• 1,210 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    Golden era Grateful Dead in the most golden city in the Golden State? Yes, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 46 features the complete unreleased show from the Hollywood Palladium, Los Angeles, 9/9/72. Loosen that tie, this ain't a red carpet rodeo - it's the after party that legends are made of. Consistently excellent from start to finish, this West Coast groove showcases tracks that would soon debut on EUROPE '72, solo material from both Jerry and Bob, a riveting iteration of "China>Rider," a couple of Chuck Berry doozies, a bonkers 35-plus "Other One" that hits all the psychedelic highs, and wraps up with a "Casey Jones"/"Sugar Magnolia"/"One More Saturday Night" finale that'll have you wondering why you wore a tie in the first place. Hooray for Hollywood, indeed.
     
    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Owsley Stanley and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Oh, and it ships next week so you'll wanna grab a copy while you can.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • 1stshow70878
    Joined:
    Where's Dave?

    So typically dysfunctional that we get a "stealth" announcement.
    Fits this year's theme of screw ups.
    But hey, that's us. One big dysfunctional family. Love it!
    Cheers
    It's on the Hoffman thread too.

  • onthebussince77
    Joined:
    DaP 47 = "Listen to The River" discs 21 to 23

    Thanks ADEDHED68 for the heads-up on DaP 47! If you have any doubts go to your subscription confirmation email, click on the order number, and then enter the pertinent info.

    12/9/79 St. Louis:
    SET 1: Alabama Getaway > The Promised Land; Brown Eyed Women; Cassidy; Row Jimmy; New Minglewood Blues; Candyman; Lazy Lightning > Supplication; Deal
    SET 2: Shakedown Street > Samson & Delilah; High Time > Easy To Love You; Terrapin Station > Lost Sailor > Saint Of Circumstance > Jam > Drums > Space > Black Peter > I Need A Miracle > Bertha > Good Lovin'
    ENCORE: Don't Ease Me In

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    MDJim pole guy reference

    You are one funny dude

  • MDJim
    Joined:
    RIP... Man

    Anchor Steam and Sam Cutler.. man. at 5:20, beer o'clock.. I will be sure to pour my first two sips to the curb. Like others, Anchor Steam was one of my favorites also. Thick and chewy satisfaction, especially around the holidays. As for Sam Cutler, a classic character and a rock and roll icon.

    I googled and it looks like Fritz Maytag is still alive at 85, which coincidentally is the year I am seeing a lot of love for further down in the thread. I can't believe it's gone and I have to believe someone will revive Anchor Steam.

    My JimInMD account doesn't seem to be logging in correctly so I had to resurrect MDJim. It's still me, I have no idea why it's flaking out on me.

    Weird.. but as they say, when the going gets weird... the walls spiral and melt away and you find yourself once again without clothes and purched on top of the telephone pole in the town park with a nasty case of sunburn.

    I really like 1985, warts and all and also caught one of these rare and elusive She Belongs to Me. A highlight for sure.

  • adedhed68
    Joined:
    Dave’s 47 will be…..

    12/9/79 Kiel Auditorium St. Louis, MO

  • bigbrownie
    Joined:
    Anchor Steam and 1985

    Growing up on the East coast as a beer loving teen in the Seventies, beers like Anchor Steam, Olympia, and Coors (must be kept refrigerated) gained mythical status. Just not available. Had my first Anchor Steam in SF with my old man in 1976 down at the wharf, some crab legs, chowder, you know the drill. Those were the days.
    Saw only one show in '85: Manor Downs 8/31. It doesn't get much love on these threads, but boy I'll tell you, as a Texan, it was a gol dern good ol' time. I still remember Jerry's guitar sounding crystal clear like his rig had been super upgraded. Let it Grow, Terrapin, Estimated and ...She Belongs to Me!!!, were the highlights as we kicked up the dust like a bunch of stampeding cattle during that 100 degree late afternoon.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    That’ll get ya goin for the show…

    Prepping for the final run…

    Nice post on Anchor Crow. I misspoke, about first “craft beer”, ment modern area, of course there were hundreds of small local breweries BITD, same in Bu faf. I was referring to modern era, and yeah, back east Sierra Nevada Pale Ales were our go to “micro brew” before that really caught on back there. Hell St Pauli, Beck, and Heineken were exotic back then! Remember, a lot of things that are current in Cali sometimes take years to cross America lol.
    Bet you’d dig the Anchor Brewing Story book, good sheet Mon!

    85: if yer gonna go…go BIG!
    Summer 85, best of tour, a little Greek, Blossom, Toga, Hershey, both Merriweather, and Ventura! Boo yah!

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    I like your idea, Gary

    I even have the title

    Summer Love in the Spring, Fall, and Winter

    Hire me, Dave!

  • Crow Told Me
    Joined:
    Anchor's Away?

    That really is some sad news. Anchor's Liberty Ale was always a favorite, as was their porter. They weren't technically the first craft beer company: they were actually the last surviving local brewery. Once upon a time there were hundreds of local companies, often providing a specifically local style preferred by local drinkers. But after WWII, the brewing industry consolidated in a massive way, so much so that at one point (the mid-70s, I think) there were less than a hundred brewing companies in the whole fucking country. (There's now something like 10,000.)

    Anchor somehow survived that era, partly because it was owned by a guy named Fritz Maytag, whose family made a fortune selling appliances, so he could keep the brewery going just because he liked the beer. Their signature product was Anchor Steam, and they were the only ones making "steam beer", a style specific to the Bay Area and which evidently had a loyal following. Steam beer was so named because brewers in the Bay Area would cool the hot wort in long shallow trays that produced lots of steam in cool bay air. This was cheaper than using various refrigeration methods used elsewhere, but it also took longer and exposed the raw beer to lots of microbes that contributed a distinctive funk to the flavor. As is often true of many things--music included--that small imperfection actually made it more perfect.

    So Anchor did not start the craft brewing movement, but Fritz Maytag was a mentor to Ken Grossman, who started Sierra Nevada, the company that arguably started it all. He gave him access to equipment and ingredients that he otherwise couldn't have gotten. At that time, brewing was so centralized/industrialized, that it was impossible to buy malt in a quantity small enough to make, say, 100 barrels of beer. You had to buy enough to make thousands of barrels, which Ken could never have done at that time. There's a hilarious story about how Ken once bought a pick up truck bed-sized load of malt from Fritz, not realizing it would be way too heavy for his suspension, and yet somehow manage to coax the pickup all the way back up to Chico via the back roads.

    Anyway ... I'll raise a glass to Fritz and to Anchor when happy hour comes today. And would you look at that? It's Beer O'clock already.

    I was as surprised as you all there was no announcement about 47. I'm thinking it almost has to be an '80s show, given that we've just had a couple '70s, a couple '90s, and gotten our '60s fix recently. Maybe they'll finally release one of the Berkeley Greeks we've been begging for? A guy can dream.

  • Gary Farseer
    Joined:
    Wonder

    Can they find an 1985 4 concert box with the best show from each season of the year?

    Will pull the MSG box again in the not too distant future...

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

3 years 1 month

Golden era Grateful Dead in the most golden city in the Golden State? Yes, DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 46 features the complete unreleased show from the Hollywood Palladium, Los Angeles, 9/9/72. Loosen that tie, this ain't a red carpet rodeo - it's the after party that legends are made of. Consistently excellent from start to finish, this West Coast groove showcases tracks that would soon debut on EUROPE '72, solo material from both Jerry and Bob, a riveting iteration of "China>Rider," a couple of Chuck Berry doozies, a bonkers 35-plus "Other One" that hits all the psychedelic highs, and wraps up with a "Casey Jones"/"Sugar Magnolia"/"One More Saturday Night" finale that'll have you wondering why you wore a tie in the first place. Hooray for Hollywood, indeed.
 
Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, this release was recorded by Owsley Stanley and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Oh, and it ships next week so you'll wanna grab a copy while you can.

user picture

Member for

11 years 7 months
Permalink

got to the store at 6,,,, store opened at 7. Line around the building,,,, odd for this place. Get in line and ask some guy why all the people,,,, taylor swift dropped some album today! Most were in line for that! So guy said he was second in line and he got there 9 PM the night before!

Got what I wanted,,,, 5/7/77 boston garden, JGB - how sweet it is and miles davis' on the corner.

Now I need to find a copy of 5/9/77, Buffalo.

At the risk (risque) of deletion, may I humbly suggest checking out the original cover art for Mom's Apple Pie. You young folk would not know it, its surely an age thing, being a 1972 release, so to speak, Ohio band. The cover soon had a censored second version with humor. Hope we are all over 15 here, if not entirely grown up.

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months
Permalink

The subscription price has remained the same and the way to go.

user picture

Member for

2 years 6 months
Permalink

37 years ago I was up in Berkeley to see the Good ole Grateful Dead kick off the show with Box of Rain followed by Visions of Johanna, what a cool start to a show!

That looks okay, to me. It wouldn't entice me to buy it, and wouldn't have at the time - but it seems inoffensive enough. I've never heard of this band before. Maybe I should cehck them out.
One I have always disliked intensely is the cover to Silverhead's "16 and Savaged." from about 1973. No one else seems to think there's anything wrong with it, and it adorns all the reissues - but to me it suggests the worst.

I've been listening to whatever 1973 albums I have around the house over the last month or so. And some are much better than I remember -Houses of the Holy for example - and some are much worse - Quadrophenia for example. Some of those lyrics wouldn't be considered acceptable today. I'm surprised they ever were. Horrible.

One really good one is "Innervisions" by Stevie Wonder. And I have just played the first cd of Dave 16 - 3/28/73. Great country rock, full of energy and joie de vivre. One of the best covers, too.

user picture

Member for

3 years 9 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

Butthole Surfers locust abortion technician
My Bloody Valentine loveless
Mothers of Invention we're only in it for the money
Moody Blues any of the first 6 albums
Beatles sargeant pepper
Beatles magical mystery tour

creepy af

Silverhead cover...truly unfortunate. Ew.

Blind Faith's cover...blech. truly unfortunate, too.

I love Motorhead, but could do without the cover to Sacrifice.

I recall seeing the cover to Warrant's Cherry Pie album back in the day. Bruh...

Millie Jackson's back to the sh*t cover....noooope. (saw it in a list of worst album covers back in the past)

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

Wireless Access point…?

Heeyy, where’d you guys find that sweet 16 picture of Ma?

Inversions is Da Shit!
DaP 16 is too, perhaps my fav?

Playoff hockey is Da Udder Shit!

I don’t think these covers cause feelings as mixed as Blind Faith…
EDIT: check out Tge 10 most controversial album covers. Most are what evs, but there’s a few…
Type O is, ahem, well….but Virgin Killers is just wrong!
Maybe bearded skeletons ain’t so bad lol

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months
Permalink

The title of recorder player Svetlana Gruebbersolvik's album "My lips are for blowing".

Didn't anyone think it might be inappropriate?

user picture

Member for

3 years 9 months

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

Acronym for a recent swell contribution to pop culture:

Song title of Wet Ass Pussy

I am not making this up

user picture

Member for

3 years 9 months

In reply to by simonrob

Permalink

They knew EXACTLY what they were doing.

That scorpions cover...ick. Never liked the band, anyway.

What a world.

THANK GOD FOR THE GRATEFUL DEAD.

Yes indeed, Thank goodness for the Grateful Dead!! Had a lot of windshield time lately, was a pleasure, mostly, to dial in channel 23 GD jukebox and let the tunes fall where they may, listen to Big Steve a bit. As a college radio station DJ back in the early 70s, album cover art was a thing, some promos were blank, album covers were big enough to allow artistic endeavor, there was testing of "limits", Tipper Gore stuff, Sticky Fingers, Over-nite Sensation etc. The cover of Blind Faith never bothered, it's art, provocative maybe, perhaps surrealism. Now the lyrics to Mexicali Blues, Bob has surely been taken to task by a few for that. So my question is, is Jack Straw a cowboy song?

user picture

Member for

5 years 2 months
Permalink

My wife gifted me with Dead and Company tickets for Citi Field in June. I've never seen them mainly due to tickets being crazy cash anymore! So, I've been getting excited as of late, mainly to seeing Mickey and Billy together on drums only to just discover Billy won't be doing the tour. The message said his health was ok, but something about creative difference maybe??? Oh well, I'll make the best of it

user picture

Member for

10 years 4 months
Permalink

After seeing availability stretch longer and longer with these, decided to take it easy and just head out when I felt like it. Luckily, I'm in Boston, so several options. Chose a shop in Natick this time, and ended up getting the last copy they had, though they told me they could order more if there was a demand. They has it priced reasonably at $125. Newbury charged $155 last year, so was definitely using them as a last resort, and didn't need them. The cover and back seem even better than other two triumvirate shows of ear,y May. But then my Cornell is the second pressing, which was made more muted. Wonder why the Jerry Band and Jerry Garcia vinyl boxes are even less expensive? The JGB Hampton set was there and was 90 bucks, also 5 LPs. Also curious at the production run on this being 11,000, but I saw one marketing blurb that started out saying 9,000 then finished the blurb by saying "limited to 12,000". Just found it interesting, wonder if they were debating what number to go with and had copy written for different ideas? Will have to wait for another time to listen to it. But nice to have the set now, plus Dave's 1. Now hoping this Fall's RSD release is 3/2/69 to complete THAT set.

user picture

Member for

3 years 7 months
Permalink

Scored a copy of Captain Beefheart's I'm Gonna Play What I Wanna Play in the RSD vinyl edition, which was the only thing I was really interested in this year. No muss, no fuss, in and outta there in like 10 minutes. The secret, for me, is going to this punk rock record store in the shitty part of town where nobody is going camp out overnight or even line up an hour early, and none of the clientele is much interested in the Dead, the ABB, jazz, Captain Beefheart or any of the other stuff I'm usually looking for. I can show up at noon and have my pick.

The also had a copy of the GD Boston '77 show which I was tempted to grab, but I decided to stick with my rule about "no double dipping," since I have that show in the Get Shown the Light box. There were also some jazz titles I was very tempted by: Eric Dolphy, Bill Evans, a Chet Baker I cam thisclose to grabbing, but I passed. Vinyl is so freaking expensive these days.

You were afraid you'd be the devil's red wife
But it's all right, God dug your dance
And would have you young and in his harem
Dress you the way he wants cause he never had a doll
'Cause everybody made him a boy
And God didn't think to ask his preference
You can bring your dress and your favorite dog
And your husband's cane, and your old spotted hog
'Cause in this lifetime you got my human gets me blue

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months

In reply to by Crow Told Me

Permalink

....first thing I noticed? Flower sellers everywhere. T-minus three hours til 🐟🐠.
And yes. Vinyl is expensive.
Knights were up 4-1 and now OT?? WTF?!
Bummer about Kreutzmann.
Edit. Vegas pulled it out. Let's do this hockey thing.

Just looked at the setlist so far, and wow. Phish phans are very happy in Hollywood right now. They played a second set for a first set. Here's a fun game, I'll try to transpose the setlist into a Dead setlist:
Ghost> David Bowie, Esther> Harry Hood> Meat> Split Open & Melt, Leaves> Squirming Coil
Would become
Playing in the Band> Help> Slipknot!> Franklin's, Crazy Fingers> Eyes of the World ('74 style)> Hey Pocky Way (except an original)> Let It Grow, late era ballad> Brokedown Palace with a piano solo to close the set

That's an approximation of what he saw tonight. Meat was a hard one to choose, as it's a funky song that is kind of obscure, but also not obscure to Phish phans, if that makes sense. Not frequently played, but always welcome, which I imagine was similar to the Meters classic.

....Phish fucks. This was my 50th Phish show since 1994, and immediately jumped to into my top five. Heater after heater. It was like they fired up the DeLorean and went back to 1998. Outstanding flow, intense face melting jams and the lighting rig just gets better and better. Mike blew his bass up during First Tube and had to call for backup. I almost feel sorry for tomorrow's show having to follow this.
SET 2: Chalk Dust Torture (23 min!) > Twist > 2001 > Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley > Back on the Train, A Life Beyond The Dream, First Tube

ENCORE: Run Like an Antelope!!

This show is what fans call "special". All but two songs were type 1.0, or pre-2000.

The Hollywood Bowl is special too. It almost got destroyed.

I highly recommend everyone here listens to the Chalkdust > Twist if nothing else. Outstanding stuff.
I can't sleep.

user picture

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

I’m going to have to set my satellite radio to the Phish station (29 - I think), and find out what the phuss is about. Sounds like an epic show, VGuy.

(Leafs win in OT. Quietly proud.)

user picture

Member for

11 years 7 months

In reply to by That Mike

Permalink

No need to be quiet. That was a big-time victory.

The Leafs showed a lot of fortitude. As I said last week, maybe what they needed was a good ass kicking in game one. I don’t want to get overly excited, but the Leafs of old would never have won that game. I continue to see similarities to the 2004 Red Sox. Auston Matthews, getting into a scrap reminds me of Jason Varitek defending his pitcher against Rodriguez and the brawl that ensued. I remain cautiously optimistic.

user picture

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

Jack - I really like the analogy to the 2004 Red Sox, you’ve really nailed it. An absolute thrill ride last night. Tampa has championship pedigree, so I’m not getting ahead of myself, by any means. But…

Sports and music provide real in the moment thrills (see VGuy’s report on last night’s show), and if the two are intertwined - magic!

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months

In reply to by proudfoot

Permalink

....last year when I went to TBB at Red Rocks, Subarus dominated the Denver streets.
LA? This is Tesla country. I just find that interesting.
Beautiful weather today. Getting ready to walk to Amoeba Records and kill an hour or so. RIP my credit card??
Edit. While the show last night was indeed off the charts, leaving to walk back to my hotel, I was reminded of the dark side of the scene. A quarter mile stretch of nothing but hissing nitrous tanks. Sad really. Those days are behind me and couldn't believe so many people sucking on balloons while standing on pavement. Bad idea. I should know. My dumb ass cracked the back of my skull doing that in the lot at the Irvine '88 Dead shows. Swore off the stuff after that.
Fingers crossed for a Slave To The Traffic Light and a Lizards tonight.

The thing my security personnel daughter complained about when Phish came to town

May your setlist wishes come true, Vguy

user picture

Member for

7 years 3 months
Permalink

Love the '72 Palladium release. So many classic shows there... Keith and the X-pensive Winos and tons more.

It snows in Denver, in fact it did yesterday and will again later this week. Subarus get around in that stuff (unless there's a native Californian or Texan behind the wheel). Ouch!

Go Avs!

\m/

user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months
Permalink

Yes they are. 40 years in and that band can some how still do amazing and new things while still keeping it familiar. I caught the Set 2 opener last night - great stuff. I am still buzzing from the Berkeley show on 4/17. A second set with 4 songs highlighted by a Tweezer that clocks in at the 43 minute mark only to go into a 19 minute Simple. Now just because a song is long does not make good, but Phish can do a lot in a 43 minute or 19 minute space for that matter. The Rock and Roll to close that 2nd set was high energy too. They seem to be at the top of their game or close to it. I got Phish coming to my hometown of the Burgh for 2 nights this summer which I am going to both shows.

Plus Dead and CO will be coming by as well, which I am going to see simply because it is my home town. I think that band has been playing about 2 years or so too long. I appreciate the effort though and I don't think their playing is terrible. Yet I feel like they got too refined when compared to the earlier efforts. I feel like any semblance of an X-factor in their shows is gone these days. Just me feelings on it - things may differ with others I 'm sure. Oddly Dead & Co will be sans Billy this entire tour due to what has been labeled as "creative differences". Seems awfully fishy to me.

I am also making the trek to Blossom to see The Tedeschi Trucks Band. I think they are top notch. If anyone has not heard their recent shows, they have been playing some great music. This summer is looking to be a great one for shows for me.

Last 5 just because:
Pink Floyd 3/13/72
Led Zeppelin 5/21/75
Pink Floyd 4/29/70
Led Zeppelin 9/28/71
Phish 7/29/03

....but No Quarter is the exception. What an awesome couple of shows. Thank you guys.
Was in a higher up section tonight. More space and met a lot of incredible people. The air was heavy with mind-altering vibrations. Just the way I like it.
Oh. Got my Slave To The Traffic Light. See the city, see the zoo.

I was there for the Clash/English Beat too....my buddy and I were first in line for entrance and we made a bee line for dead center up against the barricade....during the show a bunch of surf Nazis barrelled their way through the crowd shoving and pushing people out of the way so they could get upfront...needless to say they had a little trouble trying to shove me and my pal from our spot...insults were traded (this while "London Calling" was blaring) and my pal dropped one of them which got the bouncers between the stage front and barricade involved...we told them that the guy slowly getting up off ground had talked a buncha racist crap (which he had) and that we were just defending ourselves...these guys were all Black and big of course like offensive linemen...they reached over the barricade and grabbed the offender and tossed him out of the building...they looked at his buddies and they all laughed and said no problem here ...it took all of three minutes or so...a couple of weeks or so earlier I had been at the Greek in Berkeley for GD so I had some refreshments left over for the Clash show ...

....time to check out my Amoeba Records haul. Gave myself a hundred dollar limit. Before I knew it I had seven records in hand. Narrowed it down to Yo La Tengo's I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One, The Animals Retrospective and King Gizzard's Ice, Death, Planets, Lungs, Mushrooms and Lava.
The packaging is especially nice on the KG one.
VGK on soon.

user picture

Member for

9 years 7 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

Permalink

You gotta Be-Leaf!

user picture

Member for

1 year 10 months
Permalink

Looks like this one is going to be later than usual. The release date should read..."when we get around to it..." : /

user picture

Member for

9 years 9 months

In reply to by Oroborous

Permalink

According to my blues approved calendar, today would have been Albert King's 100th birthday. "Born Under A Bad Sign" surely ranks as one of the best albums of the 60's. And while I never much cared for the much lauded "Live Wire-Blues Power" album , he made many more live albums after that one that are fizzing with energy.

user picture

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

Trying to listen and learn more about Phish, a band I’m a “bit” out of the loop on. Today, they were playing stuff from their Saturday show in Hollyrock - “Harry Hood” - and pretty interesting stuff. This calls for a deeper dive. Is their recent Gorge ‘98 a two thumbs up recommendation from those that are Phish Phriendly? I see it or on sale for a decent price, for two complete shows/5 discs.

Oro - Nice to see the team spirit!

winning last night

I didn't watch the game...my son and I finished season 4 of Better Call Saul (a very high-quality show. Not cheerful by any means, but extremely well done.)

but the K won.

back to Colorado...

These playoffs will drag on for weeks, brah

user picture

Member for

11 years 7 months
Permalink

Probably my favorite drama series of all time. I enjoyed it far more than BB. The writing and cinematography are outstanding.

Enjoy the last two seasons.

user picture

Member for

9 years 8 months
Permalink

Destroyed by the Belgian wine police.
For having the statement on the can,
The Champagne of Beers.
Duh, champagne doesn't come in a can!
Cheers
There is some good beer in Belgium I would wager.

product sku
081227834593
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/en/grateful-dead/special-collections/daves-picks/daves-picks-vol.-46-hollywood-palladium-los-angeles-ca-9972/081227834593.html