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    heatherlew
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    "The Grateful Dead picked up their instruments and hit the first note with perfection. They never missed a note for the next three and one-half hours. People followed the flow of the tunes. Down on the floor in front of the stage was a sea of heads keeping time with the music. No one sat still. No one, except the youngsters behind us sat still. They were still and stunned." - The Power County Press

    And what a stunner it was, that show at the Boise State University Pavilion in Boise, ID on September 2, 1983. Dave's Picks Volume 27 contains every stitch of music from this mid-80s show (our first in this series), one that's as good as any other in Grateful Dead history. When the Dead were on, they were ON! Straight out the gate with a definitive take on the old standard "Wang Dang Doodle," the band swiftly switches back to a setlist of yore, firing off 70s staples like "Jack Straw" and "Brown-Eyed Women" and wrapping things up with a terrific trio of "Big Railroad Blues"/"Looks Like Rain"/"Deal" (don't you let that epic guitar solo go down without you). Primed for the second set, they tackle the complexities of "Help>Slipknot!>Franklin's" with heart and ease. It's clear there will be no stopping their flow - Bobby and Brent hanging in for a fantastic pre-Drums "Jam" and Jerry and Bobby in the zone on a not-to-be-missed melodic "Space." Not a skipper in the whole lot!

    Dave's Picks Volume 27 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.

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  • kyleharmon
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    i never played A Link to the
    i never played A Link to the Past and I never knew who Bruce Cockburn was and somehow when my life flashes before me I wont be thinking I wasted my life because of it
  • Thin
    Joined:
    couple reactions:
    "The blues started with field workers on farms who got it from gospel and African roots". Seriously??? Thank you HendrixFreak for the correction - holy moly, how far can we disassociate the musical contributions of slaves? Let's give then credit... I think they earned it, no? Mononhahela regarding your 1980 dilemma... stay loud on the topic until your miracle appears. Unless you're dying for the actual article, in which case go ahead and spend the $40 (but that's a lot of money). Sixtus re: 2/15/73 Dark Star.. the accessible melodic ones are my favs. Thanks for the signpost. I believe the Wembley 4/7 or 8/72 Dark Star is also very melodic.... love that one. Anybody notice something different????
  • simonrob
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    Labels...
    Now it is plain for all to see the problems that arise from trying to label different types of music. So whatever happened to country rock, for instance. Were the Beatles rock'n'roll? Who cares. Daverock, your ignorance of who Bruce Cockburn is, is indeed inexcusable. To put another pointless label on him, he could be called the Canadian Bob Dylan, but then again...
  • daverock
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    Bob Dylan Mr Heartbreak....Bruce Cockburn?
    Yes, I'd go along with what you say about his Bobness. To me, he raised the bar lyrically in the same way Hendrix did instrumentally. Maybe people who would otherwise never have considered setting their poems to music did so as a result of Dylan. This wasn't always a good thing, mind you.Incidentally, excuse my ignorance...but who's Bruce Cockburn?
  • highstrikerjay
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    1983
    In anticipation of 09/02/83, I've been listening to some other well regarded fall '83 shows today, notably 09/06/83 and 10/11/83. If 09/02/83 is cut from the same cloth, it will be a solid pick. Totally digging those other 83 shows (as I do the other official releases from '83 - 10/14 and 10/21). Next up while I wait for DaP 27, I think I'll spin 10/17/83. Don't compare '83 to shows from '67 to '79, just enjoy them for what they are. Also perhaps not as cleanly played or recorded as '87-'89, but more crispy in between song jams in '83 IMO than in those later years. Bless the digital archives!!
  • kyleharmon
    Joined:
    for you, Orosbouros
  • Dark-Star
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    Semantic tangeant
    Rock music, pop music, Prog music blah blah blah. The point that was being made is that our generation and our parents generation were around for the invention of rock pop Prog whatever you want to call it music. it's not classical it's not baroque,it's not rap. We were around when the artists were alive and their records were being made and our parents played their records and we played their records. In 200 years there may not be anything that sounds even remotely like this, yet we were here to see live concerts of it. In 200 years they will most likely look back on the Beatles And The Rolling Stones and Elvis and say wow to have been alive when all of that was happening, all of that great music. Nobody's trying to identify when the first rock record was made. A point was made that the elements that came together to make modern rock and roll were a perfect storm that will never happen again, and WE got to live to see it. And to say The Beatles weren't a rock band, well by that logic I could listen to Dead Flowers by the Stones and say they're not a rock band. Or I could listen to the Song is Over by The Who and say that's easy listening. Or I could listen to That's the Way by Led Zeppelin and say they're not rock they're folk. I'm starting to hear hairs being split just to split hairs. We got to see all of these people while they were alive that's the point. And the styles they developed will never be redone again because all of the things that went into making it are already done. It was clearly stated that the Beatles brought it to the world and they did. It was never said that they did it without anyone's influence. Mind left body I thought you made a good point. Birth is bringing it to the world which is what the Beatles did and continued to do until their breakup. It's nonsense to attribute the explosion of pop / rock music to anyone other than the Beatles. Without the Beatles it would have all remained esoteric. And yes other bands picked up where they left off and carried the torch. The Beatles brought it to the world. And to be honest I don't even like the Beatles that much. The White Album should have been cut in half, and the first five albums I'm mostly throwaways and are summed up in the one red greatest hits album. Sergeant Pepper Magical Mystery Tour and Abbey Road are pretty good. My point is I don't even like him that much but I know what their role was in the birth of rock and roll music.
  • Mr_Heartbreak
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    Changing the Course of Rock History
    Interesting discussion of rock history, but I think everyone here is forgetting the man who changed the course of music forever: Mr. Robert Zimmerman, aka, Bob Dylan. He turned on the Beatles. Before Dylan, they were "She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah." After Dylan, they began to see song lyrics as poetry, an art form. Jimi Hendrix? Same thing. Look at the covers: Like A Rolling Stone, arguably the most important song in rock history; All Along the Watchtower; Drifters' Escape. etc, etc. The Dead? Don't even get me started. Without Dylan, Robert Hunter and Jerry Garcia never would have gone beyond playing some old folk and bluegrass tunes together. Look at the covers with them, too: they were covering It's All Over Now Baby Blue when they were still playing tiny venues in 1966. Meanwhile, Dylan was conquering Europe on a mass scale. Dylan pushed everyone: the Stones, the Byrds, the Doors. Without Dylan's massive influence, going back as far as '63, songs played on the radio - rock and pop alike - would always have remained boy/girl love songs and cheesy pop. Without Dylan, we never would have had the Dead as we know them, or the Beatles (beyond the first couple albums), Bruce Cockburn, Hendrix, or any form of prog rock. Dylan is The Godfather of all modern music that has lyrics with any depth whatsoever.
  • daverock
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    Rock n' roll
    Some great views expressed on here on this subject. I love The Beatles, and there is no question that they started life as a rock n' roll group. And that they periodically revisited it to great effect-especially on "The Beatles For Sale". But the music that they will be remembered for is not, to me, rock n' roll-or rock. It is pop music. That isn't a bad thing-but its what it is. No way hozay is "Sergeant Pepper" rock n' roll. Actually there is more of a case for claiming that The Beatles invented prog rock than rock n' roll. Finer men than me have tried to identify the first rock n' roll record. But for what its worth, Robert Johnson definitely played with more rhythm than earlier country bluesman. Fast forward to 1948, and we have John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters playing electric guitars with a much heavier beat. Any of these artists could be credited with starting rock-but its probably Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry, both seemingly independently of each other, mixing country with blues to create what is known as rock n' roll today. After the pop of the early 60s, the man who really invented "rock" as we know it today, and as distinct from "rock n 'roll" was surely Jimi Hendrix. He brought his blues and soul chops to London in 1966, added the volume and power chords associated with Pete Townsend, the craziness of Jeff Beck, wrapped it all up in ball and kicked it out of the park. A far greater influence than The Beatles-every band I saw in the 70s owed something to him. There is surely room for ongoing development, too. Rock n' roll is a hybrid of earlier musical forms, from different cultures, combined together to create something new. Its a great blueprint for the future.
  • Mind-Left-Body
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    KF completely on target
    What I took from Keith fan's essay is that the Beatles did not invent the first rock and roll song, they took all of the primal elements that define today's rock and roll from various sources and put them together into one whole and brought music that had rock elements from an esoteric underground entity to a worldwide industry. While you all make good points about the history of rock in general, I don't believe that Keith fan means to say none of that is true, only that it was the precursor to what has become today's rock and roll music. The rock music of the 60s and 70s and 80s and 90s is molded after the Beatles and their contemporaries like the Rolling Stones and The Kinks and The Who and many others, not Elvis not Jerry Lee Lewis not Bill Haley, not anything before the Beatles. What I see in some of the counterpoints being raised here are people missing points in the original article. For example someone might respond to my comments by saying lots of musicians were influenced by Elvis so how can I say that modern music wasn't in part due to Elvis's career? The answer is, that's not what I'm saying. I am saying that modern music doesn't take on the arrangement and style of Elvis, it takes on that of The Beatles and their contemporaries. And the contemporaries that I mentioned worked off of The Beatles and took their lead from the Beatles and then added their own elements. The artists before the Beatles that some people mentioned, collectively produced elements that the Beatles then unified and brought pop sensibility to. This brought about a seismic shift in the way the bands that were the Beatles contemporaries approached music. In the late 60s and early 70s they all fed off of each other, but it started with the Beatles. And those other bands contributed to the continued development, such as the Rolling Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin The Grateful Dead Etc. The Beatles were the birth of rock and roll. They did not write the first rock song, they put the puzzle together and industrialized it. In doing that, there was a birth. Nobody is wrong here in any of the smaller points they've made about the significant contributions of some artists who came before The Beatles. The over arching main point though is that the Beatles brought it all together and introduced it to the world. The embryo analogy was spot-on. In its simplest manifestation you could say that without the Beatles there would be no Rolling Stones or Who or Zeppelin as we know them today. If they were to exist at all, meaning if they were able to even break out of the underground, the Stones would sound like their first record which was all R&B covers, Led Zeppelin 1 would all sound like you shook me and I can't quit you baby, and The Who would all be like shout and shimmy and I'm a man. Rock music as we know it today would not sound as it does today without the Beatles. But if you take away any one single other group that was mentioned pre-beatles, The Beatles would still have been the Beatles. I'll stop rambling now. I just have always connected with what Keith fan said here but I can't say it as eloquently. And then I saw some responses that didn't seem to get the point. I mean everyone's disputing the term birth. Birth is not the invention of something. Birth is to bring something to the world. The Beatles didnt invent rock, they brought rock to the world (and with a genetic makeup that was all their own). That's what I took from Keith fans original comment when he said we witnessed the birth of rock and roll. That we did. We didn't witness the conception of rock and roll we witness the birth. That's what I took Keith fan correct me if I'm wrong.
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"The Grateful Dead picked up their instruments and hit the first note with perfection. They never missed a note for the next three and one-half hours. People followed the flow of the tunes. Down on the floor in front of the stage was a sea of heads keeping time with the music. No one sat still. No one, except the youngsters behind us sat still. They were still and stunned." - The Power County Press

And what a stunner it was, that show at the Boise State University Pavilion in Boise, ID on September 2, 1983. Dave's Picks Volume 27 contains every stitch of music from this mid-80s show (our first in this series), one that's as good as any other in Grateful Dead history. When the Dead were on, they were ON! Straight out the gate with a definitive take on the old standard "Wang Dang Doodle," the band swiftly switches back to a setlist of yore, firing off 70s staples like "Jack Straw" and "Brown-Eyed Women" and wrapping things up with a terrific trio of "Big Railroad Blues"/"Looks Like Rain"/"Deal" (don't you let that epic guitar solo go down without you). Primed for the second set, they tackle the complexities of "Help>Slipknot!>Franklin's" with heart and ease. It's clear there will be no stopping their flow - Bobby and Brent hanging in for a fantastic pre-Drums "Jam" and Jerry and Bobby in the zone on a not-to-be-missed melodic "Space." Not a skipper in the whole lot!

Dave's Picks Volume 27 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.

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*
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I don't care who knows it: I think think Spring 91, Spring 92 and late '93 are awesome periods.
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once in a blue moon i'll put Ween's 12 Country Golden Greats on and laugh...and laugh.. particularly Fluffy the most
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*
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I know next to nothing about Spring 92 (Deer Creek comes to mind...had a tape that played fast of that show) 6/28/92, I believe. 91 and 93 I know a bit of you like what you like. and 91 and 93 have shows that are pleasing to my ears.
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"IN Order to save his love for Grateful Dead...he had to listen to Post Brent" Terrapin Moon in Terrapin Moon: Post Brent Hero in theaters this fall.
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After 32 days in transit my copy has finally arrived. The only thing I don't like about living in Australia is how long it takes for my Dave's Picks to arrive. (And why it goes through Switzerland is beyond me.) So for the last month I've been reading all the comments and was worried this was going to be a horrible release. For many years I've notice Deadheads are some of the pickiest most critical people ever. I've only listened to the first cd but it's exactly what I'd expect from a early 80's recording. It doesn't sound as good as other releases, but that doesn't bother me. From what Dave has said about the 80's shows in the vault and from what was released on Thirty Trips this show is as good as it gets for this time period. I want everything that's released and for me everything has been an upgrade to any copy I might have or have had. Keep em coming! Now why is it when my sister sends me a package from Toledo Ohio it takes a week/two before it arrives, yet my Dave's are now taking 30 plus days? How about for next years oversea's subscriptions their be an option for expedited international shipping? And before everyone points out the hows and whys products are shipped, trust me I'm well versed in the transport/logistic world. Finally for Vguy.... A neutron walks into a bar and asks "How much for a beer?" The bartender says "For you? No charge."
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I gave this a second listen. and the second listen went from "its ok" to "this will be in high rotation" this gives me hope for 83 shows. I listened to 10/30/83 and it just about ruined me for the Dead for awhile. shitty tape. this however has many a gem: the wang dang doodle I disagree I heard better ones in the fall '91 east coast shows. loved the jack straw, They Love Each Other, Brown Eyed Women, New Mingle Wood Blues, Love the Big Railroad Blues w/ the extended jam, Looks Like Rain, Help>Slip>Franklin's, Estimated Prophet, The Eyes Of World even if it had a cut in it I didn't notice cuz it was that good for me, Loved the Space with the jerry and weir interplay, solid Goin' Down, great Black Peter and Baby Blue. the mix it aint perfect. but I can hear everyone at least most through out which is what I look for in decent tape quality.
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You sound as though you know what you are talking about...but I would worry if they changed the shipping arrangements. For the first few years with Dave's Picks, I had to pay a lot of additional costs to the postman on delivery of the goodies. For the last few years, though, there don't seem to be any additional charges. The Pick arrives many weeks after everyone elses-I am in England-but I don't mind if it shaves a few pounds off the cost. You're proposal might still cut costs and be quicker, of course.
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I LOVE me some Ween, and Phish is okay on their best nights but this is not the Jambands board. Dont wan to sound rude but its one thing to keep bringing up off-topics like politics, music listens etc., but the constant posting of easily findable non-GD Youtube videos, setlists of old Phish shows and upcoming info about whatever is your local area for shows is getting cumbersome. Ignore my greying gripes if you want ,I'll just scroll through it all but the increase in the amount of posts the last few months has been tedious. And what? Can't even hear the tape cut in Eyes cause it was that good for you?!? WTF kinda hyperbole is that, I LIKE this show too but come on..... This board is getting more and more zealous about this release everyday. No one's been switching to a low-protein diet, buying matching tracksuits and black Nikes have they? I JUST NOW, realized...that this show...is the key to traveling to Alpha Centauri before the alien overlords come to bring us back home as sex slaves, ewwww.
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...to the Era of Irritation: "is getting cumbersome" "has been tedious" Such low emotional thresholds these days. Szell in the PObox. Red, Starless & Sailor's boxes arrived this weekend; unopened on the dining room table. Vail is lovely in Summer, but this (business) trip got to end. Notable nature encounters: two days, two trail runs, two uncomfortably large diamondbacks that brooked no reservation at expressing their dispeasure with my proximity. Not the stuff for weak sphincters or bladders, which reminds me of a thought I'd had on #27 that will have to wait as the call for 0800 conference was just issued!
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I'll shut up from here on out.
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no, it's not my personal board. but let the thing flow and keep it open, I say. I scroll past the things I am not interested in. I do notice the splice in Eyes. pretty jarring. I recall (tell us more, grampa) tapes that had horrific cuts in them. i just shrugged and kept listening. the occasional tear did happen though. "The sun will shine in my ba-"\/\/BLURGLESHUF\/\/"-northbound train" 4/7/71 has a nasty, as does 2/18/71
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@ direwulf - not so much an old guy gripe, more an aversion to trolls I suspect. Attempts to transfer the entire contents of YouTube onto this site, along with all sorts of other unrelated detritus starts to look more like the actions of a troll, or to be more precise 2 trolls. I guess it is just something we will have to learn to live with and ignore. Subtle hints have had no effect so far. Possibly they cannot read or write as they only ever seen to copy/paste. Naturally everyone is free to post what they want here, but some things just become irritating after a while.
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Guilty as charged.. Is 24 hours of harsh self-flogging penalty enough? So long as I don't have to switch to decaf.. all should be ok.
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I also like the variety of topics, but if everybody here starts posting YouTube clips of their favorite bands, this board will become a hot mess!
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9.2.83 ~ Boise 7.12.89 ~ Washington DC Smoking Hot !! Dave's Picks Disc 2 is primo stuff , desert island dead for fans of this lineup. Help on the Way Slipknot Franklin's Tower Estimated Prophet Eyes of the World great finish to Franklin's Tower with very smooth turn into Estimated Prophet question about the Jerry vocals on Help On the Way ? was there any microphone equipment issues or issues with the tape , or was it just straight flubbsville ? Dave L. send out a primo "Brokedown Palace" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cQkdaHm2FE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJXi5QhTIHc
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I have no interest in going, but how come nobody here is discussing the recently announced D&C Mexico shows?
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if lack of money was not a factor i would go. In 2018 i saw 10 shows Dead and Co played, payed a total of $40 dollars to get in. One miracle was part of the 10. last summer 2017 i saw at least 7 Dead and Co shows, paid approximately $150 to get in to them all, no miracles. for the asking price to Mexico a couple thousand $$, some could stay 3 months in a foreign country and hit multiple locations compared to less than a week in a similar location i would bet the band throws a bone to the folks that cannot travel international and plays a few shows in Florida again after Mexico dates, late Jan or early Feb 2019
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We have never had to pay extra down under but that may have changed. It used to be anything under $1000 was GST free but as of July 1st this year, GST is required for everything regardless of price. The only stipulation is the company selling must do at least $75000 worth of business in Oz annually, otherwise GST is not required. As a result we can no longer order from amazon with an Aussie address, we must use Amazon Australia, and most eBay transactions that are outside of Oz now have an extra "import charge" estimate based on price. I'd have items delivered to my relatives in the U.S. and then shipped to me, but the price of international shipping is cost prohibitive, and the Aussie dollar is expected to drop against the greenback so it will become even less affordable soon. I'd hate to pay for shipping twice, and with subscription I'd have free shipping to a U.S. address, but then would have 4 shipping charges to Oz. (That would be nearly another subscription for shipping charges.) At any rate I've learned to be patient waiting on my Dead items. My next bout will be when the Pacific box ships. And that was ordered prior to July so am curious if it will be flagged for GST upon entry to the country.
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Import duty, GST, VAT, BTW, whatever, these various taxes on imported products are levied in most countries. What varies is the threshold above which the tax is applied. Daverock stated that recently he hasn't had to pay any such tax. Neither have I, but the reason has nothing to do with customs or tax officials. It has to do with the fact that since Warner have taken over the sales and shipping operation, they have stated a value of $1 on the customs declaration that is obligatory on international shipments. This may seem just fine - nobody has to pay import duties and taxes on Dave's Picks (most overseas customers didn't anyway due to the comparativeley low value of the series, i.e. less than $30). The problem arises with box sets and other large and high-value product. When my copy of Get Shown The Light arrived at customs with a value of $1 stated on the customs declaration, they quite correctly smelled a rat and would not release it until I had sent proof of the cost of the item. They then sent me a tax bill which had to be paid before the order could be delivered. I eventually received my order weeks after it had reached customs. I hope this situation does not repeat itself with the Pacific Northwest box, but I have made copies of the relevant documents (order, PayPal statement etc.) so I am ready if the same does occur. One can fool some of the customs officers some of the time but you cannot fool all of them all of the time. Or something like that.
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Ok, you made your point.. but the rest of us have to suffer through this GIF too. Come on man.. give is a little break??? Please??? Edit it out.. pretty please??. As for Doodies, if I watch that bob saget GIF one more time, I am liable to doodie my pants. Sorry to see you guys have to pay customs tax just to get some great music.. but I would be right there with you if I had to. GD music is like gas to me.. I hate to pay for it, but when I really need to get somewhere.. I regretfully fill up the tank and when winter hits.. I fill up the tank before the first big snow.
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"ERR"tried again "ERR" tried 10/21/83 "ERR" tried again "ERR" Cartman sez "GAHDAHMITT!!" tried Dave's Picks 3 (10/22 and 21/71) works like a charm
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lol appropriate typo in this context irritable bowel, you mean? the pink in the GIF should be enough Pepto Bismol to help you out
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Kyle HarmonTerrapin Moon Shirdeep Same person, 3 different user names. At this point, you aren’t going to convert anybody to Phish. Try for a younger crowd.
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....I was converted in 1994. I don't need daily reminders either. But it doesn't really bother me. I just scroll on by, like a steam locomotive, rolling down the track....Choo Choo
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dead heads that hate phish are starting to go the way of the dinosaur. I won't be having to hear about it for too much longer.
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You'll be hearing it for a long fucking time, son. To even begin to insinuate - if I read you correctly - that Dead fans who aren't into Fish are going the way of the dinosaur any time soon is ridiculously short-sighted. I went to a few shows. Red Rocks. McNichols. They tended to cover the Stones' "Loving Cup" at most of the shows I saw. Trey did wail his ass off. They're very talented. They stepped into the void created by Garcia's death, and gave to many a new meaning in their life. I wasn't one of those. Fare Thee Well was a beautiful moment, but it lacked spark, particularly in the lead guitar department. This has all been rehashed a thousand times. To me, "You Enjoy Myself" and "David Bowie" off the first record are the best things they ever did. They're ok. There is a lot of cultural crossover, particularly with the younger crowd between the bands, but to even consider that their legacy is remotely on the level of the Grateful Dead is ludicrous. Like what you like, but don't get so far out of line that I have to slap you, son.
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.
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Bye Bye content deficient, empty, hate filled, trolling posts?
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and other adolescent humor....Dude, too funny, reminds me of the old standbys in these parts...so without further ado, for Vguy! 1) what do you call a snowboarder who just broke up with his girlfriend? ........HOMELESS! 2) How does a snowboarder introduce himself? ....Sorry Dude! 3) How many ski instructors does it take to screw in a lightbulb? ....3, one to screw in the light, and two cheer “nice turns!” Oh, and before you cupcakes get yer panties all in a bind, I skied for over 30 years, then switched to the other side for like 15, so I can shit talk like Jim Lehey about all that! ; ) Not knowledgeable enough about Phish to have a objective opinion except to say, say what you want about musicianship etc, but the one thing they can’t even begin to come close to is Mr Robert fuggin Hunter bitches! No, STFU, don’t even go there cause there is no there! Great jams, good playing, supposedly good scene, no Hunter! No disrespect, hell try and think of the GOGD without Hunter? No can do mi amigos, so put that shizzle in Jim’s irritable bowl and smoke it!
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