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  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Road Trips

    Dig 'em. October 1977 may have been the biggest miss, but there a couple tunes worth the price if admission (The Music Never Stops, Let It Grow). It's also nice to have the last Help/Slip/Franklin of the Godchaux era, though I don't feel it's a great performance. This one may still be available.

    Jimmy, you're right on queue with the Feb '68 show. Between some misprints on the dates I read about with the bonus tracks and disc, I believe we have all of the Eagles Aud show from 1/27 as well. Probably the biggest bang for the buck, considering the lacka good1968 recordings.

    Same with 1974. Jerry comes through more prominently than pretty much all of the '74 two-tracks. One of my favorite Morning Dews on there.

    1978 is great just because there's do little from the Shakedown era.

    Still scratching my head on why there's no 1972 Road Trips.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Oooooh. And an acoustic Cumberland?!....

    ....not seeing the setlist is tight! 💕
    Let It Shine.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    May '70 RT bonus....

    ....JiminMD sent me a burnt copy of that in the mail when we first started communicating because I wasn't paying much attention to the releases at that time in the past.
    Thanks Jim! It's still on my GD shelves.
    Putting it in now. For first few tunes at least. No setlist written down, so playing it by ear.
    Edit. An acoustic Friend Of The Devil is a grate start. 👍

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Road Trips

    Started off a little slow and the packaging was subpar albeit made from fully recycled, non-bleached brown paper bags. There are a few that sound a little thin, a few that sound a little fuzzy, a few where the master reels got played a few times too many and a few that sound fantastic. I think it was during this series that Jeffrey Norman found his stride. It was around this time we last time we saw Blair Jackson grace the liner notes and the artwork was mostly decent if you could see it through the fog of the brown paper. It was almost a great series.. "missed it by that much."

    ......but there are a few stellar classics that reached super stardom mixed in. The best has to be Valentines day 1968. Holy smoking crater of my mind I like to blow away batman. If your brain isn't splattered all over the inside of your skull, add in the bonus disc and strap in for an additional ride around the solar system, brain = cosmic debris, check. FE May 1970, Louisville '74, Big Rock Pow Wow anyone.. goosebump shit, wowwow stuff. Some of the bonus discs were more than memorable also. Man, sometimes we don't realize just how good we have it.

    Now where were we.. there's got to be a 1968 banana box in here somewhere, shine that light over here Lemieux.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Cleaning inventory....

    ....I remember that AJS. Got Dicks 26-30 for approx $120 back in the day.
    #27 is the only officially released Welnick only that I know of. Which reminds me....12.16.92 on tap.
    It's got a Shakedown.

  • Angry Jack Straw
    Joined:
    Road Trips

    I never purchased them when they were initially released. The GD store was cleaning out inventory many years ago and I bought a bunch of them. Austin 71, Denver 73, Louisville 74, the Fillmore 70 and a few others. They are actually fantastic releases. Much better than I ever expected.

    Pete Rose is not the most likable person, but he certainly deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. My sense is that they won’t admit him until after he passes away. Which is a shame.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Conekid has a point....

    ....if you really, really, REALLY like a band/artist and wanna stick it to the man, go to the venue anyway, make sure your phone is charged and has 5G, and buy tix at showtime. You might miss a song, but you're a damn fan man!
    Those bastard resellers will shed tix at face or less faster than a husky sheds fur in summer and they will take the loss. 🖕
    And apparently, there are millions of Swiftys. Amazing.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    If the GD were still a thing

    Like if Jerry were still alive

    I wonder how much they would charge

    The TS juggernaut must be otter-pocket happy over this publicity

  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    Boycott resellers

    That would put a stop to the practice pretty quickly.
    Of course, not everybody’s going to boycott, so it won’t work.
    But, you can still go to the event and wait until it starts and you might get a cheaper ticket.
    Kind of like buying a paper ticket from a scalper after the show has started, but you’re doing it digitally.

    Of course, even at face value the price is probably ridiculously high.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Keithfan

    Classy move from ol' PR

    ------------------------------

    20K for a ticket to anyone....
    No.
    Fookin'.
    Way.

    Tie Ticketmaster down with heavy stones and throw it into the river. Robber Barons R' Us.

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3 years 7 months
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13 years 5 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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It's a good thing there is a new thread to comment on. I was not going to let that disrespect of the Second Set of Augusta slide. Tragedy narrowly averted.

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9 years 1 month

In reply to by JimInMD

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The lights are supposed to be out in this room.

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I spent the last week and a half with my parents.. at one point I had to pull out a Garcia quote from, I think, Harpur College, 1970..

"Now, now kids, don't fight." It worked perfectly until one of them asked for their allowance.

Once they turn out lights and everybody leaves.. it's so much easier to fire up a fattie. Just saying.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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Don’t make me come down there!

Once while home with pops before he went into assisted living…usually after I’d get him his dinner/meds etc, and he’d go to bed early. That was my time to make a fire in the basement family room, put on some dead, spark up, and finally be able let it all go and relax.
Well one day just as I’m getting ready to fire up, I hear this huge crash and then hear all this yelling and banging etc. Turns out he got up for some reason and the rug slipped out off the hardwood floor and he fell and split the top of his head open. Needless to say we called 911, which sucked, but would have been a whole lot worse if I’d just fired up and had tunes playing lol.
Besides making him wait in ER all night, he just needed a few stitches and he was fine. The upshot was that it lead him to decide to go to assisted living. He Being a safety consultant, I’d been trying to work the whole “it’s not safe being alone anymore” and “what if I hadn’t been here” angle on him. This unfortunate incident finally, literally, knocked some sense into him ; )

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Reminds me of childhood vacations

The rents and four kids in an old station wagon on a cross country trip...

We never made it out of the neighborhood before somebody would fart, then immediately got punched in the arm.. Mayhem would always ensue and with either end with a parent reaching his/her arm to be back seat and smacking the crap out of someone or god forbid pull over. .... and that's how it would usually begin....

Let's not even get into the tunes... FM radio at it's finest.

I was around for the poorer part of family life and never went on vacations.

My younger brother and sister went every year. (at some point mom said they were going away every year no matter what!,,,, I was 16 and working so I didn't go.

Years later my sister was singing along to some of the Polish Prince (Bobby Vinton), and I was like how you know this shit. Turned out the old man made a 6 or so 8 track tapes with a recorder I bought him. On these road trips they would listen to those tapes over and over and over. Sorry NO FM radio!!!

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10 years 2 months
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The smell of a freshly lit Parliament cigarette is good.
Not so much after the parents exhaled that first puff.
AM radio only in our cars then, and it was never on.
Same trip every year. Always on or near July 4. Virtually all fireworks were legal then, even M-80s. St. Louis to the Ozarks, then to Van Buren, MO where the other G-pa lived. Big Spring State Park was cool. And floating on the Current River (now part of the Mark Twain Nat'l. Riverway), very clear water and you could see to the bottom. Now all you can see is beer cans down there.
Cheers

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9 years 2 months

In reply to by 1stshow70878

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Ha,1stShow, I canoed the Current and the Buffalo several times ca. early '70s with my scout troop out of the Chicago suburbs. What gorgeous water. Like you say, so incredibly clear. For the record, you could see a whole lot of beer cans on the bottom back then! It's a strong memory. Like good scouts we were wondering if any them were full! And then all the cool caves, including one you could canoe into.
A blue Ford Country Squire wagon was the family vehicle in the late 60s into early 70s. Some raucous cross country trips with the siblings in the back of that beast.. No memory of the radio though.

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10 years 2 months
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My cousin is renovating the farm. Can't be sold except to the N.S.R.
G-pa's Rexall store was right on the river in Van Buren. (pop. 723)
Bob the black lab sat in a rocker on the porch "counting cars".
The side of the family that had bootleggers. I'm so proud!
Cheers

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