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Shug

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Posts posted by Shug

  1. that is an awesome first set. i haven't seen that dvd yet. i love watching garcia, phil and bob dick around between songs while brent just sits back and gets set up at the piano only to have to quickly head over to the organ b/c the boys changed their minds. also, it's always been so funny to me how much bob fucks around with his equipment and it never ever sounds any different! love 'em.

     

    There's some good in between song interaction like that captured in this video. At one point, Garcia does a little Stan Laurel top-of-his-head scratch and it cracks Brent up.

  2. Took advantage of the family being out of the house yesterday afternoon and put in the DVD Truckin' Up to Buffalo 7-4-89. I'm not as big a fan of 1989 Dead as some are, but this one took me by surprise. I had it CRANKED on the home theater and man did it ever sound good! A really strong first set, especially the Cold Rain and Snow. Its so great to see Garcia smiling and getting into it, he was clearly loving this show! His high harmony vocals on When I Paint My Masterpiece were fantastic, just sounding so great against Weir's lead vocals. I haven't got all the way thru the second set, but the first set was almost all winners on song selection, IMO, and very well played.

     

    Bertha

    Greatest Story

    Cold Rain and Snow

    Walkin' Blues

    Row Jimmy

    When I Paint My Masterpiece

    Stagger Lee

    Looks Like Rain

    Deal

     

    This has got to be one of the better shows of 1989. Really good audio recording, too. Highly recommended if you haven't seen it ever or if its been awhile.

  3. I haven't noticed the sound quality issues, but I have the recently released DVD version. I'd say this is definitely in my top ten of all time great live rock DVDs. For me the '72 tour was the Stones at their absolute peak as a live rock band. Its probably the best evidence that exists (along with the audio of Get Yer Ya Yas Out) that for a period the Stones had a valid claim to the title The World's Greatest Rock n Roll Band. I watch this one over and over and over and I never get tired of it.

  4. Dang! If we could've gotten the time off work, LD and I probably would've joined you at this show, Donna. I'm glad you got to go. I'm mildly freaking out to not have any Wilco or My Morning Jacket shows that I can attend anywhere near on the horizon! I love those all-rockers encores, that one looks pretty good. A Monday would've put it over the top for me...

  5. and here's to hoping Adam can un-douchebag himself someday.

     

    You nailed what ruins the Counting Crows for me. What a complainer. I love a wallowing, self-indulgent sad song as much as anybody, but Duritz takes it waaaay past just the song in his stage banter and on-line arguments with fans that he often gets into. If he'd shut the hell up on stage and just sing the songs, they'd be a lot better. That may sound harsh, but its frickin' true. Dave Immergluck is the musical hero of the band, and I love his playing, but even he's been an arrogant prick when I've met him. Sometimes its better to not know too much about the personalities and personal lives of musicians in the bands I like.

     

    I like alot of their songs and I think Hard Candy is one of their better albums (Goodnight LA, Up All Night, Miami, Holiday In Spain, Richard Manuel Is Dead are highlights, but its pretty solid all the way through with good songwriting and arrangements, IMO). I know they recorded about 30 songs when they were making Hard Candy, many of them covers. I always wished they'd release some of these covers, so I'm glad its finally happening.

  6. although i've been off the jamband train for quite a while, to say that Phish doesn't have a background/influence in traditional american music is just ignorance. They have moonlighted as a jazz band mulitple times, and have played plenty of straight bluegrass. They're a jack of all trades band that could really do just about anything they want (minus sing really well).

     

    You are right, I didn't know about Phish playing straight jazz and bluegrass, I've only heard them do their goofy stuff and a few choice covers (I dig their cover of Lovin' Cup). They do have pretty good chops technically, so its not surprising that they are capable of playing lots of styles, but they still fall short in the songwriting dept, IMO and I still think the Allmans and The Dead tower above them.

  7. I'm with ya, Analogman. The Dead and The Allmans were not jam bands, Phish and the Spin Doctors and Widespread Panic are/were. The Dead and The Allmans are in another league of greatness in the spectrum of American roots-based rock music. Jam bands noodle without sufficient grounding and background/influence in traditional American musical forms, and with far weaker songwriting, IMO.

  8. I suggest Eleanor start with Ashes of American Flags DVD. IMO, its the most accessible and convincing recordings of this band for people who think they don't like Wilco. If anyone can give that DVD their full attention and still walk away saying they just don't get it, I'd give up trying. For me, Wilco live is where they shine. Sounds like she knows that but still doesn't get it. I'd encourage her to just be OK with not liking Wilco, if that's the case.

  9. Steve Earle's Goodbye (also recorded by Emmylou Harris and separately by Chrissie Hynde) - I'm sure somewhere in there I made you cry, but I can't remember if I said "goodbye"

     

    Love Hurts - Everlys, Gram and Emmylou, Keef and Nora Jones, lots of good versions, what a great great song

     

    I know he can be a pathetic idiot and makes it so easy to dislike him AND some of the lyrics in this song exemplify these qualities, but Come Pick Me Up by Ryan Adams is still a song I love to hear.

     

    I could go on and on. Ditto on Bonnie Raitt's I Can't Make You Love Me and The Band It Makes No Difference and Hot Burrito.

     

    A Song For You - Leon Russell "when my life is over, remember when we were together, we were alone and I was singing this song for you"

     

    A Song For You - Gram Parsons "I loved you every day and now I´m leaving And I can see the sorrow in your eyes I hope you know a lot more than you´re believing Just so the sun don´t hurt you when you cry"

     

    Dark End of The Street - Dan Penn, many versions

     

    Never Again, Withered and Died, The End Of The Rainbow - Richard and Linda Thompson

  10. yeah, I don't buy this premise that being prohibited from using technology during a show keeps people from being involved in the show and I, too, think just the opposite. Sounds like the guy has a huge vested interest in promoting more and more technology usage in everyday life. I'm not anti-technology by any means, but I think people using cameras and phones and all that during a show keeps them a little bit out of the experience and takes away from the overall atmosphere created by the energy of people all in the same room at the same time focused on the same thing, which should be the music, imo.

  11. I was so thrilled for You Never Know! Seemed like they played much more of a straight-up guitar-oriented rock show and that the rocking out started a lot earlier in the show than typical lately.

    I was happy to hear Side With The Seeds, The Late Greats and Hate It Here. I Got You was pounding! Ashes would've floored me. But add in Kidsmoke (although I'd have lost it if they'd played the hard, funky jamming version), Reservations and Can't Stand It and you've got a hell of a setlist. I had so much fun at this show, what an amazing theater! Thanks to all the good people I met for the fun times and treating me so well, Happy Birthday, kidsmoke! I'm glad it was a special night for you. Can't wait to do it all again soon! Santa Barbara...?

  12. The Mother Hips have had a thriving fan-run message board, The Grotto, for over 15 years, but in the past couple years, the Facebook addictions of many of the consistent contributors, even in the band, has really drained the life out of The Grotto. People just post on Facebook and they don't post that much on the Grotto anymore and its a real shame to me. I'm not a fan of Facebook and I'd hate to see the fan energy spread too thinly over too many sites. I understand some people like Facebook and want to see everything they like on there, but I'm not in favor of it for the reason stated above. Don't really want to throw cold water on yer idea BACarver, but I gotta be honest, I hope Wilco fans just stay here.

  13. At Tempe, my section (10 rows back from stage on the far right (Pat's side), everyone immediately stood when they took the stage, then immediatley sat down for One Sunday Morning and then stood again for Art of Almost and stayed standing the entire rest of the show. I thought it was great.

     

    Third night of LA was much more of a sitting crowd, with just one or two folks braving the desire to stand and dance and that lasted about the first half or 2/3rds of the show. As they started rocking out, more people stood and it stayed that way through the end. I'd prefer to stand all night, but I was okay with how it went.

     

    Its nice to know Jeff prefers audiences who stand, it feels, to me, like the audience is more engaged and participating when they do.

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