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    clayv
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    Who's up for a revolutionary evolutionary ride? DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 1/2/70 captures the Grateful Dead as they make their first foray from the experimental 60s into their early 70s acoustic Americana period. Yes, this one is a little bit country and a little bit (psychedelic) rock and roll.

    When the "Magnificent Seven" - Pigpen on percussion, T.C. on keys - first took the stage on 1/2/70, evidence was clear that the trip was about to take a turn. From their western wears to the twang in Jerry’s “broken-string blues,” it appeared they'd brought the Bakersfield sound to the Big Apple. They worked through much of what would become Workingman's Dead, stunning the crowd with laid-back numbers like "Uncle John's Band," "Casey Jones," and "Black Peter." Just the same, they satisfied 60s stalwarts with magical versions of "Dark Star," "St. Stephen," and "That's It For The Other One." Sonic alchemy, indeed!

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, ​New York 1/2/70 has been rounded out with a bit of 1/3/70 (the subscribers-only bonus disc features the bulk of 1/3/70). It was recorded by the great Owsley "Bear" Stanley and has been lovingly mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

    DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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  • Trainwrecked
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    Yeah Right Thin

    All the music in the world, 90% of which I won't listen to, for 10 bucks a month sounds as good as that cable TV bill I was paying 15 bucks a month for in 1980. Was great at the time, but my cable bill is 10x the cost now, and keeps going up. Have fun with your streaming in 10 years. And besides, streaming and digital technology has killed the recording artists, and in turn, the concert scene. Piracy IS the reason the reason concert ticket sales are so high now. Artists have to make their money on the road, because there's little for them in songwriting royalties anymore. Technology killed the concert scene. What used to be a festive getaway for any who desired it is now reserved for the priveledged. And like wise Charlie said, the only CDs I buy is Limited Edition Dead CDs, and like wise KeithFan said, the fun part is opening the damn package and enjoying the artwork, the liner notes, and that great smell.

    There's no turning back from it all, but make no mistake, we're being tethered and robbed in the long con. Enjoy your financial bondage.

  • JimInMD
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    Interesting Discussion

    First.. why only ten comments per page? You blink or take a day hike and you have scroll back 10 pages to get the pulse of what's going on.

    Second.. 8-Tracks always sucked... well, they were ok for the first ten plays but on the 11th play your car or portable 8-Track player would get hungry and inevitably eat your tape. Then you realized you had to buy a really nice, expensive deck so it wouldn't eat your tapes.. you'd then get 37 listens before it got hungry and ate your tape and be out an extra $350 for a new high-end, but still shitty deck. If you were skilled.. you could somehow pull it out, bend and tuck all that extra tape back into the 8-Track cassette, but every time that part of the album came on it would sllllloooowwww dooowwwwnn where it was stretched.. then skip 10 seconds where you had to cut and splice it back together with scotch tape, etc. There is no comparing any media to 8-Tracks because they sucked that bad. As soon as my first tape was eaten, I loathed them and could not wait for a better technology. They were the first media you could play in a car, once another arrived they were gone like the dodo. Plus, album art or liner notes, forget about it. Comparing any of this to 8-tracks is like wondering why no one drives Edsels anymore.

    As for streaming.. I find it just doesnt work well for dead music. I mean, what band has 2,318 albums? Amazon Alexa, for example, has a ton of concerts on their service.. but asking 'her' for one and having 'her' return and play the show you like is next to impossible. "Alexa, Play Grateful Dead Cornell University, 5/8/77" (which is in there) and you get "mmm I can't find that, here's Donnie and Marie Paper Roses 1977 instead", said in the most polite, androgynous voice possible.

    Streaming just becomes difficult for a band with so many [albums] or shows, whatever. If it was quicker/easier to find exactly what I want, I would stream more. Perhaps tomorrow this will get better.

    Who knows. I think for deadheads, who seem to have an almost unquenchable thirst for good music.. they will stream for the convenience and buy Dave's Picks and perhaps a box set a year, so why would Rhino walk away from that extra revenue stream of the new releases from the vault? In fact, their revenue is increasing, they are not going to pull the plug just yet. Streaming is for what has already been released and all the other music you listen to, but vault releases will likely continue to be released on physical media as a niche product. ..then in a few years it will wind up on the streaming platforms.

    My two cents and I could be wrong.. I see GD listeners as being perhaps streamers and I'm going to get Dave's Picks too because I want it and it makes me happy and I want it now.

    Oh.. and Charlie3, I totally get why you live where you live and it being worth the sacrafice of being plugged in all the time. An amazing part of the world.. beautiful and lots to do. Nothing wrong with cities, but you are in big sky country, I'd take it for 15 (slow) gigs a month or whatever the limit is and speed is. Perhaps 5G will change some of this.

    So anyway.. this could be the year of the Ark. Makes sense, doesn't it. Bolo, bolo, bolo. There, said it three times.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Pointless progress

    There have been so many changes in format since I bought my first L.P in 1971. The move to cassettes, on to cds, on to digitally remastered cds-circa 1995, onto new digitally remastered cds this century using the latest technology. And now streaming. I am not sure what progress has been made, really. A lot of it seems, now-with the benefit of hindsight-to be a marketing ploy.
    The move from having videos, onto dvds onto blu ray seems to me to have marked progress-but a lot of improvements to consumer items is surely designed to create profit-not to improve quality.

  • cub
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    Will Music Streaming Servers Survive an E.M.P.

    I too prefer hardcopy CD's. As far as I know Cd's cannot loose their data in the event of electro magnetic pulse event,
    solar event etc.

    I also preorder Dave's Picks Subscription every year for $99. Not try something stupid like try to cancel 1/2 my placed order. Just sell the extra at cost.

  • Charlie3
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    Slogan of the Day

    Just as an aside, my vote goes to VGuy for the slogan of the day with "You can lead a head to Winterland, but you can't lead him to his seat."

    The answer to the recurrent question of "how could I have purchased a copy of this release before it sold out?" is to SUBSCRIBE. Don't chase each Dave's Pick, subscribe and trick them into showing up at your door.

  • Charlie3
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    Thin

    I get what you are saying, and you may be right about the expense issue to some extent, but let me expand on a couple of my points.

    My total data for the month through my internet provider is 15GB. For the month. I burn through that in two weeks just reading news and for work purposes. I would be seriously limited in my ability to stream or download music, let alone video, and would have to ration my listening time. That has no appeal. My phone service is also a plan with limited data, so that really doesn't change the picture. The data limitations alone mean that streaming is not really an option unless I jump up to a substantially more expensive data plan, and then pay for the streaming service on top of that. Your calculation assumes that there is no cost to data or internet access, but that is not the case for me. I would have the streaming cost, plus the cost of the additional data needed to make it worthwhile. I get this is an issue related to my geographic location, but I really like my geographic location with it's low population density and spectacular scenery. I have limited data access, but the one of the largest roadless area in the lower 48, the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, is just across the valley, with hiking trails in every just about every drainage up and down the Bitterroot Valley and an abundance of other nearby wilderness areas in just about every direction. I am getting by without the extra data.

    As far as cost, most of what I buy at this point is limited edition dead releases, including Dave's Picks and the annual box set, that won't be available on a streaming service, so I will be stuck paying for that on disc whether or not I stream everything else. If I buy something on disc this month and go broke with unexpected expenses next month, I can listen to the music I already own without spending a dime, but with streaming I am committed to paying the monthly fee forever or I would not be able to listen to any of "my music". I would be paying for the same music month after month, most of which I already own on disc at this point. Which brings me to sunk costs. I already have a decent number of discs, since I haven't counted in a while I'll estimate about a few hundred, maybe close to a thousand. At this point I can listen to them without paying a dime, and since they represent the things that I am most likely to listen to, I would be paying to stream a lot of music that I already own on disc and can listen to for free. And to be honest, the whole streaming thing triggers some kind of atavistic luddite response for me, and I make no claim that this is necessarily a response that will seem logical to others.

    Bottom line, if you dig streaming, go for it, the future looks bright for you. If you're one of those folks who dig vinyl, good timing, it seems to have made a comeback. For me, I foresee CD's being the source of my music for the foreseeable future.

  • jrf68@hotmail.com
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    F**k streaming

    I have no use for it.
    Proud to be that guy.
    :O)

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    If you know how it works....

    ....you had both right there! Sell one! Jeezus.....you can lead a head to Winterland, but you can't lead him to his seat.

  • tmctighe
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    I would love to experience…

    I would love to experience Dave's Picks 30, but unfortunately, due to a ridiculous purchase process, I lost out. Won't go into gory details, but I got no help trying to deal with a problem (mistakenly ordered two cd's and tried to cancel one). Supposedly couldn't delete one unless I emailed a request. I did not get a response until 5 days later, and now the cd is sold out.

    Because of this, and the fact that there is such a ridiculously low number of cd's released, making it virtually impossible to purchase a cd, I will not purchase anything from Deadnet again.

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    "Being able to see the TV from the kitchen is key"....

    ....yeah. About that. Been in our current house for three years. I love it, but that was one complaint I had about it. Mrs. Vguy trumped me. Now where's my sledgehammer? (a wall. Not my wife).
    ....streaming. I'm slowly accepting it. What choice do I have? Buffering sucks major ass. An exercise in futility. 😡 I dread being that guy who has a laptop/tablet in every room. Ptth.
    ❤️ Spotify....I'm not an audiophile, so it works just fine for me.

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6 years 9 months

Who's up for a revolutionary evolutionary ride? DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 1/2/70 captures the Grateful Dead as they make their first foray from the experimental 60s into their early 70s acoustic Americana period. Yes, this one is a little bit country and a little bit (psychedelic) rock and roll.

When the "Magnificent Seven" - Pigpen on percussion, T.C. on keys - first took the stage on 1/2/70, evidence was clear that the trip was about to take a turn. From their western wears to the twang in Jerry’s “broken-string blues,” it appeared they'd brought the Bakersfield sound to the Big Apple. They worked through much of what would become Workingman's Dead, stunning the crowd with laid-back numbers like "Uncle John's Band," "Casey Jones," and "Black Peter." Just the same, they satisfied 60s stalwarts with magical versions of "Dark Star," "St. Stephen," and "That's It For The Other One." Sonic alchemy, indeed!

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30: FILLMORE EAST, NEW YORK, ​New York 1/2/70 has been rounded out with a bit of 1/3/70 (the subscribers-only bonus disc features the bulk of 1/3/70). It was recorded by the great Owsley "Bear" Stanley and has been lovingly mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman.

DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 30 is limited to 20,000 individually-numbered copies*.

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

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by Lovemygirl

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.. while we are waiting on the box set announcement (like we don't already know exactly what that's gonna be).

They have been playing the hell out of the studio version of this song on SiriusXM Deep Tracks the last six months or so, and it piqued my curiosity.. A traditional song handed down from the writers grandfather and called the Peyote Healing Chant. No wonder it caught my interest.. don't be scared off by the vocal intro, the gem is in the instrumental pieces in the middle. The studio version might be better, but we are a live audience, right?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tG8m3upv4Lg

Hypnotic and has that mescaline vibe..

What does this have to do with the GD? Jim Pepper was a jazz sax player and Billy Cobham played on his 1971 album Pepper's Pow Wow and also with Bobby and Midnights. Oh.. and it's pretty psychedelic. Great sax player and a good song when you are really, really stoned (or at least I have been told).

I hope this isn't too much a diversion..

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I can't believe that they would charge $800.00 for the Woodstock box which has about $25 worth of cds including paper and other stuff. I know that the music has value but to make that kind of profit is crazy. But that's my view. You could get 7 or 8 years Dap subscriptions for that price. Sorry to offend anyone.

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In reply to by carlo13

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....if I was there, yes. Shit Carlos, if they put out a Vegas box featuring every show they played here (including the ones in the 80's, which I did not attend), I would pony up $800. Alas....
VegasStrong. Born and raised.
It's a niche audience that they're attracting.

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7 years 8 months
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Right!! If we were there,yes. The baby boomers have more clams,cabbage, coin,bananas. Like Tony soprano would say. Forgettaboutit.

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by carlo13

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I have no interest in it. It's simply too expensive compared to what you get, especially for me right now.

I honestly do not know what the royalties and contractual obligations might be, so to call it greedy might not be 100% accurate. ..like what if a particular estate held out and said no, unless we get $XX's + XX%, etc. no deal, and without that artist the entire concept was a nogo.. But for me it's just not a great value and I have absolutely no interest in it. (well, I guess if a particular artist or estate holds out for excess cash, that is greed.. but its hard to say who and why).

I'd much rather get the Old Years Pink Floyd Box, but I passed on that for price too. ...but I was and still am oh so tempted. Speaking of box sets.... could tomorrow be the day?

Now, back to your regularly scheduled drums and space....

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I still have some tapes and cds of old that still sound great. It's not worth it for me to get the remasters. If you're used to it without hearing the remasters it doesn't really matter. I'm cool with old school.

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9 years 3 months
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JiminMD, right there with you and Carlo on the Woodstock box, the price is pretty off-putting right out of the gate, and my interest level is not even close to enough to justify the purchase. Nope, I think I am going with the "tarted up" version of the original so that I can get the Dark Star without paying an arm and a leg for a lot of stuff I'm not really keen on. By the way, for whatever reason, the phrase "tarted up" really amused me, thanks Perithecat for the phrase and the recommendation on the cheap route to pick up the Dark Star.

I passed on the Early Years Pink Floyd box also, it just seemed like it was nowhere near as good a deal as the 30 Trips box. I did however pick up the compilation disc and the individual box sets for 1969 (Dramatis/ation) and 1972 (Obfuscation), both of which contained stuff that I really wanted and both of which were a reasonable price for the contents. I think I did the math and you could actually get all of the individual boxes for each year cheaper than getting the entire Early Years box set. Not sure how that makes any sense, but it worked for me. The 1972 box has the Live at Pompeii disc which was the draw for that one, and the 1969 box has a bunch of great live stuff that makes it really worthwhile. Both are less than $40 on amazon now.

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7 years 7 months
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I'll check that 69' box for 40 bucks. Now that's a good price. P.S. I think the word tart in England is slang for loose woman. Or just woman. I hear it a lot on Monty python. Now they are the funniest crew in comedy.

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8 years 2 months

In reply to by carlo13

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Jim, sounds like you may know what the box for this year will be. Please share.

I think we will have an announcement next Thursday June 13. This of course is not based on inside information, just based on last year's release date.

I know I was totally surprised by the PNW box.

Let us know you insiders.

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6 years 11 months
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The PNW box? Not in love with it yet, as much as I want to be. May take a while to peak for me, though I do dig the shows for the most part. All good things.

On the flip side, the Charlie Miller SBD of 4/23/77 has been dominating my speakers lately. Another favorite show that I'd throw money at if it was officially released (that can be read as both a statement and an indirect request).

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...finished today with the complete 7/21/72, Seattle performance that was released by the Grateful Dead. The second set is primo,
Casey Jones
Me & My Uncle
Deal
Jack Straw
He’s Gone
Truckin
Drums/Bass
The Other One
Sugar Magnolia
Ramble On Rose
🙏❤️😎

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In reply to by Charlie3

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Box sets, that is. If any of my friends knew I bought things like this they'd think I'd taken leave of my senses. But they do draw me in. The German company, Bear Records release particularly sumptuous and exhaustive sets, complete with hard back books. You can get the same music-I have Sun Records boxes by them, - for much, much less money-but the presentation and the sound on the discs from Bear Records is immaculate.

The biggest draw back with Floyds Early Years box was the duplication of music-including the same content on both dvd and blu ray. Seemed a bit unnecessary. There is even more duplication in King Crimson boxes-the same show in different formats with different mixes. They are about a third less than the Floyd box, but they cover shorter timespans.

The biggest problem with Dead boxes for me is the size of the damn things. Last years 73/74 box was a bit too much-the duty and tax to get it in England was extortionate. It would have to be something that I specifically wanted, for me to buy this years box-I wouldn't automatically order one, as I have done with Dead releases over much of the last 40 odd years.

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Hey Now, I just scored an interview for a job I'd really like to have. The interview is this coming Wednesday morning!

Wish me luck folks! :-)

P.S. I love cargo pants!

P.S.S. A fire hydrant!

...ciao’, my fellow Dead fans, hope everyone is well and on their way to having a grateful day!
“I’ve gone mad for Boxsets!” Ever since they began. Like Daverock mention, over the years I collected musical Boxsets for all types of music. I fell in love with the artwork, production and themes of all my Boxsets. Some more than others, lol, like Daverock also mentioned there’s a lot of different Boxset releases with diffferent artwork, mix’s and so on...but like all things in life, it came to an end. Well, sorta, lol ha ha, Now I’m only interested in Grateful Dead Boxsets. 😁
2-3% of my purchases are non-Dead. Especially over the last few years with 40th anniversary’s & now with the 50th anniversary’s arriving throughout the rest of the year for many other bands. Some examples being...
‘White Album’ 50th Anniversary - the Beatles
‘Electric Ladyland’50th Anniversary- Jimi Hendrix
‘The Doors’- first three albums,50th Anniversary
‘Grateful Dead’ - first 3 albums, 50th Anniversary
RSD Vinyl/CD Releases
...I’m open to any design, size,shape, form and themes the Grateful Dead Company can come up with. Keeping an open mind is a very positive attitude and state of consciousness to live in/by.
That’s only my thoughts & opinion.
I can also see that it’s a burden for other fans who can’t afford to purchase an item or/and if one lives outside the USA are subject to high taxes and import fees...if it was up to me , we would have,“Grateful Dead embassy’s” all around the world offering the same product at the same cost,lol ha ha, I know I’m a Dreamer!!!
I listening to and love’n the New Live tracks included in the 50th Anniversary edition of ‘AOXOMOXOA’ , Long Live the Grateful Dead ! This Album is Still packing a punch 50 years after being recorded in the studio, that’s Divine music my brothers & sisters! Have a grateful day.
🙏❤️😎
*my new favorite ‘Clementine’ performance to date! 😉
PS/ Good Luck with your Job Interview, God bless my brother! Sending positive vibes your way.🙏... just be your ‘Best’ self.

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I have found a second income stream helps a lot to buy large, overpriced box sets. I remember when the Europe Box came out, I waited until my wife left for work, rummaged thru her jewelry box and found her engagement ring. Resold for enough coin for that box. (it hasn't fit her in years!)

The 30 trips box? It will be a few years before my kid needs his college fund.

Luckily my latest income stream will be able replace that money. I started a cam channel on pornhub. I call it "showers with my wife". VERY popular. I think I can finance a new wall of sound system, but has been more than enough to keep me in Dave's, GarciaLive, Pink Floyd and other such things!

I'm just never sure if I should inform her of the channel, she'd want her cut if she knew.

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10 years 4 months
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Scarlet Fire and Estimated Eyes
The music's Dead but never dies.

Some rocked out to Who and Stones,
But we all danced and shaked our bones.

We heard of Jed from Tennessee,
and outlaw bandit Stagger Lee.

Emisarries from our past,
The dream was much too good to last.

Cowboy hat, pony tail, beard, bandana,
They lived and breathed Americana.

Help on the Way and Morning Dew
for Wilfred T's next interview!

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by DeadVikes

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No.. I haven't a clue what the box set is. That was just a benevolent dig on the Bolo posts (clues?) that were made about a month ago. I made some initial comments about how easy the clues were this time and everyone should know what the box set is by now.

I have no idea.. If I were to guess, I would guess old (like 69 Ark or 71 Portchester) or newer and returned, something where they have much better sound than what circulates (fall 72 or some surprise from 79, 80 or beyond).

Honestly.. I haven't even come close to solving a single one of his clues. ..but they're fun and well intended so it's all good. They are just impossibly difficult, which I guess is the whole point.

Wilfred.. sending some positive vibes your way.. which begs a question, what is the most happy go lucky song in the GD canon? Sugar Magnolia, Scarlet Begonias, Me and My Uncle? Certainly not Jack Straw, Masons Children or New Speedway Boogie..

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...Keithfan, Primo Poem, I gig it my friend, bravo! ✌️

Dead and Co. at the Gorge

a Christmas gift from my wife (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) (she's NOT a Deadhead)

Perhaps my grumpy POV about D&C will change

sing on, brother
play on, drummer

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13 years 5 months

In reply to by stoltzfus

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Lucky dog. I really wanted to make it there.. If it was in August, I would have... but too busy now. I really want to hit the PNW this year or next.. a beautiful piece of the planet.

KCJanes will be there too.. apparently he will be the one wearing the tie die drinking a beer with a legal pocket full of vegemite. You can't miss him!

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Getting ready for 6/7 and 6/8/80 anniversaries. State of the art 80s Dead, Jerry on fire for both shows. Add the 3 Alaska shows, and you would have a superb box set.

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Yes, "Golden Road"! I also thought of "Might as Well". Definitely NOT "Touch of Grey". I was watching that Barton Hills choir version recently and remembered how ambiguous that song is: "clocks are running late" "draw the curtains I don't care" "say your piece and get out". I noticed the Barton choir conveniently skipped some lyrics: "kid can't read at seventeen"....etc. Of course, the ambiguity is what makes the song truly great. Good ole Hunter.

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This horse ain't quite dead yet, so I'll keep beating it.

1968 shows are too rare and short for a box.
A '69 box would seem date-appropriate, but you know, Aoxomoxoa w/live '69 disc is due in my mailbox tomorrow.
1970 shows are too few and Workingman's and American Beauty need live material to accompany their re-release next year.
Spring '71 is always a candidate (esp. Portchester run), but ultimately (perhaps) not as widely popular as the following year.
Last year's box was '73/'74 and the years before (and endless DaPs) were returned tapes from '77 and '78.
I would welcome some '79, but......
The surefire sales would focus on fall '72 -- lots to choose from, uniformly hot performances, a pivotal time for the band without Pigpen on board, lots of shows left over for future releases.

I'm putting down my lavish two cents on five (5) shows from fall '72, including my first show (9-19-72).

No bias here, and I've never been wrong before....

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Yup, that's the 1983 Boise show.
When I got this back in the tape trading days, I was disappointed. Lousy sound, sloppy playing. Listened to it twice and then shelved it. Now it's packed with my other tapes somewhere in the basement.

When it was announced as a Dave's pick, I was flabbergasted. I listened to it and thought it was not as bad as I remembered. Then I shelved it.

Last weekend I was driving across Idaho and decided to give it another go. Man, I really enjoyed it. Even Wang Dang Doodle, which usually annoys me. There is a general intensity to this show that I never picked up on - especially disc 2.

Just goes to show that you never know when a show will hit you the right way.

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14 years 11 months

In reply to by loudmouth

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I disliked 8/13/87 for ages

then gave it oooonnnneeeeeeee more chance

it was a lot of fun

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If Bolo's recent jabbering was meant as a clue of any sort . . .
They seemed to suggest a box of shows from the same place but across different years.
That would be cool, if that's what it is.

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14 years 11 months

In reply to by Roguedeadguy

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Please oh please

GREEK!!!

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9 years 3 months
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That post was just what I needed after a long, aggressively hostile and adversarial work situation this morning. I got back in and read through these posts and your box set financing shenanigans cracked me up.

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5 years 8 months
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I don't listen to soundboards too much, so Port Chester Feb '71 would be very welcome. I listen to Three from the Vault plenty. 1972 would be even better.

KeithFan2112 that was very thoughtful of you and entertaining. We still have to listen to records some time ;-)

Not much more to say about this Dave's Picks 30 that hasn't already. 1970 is not my favorite year, but I listen to this a lot.

Be good boys.

It would be magic if the next box was Fall 1972-I'd buy that even if it was packaged in something the size of a small car-but my money is on 1971 or 1976. We have had, or soon will have, lives sets from 1969 and 1970 this year, and there have been boxes from 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977 and 1978 already. We haven't, as far as can remember, had ones for 71 or 76 yet.

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17 years 5 months

In reply to by daverock

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....as would pretty much anything else. See? Easy Peasy when one isn't too picky. I would welcome a Bruce/Vince box with open arms.
AOXOMOXOA tomorrow.

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9 years 3 months
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I think Bolo's comments are generally more of a tease than a clue, they're just too ambiguous to be a clue. I think RogueDeadguy has the right idea with a number of shows over a period of years with a common venue for the shows. But that would still leave the question of what years and what venue.

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In reply to by Roguedeadguy

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Several people over the years have suggested a box like you mentioned: multiple shows/same venue…a look on Reddit revealed most shows at the same venue and possible candidates for a box theme like that:

1. Oakland Coliseum - Oakland, CA 66
2. Fillmore West/Carousel Ballroom - S.F., CA: 59 (TIE)
3. Winterland - S.F., CA: 59 (TIE)
4. Henry J. Kaiser/Oakland Aud. - Oakland, CA: 58
5. Phila. Spectrum - Phila., PA 53
6. Madison Sq. Garden - NYC 52

I'd say Phila. is out of the running since 1972 (DP36) and 1982 (RT V4 #4) have been released. The 1974 shows occurred at the Phila. Convention Center.

Alpine must have made the list somewhere. So many great venues, so little time.

Never heard of this pornhub thing before. Dennis, that's your wife? My man!

Edit: I feel dirty.. it won't wash off. Oh my, what have I done?

Crap.. Dr. John and Roky Erickson within a week.. Heaven just got a double dose of psychedelic funky boogie woogie goodness

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I can see the saliva is flowing for SOMETHING BIG in the upcoming box set. I admit it, I love stirring up the gang here. Guess we'll know soon. I'm digging the Electric on the Eel, which features Jer band in 87, 89 and 91 at the same venue and it's killer. It seems clear to me that he'd have rather chucked the GD and just do his band but he still had a job and hungry mouths to feed. Just my view of Jer's situation almost 30 years ago, not dissing the latter-day Dead. Hell, I caught two shows in 1992 (my last in a 20-year run, 72-92) outside my patch in Colorado when I was cultivating in Vermont's backcountry. We drove to Knickerbocker Arena for two shows in June '92. One show was a bit light, the other pretty credible. My buddy and I were dressed normally -- t-shirt, jeans, sneakers -- and asked around the parking lot for shrooms. Some kid in his early 20s -- hell, I was only 35 then, but had cut my hair after a Colorado bust in '85 -- who wasn't born when I first caught the GD is dirty and sunburned into looking a wee bit ethnic when he was just another white boy from the suburbs and he jumps up and starts yelling "Everybody be careful, cops are here!" He meant us. I said F you. Then a young girl selling shirts said, "You guys look like you could use some tie-dye." And I said: "I don't wear uniforms." The scene had always been be who you are, come as you are, and feel free to freak. Twenty years later I dropped out of the scene because appearances and behavior seemed a little prescribed, if you will. But I digress.

Back to box talk. I don't think they'll do a same venue/many years box because that consistency shows up most often in the '80s touring years. Although the Greek does come to mind, as does Red Rocks. As for 1976, I caught a few hot shows early in '76, but the tapes all these years later are kind of a snooze for me. Plus, they released a number of '76 shows under the ABCD Enterprises deal via Dave's Picks in the past two years. Lastly, I did hear Dave on one of his seaside chats say that fall '72 would definitely be on the agenda at some point and that was 3-4 years ago, I believe.

As I said, no bias here, nor have I ever been wrong!!!!! (Must I add: yeeeehhhhiiiii!!!!!!) But first, the live disc from Aoxomoxoa from Jan '69, loud and with refreshments! Good luck to all in getting what you want out of the box to come.

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no dots needed for this one Front and center!!! I am prepped and ready

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I HEAR YOU. Everyone has their favorites sometimes for show quality, but many times sentimentality. I have so many good memories from the Greek shows in totality I'm constantly thinking about the whole hog box. Hell a cardboard replica from before they built that damn building and you could stand on top of the hill audience left with a beautiful view. Unfortunately from what I've heard a lot of the shows they have on ice aren't really better by much than what's available now. I know it would be expensive but priorities priorities. They could put out a music only later. After all as the angry ones keep telling me it's all about the music. Of course if it was they wouldn't be upset they could only aford the music
As for uniforms be careful as FZ wisely put it God knows at what show how long ago. " don't kid yourself everyone here is wearing a uniform ". Peace and here's to the Greek with The Frost on the side

Lol that's why they call me the old man at work. I work a blue collar job and most of the guys on my crew are 35 years younger than me
By the way I have the gas are you ready for an Aoxomoxoa session

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Finally listen to the 46 minute version from the box set. Imagine being there for that!

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Loved this man's contribution to the musical universe. merci

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