other One,'” and sometimes it is, but then there's a left-hand turn, Jerry slows it down and suddenly you've arrived at “Stella Blue”! Or maybe Bob starts up a “Spanish jam” before eventually hitting “The Other One.” I like that thrill of discovery.

    I went through the same sort of machinations beginning the first moment I heard about The Second Annual Meet-Up at the Movies. I loved seeing The Grateful Dead Movie in a theater last year, and this one had the added allure of being a show no one has ever seen on video: July 18, 1989, at Alpine Valley (in Wisconsin), the night after the concert that makes up the bulk of Downhill From Here, one of my favorite Dead vids. Although I undoubtedly have a tape of 7/18/89 lying around somewhere, I never “upgraded” to digital, and I might not have heard the tape since I got it 22 years ago. In short, it's a show I don't “know.” When promos for the Meet-Up appeared on Dead.net or in my email, I didn't read them, didn't click on the video teases. I avoided talking about the show with friends and colleagues, lest they suddenly rhapsodize about it.

    Tragedy struck three days before the April 19 screening. I was wandering around Rolling Stone's website and glanced down at an embedded video headlined “Grateful Dead 'Touch of Grey' 1989” and mentioning the movie night in the first line of the description. Aaaaugh! Oh well, one song; not much damage there.

    The screening I went to, at the AMC multiplex in Emeryville (between Oakland and Berkeley), was very close to full (The Dead Movie in the same theater drew about a quarter-house) and the crowd was very enthusiastic. And why not? It was a helluva Dead show!

    Sweet and soulful at Alpine in '89

    Nineteen eighty-nine really was a high-water year for the band. It was clear from that opening “Touch of Grey” that the band was clear-eyed and fully engaged with one another and their songs. Jerry was in a great mood the whole show, and when Jerry was happy, it was hard not be happy along with him. The band was looking really good in this era—Jerry had the longish hair and was comparatively slim; Bob was wearing his short-shorts, his perfect face still uncreased by time; everyone else seemed robust and relaxed. Smiles all around.

    Seeing the band up close like this on a big screen with booming sound really was the next best thing to being there—“close enough to pretend.” And not knowing what they were going to play next really was a gas. The first set was fantastic. The “Touch” was a nice warm-up, but the show really started to take off with the “Jack Straw” that followed, when Jerry leaned into his guitar solo with an “OK, no more messin' around” determination that kicked the whole band into a higher gear. Jerry the master storyteller took over for “Jackaroe,” and then Bob totally nailed Dylan's wordy “Stuck Inside of Mobile”—there was a great moment when he was singing falsetto on one of the choruses, straining but still completely in control, that drew loud whoops from the audience in the theater. It was Bob at his best, doing that thing he does like nobody else.

    I experienced many wistful feelings during the show, mostly connected to Jerry, because seeing him be so expressive and interacting with everyone onstage—especially Brent, with whom he obviously shared a special bond; what a lovefest!—reminded me more of the person we've missed these past 17 years, not just the incomparable musician. Oh, but his genius was evident at every turn, too. In “Friend of the Devil,” the little flurry of notes that rolled out of his fingers at the beginning of his solo was breathtaking—a few seconds of transcendent bliss on his way to a plateau where his lines could dance and sing with abandon, short notes and long intermingling gracefully, but with power. Similarly, the meaty jam during “Bird Song” was strong and confident as he led the band though varied realms.

    It might have been fun to have a short break between sets to hang out and socialize, but I suppose having one continuous event did keep everyone in the theater locked in. “Sugar Magnolia” was a delightful surprise to start the second set, and the transition from that into “Scarlet” during the guitar break was a thing of beauty—as seamless as you could imagine. If I had been at this show in 1989, I guarantee you I would have been disappointed that “Fire on the Mountain” didn't flow out of “Scarlet,” and in the theater I was not eager to hear “Man Smart Woman Smarter” instead. (The Picky Dead Head dies hard!) But the band pulled it off effortlessly, and at the end we were rewarded with a fine “Eyes of the World,” Jerry once again in command. Lovely little jam going into “drums,” too.

    View from the lawn at Alpine. (From the venue's Facebook page!)

    It was a treat to see Mickey and Bill in close-up during their solo segment, because their world was always largely shielded from us in the venue—much of what they did was out of our view. So, to see Mickey's subtle work on the Beam, or to hone in on Bill's deft hits on his large drum arsenal that seemed to envelop him, was exciting. After a MIDI-ful “space,” there was a hint of “I Need a Miracle,” but instead Jerry went into a gripping and emotional “China Doll,” followed close behind (after an “Other One” tease) by “Dear Mr. Fantasy,” which gave Brent a chance to shine. Something the video let us see that merely listening to a recording would not, was Jerry's MIDI guitar (Wolf—what a gorgeous instrument, I was reminded) malfunctioning right as he went into his solo on that tune. You could see he was playing hard, but the sound was barely audible. Brent jumped in to fill the void and Jerry switched back to Tiger (yay!) and then uncorked a beaut of a solo.

    “Throwing Stones” was another unexpected highlight, big and brash with an amazingly well-executed middle jam that built and built, everyone in sync, Bob with his slashing Rock Star rhythm work cutting through the intricate weave of instruments. We all knew there must be a “Sunshine Daydream” still lurking, but it seemed like “Throwing Stones” was surely headed to it's usual mate, “”Not Fade Away.” But no, after an awkward silence, the “SSDD” came bounding in to wrap up the set.

    Cue end credits, but underneath we could hear the band had come back and was tuning up for the encore. I heard a “Black Muddy River” tease, but then, with the credits done and the band visible again, it turned out to be a solid and fun “Quinn the Eskimo”—all the more appropriate on the night that Levon Helm died, as he had played on the Dylan/Band “Basement Tapes” original 45 years ago.

    What a great night at the movies! Let's do it again!

    (A few notes: Kudos to Len Dell'Amico for the crisp video direction—though something seemed to go awry during “space”—and to John Cutler for the superb sound mix which, true to a real Dead show, seemed to get better and clearer and louder as the show went on… In answer to a question several people have asked me, at the moment there is no plan to release this show on DVD… A cool touch was showing three of the top videos from the Dead.net “Dead Covers Project” before the show—they looked good on the big screen… Also entertaining was the “U.S. Blues” from the forthcoming Dave's Picks Vol. 2 (7/31/74), accompanied by photos from that gig at Dillon Stadium in Hartford.)

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  • Sun King
    12 years 7 months ago
    encore! encore!! encore!!!
    it's been great reading all of the reviews. i, sadly, couldn't make the showing, so i'm hoping they encore it like they did the dead movie last year. i was at this run, and am looking forward to reliving the moments...
  • marye
    12 years 7 months ago
    yup
    by the time I got on the bus in '81 it was all sold out. Many years later when I got to know Jon Sievert, the photographer who took the photo, and asked if it were possible to buy a print, he said oh no, the negatives were long gone (being the magazine's and apparently they don't keep that stuff...) but he scrounged me a copy of the mag, bless his heart.
  • Deadicated
    12 years 7 months ago
    marye
    I had a copy of that issue of Guitar Player magazine - truly, a great guitar. That was '78 wasn't it?
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I have a slightly bizarre ritual when it comes to listening to shows I'm not familiar with. I make every attempt I can to not know what songs were played in what order, so when I hear them I get to experience them more-or-less fresh. I say “more-or-less” because working against this methodology is the fact that I have a pretty good memory for Dead shows, and with the post-GD groups, I make a point of going online the day after any Phil & Friends or Furthur or RatDog show to see what was played. But in the case of the first shows from the current Furthur East Coast tour, I downloaded audience recordings of the Boston and Connecticut shows to my iPod a couple of weeks ago, and then it was another week or so before I got around to listening to them. By that time I'd forgotten most of what I'd absorbed about the lists.

I go to fairly extreme lengths to not know what I'm going to hear. I will download from Archive.org without looking at the song list (not an easy task), drag the songs into iTunes “blind,” and then transfer to my iPod only looking to make sure that the entire clump of iTunes with the correct date goes into a pre-labeled playlist, sometimes even covering up the song list itself on my monitor with a 3x5 file card.

I do the same thing when I write liner notes for archival releases of Grateful Dead shows I don't know off the top of my head (which is most of them). I love to be surprised by what comes next, and it really does make the experience like being at a show, where you're listening closely and maybe thinking, “This sounds like it's headed for 'The Other One,'” and sometimes it is, but then there's a left-hand turn, Jerry slows it down and suddenly you've arrived at “Stella Blue”! Or maybe Bob starts up a “Spanish jam” before eventually hitting “The Other One.” I like that thrill of discovery.

I went through the same sort of machinations beginning the first moment I heard about The Second Annual Meet-Up at the Movies. I loved seeing The Grateful Dead Movie in a theater last year, and this one had the added allure of being a show no one has ever seen on video: July 18, 1989, at Alpine Valley (in Wisconsin), the night after the concert that makes up the bulk of Downhill From Here, one of my favorite Dead vids. Although I undoubtedly have a tape of 7/18/89 lying around somewhere, I never “upgraded” to digital, and I might not have heard the tape since I got it 22 years ago. In short, it's a show I don't “know.” When promos for the Meet-Up appeared on Dead.net or in my email, I didn't read them, didn't click on the video teases. I avoided talking about the show with friends and colleagues, lest they suddenly rhapsodize about it.

Tragedy struck three days before the April 19 screening. I was wandering around Rolling Stone's website and glanced down at an embedded video headlined “Grateful Dead 'Touch of Grey' 1989” and mentioning the movie night in the first line of the description. Aaaaugh! Oh well, one song; not much damage there.

The screening I went to, at the AMC multiplex in Emeryville (between Oakland and Berkeley), was very close to full (The Dead Movie in the same theater drew about a quarter-house) and the crowd was very enthusiastic. And why not? It was a helluva Dead show!

Sweet and soulful at Alpine in '89

Nineteen eighty-nine really was a high-water year for the band. It was clear from that opening “Touch of Grey” that the band was clear-eyed and fully engaged with one another and their songs. Jerry was in a great mood the whole show, and when Jerry was happy, it was hard not be happy along with him. The band was looking really good in this era—Jerry had the longish hair and was comparatively slim; Bob was wearing his short-shorts, his perfect face still uncreased by time; everyone else seemed robust and relaxed. Smiles all around.

Seeing the band up close like this on a big screen with booming sound really was the next best thing to being there—“close enough to pretend.” And not knowing what they were going to play next really was a gas. The first set was fantastic. The “Touch” was a nice warm-up, but the show really started to take off with the “Jack Straw” that followed, when Jerry leaned into his guitar solo with an “OK, no more messin' around” determination that kicked the whole band into a higher gear. Jerry the master storyteller took over for “Jackaroe,” and then Bob totally nailed Dylan's wordy “Stuck Inside of Mobile”—there was a great moment when he was singing falsetto on one of the choruses, straining but still completely in control, that drew loud whoops from the audience in the theater. It was Bob at his best, doing that thing he does like nobody else.

I experienced many wistful feelings during the show, mostly connected to Jerry, because seeing him be so expressive and interacting with everyone onstage—especially Brent, with whom he obviously shared a special bond; what a lovefest!—reminded me more of the person we've missed these past 17 years, not just the incomparable musician. Oh, but his genius was evident at every turn, too. In “Friend of the Devil,” the little flurry of notes that rolled out of his fingers at the beginning of his solo was breathtaking—a few seconds of transcendent bliss on his way to a plateau where his lines could dance and sing with abandon, short notes and long intermingling gracefully, but with power. Similarly, the meaty jam during “Bird Song” was strong and confident as he led the band though varied realms.

It might have been fun to have a short break between sets to hang out and socialize, but I suppose having one continuous event did keep everyone in the theater locked in. “Sugar Magnolia” was a delightful surprise to start the second set, and the transition from that into “Scarlet” during the guitar break was a thing of beauty—as seamless as you could imagine. If I had been at this show in 1989, I guarantee you I would have been disappointed that “Fire on the Mountain” didn't flow out of “Scarlet,” and in the theater I was not eager to hear “Man Smart Woman Smarter” instead. (The Picky Dead Head dies hard!) But the band pulled it off effortlessly, and at the end we were rewarded with a fine “Eyes of the World,” Jerry once again in command. Lovely little jam going into “drums,” too.

View from the lawn at Alpine. (From the venue's Facebook page!)

It was a treat to see Mickey and Bill in close-up during their solo segment, because their world was always largely shielded from us in the venue—much of what they did was out of our view. So, to see Mickey's subtle work on the Beam, or to hone in on Bill's deft hits on his large drum arsenal that seemed to envelop him, was exciting. After a MIDI-ful “space,” there was a hint of “I Need a Miracle,” but instead Jerry went into a gripping and emotional “China Doll,” followed close behind (after an “Other One” tease) by “Dear Mr. Fantasy,” which gave Brent a chance to shine. Something the video let us see that merely listening to a recording would not, was Jerry's MIDI guitar (Wolf—what a gorgeous instrument, I was reminded) malfunctioning right as he went into his solo on that tune. You could see he was playing hard, but the sound was barely audible. Brent jumped in to fill the void and Jerry switched back to Tiger (yay!) and then uncorked a beaut of a solo.

“Throwing Stones” was another unexpected highlight, big and brash with an amazingly well-executed middle jam that built and built, everyone in sync, Bob with his slashing Rock Star rhythm work cutting through the intricate weave of instruments. We all knew there must be a “Sunshine Daydream” still lurking, but it seemed like “Throwing Stones” was surely headed to it's usual mate, “”Not Fade Away.” But no, after an awkward silence, the “SSDD” came bounding in to wrap up the set.

Cue end credits, but underneath we could hear the band had come back and was tuning up for the encore. I heard a “Black Muddy River” tease, but then, with the credits done and the band visible again, it turned out to be a solid and fun “Quinn the Eskimo”—all the more appropriate on the night that Levon Helm died, as he had played on the Dylan/Band “Basement Tapes” original 45 years ago.

What a great night at the movies! Let's do it again!

(A few notes: Kudos to Len Dell'Amico for the crisp video direction—though something seemed to go awry during “space”—and to John Cutler for the superb sound mix which, true to a real Dead show, seemed to get better and clearer and louder as the show went on… In answer to a question several people have asked me, at the moment there is no plan to release this show on DVD… A cool touch was showing three of the top videos from the Dead.net “Dead Covers Project” before the show—they looked good on the big screen… Also entertaining was the “U.S. Blues” from the forthcoming Dave's Picks Vol. 2 (7/31/74), accompanied by photos from that gig at Dillon Stadium in Hartford.)

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I have a slightly bizarre ritual when it comes to listening to shows I'm not familiar with. I make every attempt I can to not know what songs were played in what order, so when I hear them I get to experience them more-or-less fresh.

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But last night sitting and watching the Dead, on that big screen (and thanks for a friend who persuaded the theater to adjust the volume jacked upward) along with sitting with brothers/tapers and road tripping partners/wife was a real delight. Screams, clapping, and whistling by the crowd after each song. Can that get any better? Yes it can, watching Jerry playing wonderfullly and then grinning while he shot those knowing glances over to Brent, then peering through the forest of cymbals to make eye contact with Billy (who returned with a surpressed grin) and raising his eyebrows at Phil, made my month (or more). And the reactions from each of those guys, (including Bobby and Mickey) really charged my batteries big time. "Sometimes we live no particular way but our own..." My God, those were the times of our lives. What a treat. I fuckin' loved it!
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in particular. I miss their chemistry so much. Also, having come along late in life, I never saw Jerry play Wolf before its MIDI conversion, and while I do not know the details and I am sure lightning will strike me dead and all, I seem to recall that it was a much prettier instrument before it was all tricked out like The Borg. In fact I just looked at the Guitar Player cover and yup, much prettier without all that stuff hanging off it. Poor Wolf probably malfunctioned in protest. Though it was cool to hear those horn sounds while it lasted.
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second the appreciation of the close-in shots of the drummers. Great stuff.
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Luckily, I was able to attend the showing of this great concert film! I sat as close as was reasonably possible to the screen and the close-ups of Jerry were absolutely magical! It seemed as though he was still here with us! And, maybe he still is here in the spirit of love that all of the Dead's fans have for the incredible music of The Grateful Dead! And I sincerely hope that this film will become available again. I would love to be able to buy a DVD or Blu-ray copy of this film. But maybe the best part would be to see it again at a good theater which features great projection and sound quality, and, best of all, a whole bunch of Dead Heads collectively getting their long overdue serving of what was one of the best times in musical history: a Grateful Dead concert!
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Seeing the movie last night reminded me that Dead were not just about music. I feel so privileged to say I was at two or three of shows at Alpine that summer. Like Phil said, it was all a smokey haze... It felt great to get into the music and let it take me, while gypsy dancing in the theater!
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No plans for a DVD release of this concert? This is borderline blasphemy. On the other hand, Congratulations are in order. It's the first movie in history to appear solely in theaters, without any plans of a later release. Last night's showing of Alpine 89- A movie so good, you never get to see it again. Ballyhoo
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At Crystal Lake IL theater. Went with Ziplock and Cowboy Neal. Zippy still had his stubs and handwritten set list from the Alpine run. We were all at the original run. Zippy and Cowboy for all. They talked with Candace about the videoing set up for the Monday. Forgot about it for years. Now see what was traspiring while they were zoned out for 3 days/ I didn't make the Monday just Tuesday Wed. Wed was wet. Mud City in the lot. Cosmic Hilarity ensued after that show. Quarter full theater. Mostly male but 10-12 femaies. Not enough "twirlers". Not enough volume ( it may have been on "10 ' but we needed "15" due to age and standing on the Phil Side for too many years) and only from screen speakers. Had plenty of sidewall units but not used we believe. Beautiful nonetheless. A whole new view and experience with the wordless communication especially between Jerry and Bob when Bob whips out the slide and eye-goosing Brent on Mr. Fantasy. The whole drumz sequence was a revelation. Never got those views from the cheap seats on the grass-rise. The Wolf up close and personal was another view to burn into memory. Too many circuits firing put it into a trance iI guess. Beautiful evening beautiful tribe at the movies. Needed more bodies to fill the empty spaces between and more dancing tho'. No one spilled anything on me or stepped on me or any of the other good stuuff. What;s next?- I'm in. See ya' at Furthur Charter Pavilion in July. Nice way to send off Levon we thought. Listened to his Dirt Farmer all day. Good man. Good Dad. Journey well Levon. bear
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I can't even begin to describe my insurmountable dismay for having to miss the one show that I attended in person that has finally seen the light of day on an official capacity. I would gladly trade my whole Europe '72 box set for an official CD/DVD release of this one show from Alpine Valley '89, being the only show I attended on that whole tour.
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I really hope that the Dead and Shout Factory does release this show as a combo cd/dvd set like the Egypt and the JFK 7-7-89 show.
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Not to take anything away from Levon Helm -- the great Arkansan who gave voice and deep groove to many classic American songs -- but it is doubtful he played on the Basement Tapes (out-take) of The Mighty Quinn (Quinn the Eskimo). Levon joined that party late and missed out on most of the recording. Syd Griffin wrote a (very poorly edited) book about that magical 1967 retreat. From Wikipedia (I know, I know): "Griffin writes that Helm's arrival in October meant that he did not play on most of the Dylan–Band 1967 Woodstock recordings, including the sixteen Dylan Basement Tapes album tracks—and it is unclear whether the drums overdubbed on "Too Much of Nothing" in 1975 were played by Helm. Griffin believes Helm drummed on eight unreleased recordings made by Dylan and the Band in the house on Wittenberg Road that Danko and Helm shared after vacating Big Pink (Griffin 2007, pp. 201, 221, 236–241). [Clinton] Heylin has suggested that Helm might be the drummer on four tracks on The Basement Tapes: "Odds and Ends", "Clothes Line Saga", "Apple Suckling Tree" and "Goin’ To Acapulco" (Heylin 2009, pp. 376–381)."
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Movie theater.
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Fun you can have
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was
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I saw this one from way back up on top of the oversold hill where the sound tails off, so it was great to finally see what was actually going on. Now I know why there's a mysterious question mark next to Dear Mr. Fantasy on my set list. I do hear about this often, so yes, these 3 complete shows need to be released from beginning to end in a new CD/DVD package. I've found the audio and video on Downhill From Here to be somewhat lacking, and after seeing a clear improvement at the movie theater, it's obviously just an artifact of the technology used to produce it 15 years ago. JERRRRRYYYYYYY!!!!
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OK, I defer to those who know a lot more about Dylan than I (which is just about everybody!). At any rate, I associate the Basement Tapes with the full Band and it was at least nice to make the spiritual connection with Levon during "Quinn," factually based or not... ;-)
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about the extremely high quality of this video, the visuals in particular, compared to the earlier live videos, due to the technology of the time of their release or whatever, particularly with regard to Downhill From Here from a couple days earlier. While I can't speak to the specifics of that, I CAN attest that I was really blown away by how good this looked on the big screen, as well as how good it sounded, in E'ville at least. Really, for moments on end it was easy to forget it wasn't really happening... Also, I've gotta say, the three Dead Covers Project videos were all great too, and THEY all looked really good on the big screen too.
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very good show....refreshing song selection......all of us here agree......gota gotta....gotta get this on ....DVD......plz....
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I was at these Alpine shows and have been calling for their DVD release for years. I was unable to go to the movies due to familial obligations and hope that one day I will have the opportunity to see it. Release a box, please, Rhino.
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Amazing video, excellent playing and song selection. at the theater we were at however, the audio only came out of the center channel, seemed like a mono mix! The speakers on the side walls were not utilized. Still a great night of music. Please, please release this on DVD! Peace, Michael
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This concert movie was one of the best I have ever seen! And the projection and audio quality at the Regal Brandywine Town Center 16 in Wilmington DE was outstanding! But best of all, so was the hospitality of the management. About half-way through the Hey Jude Reprise, the Dish Satellite link failed. Everyone was really bummed, but we felt lucky to have seen as much as we did. So, as we prepared to leave, a manager appeared. He immediately apologized for the inconvenience and refunded everyone their money! I think the spirit of The Grateful Dead is a powerful force and was well-represented in the behavior of the audience as well as the management of this theater. I sent an email to their main office and expressed my appreciation for their management's politeness and consideration to all of us who were there. I hope this might lead to an encore presentation of this great concert film.
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...theaters were downloading the signal from a dish link. I guess that's what they do with those opera simulcasts, too...
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The concert was a very decent one, the video was good, and the audio was reasonably good in our theatre, but the lack of an intermission was a grievous error! I ended up missing all of Sugar Mag and most of Scarlet whilst waiting in line for a toilet with half of the sold-out MN theatre, most of whom had assumed an intermission, as I had. If there is a next time, please schedule a brief intermission.
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PLEASE release it, for all of us who do not live in the States to be able to see it. Was at that show, and would LOVE to relive it again.
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The multiple posts issue is an ongoing problem and not your fault. Folks like me can (and do) delete them, along with the nearly daily doses of spam that appear here and in other conferences. Still amazes me that people spam a site like this...
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I sure hope they release this soon. I can't wait to hear it in 5.1 surround sound. It was a beautiful show. I just wish they could have turned it up a notch or too. Big fun!
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Sorry to invade your space Blair but this is sort of on topic (it's about videos and you wrote the notes in the booklet) and it's a well visited spot to share some good news. I just wanted to say that the All the Years Combine DVD set is available at a great price from Canada through amazon.ca for just Canadian$ 65.99, way, way cheaper than from Shout or Amazon USA and with a low shipping cost too. Get 'em while you can! End of commercial break. It would be a shame if this Alpine show is not released. Many outside the USA never got the chance to be there then or there now.
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Hi all, I would like to thank the GD and the Century Theater in Fargo for putting on this lovely concert. Unfortunately, only about 25 fellow Fargonians managed to attend, half of which were part of a group of college students. I hope the venue continues to run this event despite another year of poor attendance (only about 40 patrons last year). It might be nice to have all three of these shows on DVD/Blu-ray as a box set in the future (7/17-18-19/1989). The third show was another smoker! With a nine song first set, and Foolish, Terrapin and Dew in the second, it was a fitting conclusion to three pretty amazing days that summer. Shall we go, you and I while we can?
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about pre-MIDI Wolf, I submit this fine photo, or rather magazine cover, by Jon Sievert which remains one of my all-time favorites. It was so pretty before, I just had that image in mind... Still, it was great to see, surfeit of black cables or no surfeit of black cables.
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I had a copy of that issue of Guitar Player magazine - truly, a great guitar. That was '78 wasn't it?
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by the time I got on the bus in '81 it was all sold out. Many years later when I got to know Jon Sievert, the photographer who took the photo, and asked if it were possible to buy a print, he said oh no, the negatives were long gone (being the magazine's and apparently they don't keep that stuff...) but he scrounged me a copy of the mag, bless his heart.
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17 years 2 months
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it's been great reading all of the reviews. i, sadly, couldn't make the showing, so i'm hoping they encore it like they did the dead movie last year. i was at this run, and am looking forward to reliving the moments...
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14 years 1 month
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Wish I could have made it to the theater. Perhaps there will be an encore showing like last year. In any case, I would purchase this if it was released on CD, DVD or Blu-Ray. Ideally it would be a 2CD + DVD (or Blu-Ray) combo.
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17 years 6 months
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That's a great interview in Guitar Player magazine too. Jerry at his eloquent best (though I guess he usually was).
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17 years 6 months
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that interview was one of several that set me on the path to ruin... Blair and David's had something to do with it also.
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13 years 10 months
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We too were at the screening last week. The crowd was a little smaller than that of last years screening of the Grateful Dead Movie. The room was still pretty full with lot's of heads spanning all the different age groups, which was cool.It was great viewing this concert on the big screen, however the sound very low. This was disappointing. I think the first film I saw in that IMAX theater was the 2009 Star Trek,, which gave the sound system a work-out! (Last Years GDMovie was also pretty low) People were yelling in the theater to "turn the volume up!" I, and others went out and spoke to the manager and he told us that the theaters download the signal from a satellite and that settings were already programmed in the feed and can't be changed. Classical performances also come via the link programmed that way. Some viewers on this site reported that they did get the volume tweaked, so who knows? It seemed the sound was only coming from the front speakers not on the sides. During drums it also seemed that some of the sounds were very low in the mix, like they might have mixed this for a surround experience. Did anyone else pay attention to this at the venue they were at? Curious if this was meant to be released in two channel or full surround. I talked with a few others after the show that also noticed this at our theater. In either case, it was cool to see this and I hope that since work was put into preparing this for the feed that this will end up on Blu-ray!Thanks Again!
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17 years 6 months
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...the opening "Touch of Grey" started out kind of mouse-y but then there was a noticeable change in the volume at mid-song (which brought deserved cheers in the house) and then it was a good volume the rest of the night. That said, I think it could have been louder still--CONCERT VOLUME!--and I noticed as we were leaving that the showing of Titanic 3D next door in the multiplex sounded louder. Louder is better; more immersive.
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14 years 11 months
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I agree, Blair that it's nice not knowing what's coming next. what a contrast to have GD in one theater and Titanic right next door. Pure joy vs. pure sadness. Titanic always makes me think of the Sex Pistols' line: "cheap holiday in other people's misery."
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14 years 11 months
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GD86: show us your diamonds! 3/28/86 2/14/86 set one 3/27/86 set one 3/21/86 set two 4/19/86 3/24/86 Morning Dew 3/25/86 Space > Tom Thumb's 5/3/86 5/4/86 7/7/86 Satisfaction 6/22/86 set two (I don't have set one) there's more...
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17 years 6 months
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The following evening's Alpine Valley show (7/19/89) is also a winner (I have the degraded pro-shot version that circulated) and I would encourge consideration of a 2 night DVD release of both those shows. With those two shows and along with the Downhill from Here release, for the first time ever, Deadheads could possess a 'run' of the Grateful Dead on video. Just an idea. Loved the clarity and the intimate view of the boys that night. I am grateful for what I was able to experience in that theater that night.Your efforts are appreciated. Those who dance are thought mad by those who hear not the music.
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10 years 7 months
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Great tales. I'm new here and exploring. It was a real treat to read your article. Hey, I'm really getting to LIKE "Touch," though. Now that I have more than a touch myself, it's growing on me. -MJ