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    heatherlew
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    "We left with our minds sufficiently blown and still peaking..."

    We're headed back to that peak with the newly returned tapes from Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena, Binghamton, 11/6/77. The Grateful Dead's last touring show of 1977 finds them going for broke, taking chances on fan favorites like "Jack Straw," "Friend Of The Devil," and "The Music Never Stopped," carving out righteous grooves on a one-of-kind "Scarlet>Fire" and a tremendous "Truckin'." An ultra high energy show, with a first set that rivals the second? Not unheard of, but definitely rare. Hear for yourself...

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 25 features liner notes by Rob Bleetstein, photos by Bob Minkin, and original art by our 2018 Dave's Picks Artist-In-Residence Tim McDonagh. As always, it has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and it is limited to 18,000 individually numbered copies*.

    *Limited to 2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

    Get one before they are gone, gone, gone.

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  • Thin
    Joined:
    Music's Over, Jerry's reaction
    Seth - Listened to "Music's Over" from Absolutely Live. Great version! Very passionate. Now for that apology: I'm truly very sorry for you that your favorite recording doesn't have more low end. Maybe that's "their sound" and y'all like it, which is great, but its not my bag (and that's OK!). The organ (non-bass), cymbals/snare, and vocals are all very high in the mix and "up front" making the overall sound mid-high. Guitar mid-volume. The "bass" (or simulated bass) is clearly lower in the mix (my EQ reflects this) and of course has the organ sound -"wuf" instead of "bop" - no compression. I'd do anything to hear a real bass at full volume in there, especially in the dynamic part of the jam where the band is "3/3 timing" (11:00~). Actually, it would be nice to hear the bass do ANYTHING more inventive than redundantly repeat the EXACT same pattern over and over... no variation whatsoever! I find it distractingly redundant... A separate bass player would have been a little louder and "present", and would have been able to focus on a little more creativity with the bassline, unlike Manzarek who was distracted with his right hand lead he was playing much of the time. Can you imagine Brent repeating the same 4 bass notes throughout a 15 minute Dark Star so he could focus on the right hand, and saying "Yeah, I'm glad Phil's not here - Brent on bass sounds JUST as good!". I think Jerry's opinion of the Doors was possibly colored by the fact that Morrison stood for everything things Jerry couldn't relate to: self importance, L.A., proclamation of himself as a Lizard King and all the accompanying pantomime, the sex symbol thing, whipping out his dick, the drunk/belligerent screaming persona and all the stories he heard from the guy who had to "handle' Morrison during his boozy aggravated arrests - NOT a guy I could imagine chilling on a couch and shooting the breeze with Jerry. That combined with Jerry's opinion that their live sound was "very brittle sound live, a three piece band with no bass" (and ALL the other stuff he said about their music) left him flat from a musical AND character perspective. deadegad - Thanks for sharing that "The Doors themselves were aware of the 'thinness' issue as other described their live sound. They were planning a more proper tour after LA Woman and wanted to bring Elvis' bassist Jerry Sheff on that tour". I didn't realize that they were planning to finally add a bass player on stage.... that's a tour I would have liked to hear.
  • reijo29
    Joined:
    Ray Manzarek
    First off Thin, glad you got to listen to that. And I guess I take those shortcomings in lack of full sound as simply being the sound of the Doors. And I do sometimes have an issue with the repetitive simple organ Bass lines. Great point on that. But overall I like it and I think Ray repeats a lot as he is waiting on Jim to do what he does. Perhaps he gives Jim the space and hopes that Jim behaves and keeps somewhat to the structure of the song. I may be biased in liking most of it cause I grew up with it. Mustin- Thanks so much for posting that Ray Manzarek story. It's interesting in getting a taste of the polar opposite dynamic of the LA and San Francisco rock scene. The whole I don’t know whether to call him “Pig” or “Mr. Pen” had me cracking up out loud. It's good to laugh at all this. Sounds like a true Spinal Tap moment the day the Doors encountered the Dead. Both bands seemed to take themselves a bit too seriously that day of the shared bill.
  • SkullTrip
    Joined:
    Close the Doors
    Can somebody close the fucking Doors already? The stench of self-stroking insecurity is flooding the room.
  • mustin321
    Joined:
    GD vs. The Doors
    From Ray's book... "The Dead’s support system was enormous. They had huge amps and many roadies, old ladies and groupies and yes-men, personal cooks and gophers and gurus and soundmen and manager types. Consequently, they had no need for normal human intercourse and/or discourse. They were completely insulated. It was a little world of its own and they were perfectly content to remain inside…with you locked out. I never did get to know any of them. I barely talked to any of them. I did try to communicate with their organ player, one “Pig Pen,” but that turned into a complete fiasco. Here’s what happened. The Doors and the Dead are playing together at some outdoor festival–type gig. The Dead are the headliners (it’s early ’67). They have a ****ing wall of amplifiers. It’s like the wall in Fritz Lang’s Destiny. It dwarfs any human standing in front of it. And drum sets, two of them. And guitars everywhere. And…a Vox Continental Organ! Just like mine. Set up stage right. Just where I set up. They have a sound check in the afternoon and it takes forever. They noodle, they fool around, they play out of tune, they try to tune up…but fail…and finally play a song. Vocals are out of harmony, guitars are tuned to some arcane, eccentric mode that each musician has kept as his own private secret, not telling the fellow next to him what the mode is, and the rhythm section is at cross purposes with each other, laying down what seems to be two separate and distinct rock beats that have no relation to each other. In other words, it’s a typical Grateful Dead song/jam. They finish and, to them, everything seems fine. The musicians begin to leave the stage and the roadies lovingly gather up all the guitars. Everything else has to stay exactly where it is. The drums are not allowed to be moved. Pig Pen’s organ must not be moved. Fritz Lang’s wall of Destiny is impossible to move. For our sound check—and performance—John’s drums will have to be set up on the floor, in front of the existing pair of drum risers. No riser for John. The Dead have taken both of them. John’s pissed, as well he should be. I take the opportunity to run up to Pig Pen. I don’t know whether to call him “Pig” or “Mr. Pen.” Mister sounds a bit formal between long-hairs and “Pig” sounds like an insult. I opted for the all-purpose, ubiquitous “man.” “Hey, man,” I say, bounding onto the stage before he retreats into the womblike miasma of Dead sycophants. “I’m the keyboard player with the Doors.” “So?…” He’s slow and unenthusiastic. I extend my hand but he doesn’t take it. Actually, he doesn’t even really see it. His pace is slow. I try to be jolly. “I play a Vox Continental just like yours.” “It can’t be moved,” he says. “I know that.” I smile, hoping to somehow communicate with this fellow musician. “What I want to ask is…instead of bringing my organ onstage and placing it in front of yours…I simply use yours.” “You wanna what?” He is slow. “I want to use your Vox. I play the exact same thing. I’ll just set my piano bass on top of your organ and it’ll all be simple and easy. Nothing has to be moved.” His head starts to shake back and forth. He isn’t liking the idea. But he is understanding the idea. I’m thankful for that. I press on. "If I have to bring my organ up, I’ll have to set it up right in front of yours. I play on the same side of the stage, just like you.” “So…?” “Then there’ll be two Vox organs on stage. One in front of the other. It’ll look ridiculous. People will think, ‘Why are there two identical organs onstage? Why doesn’t the guy from the Doors play the one that’s already there? Why did he have to bring up a duplicate organ?’ You see, man, it’s absurd.” Wrong word. Pig Pen didn’t like that word. His face scrunched up. Absurd was not a word that was used in the Grateful Dead camp. Too revealing. Too pointed. Even too inner-directed. The Doors, at least Jim and Ray, used the word freely. After all, isn’t the post–World War II second half of the twentieth century totally absurd? Do we have to add to the absurdity? Isn’t the whole point of psychedelics to break down the walls of absurdity and reestablish a divine intuition amongst the human species on this good earth? Well, of course it is. And the Grateful Dead is supposed to be psychedelic, but here I am having an absurd conversation with a person called Pig Pen. Man! “Nobody uses the Grateful Dead’s equipment,” he finally said. It was like the Dead party line and he had it well memorized. “I’m not asking to use the Dead’s equipment. I know these amps are all custom built for you guys. We’ll use our own amps. And we’ll use our own drums.” “Damn right you will,” Pig grunted. He was getting testy. “I know every drummer has his own setup. But the Vox organ…it’s generic.” “What…?” “They’re all the same! Yours is just like mine. They’re identical. It would be so clean and easy if I didn’t have to bring mine up.” I gave him my best back-slapping smile of camaraderie. “What do ya say, man? Come on, can I use your organ?” He paused for a couple of beats. Nice dramatic moment, I thought. Then the hammer…“No way, Jack. I told you, no one uses the Grateful Dead’s equipment.” And he turned and lumbered off, into the miasma. I gave his retreating back a peace sign and muttered to myself…“Share and share alike, ehh, brother?” Then more loudly to his rear end girth…“Peace and love, man.” He didn’t even hear me. He was lost in his own little world. His very secure little world. It was an absurd encounter." -- Thanks Mr. Dc for mentioning that. I didn't know about this tale.
  • Cousins Of The…
    Joined:
    Ray's recollections
    Does seem like the typical opener/headliner dynamics at work. There might be some slight exaggeration in there :-) "guitars are tuned to some arcane, eccentric mode that each musician has kept as his own private secret, not telling the fellow next to him what the mode is..."
  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Just like Elvis...
    ...Jim Morrison faked his death in Paris. He is alive and well and living in South Africa, or Honduras... or maybe Las Vegas, I hear he's a big fan of the all-you-can-eat buffets.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    My new word of the day....
    ....ABSURD.
  • LoveJerry
    Joined:
    Weeeehooooo
    I've been listening to road trips Austin 1971 November 15th getting ready for Dave's picks 26. The Sound quality is really really good. I have not listen to this in a long time. And the set list is really really good. I hope Dave's picks 26 sounds this good.
  • Mr.Dc
    Joined:
    The Doors and Jerry's comments
    From what I understand, Jerry was commenting on how the doors sounded in 1966 or very early 67. At that time, the Doors had cheaper equipment and did alot more covers. Weird to see Jerry slam another group of musicians in such a harsh and dismissive way, especially if it was just based off a couple early shows he saw before they had even really become the Doors we all know and had their sound dialed in. There is the story of Ray Manzerek and Pigpen having a heated exchange over the use of some keyboards during a show in which they were both billed, I think that indident could actually be one of the main reasons Jerry had such hard feelings towards them. I personally really enjoy quite a few of the Door's available live recordings, and I don't seem to find their sound to be nearly as "thin" as most people do. Maybe that thin sound, just sounds to me like how the Doors are supposed to sound.
  • Thin
    Joined:
    Rejoi29 re bass
    Thanks Rejoi29 - I'll check it out. Maybe the first album had no bass player? Who knows. From Rolling Stone: "The Doors famously lacked a bassist during live sets, instead relying on Ray Manzarek's Fender Rhodes' keyboard bass to lock into the rhythm with Densmore. For their studio albums, the band quietly supplemented their core lineup with session pros handling the low end. Some of these contributions were overdubbed separately from the band, but for L.A. Woman, they wanted the live sound of musicians playing together. Botnick suggested Jerry Scheff, fresh from backing Elvis Presley at Las Vegas' International Hotel. Morrison, a massive Presley fan, was thrilled. So was Densmore. " Again, I love the Doors. Always have - listened to them a TON in high school (very high...). I just never dug their live stuff - was always disappointed when I tracked down the DATs... similar to Jerry's "I can't put my finger on it but it didn't grab me".... It was when I heard that other band a few months ago and started talking to the B3 player about how (and why) he likes having a string bass on stage that it clicked - that's why I brought it up.
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"We left with our minds sufficiently blown and still peaking..."

We're headed back to that peak with the newly returned tapes from Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena, Binghamton, 11/6/77. The Grateful Dead's last touring show of 1977 finds them going for broke, taking chances on fan favorites like "Jack Straw," "Friend Of The Devil," and "The Music Never Stopped," carving out righteous grooves on a one-of-kind "Scarlet>Fire" and a tremendous "Truckin'." An ultra high energy show, with a first set that rivals the second? Not unheard of, but definitely rare. Hear for yourself...

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 25 features liner notes by Rob Bleetstein, photos by Bob Minkin, and original art by our 2018 Dave's Picks Artist-In-Residence Tim McDonagh. As always, it has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman and it is limited to 18,000 individually numbered copies*.

*Limited to 2 per order. Very limited quantity available.

Get one before they are gone, gone, gone.

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Thanks Vguy. I just watched an hour of these. Check out Truckin on the subway. I'm going to run these continuously at my next party!
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Hope you get it soon ..... mine arrived a few days ago.
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Message received and understood. Its just such an interesting subject.. I like the idea of 8 Dave's picks a year!
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again, just being silly. I live in Seattle Washington. Seattle "Boom Boom" Washington.
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give it a listen the end of an era (irony fully realized) next show in October they had Keith in tow. 8/26/71 was the last show by the Quintet o' 71 sound. recent talk of Max Headroom effect: during St. Stephen and some of NFA, my disc has skips that I just have to ride out. seashore washed sea sea seashore washed by the suds and the suds and the suds and the foam etc. oh well.
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so I wish all of you a glorious day today on 2/18. Bring out ye Port Chesters!!! Bill Graham introduces the GD at a show in late 71 I think, saying in effect, "In the midst of all the madness, a bundle of joy, the Grateful Dead" Words to live by.
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Does that make that version of St. Stephen your favorite error in the error wars? (Sorry, couldn't help myself).
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https://themidnightcafe.org/2018/02/18/lossless-bootleg-bonanza-gratefu… Grateful Dead May 1, 1970 Alfred State College Alfred, NY Download: FLAC/MP3 This is a tagged version of shnid: 95683 gd70-05-01.sbd.miller.95683.sbeok.flac16 Recording Info: Source 1: SBD -> Master Reel -> CD Source 2: SBD -> Master Reel -> Dat -> Sonic Solutions -> CD Source 3: SBD -> Master Reel -> Reel -> Dat -> Sonic Solutions -> CD Transfer Info: CD -> Adobe Audition v1.5 -> Samplitude Professional v10.1 -> FLAC (2 Discs Audio / 1 Disc FLAC) All Transfers and Mastering By Charlie Miller charliemiller87@earthlink.net November 6, 2008 Notes: — Source 1 provides Deep Elem Blues through Cumberland Blues — Source 2 provides The Race Is On through the middle of Drums — Source 3 provides the middle of Drums though the end of the show — Thanks to David Gans for sources 2 and 3 — Thanks to Joe B. Jones for his help with the pitch correction –Set 1– 101-d1t01 – Deep Elem Blues 102-d1t02 – I Know You Rider 103-d1t03 – Monkey & the Engineer -> 104-d1t04 – Candyman 105-d1t05 – Me & My Uncle * 106-d1t06 – Mama Tried * 107-d1t07 – Cumberland Blues * 108-d1t08 – The Race Is On * 109-d1t09 – Wake Up Little Susie * 110-d1t10 – New Speedway Boogie * 111-d1t11 – Cold Jordan * 112-d1t12 – Uncle John’s Band * –Set 2– 201-d2t01 – Not Fade Away 202-d2t02 – Hard to Handle 203-d2t03 – Cryptical Envelopment -> 204-d2t04 – Drums -> 205-d2t05 – The Other One -> 206-d2t06 – Cryptical Envelopment 207-d2t07 – High Time 208-d2t08 – Turn On Your Lovelight// *w/ David Nelson, Maraduke & possibly other members of NRPS
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Yes, arrived a week ago. Hope you get yours soon Gerhard.
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Hello everyone! I've been reading and enjoying these boards for a couple of years now and thought I should introduce myself and, I don't know, maybe contribute constructively to the vicious squabbles -- err, I mean the lively debates contained herein. Lol. Full disclosure: I am a relatively recent Head. By which I mean, even though I was born in the '60s and I'm currently on the far side of a half-century, and even though I saw the boys twice in the '80s (10/84 in Syracuse -- good show -- and July 4 1987 at Sullivan Stadium outside of Boston -- truly a wretched show, and sharing the stage with Bobby Dylan in his fullest "I don't give a shit" phase didn't help any) and Jerry solo once in Boston in 87 (?) or '88 (?) -- despite all of that, and despite the band being just ubiquitous at the earthy-crunchy college I attended from 1981 t0 84 -- I just never was all that much of a Head. (Whew -- that was some sentence. Congratulations if you made it all the way through.) Tl; dr: I used to like the Dead OK. Now I'm obsessed with them. I wonder why? And I wonder if any others on these boards have experienced the same. To be blunt, I find it kind of astonishing that Garcia (and Hunter) were able to write songs in their 20s and 30s that really only started making sense to me in my 50s... There is just such a sense of perspective, of understanding the long view of life and how we all try to live it as best we can. I'm thinking of "Sugaree," "He's Gone," "Brokedown Palace," Althea," "Bertha," "Ship of Fools," "Terrapin," too many to name really. FWIW, Bobby's songs don't do it for me nearly as much. Sorry if I'm rambling. Hey, I've I've been waiting to talk about this to someone (not my wife, heh heh) for the past 3 years... This is only my 2nd year subscribing to Dave's. I've been able to grab a few on ebay but not many. I have about 2/3 of the Dick's Picks and most everything else released officially, plus the Winterland '73 box and GSTL. I wouldn't mind picking up what I'm missing of course, so feel free to PM me if you have anything you're looking to part with. And now, the important issues and topics that touch us all: 1. Eras. I like everything to some degree or other, but I am fond of Pig, so early stuff is most exciting to me. Two from the Vault is an astonishing release, as is just about anything from that era that features St Stephen/The Eleven/Death Don't Have No Mercy/King Bee/We Bid You Goodnight or any combination thereof. Love Mountains of the Moon too. Pig's raps on Heard to Handle, Lovelight, Good Lovin etc make the band what it is, IMO. The 70s are great too, no argument with 72 or 77 or whatever your fave year is. The 80s were spottier. As I mentioned, both my shows were from the 80s, and one was great. I would love to see that Syracuse show released officially (there's a pretty good soundboard on the archive, and it holds up.) The 1987 show was dire. "Touch of Gray" to start off, downhill after that. I remember standing there in the sun (it was a hot afternoon) and just feeling the energy vanish out of the crowd. Seriously, they never got it back. Even Charlie Miller can't make it sound good, though props to him for trying: https://archive.org/details/gd1987-07-04.sbd.miller.101650.flac16/gd87-… 2. Brent or no Brent... Ahh, I'd have to say no Brent. He was a good backup vocalist when he wasn't overdoing it. And he could be a great keyboard player. But I never liked his songs much ("Gentlemen, Start Your Engines" ? "Hey Pocky Way" ? Seriously? "Tons of Steel" is just flat dull.) And whoever said that he sang like a Bob Seger wannabe was exactly right. That said, there are some good late-era recordings out there that I keep revisiting. DP 17, and Crimson White and Indigo both come to mind. I agree with Spacebrother that we need more variety in the Dave's selections. (Although I must admit too that I haven't bought the RFK box. I just don't have the cash and the songs I've samples aren't compelling enough... Sue me. Don't have the July 78 box yet either, that's next on the list.) Anyway -- I think I have rattled on LONG ENOUGH. Geez, it's taken me an hour to write this... All while listening to RT 4.4, the 1982 Centrum show that someone mentioned recently... Great show. Thanks everybody. I'm off to sign the 6/23/73 RFK petition now.
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ANNIVERSARY PORT CHESTER 2/18/71!! Everyone listen before midnight ahhhhhhh!
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I love to hear everyone’s opinions on each show, so I thought that I would grade the series so far from my perspective. Especially since we’re at the nice round number of 25. Volume 1: The Mosque 5/25/77 – A great start. Not my favorite May ’77 show but May ’77 shows are like pizza. Even when it’s not your favorite, it still is… well, pizza. Grade: A minus Volume 2: Hartford, CT, 7/31/74 – My favorite of the DaP ’74 shows. Maybe because I’m from Connecticut and I’m biased? Maybe… But probably more because of the MLB -> Spanish Jam Grade: A minus Volume 3: Chicago, IL, 10/22/71 – Ragtime Dead. Love this show. Lots of fun sing-along tunes. The filler might just be the best part... Grade: A minus Volume 4: Williamsburg, VA, 9/24/76 – I’m usually a big fan of ’76… the sound is so different from all other years. This is not one of my favorites, though. Hard to explain why. I just don’t reach for it very often. Grade: B minus Volume 5: Pauley Pavilion 11/17/73 – one of my top 3 from the series. Love the HCS then my favorite of the Playin’ Uncle Dew Sammiches. Grade: A plus Volume 6: San Francisco 12/20/69 & St. Louis 2/2/70 – I should listen to this more often. GREAT Casey Jones and two Dark Stars. I usually skip the 35 minute Lovelight. Sshh… don’t tell HendrixFreak! Grade: A minus Volume 7: Normal, 4/24/78 – I like this show better than most based on the reviews that I’ve seen. Bobby’s slide can be brutal at times but he had it goin’ on this night. One of my favorite Scarlet/Fires. Grade: B plus Volume 8: Fox Theatre, 11/30/80 – this show surprised me more than almost any. I’m not usually a 1980 kinda guy and I wasn’t crazy about the idea of a matrix. But I love this show. They were firing on all cylinders on this tour because the 1980 TTAS show is also great. Bring on Gainsville… Grade: B plus Volume 9: Missoula, 5/14/74 – This is probably blasphemous but 1974 isn’t my favorite year. I can’t explain it because it should be right in my wheel house. That being said, There are parts of this that I love. One of my favorite Bertha’s of all time. Grade: B minus Volume 10: Thelma, 12/12/69 – Love how intimate the venue seems. Love the transition from psychedelic to cowboy. If you add in the bonus disk, there’s something here for the whole family. Alligator AND Caution…. Wow. Grade: A Volume 11: Wichita, 11/17/72 – One of my top 3 from the series. My favorite Cumberland of all time and an awesome Bird Song. Every song played to perfection. Grade: A plus Volume 12: Colgate University,11/4/77 – I’m a 1977 junkie. I do however like the spring shows better than the fall shows. This one has merit because its so different. Maybe even slightly strange. The Brown Eyed Women is awesome. Grade: B Volume 13: Winterland, 2/24/74 – Seems to be the favorite DaP for many… I can see why but the sound bothers me more than it probably should. I know that it gets better when it counts but… Grade: B plus Volume 14: Academy Of Music, 3/26/72 – It’s weird that I don’t like this as much as I should. Hardly ever reach for this anymore. Warm up shows before E72 but it sounds starkly different to me than E72. Grade: B Volume 15: Nashville, April 22, 1978 – Great 1978 show – the steel drums and groovy beginning to NFA makes that hair on the back of my neck stand up. Epic Wharf Rat but I like 11/6/77 slightly better. Grade: B plus Volume 16: Springfield, MA, March 28, 1973 – my choice for the most underrated DaP. Jerry is on absolute fire throughout. This show is a monster. Possibly my favorite DaP. Grade: A plus Volume 17: Fresno, CA, July 19, 1974 – not my least favorite DaP but probably second. I don’t reach for this often. Monster Playin’ though. Grade: C Volume 18: Orpheum Theatre, July 17, 1976 – This show seems to be very polarizing. People either love it or hate it. I am definitely on the love side. It has such a unique quality to it… both shows flow so nicely. They’re so laid back but in a great way. Grade: A Volume 19: Honolulu, HI, January 23, 1970 – Another pick that I don’t listen to much anymore. Not my favorite Dark Star and the Lovelight is over the top. Not crazy about the early Dancin’. Too bad about the Casey Jones… great start to it and I love the slinky King Bee… Grade: B Volume 20: Boulder.CO, December 9, 1981 – Far and away my least favorite of the series. Still not sure why it’s a pick. Listened about 3x and retired it. Oh well… Grade: D Volume 21: Boston Garden, April 2, 1973 – Lots of shorter songs all played extremely well, then an epic HCS that melts your face. Grade: B plus Volume 22: Felt Forum, December 7, 1971 – Lots of fun sing-along songs but not a ton here that’ll melt your face… and who doesn’t want their face melted? Grade: B Volume 23: Eugene, OR, January 22, 1978 – This rounds out my top 3. Super high energy, Close Encounters, incredible St. Stephen… top to bottom classic. Grade: A plus Volume 24: Berkeley, CA, August 25, 1972 – LOVE this show. More than I thought I would too. I was bummed that they didn’t release 8/21 but now I’m glad they didn’t. Maybe we’ll get the rest of the run in a box? Grade: A Volume 25: Binghamton, NY, November 6, 1977 – surprised at the average reviews of this show. All-time great 1st set... 3 GOAT songs for me in one show (1/2 step, Truckin’ and Wharf Rat) This one might be suffering from the hype but I’m certainly on board. Grade: A Sorry for the long post but I don’t post a lot so I guess this kind of makes up for it.
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I too enjoy the earlier GD "eras" the most, specifically around august 68-june 69 but really 1966 through to the end of 1970. Though there are certain things about pretty much every year that make them worthwhile imo. When it comes to Brent, I do actually enjoy most of his tunes with the exception of 'Never trust a Woman' which may be the only song the Dead played that I do not like at all. I also personally enjoy most of the occasional rants and debates on here, I almost always find something humorous or interesting in them, or even just how they are worded. Sure we got some that are prone to hyperbole, and there have been a couple instances where people have tried to deflect using adhominems and character attacks when they noticed their own arguments shelf life was about up. But in comparison with almost any other site on the web, the disagreements on here are extremely mild and usually over very light topics such as cds and music.
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Volume 8: Fox Theatre, 11/30/80 – this show surprised me more than almost any. I’m not usually a 1980 kinda guy and I wasn’t crazy about the idea of a matrix. But I love this show. They were firing on all cylinders on this tour because the 1980 TTAS show is also great. Grade: B plus One of three in a 3-way tie for "Numero Uno" of the series this far. Don't agree with your grade, but def agree with your sentiment about dat Gators '80 gig. The Dave's series is still w/o a "Shakedown Street" iirc !!!
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What about it......?
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I highly suggest you obtain the 78 Box as soon as it’s financially feasible.
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on 85 GD I have 11/20 21 22 on disc. haven't listened for a while (years) 11/20 today while Ubering. Fun. Worth a listen. Not a E72 show, but fun. started 11/21. oddball songs (Big Boy Pete, e.g.) eras, shmeras. JUST LISTEN. an interesting synchronistic moment: 11/21 Brown Eyed Women. "Bigfoot county" line at a stoplight. Look in my mirror. in the car behind me, the passenger (don't you hear me) had her bare feet up on the dash. I love stuff like that.
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16 years 4 months
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Does not do too much for me anymore.
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10 years 4 months
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Interesting that you have got more into the band as you have got older. I have been listening to them in various ways ( and in various states) since 1974. One of the reasons they have endured for me, when so many other bands have bitten the dust, could be the sheer range and scope of the music they played over thirty years. My first two albums were Working Mans, followed by Anthem of the Sun, which were so massively different. There music seems to have a depth and variety to me that other rock bands simply don't have. Or maybe the other rock music I liked was more fitting to a teenage lifestyle. I loved going to heavy rock concerts between 1972 and 1976, and then punk between 1976 and 1978. But as time passed, I went off them. But the Dead have continued to fascinate me.
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10 years 4 months
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Thanks for the reviews. Fascinating which ones you rate highly and which ones not so. I feel tempted to listen to that 1980 one now, which I don't think I've listened to since it arrived.
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8 years 5 months
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Nice to hear from you. I also share your perspective of growing into the Dead more and more over time. When I was in college (in the 90s) we were all really into Phish. Back then I loved that zany irreverance. Now I think I prefer a little Reverance. So many little nuggets of wisdom in the Dead . . . When life looks Easy Street there is danger at your door Some folks look for answers, others look for fights Got two good eyes, but you still don't see
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14 years 2 months
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That little exercise inspired me to go back and listen to DaP4 (9/24/76) today.LibertyCalypso has inspired me to spend some time with 11/30/80 this week as well... Did I grade it too low? Maybe... but it’ll be fun going through that show again to see if I did. I also want to revisit the 1/23/70 Hawaii show.
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11 years 4 months
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I would definitely give it an A + listening to some of that Gainesville show over the weekend. Cool show with nice Althea and Sailor Saint Bring on "Shakedown Street" ~ 12.30.78 And 7.5.81 !
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8 years 5 months
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Great list! DaP 16 was my first, so it holds a special place for me, it changed everything for me! Good to see it getting some love. Surprised you hold 17 in such low regard, but as you say that Playin' is something else. Very interesting either way, thank you for the read!
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14 years 2 months
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lol - I knew that people would question my grades...That definitely makes it more fun though. One thing that I'll mention - sometimes the timing of a release has a lot to do with how much I like that show. If I get to spend a lot of time with it, I usually end up liking it more. It also depends on my frame of mind when it comes out, etc... I guarantee that if I graded these shows a year from now, some of my grades would be a little different. Also - B+ is a good grade! I would have killed for those when I was in school a million years ago. The Binghamton show is a funny one - very surprised at the response of that one from many. I wonder if it's the Scarlet/Fire that hurts it. It's not a strong version and Scarlet/Fire is usually a show-stopper.
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14 years 11 months
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I heard some of 10/28/85 earlier today. solid playing, and reeeeeally good sound quality. again, not on the same plane as E72, obviously, but good stuff, nonetheless. I'm sure plenty of possible DaP's candidates from 85 are in the vault. 85 box? hmm...that is one way. gimme dat Greek box first, though. or at least one show from the Greek.
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8 years 1 month
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I don't see the big deal concerning Fergie's rendition. I remember the controversy over Rosanne Barr's performance. I didn't mind that one either. When you hire someone to do a gig you should get what talent you book! Jerry, Bob, and Vince nail it...WITH HAROMANY! https://youtu.be/MH8ObibNCoo Hi Maine Dave! Welcome!
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11 years 4 months
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I usually listen in the car , for a while my car stereo has not been working with the new CDs , so a good amount of the most recent Dave's Picks have been enjoyed in house. I do like listening outdoors as well, most during sunset hours , sunrise is cool too. It's been brutally cold around here , a few weeks ago , the night of the super moon I had a 1988 show going outside. Just as the clouds were parting the moon appeared smack dab in the middle with "When I Paint My Masterpiece" as the soundtrack ~ 6.17.88
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10 years 11 months
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12/11/69 set 2. Was listening to this today. Wow. This is the best single disc of live Dead I have I believe*. Phil is on fire, and Jerry is fantastic, though a bit shaky in Stephen and The Eleven in a couple of spots, and Tom provides excellent work in Dark Star. This is definitely on the very top of any shelving unit. *I do not have Rockin' the Rhein bonus disc, but my next favorite single disc is Hofheinz 11/18/72 set 2; the something like 2012 bonus from 7/29/74, 2015 bonus 7/16/76 set 2, Dick's Pick 2 10/31/71, etc.
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9 years 8 months
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1979 is definitely under represented but what we have is still pretty sweet. By my count, here are the full shows (I'm not counting the tracks that make up road trips 1.1) 10/27 11/5 11/6 12/26 12/28 Hopefully we'll see 12/1 join the list soon! Another year that could use more love is 1981 (currently 1 dicks pick, 1 daves picks and the 30 trips selection). I'd love to see more- how about 3/9, 3/10, 4/30 or 5/5?
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6 years 11 months
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The “Brown Eyed Women” from this show always catches me by surprise. T’is a nice one.
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14 years 2 months
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I went back to listen to the BE Women. I take that song for granted because it’s always consistently great.You’re right though... it has a little extra funk to it. Great version! The whole show is great. Especially the Let It Grow. It’s an absolute scorcher.
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10 years 4 months
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Definitely 1979. I listened to all the officially released shows at the end of last year, and was really impressed. I loved the energy of the playing, and the way Brent uses the synthesizer in the space jams-something he sadly seemed to back off from doing as he found his feet in the following years. Shame. But the great unrepresented year to me is 1967. The show in 30 Trips was one of the best in the box, but apart from that, I don't think there has been a single show released. There are two fragments from 3rd September 1967-on the Phil Zone there is 30+ minute version of Midnight Hour, and on the version of the first album that came out with bonus tracks about 10 years ago, there is a 23 minute Viola Lee Blues. Even the latest edition of the first album, released last year, passed 1967 by in favour of a 1966 show. Odd. The last few months of 1967 seem to be the time where they developed massively in terms of sound and adventurousness. There is no comparison between the bands playing on the 30 Trips show, and that during 1966 and the first 7-8 months of 1967. With Mickey Hart in tow they evolved from a somewhat tinny sounding, but slightly trippy rootsy/ blues/garage band, into one of the most powerful psychedelic bands in the world. The only reason for the year being passed by, that I can think of, is that they don't have any good soundboard recordings in the vault.
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9 years 2 months
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11-5,6-79When those were released I had DSL internet. Also wanted CDs, not downloads. Considering the fiasco of downloading from this site currently, trying to download 10 years ago with DSL would have been an epic disaster.
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11 years 6 months
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So I'm knee deep in '76 right now, digging a slew of new shows. 1976 is an underrepresented year - too often unfairly compared to 1977. It's the old Ginger vs. Mary-Ann debate - but you can't look at Mary-Ann in the context of Ginger - it misses the point of what makes Mary-Ann great. I see 1976 as defined by what precedes it... an excellent album. '76 is the "Blues for Allah" tour with recently-in-studio precision, sublime jams, recorded meticulously. What's not to love? I have spent the last week focused on the "new" material: H>S>Franklin's (so many in '76!), Crazy Fingers and Music Never stopped, and then exploring the music around them... an interesting way to explore 1976 for Blues for Allah fans. '76 box would be nice. Where's the announcement? Waiting for Olympics to end so announcement doesn't get buried by mixed-Curling updates?
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