From: Digestifier To: Subject: Dead-Flames Digest #680 Dead-Flames Digest #680, Volume #48 Wed, 26 Oct 05 14:00:01 PDT Contents: Re: cream bt (JC Martin) Re: My 10-22-2005 Steve Kimock experience. (JimK) Re: cheney = traitor ("Ray") Re: RIP Rosa Parks ("Ray") DYLAN TO ENGLISH DICTIONARY ("ARON KAY") Re: "God" is great ("neurodancer") Re: rhino fillmore compilation ("rcb30") Re: moe. mule-- a micro review ("Olompali4") Re: rhino fillmore compilation ("mr rapidan") Re: OK, They've Gone Too Far Now (NDC) ("tim_ratdog") Re: moe. mule-- a micro review (Peter_Wimsey) Re: cream bt ("frank stacey") Re: rhino fillmore compilation (pbuzby2002@yahoo.com) Re: New SKB SBD 10/22/05cm LMA ("Dave Kelly") Re: cheney = traitor ("neurodancer") Re: moe. mule-- a micro review ("Ray") Re: drug tests for jobs (NDC) (Ben) Re: cream bt ("Dave Kelly") Re: rhino fillmore compilation ("mr rapidan") Re: moe. mule-- a micro review ("Andrew Murawa") Re: moe. mule-- a micro review ("neurodancer") ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "mr rapidan" Subject: Re: rhino fillmore compilation Date: 26 Oct 2005 11:38:34 -0700 DB wrote: > mr rapidan wrote: > > I've looked on deaddisc, I've looked at the dead store, I've searched > > the rmgd archives, and I just can't find the show sources for the 3 > > disc rhino compilation. I know I've seen it! Could someone please > > help!? Thanks! > > > > It's in the "pre-sale" section of the GDstore. > > DB Well, I think they removed the darn source info! I do think that this is where I saw it, previously, but I can't find it now. Here's what's there (or at least this is what I found): (so I'm still looking for the proper info!) Track listing Disc One 1 Morning Dew 11:05 (Rose, Dobson) 2 Good Morning Little Schoolgirl 11:00 (Williamson) 3 Doin' That Rag 6:56 (Garcia, Hunter) 4 I'm A King Bee 7:31 (Moore, Arr. By Grateful Dead) 5 Cosmic Charlie 6:02 (Garcia, Hunter) 6 Turn On Your Lovelight 19:09 (Scott, Malone) Disc Two 1 Dupree's Diamond Blues 4:48 (Garcia, Hunter) 2 Mountains Of The Moon 4:52 (Garcia, Hunter) 3 Dark Star > 19:43 (Garcia, Kreutzmann, Lesh, McKernan, Weir, Hart, Hunter) 4 St. Stephen > 7:51 (Garcia, Lesh, Hunter) 5 The Eleven > 15:13 (Lesh, Hunter) 6 Death Don't Have No Mercy 9:58 (Davis) Disc Three 1 That's It For The Other One 23:30 Cryptical Envelopment (Garcia) The Other One (Kreutzmann, Weir) Cryptical Envelopment (Garcia) 2 Alligator > 4:00 (McKernan, Hunter) 3 Drums > 6:52 (Hart, Kreutzmann) 4 Jam > 25:31:00 (Grateful Dead) 5 Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks) > 9:13 (Grateful Dead) 6 Feedback > 7:54 (Grateful Dead) 7 We Bid You Goodnight 2:01 (Trad. Arr. By Grateful Dead) ------------------------------ From: JC Martin Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 18:40:46 GMT Olompali4 wrote: >>Personally, I'd rather listen to nonsense lyrics than hearing a band try >>to write legitimate songs without the talent to do so > > > Complete opposite here. > Anyone can write nonsense. > Too much art is throwaway because few want to try for "legitmate." Phish wrote nonsense lyrics, yet their compositions were sophisticated, hooky and as an improvising unit, they were a cut above the rest in their field. If you can't write good lyrics, please don't try. That doesn't elevate art. And then there's Zappa. Not exactly a world class lyricist. -JC ------------------------------ US News and World Report pretty piss poor in > > terms of accuracy in my book and I see no other source that implies > > Cheney would resign OR be indicted. It ain't gonna happen leftie. You > > wanna lose some money on this or something? As much as I'd love to see Cheney go down I don't think he's going to get indicted here either, though it's not out of the realm of possibility. However I'll be plenty happy if 'just' Rove gets indicted - not too long ago that scenario was also a left wing pipe dream but is now highly plausible. That said, I'm still not convinced that there'll be *any* indictments - I think it's likely, but not a given. > Fitzmas is Friday. Let's just wait and see. It's possible that we won't know even by Friday. If there are indictments, from what I've read they could be handed down under seal and remain that way for some time to come. Ray ------------------------------ From: "Ray" Subject: Re: RIP Rosa Parks Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:18:16 -0700 .. ------------------------------ From: "ARON KAY" Crossposted-To: alt.culture.us.1960s,rec.music.dylan,alt.music.byrds,rec.music.gdead Subject: DYLAN TO ENGLISH DICTIONARY Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 19:20:15 GMT DYLAN TO ENGLISH DICTIONARY BY AJ WEBERMAN The Yippie! Museum Press / 9 Bleecker Street / New York, New York / 10012 yippiemuseumpress@nyc.rr.com announces its 2005 publication list: November 2005: Dylan to English Dictionary by A.J. Weberman (the inventor of Dylanology) ISBN: 1-4196-1338-3 Binding: Trade Paper 560 pages $32.99 December 2005: The Pie And The Mighty by Aron Morton Kay (Yippie! Pie Thrower) THE CORE MEANING OF DYLAN'S POETRY REVEALED FOR THE FIRST TIME Future literary historians will realize two things: That Bob Dylan is the Whitman or Sandberg of his generation and that the relationship between A.J. Weberman and Dylan was similar to that of the relationship between Paul Verlaine and the opium smoking Arthur Rimbaud. Weberman is Bob Dylan's toughest critic (Verlaine shot Rimbaud over an argument about poetry) and is also Dylan's most vocal advocate when it comes to demonstrating the genius of Dylan's poetry. To prove his contention he has written the Bob Dylan To English Dictionary that translates about 800 words from the poetic language Dylan has developed into everyday English. When a translated word appears in the same sentence, verse or paragraph next to a string of already translated words all these translated words make sense within the logic inherent in language forming a coherent thought and parallel the contemporaneous events in Dylan's life at the time the poem was composed. AJ Weberman has unearthed a degree of consistency in Dylan's use of words that can only be intentional and has done what no one has done before - made public the metaphorical and allegorical meaning of Dylan's poetry with a high degree of accuracy. If you don't have a copy of this book you can click http://dylanology.com/sample.pdf for a taste but you got to look at the work in its totality to judge the degree of consistency that has been carefully contrived by Robert Allen Zimmerman, boy genius. AJ has unzipped his poetry just as one would unzip a compressed file, using a certain formula known as the Dylanological Method, which he reformulated while doing a federal prison sentence (his dog bit a mailman) since AJ had "time to think about it for awhile" (Dylan, When The Night Comes Falling From the Sky 1985). This is Weberman's contribution to American Literature, although he will probably be remembered for his having originated garbology, a now widely accepted journalistic technique. "The perfect book for Dylan fanatics." --Paul Krassner, author of One Hand Jerking: Reports From an Investigative Satirist A.J. Weberman is best known for his analysis of Dylan's garbage and for having been beaten up mercilessly by Bob Dylan on Elizabeth Street in Manhattan in the early 1970's. Dylan viewed this incident as the "laughter down on Elizabeth Street / And a lonesome bell tone in that valley of stone / where [he] bathed in a stream of pure heat" (Where Are You Tonight, 1978). A.J. is featured on Joel Gilbert's DVD Bob Dylan World Tours 1966 to 1974, and will appear on Gilbert's next DVD. Chromedreams in the UK released Weberman's legendary telephone conversations with Dylan. Rolling Stone Books will soon publish an interview Weberman did with Dylan. Weberman was a character in Don DeLillo's Underworld, "Detwiler had been a fringe figure in the sixties, a garbage guerilla who stole and analyzed the household trash of a number of famous people. He issued mock-comintern manifestos about the contents, with personal asides, and the underground press was quick to print this stuff. His activities had a crisp climax when he was arrested for snatching the garbage of J. Edgar Hoover from the rear of the Director's house in northwest Washington and this is what people remembered" and he his featured in Mark Jacobson's book, Teenage Hipster in the Modern World. AJ is mentioned in numerous articles and books about Bob Dylan and an independent film company in the UK is currently putting together The Ballad of AJ Weberman. AJ is the author of My Life In Garbology (Stonehill Press, 1980) and Coup D'Etat In America: The CIA and the Assassination of JFK (The Third Press, 1975, Quick Publishing Co 1992). The latter book is in its fourth edition and also available from amazon.com as is The Dylan To English Dictionary. Joan Baez related in NO DIRECTION HOME: "Dylan would always say, 'What do you think of this?' 'I didn't understand the thing at all but I loved it so I said, 'Okay, I'm gonna figure this one out.' So I read it and gave back my interpretation of what it was about and he said, 'That's pretty fuckin' good.' And he said 'Years from now all these people, all these assholes, are going to be writing about all the shit I write...and what it means.'" A Dylan Data Base is available at http://dylanology.com/wrtwrddb.htm The Yippie! Museum, and The Yippie! Museum Press are dedicated to preserving the works and artifacts of the leaders and members of the Youth International Party, a loose-knit organization founded in 1968 by Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Paul Krassner, Stew Alpert and others. Dana Beal, an organizer for Cures-Not-Wars, serves as Curator and the Board Members include: William Prop of WBAI radio, John Sinclair, former Prisoner Of Weed (POW) and founder of the White Panther Party, Stewart Albert, founding member of the Yippies! and Vietnam Day Committee, Paul DeRienzo, radio journalist, Steve Conliff, historian of Native American History and several other surviving political activists. ------------------------------ From: "neurodancer" Subject: Re: "God" is great Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:38:11 -0700 The Lord of Eltingville wrote: > Tim Ujin wrote: > > > > I thoroughly enjoyed the Cream show last night. Clapton sounded > > fabulous, in some ways better than ever. [...] > > For $200+ per ticket, he *should* have sounded great. Hell, for that > price, he should have laid down onstage and let all the male audience > members teabag him.during his solos... So you saw that too? I got in for $40 and am going back tonight. Nice to see Clapton still has some balls left after all these years. ND ------------------------------ From: "rcb30" Subject: Re: rhino fillmore compilation Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:43:50 -0700 IIRC, they never got more specific in the initial writeup than to say that they would avoid using the Live Dead performances, per instructions from the GD department of redundancy department. So I guess you could narrow it down a little bit from that depending on the track(s) in question, but we may have to wait for the booklet to know it all. (Can't imagine they would leave that info out ...) waiting on that but looking forward to DP36, rcb ------------------------------ From: "Olompali4" Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:44:19 -0700 > Phish wrote nonsense lyrics, yet their compositions were sophisticated, hooky Prog pop. I'd rather hear XTC, They Might Be Giants or Todd Rundgren tunes. ------------------------------ From: "mr rapidan" Subject: Re: rhino fillmore compilation Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:50:16 -0700 > IIRC, they never got more specific in the initial writeup than to say > that they would avoid using the Live Dead performances, per > instructions from the GD department of redundancy department. > > So I guess you could narrow it down a little bit from that depending on > the track(s) in question, but we may have to wait for the booklet to > know it all. (Can't imagine they would leave that info out ...) OK, but I *know* I saw it somewhere! As it dawned on me that I wouldn't have the spare $ for the 10 disc set before it was gone, I consoled myself that between my copy of Live/Dead and the 3 disc compilation that I'd sorta, kinda be ok with things. And I know, I know that I saw the source info somewhere. Did deaddisc have it up and then take it down? Was it somebody here? I've been to all the obvious places to look . . . Aaagh! ------------------------------ From: "tim_ratdog" Subject: Re: OK, They've Gone Too Far Now (NDC) Date: 26 Oct 2005 12:50:25 -0700 The Lord of Eltingville wrote: > tim_ratdog wrote: > > > > The Lord of Eltingville wrote: > > > Has anyone else noticed how some of BushCo's most vocal buttmonkeys > > > (Buck, Chunk, Shelby, and even crazy ol' Marky Williams) have grown > > > unusually quiet over the past month or so? > > > > Bad form. This is like saying (while on the road) "gee my car hasn't > > broken down in a while" :-) > > Not really. It's pointing out that people who were fervently defending > something that was blatantly bad have suddenly shut their pieholes now > that the rest of the country is discovering that the "sore losers" just > may have been correct all along. > > http://www.workingforchange.com/comic.cfm?itemid=19757 "Very Bad Idea Accomplished" - heh. But I guess I meant that it has been nice without the extremist posts. In the meantime the wing nut media hasn't quieted down at all has it? > > > I guess it must be pretty embarrassing to be a republican these days... > > > > Only if folks feel like keeping the divide in the country and possibly > > making it worse. I personally don't feel that the Republican voters are > > responsible for the crimes committed by the administration. Rather than > > rub a smelly "I told you so" in anyone's face I think we need to talk > > about dealing with criminal politicians. > > Whoever voted for Bush and Cheney last year certainly deserves some of > the blame for the current state of affairs. It's not like people hadn't > been pointing out the foolish/insane/criminal stuff the current > administration's been doing since day one, but instead of doing a bit of > independent research to find out what might really be happening, the > boneheads I listed above (and others of their ilk) chose to jam their > fingers another knuckle deeper into their earholes while parroting > whatever crap the White House (and their flunkie "news" agencies like > Fox and newsmax) was squeezing out. > > A lot of people *have* been trying to talk about the criminal > politicians since 2000, but there were a large number of people who > refused to even consider the possibility that they voted for the wrong > party (I believe a lot of people voted for the party, not the > candidate). Thankfully, that number's getting smaller as it's becoming > increasingly difficult to justify the arrogance, stupidity, and greed > that have become the Bush administration's hallmark. > > So, given that...a few big, brown, smelly, peanut-filled "I told you > sos" are to be expected. Maybe the residual stink will help remind them > to be a bit smarter when deciding who to vote for in 2008. > Yeah, but I also think it is also hinged on the Dems to get their act together and find someone that appeals to more folks. -tim ------------------------------ From: Peter_Wimsey Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 16:02:34 -0400 Neil X. wrote: > Amazing. I've never seen a .moe show that wasn't, IMO, numbingly bad. > When it comes to jambands, I'm pretty much a bottom feeder, I can find > something of value in most of them. But Rusted Root and .moe, I just > don't get it. > > Different Strokes, > Neil X. > Oh, I like Ruted Root - makes me think of Jefferson Airplane or something. Not that I listen to their albums or follow them around or anything. moe. is variable - big chances for dead-end jams, and adding a "percussionist" didn't help things. At the same time they have their good nights, and have serious potential. If you get a chance to hear a recording of them at the Warfield playing a Dead-tune set with Bob Weir check it out. Better than some of the other post-dead incarnations in terms of handling the vibe. N ------------------------------ From: "frank stacey" Subject: Re: cream bt Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 20:11:51 GMT I hate MSG for concerts since the acoustics are always horrific. I think Cream should have done Carnegie Hall instead. Eric and the boys did OK but did not look too excited. Just went through the motions IMHO. I spent $400 for two tickets since I doubt Cream will do a show in a small club any time soon. BUT, even a lazy ass Eric is still pretty awesome. He woke up for a minute during "Stormy Monday" and I turned to my bored wife and said: "THIS is worth $400....." ------------------------------ From: pbuzby2002@yahoo.com Subject: Re: rhino fillmore compilation Date: 26 Oct 2005 13:16:51 -0700 Havin' a little fun with Deadlists.com... mr rapidan wrote: > Disc One > 1 Morning Dew 11:05 (Rose, Dobson) > 2 Good Morning Little Schoolgirl 11:00 (Williamson) > 3 Doin' That Rag 6:56 (Garcia, Hunter) > 4 I'm A King Bee 7:31 (Moore, Arr. By Grateful Dead) > 5 Cosmic Charlie 6:02 (Garcia, Hunter) > 6 Turn On Your Lovelight 19:09 (Scott, Malone) First four songs match first four on 2/28. That was also the only show with a standalone Lovelight. Cosmic was done on 2/27 and 3/1. > Disc Two > 1 Dupree's Diamond Blues 4:48 (Garcia, Hunter) > 2 Mountains Of The Moon 4:52 (Garcia, Hunter) > 3 Dark Star > 19:43 (Garcia, Kreutzmann, Lesh, McKernan, Weir, Hart, > Hunter) > 4 St. Stephen > 7:51 (Garcia, Lesh, Hunter) > 5 The Eleven > 15:13 (Lesh, Hunter) > 6 Death Don't Have No Mercy 9:58 (Davis) The only show in this run where they did 11->Death Don't was 2/28. They only did Dupree's/Mountains on 2/27 and 3/1, and the Mountains outro from 2/27 is the beginning of Live Dead. > Disc Three > 1 That's It For The Other One 23:30 > Cryptical Envelopment (Garcia) > The Other One (Kreutzmann, Weir) > Cryptical Envelopment (Garcia) > 2 Alligator > 4:00 (McKernan, Hunter) > 3 Drums > 6:52 (Hart, Kreutzmann) > 4 Jam > 25:31:00 (Grateful Dead) > 5 Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks) > 9:13 (Grateful Dead) > 6 Feedback > 7:54 (Grateful Dead) > 7 We Bid You Goodnight 2:01 (Trad. Arr. By Grateful Dead) Timings for Alligator...Goodnight look like 3/2, although if they picked that they would be duplicating the Feedback/Goodnight from Live Dead. It looks like 3/2 was also the only night That's It got up to 23 minutes. Pat Buzby Chicago, IL ------------------------------ From: "Dave Kelly" Subject: Re: New SKB SBD 10/22/05cm LMA Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 20:26:17 GMT The "Merls Boogie" sounds like Kim channelling Dominos era Clapton! Great jams...Yo, this band is KILLIN'! Gotta get my NYE tick dammit! ------------------------------ From: "neurodancer" Subject: Re: cheney = traitor Date: 26 Oct 2005 13:27:31 -0700 Ray wrote: > Everybody's Gonna Be Happy wrote: > > "Ray" wrote: > > > Everybody's Gonna Be Happy wrote: > > >> there is no serious damage done to the CIA by any of this > > > > > > Disgree. If Plame was outed by the government then this has > > > substantial adverse impact on our national security. Former CIA case > > > officer and prosecutor James Marcinkowski explains why: > > > > Just a lot of background noise. > > > > CIA agents are outed in every administration. > > Really. If this is true, which covert CIA agent(s) were outed by the > Clinton and Bush Sr. Administrations? > > > I remember hundreds being > > outed in the past. > > By the US government? Please elaborate. The only instance I know > where 'hundreds' of CIA agents have been outed in the past where when > ex-CIA agent Philip Agee turned traitor in the mid-late 70s - he then > proceeded to out hundreds (thousands?) of CIA agents. This is what > lead to the passage of the Intelligence Identities Protection Act int > he early 80s, which was promoted and lobbied for by then-VP Bush Sr. > > The columnist Jack Anderson outed my father and about 20 other overseas CIA agents in the early 70s. My father had to leave the country he was in and a family friend (station chief in Athens) was assasinated shortly thereafter. No one else (that I know of) was killed but it ain't pretty, regardless about what one thinks about the CIA. ND ------------------------------ From: "Ray" Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: 26 Oct 2005 13:28:50 -0700 Peter_Wimsey wrote: > Neil X. wrote: > > > > Amazing. I've never seen a .moe show that wasn't, IMO, numbingly bad. > > When it comes to jambands, I'm pretty much a bottom feeder, I can find > > something of value in most of them. But Rusted Root and .moe, I just > > don't get it. > > > > Different Strokes, > > Neil X. > > > > Oh, I like Ruted Root - makes me think of Jefferson Airplane or > something. Not that I listen to their albums or follow them around or > anything. With Rusted Root I'm with the thumbs-down crowd. > moe. is variable - big chances for dead-end jams, and adding a > "percussionist" didn't help things. At the same time they have their > good nights, and have serious potential. Pretty-much my thoughts about moe. as well. That and IMO their songwriting is for the most part weak. > If you get a chance to hear a > recording of them at the Warfield playing a Dead-tune set with Bob Weir > check it out. Better than some of the other post-dead incarnations in > terms of handling the vibe. I'm not familiar with Bob sitting in with moe. at the Warfield, but in 9/97 he sat in with them at the Fillmore - he came out at the start of the 2nd set to join them for a very nice Viola, OMSN, Other One > Meat (he left during the OO>Meat segue). That's a very good moe. show overall, including a killer Recreational Chemistry with Henry Kaiser sitting in. Ray ------------------------------ From: Ben Subject: Re: drug tests for jobs (NDC) Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 13:29:08 -0700 On Wed, 26 Oct 2005 11:03:46 -0700, Kelly Humphries wrote: >Also sprach Tom Beck : > >> Ben wrote: >> >> > By the same token, I have ridden in the back of the cab and felt the >> > contempt of the cabbie because he had waited at the airport 3 hours >> > for a fare and I wasn't going more than 10 miles. >> > >> > It's not my fault he waited at the airport for 3 hours - maybe there >> > are too many cabbies to begin with. >> >> No. He chose to play the airport rather >> than answer radio calls (which I always >> preferred). "You makes your choices, you >> takes your chances" was a common saying >> back when I did it. And, no, there are >> not too many cabbies. Try out that saying >> on a cold, blustery Friday night which >> happens to fall on the first day of the >> month. > >Exactly. Cabbies who hang around the airport are hoping for the big >trip to some far-flung suburb, but they know that it doesn't always >work like that. > >Back in the early 90's when I drove a cab (for a total of about six >months), I would sometimes park myself next to the blood bank and get >whatever refrigerated packages were being sent to area hospitals. It >was usually enough to pay the nut and keep my income steady, and >sometimes I'd get a nice trip to Tacoma or Olympia. The real benefit >was that padded mailers filled with blood packs would never argue >about the route I was taking, or pull out a gun instead of money. > >And if by chance a driver got the "beans run," (taking some old lady >and her six bags of groceries about four blocks), the dispatcher would >put that driver back at the top of the list for whatever call came >next when it was done. Just depends on how the individual driver >wants to play it. Can either of you explain it when cabbies ignore radio calls? It's happened numerous times before, but the last time was when it took a couple of hours to get one to go to a hospital for a pickup and drive a decent fare (in terms of distance and thus money) all the way across town? ------------------------------ From: "Dave Kelly" Subject: Re: cream bt Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 20:39:00 GMT 1200 + leechers 1 seed. ------------------------------ From: "mr rapidan" Subject: Re: rhino fillmore compilation Date: 26 Oct 2005 13:40:39 -0700 pbuzby2002@yahoo.com wrote: > Havin' a little fun with Deadlists.com... Thank you, thank you. I really appreciate it! If I figure out where I saw the info previously, I'll definitely post it. ------------------------------ From: "Andrew Murawa" Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 13:41:14 -0700 "Ray" wrote in message news:1130358530.531822.271060@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com... > Peter_Wimsey wrote: >> Neil X. wrote: >> >> >> > Amazing. I've never seen a .moe show that wasn't, IMO, numbingly >> > bad. >> > When it comes to jambands, I'm pretty much a bottom feeder, I can >> > find >> > something of value in most of them. But Rusted Root and .moe, I >> > just >> > don't get it. >> > >> > Different Strokes, >> > Neil X. >> > >> >> Oh, I like Ruted Root - makes me think of Jefferson Airplane or >> something. Not that I listen to their albums or follow them around or >> anything. > > With Rusted Root I'm with the thumbs-down crowd. > >> moe. is variable - big chances for dead-end jams, and adding a >> "percussionist" didn't help things. At the same time they have their >> good nights, and have serious potential. > > Pretty-much my thoughts about moe. as well. That and IMO their > songwriting is for the most part weak. > >> If you get a chance to hear a >> recording of them at the Warfield playing a Dead-tune set with Bob >> Weir >> check it out. Better than some of the other post-dead incarnations in >> terms of handling the vibe. > > I'm not familiar with Bob sitting in with moe. at the Warfield, but in > 9/97 he sat in with them at the Fillmore - he came out at the start of > the 2nd set to join them for a very nice Viola, OMSN, Other One > Meat > (he left during the OO>Meat segue). That's a very good moe. show > overall, including a killer Recreational Chemistry with Henry Kaiser > sitting in. There's also this (http://www.archive.org/audio/etree-details-db.php?id=3798) from 2/22/03 with Weir sitting in for Cassidy, Jack Straw, Playin and Saturday Night... And this (http://www.archive.org/audio/etree-details-db.php?id=2812) from 12/21/02 at Warren Haynes' Christmas Jam with Weir (and Warren and Barraco) sitting in for The Weight and Jack Straw... ------------------------------ From: "neurodancer" Subject: Re: moe. mule-- a micro review Date: 26 Oct 2005 13:53:42 -0700 joker4153@comcast.net wrote: > If his cousin was half as good at ultimate frisbee as Al is at music, > your team kicked some ass! > I'll take a minute to say the whole front line of moe. consists of > excellent musicians: Chuck, Rob and Al are all outstanding--playing, > singing, tunes-writing. > As I said in an earlier post, I've been seeing moe. since 1997 and have > never seen a moe. gig I didn't like...a lot. > > Larry He was pretty damn good and we took a pickup team to #2 in the DC A league (and some other not so distinguished finishes). I was at a moe. show at the 9:30 club in DC and Al dragged him up out of the audience to sing during "Going to Mexico", which I gather was about some adventures they had long ago. This is the cousin Dave of "...me and my cousin Dave went down to Mexico..". He's a FSO in Ghana now. And, for the record, I think moe. is just about the hottest live band out there these days. Flame on. ND ------------------------------ ** FOR YOUR REFERENCE ** The service addresses, to which questions about the list itself and requests to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, are as follows: Internet: dead-flames-request@gdead.berkeley.edu Bitnet: dead-flames-request%gdead.berkeley.edu@ucbcmsa Uucp: ...!{ucbvax,uunet}!gdead.berkeley.edu!dead-flames-request You can send mail to the entire list (and rec.music.gdead) via one of these addresses: Internet: dead-flames@gdead.berkeley.edu Bitnet: dead-flames%gdead.berkeley.edu@ucbcmsa Uucp: ...!{ucbvax,uunet}!gdead.berkeley.edu!dead-flames End of Dead-Flames Digest ****************************** .