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To: Paladin2
Bill Graham booked Led Zeppelin at both the Fillmore West and East. Perhaps Bill Graham booked every significant band of that era and heard them all.

They did not fit their music to an established category such as pop rock, blues, folk rock, or country & western. Individual tunes within their repertoire could be identified under one of these stylistic labels, but overall their music drew on all of these genres and, more frequently, melded several of them. Bill Graham said of the Grateful Dead, "They're not the best at what they do, they're the only ones that do what they do."[82] Often (both in performance and on recording) the Dead left room for exploratory, spacey soundscapes.

Their live shows, fed by an improvisational approach to music, were different from most touring bands. While rock and roll bands often rehearse a standard set, played with minor variations, the Grateful Dead did not prepare in this way. Garcia stated in a 1966 interview, "We don't make up our sets beforehand. We'd rather work off the tops of our heads than off a piece of paper."[83] They maintained this approach throughout their career. For each performance, the band drew material from an active list of a hundred or so songs.[83]

100 posted on 09/19/2019 6:10:24 PM PDT by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began)
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To: goldbux

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243 posted on 09/20/2019 11:31:03 AM PDT by goldbux (No sufficiently rich interpreted language can represent its own semantics. — Alfred Tarski, 1936)
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