DiscoverDeadhead Cannabis ShowThe Dead play the Melk weg with surprises. MJ users who caught COVID had better outcomes!
The Dead play the Melk weg with surprises.  MJ users who caught COVID had better outcomes!

The Dead play the Melk weg with surprises. MJ users who caught COVID had better outcomes!

Update: 2023-10-16
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"Middle-Aged and Older Patients Report Improved Health with Medical Marijuana"

Larry Mishkin discusses a recent study from the University of Florida which shows that medical marijuana use can lead to lower pain levels and reduced dependency on opioids and psychiatric prescriptions among middle-aged and older chronic pain patients. Participants in the study reported improved physical and mental functioning, better sleep quality, and reduced anxiety. The research adds to the growing body of evidence supporting the therapeutic benefits of medical cannabis for pain management.

.Produced by PodConx  

Deadhead Cannabis Show - https://podconx.com/podcasts/deadhead-cannabis-show

Larry Mishkin - https://podconx.com/guests/larry-mishkin

Rob Hunt - https://podconx.com/guests/rob-hunt

Jay Blakesberg - https://podconx.com/guests/jay-blakesberg

Sound Designed by Jamie Humiston - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamie-humiston-91718b1b3/

Recorded on Squadcast

 

 

Grateful Dead, October 16, 1989, Melk Weg Club, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Grateful Dead Live at Club Melk Weg on 1981-10-16 : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive

 

Second of two night stand at this famous hash bar that only held about 500 people in the room in which the Dead performed.  Very cool and famous club in Amsterdam, one of the best known hash bars.  Went there one time in 1988 with good buddies Mikey and H.  A highlight of our trip.

 

Another good buddy, Freddie Burp, was spending the school year abroad in the fall of 1981 and was one of the lucky ones who were present for this show.  He’s a tough guy to get a hold of, but maybe some day I can get him on the show to talk about this concert.

 

 

INTRO:                  The Race Is On

                                Track No. 8

                                1:102:24

 

                Show had an acoustic first set and an electric second set.  Many of the songs in the acoustic set we featured a few weeks ago from the September, 1980 show at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco as part of the recordings for the Dead’s Reckoning album.  So I went with this one which has always been one of my favorites ever since my good buddy Mikey (who took me to three of my first four shows) used to play it for me as we drove through the northwoods of Wisconsin on nights out from the summer camp where we were spending the summer in 1981.

 

"The Race Is On" is a song written by Don Rollins[1] (not to be confused with the Don Rollins who co-wrote "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" for Alan Jackson and Jimmy Buffett) and made a hit on the country music charts by George Jones and on the pop and easy listening charts by the unrelated Jack Jones. George's version was the first single released from his 1965 album of the same name. Released as a single in September 1964, it peaked at number three on the BillboardHot Country Singles chart and at number 96 on the BillboardHot 100 in January 1965. Jack's version topped Billboard'sEasy Listening chart and reached number 15 on the Hot 100 the same year. The two recordings combined to reach number 12 on the Cashbox charts, which combined all covers of the same song in one listing and thus gave George Jones his only top-40 hit. The song uses thoroughbred horse racing as the metaphor for the singer's romantic relationships.

 

                Rockabilly artist Dave Edmunds, in collaboration with the Stray Cats, whose debut album Edmunds had recently produced, recorded a version for his 1981 album, Twangin.... Stray Cats drummer Slim Jim Phantom recalled Edmunds' affection for the song when he was courting the band to produce their debut album: "We met with Edmunds at his house. He had a little pub in his basement. He had a finished basement, outside of London. Edmunds had a jukebox, a little jukebox. He had 'The Race is On' and 'Rockabilly Boogie' by Johnny Burnette. He had those records in his jukebox. We all looked at each other and said, 'This is it.'"[3] Phantom also recalled that the song took "one or two takes" in the studio.[4]

Thank you.

 

                Covered by:        Jack Jones

                                                Loretta Lynn

                                                Alvin and the Chipmunks for their 1965 album, “Chipmunks a Go Go”

                                                Waylon Jennings

                                                The Georgia Satellites from 1965 debut album, “Keep The Faith”

                                                Elvis Costello

                                                And others

 

                                                Dead played it 60times in concert

                                                First:  December 31, 1969 at Boston Tea Party in Boston

                                                Last:  May 20, 1995 at Sam Boyd Silver Bowl, Las Vegas

 

 

SHOW #1:                           Ripple

                                                Track No. 9

                                                1:503:06

 

                                We prominently featured this song form the Warfield show and talked about how it was last played ever on Sept. 3, 1988 at the Cap Center.  What makes this version we just listened to so special is that this was the last Ripple played by the Dead until the Cap Center show, a seven year gap, and that that was it, no more Ripple.  So this is the last accoustic Ripple ever played since the Cap Center was electric.  Maybe the most famous Dead tune ever, from American Beauty, Hunter’s lyrics and Jerry’s music mesh together in a way to make this tune not just one of the best Dead tunes ever, but one of the best tunes ever, IMHO!

 

 

SHOW #2:                           Hully Gully

                                                Track No. 12

                                                0:151:38

 

                                "(Baby) Hully Gully" is a song written by Fred Sledge Smith and Cliff Goldsmith and recorded by The Olympics, an American doo-wop group formed in 1957.  Released in 1959 on the album, “Doin’ the Hully Gully”, it peaked at number 72 on the Billboard Hot 100 in February 1960[2] and sparked the Hully Gully dance craze.

 

                        Covered by:     Buddy Guy

                                                Chubby Checkers

                                                The Ventures

                                                The Beach Boys

                                                Many others

                                                Peter Pan Peanut Butter add jingle in the 1980’s

 

                                                The Dead’s version of this song from this show is the only time they played it in concert.

 

 

SHOW #3:                   Gloria

                                    Track No. 15

                

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The Dead play the Melk weg with surprises.  MJ users who caught COVID had better outcomes!

The Dead play the Melk weg with surprises. MJ users who caught COVID had better outcomes!

PodConx