Dunno....hrmm..i-am-me wrote:anyone else notice that roi is really turned down in more recent DDTWs? before it was ALL roi...but now i hear dave's strumming more than roi's sax. anyone?
Random DMB Post Thread
- Beauford33
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- Davy28
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At the gorge dave's guitar sounded like it had distortion during DDTW.
Forget about the reasons and the treasons we are seeking
Forget about the notion that our emotions can be swept away, kept at bay
Forget about being guilty, we are innocent instead
For soon we will all find our lives swept away
-DJM
Forget about the notion that our emotions can be swept away, kept at bay
Forget about being guilty, we are innocent instead
For soon we will all find our lives swept away
-DJM
- Elliottman
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wow, heartbeat intro is sweet
-Ezra
http://community.webshots.com/user/sk8rdude12000
the future is no place to place your better days
http://community.webshots.com/user/sk8rdude12000
the future is no place to place your better days
- Nitro1515
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Its around 150 actually when you add the SU songs and the 25 other songs they wrote during the sessions that apparently were never going to hear. And if you want to add the Some Devil songs its at 165 or so.GSRLessard14 wrote:Close to if not 100 now... I think stay or leave was like 80 something...?Dale_Milligan wrote:Anyone know how many songs DMB have written? I was think #41 was sooooooo long ago, yet there 41st song. How many must they have written now?
DMBAlmanac.com wrote:Summer 2005 Shows:
The 2005 Summer Tour marked a mix of the present and the past. The band heavily promoted their new studio release Stand Up and for the first time played all 12 tracks of an album on the road. Dreamgirl, Hunger For the Great Light and Louisiana Bayou enjoyed the heaviest rotation. Later in the tour, they completed the album live by playing intense versions of American Baby intro and Everybody Wake Up. They also added new covers of the Zombies' Time of the Season and the Beatles' Blackbird.
Several songs made triumphant returns, none moreso than #34 which was played in full for the first time in over 12 years. Crowd favorite Say Goodbye, played a handful of times for a few years and absent in 2004, was played more than in any year since 1998. What You Are and You Never Know also returned after a year off, while songs played heavily in the past several years like Fool to Think, I Did It, Grace Is Gone, If I Had It All, Satellite and Stay (Wasting Time) were absent. Other songs notably absent were Sugar Will, Crazy Easy, Joy Ride and Good Good Time; they being written before the tour and played heavily in 2004 but not making the album cut.
After a mostly uneventful 2004 Summer Tour as far as guests go, the band and fans welcomed the return of several guests from past years such as Robert Randolph, Trey Anastasio, Eric Krasno and Victor Wooten. Newcomer Rashawn Ross literally and figuratively blew everyone away whenever he appeared. The band also made their first appearance at Bonnaroo and Warren Haynes joined them on Jimi Thing.
The tour was highlighted and framed by returns to venues which hosted some of their most famous shows of the past. Though technically not part of the tour, they had their first album release celebration in 7 years at New York City's Roseland Ballroom, debuting 4 of the new Stand Up tunes. The tour ended with a four night return run at Red Rocks, the fourth show being a benefit for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. The band showed at these shows that they know how to put on special shows that pleased both the casual and the finnicky hardcore crowds. In filling out the four night run they played rarer songs such as Typical Situation, Drive In Drive Out and Blackbird while debuting other crowd favorites like Pig, Halloween and Recently. Butterfly made its first thorough appearance in a full band setting, and the tour climaxed with guest-laden versions of Exodus and Louisiana Bayou.
The band acknowledged that this might have been their best year and tour yet, proven by the news that they will return in the Winter to the studio with Stand Up producer Mark Batson to record another album.
Andrew
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- shess22
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Does that rule out a winter tour?[/b]GSRLessard14 wrote:DMBAlmanac.com wrote:Summer 2005 Shows:
The 2005 Summer Tour marked a mix of the present and the past. The band heavily promoted their new studio release Stand Up and for the first time played all 12 tracks of an album on the road. Dreamgirl, Hunger For the Great Light and Louisiana Bayou enjoyed the heaviest rotation. Later in the tour, they completed the album live by playing intense versions of American Baby intro and Everybody Wake Up. They also added new covers of the Zombies' Time of the Season and the Beatles' Blackbird.
Several songs made triumphant returns, none moreso than #34 which was played in full for the first time in over 12 years. Crowd favorite Say Goodbye, played a handful of times for a few years and absent in 2004, was played more than in any year since 1998. What You Are and You Never Know also returned after a year off, while songs played heavily in the past several years like Fool to Think, I Did It, Grace Is Gone, If I Had It All, Satellite and Stay (Wasting Time) were absent. Other songs notably absent were Sugar Will, Crazy Easy, Joy Ride and Good Good Time; they being written before the tour and played heavily in 2004 but not making the album cut.
After a mostly uneventful 2004 Summer Tour as far as guests go, the band and fans welcomed the return of several guests from past years such as Robert Randolph, Trey Anastasio, Eric Krasno and Victor Wooten. Newcomer Rashawn Ross literally and figuratively blew everyone away whenever he appeared. The band also made their first appearance at Bonnaroo and Warren Haynes joined them on Jimi Thing.
The tour was highlighted and framed by returns to venues which hosted some of their most famous shows of the past. Though technically not part of the tour, they had their first album release celebration in 7 years at New York City's Roseland Ballroom, debuting 4 of the new Stand Up tunes. The tour ended with a four night return run at Red Rocks, the fourth show being a benefit for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. The band showed at these shows that they know how to put on special shows that pleased both the casual and the finnicky hardcore crowds. In filling out the four night run they played rarer songs such as Typical Situation, Drive In Drive Out and Blackbird while debuting other crowd favorites like Pig, Halloween and Recently. Butterfly made its first thorough appearance in a full band setting, and the tour climaxed with guest-laden versions of Exodus and Louisiana Bayou.
The band acknowledged that this might have been their best year and tour yet, proven by the news that they will return in the Winter to the studio with Stand Up producer Mark Batson to record another album.
- Nitro1515
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No. A winter tour usually ends in December so that still gives them 3 months of winter in the studio.shess22 wrote:Does that rule out a winter tour?[/b]GSRLessard14 wrote:DMBAlmanac.com wrote:Summer 2005 Shows:
The 2005 Summer Tour marked a mix of the present and the past. The band heavily promoted their new studio release Stand Up and for the first time played all 12 tracks of an album on the road. Dreamgirl, Hunger For the Great Light and Louisiana Bayou enjoyed the heaviest rotation. Later in the tour, they completed the album live by playing intense versions of American Baby intro and Everybody Wake Up. They also added new covers of the Zombies' Time of the Season and the Beatles' Blackbird.
Several songs made triumphant returns, none moreso than #34 which was played in full for the first time in over 12 years. Crowd favorite Say Goodbye, played a handful of times for a few years and absent in 2004, was played more than in any year since 1998. What You Are and You Never Know also returned after a year off, while songs played heavily in the past several years like Fool to Think, I Did It, Grace Is Gone, If I Had It All, Satellite and Stay (Wasting Time) were absent. Other songs notably absent were Sugar Will, Crazy Easy, Joy Ride and Good Good Time; they being written before the tour and played heavily in 2004 but not making the album cut.
After a mostly uneventful 2004 Summer Tour as far as guests go, the band and fans welcomed the return of several guests from past years such as Robert Randolph, Trey Anastasio, Eric Krasno and Victor Wooten. Newcomer Rashawn Ross literally and figuratively blew everyone away whenever he appeared. The band also made their first appearance at Bonnaroo and Warren Haynes joined them on Jimi Thing.
The tour was highlighted and framed by returns to venues which hosted some of their most famous shows of the past. Though technically not part of the tour, they had their first album release celebration in 7 years at New York City's Roseland Ballroom, debuting 4 of the new Stand Up tunes. The tour ended with a four night return run at Red Rocks, the fourth show being a benefit for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. The band showed at these shows that they know how to put on special shows that pleased both the casual and the finnicky hardcore crowds. In filling out the four night run they played rarer songs such as Typical Situation, Drive In Drive Out and Blackbird while debuting other crowd favorites like Pig, Halloween and Recently. Butterfly made its first thorough appearance in a full band setting, and the tour climaxed with guest-laden versions of Exodus and Louisiana Bayou.
The band acknowledged that this might have been their best year and tour yet, proven by the news that they will return in the Winter to the studio with Stand Up producer Mark Batson to record another album.
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