New Riders Of The Purple Sage
Vinyl Records and Rare LPs:
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Best Of The New Riders Of The Purple Sage
Used - Vinyl - PC 34367
1976 Compilation. Appears Glossy, Unplayed.
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Brujo
New - Vinyl - PC 33145
Sealed, Rare 1974 Original.
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Feelin' All Right
New - Vinyl - SP 4818
Sealed 1980 Original, Saw-Cut.
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Gypsy Cowboy
Used - Vinyl - KC 31930
1972 Original, 1C/1E Stampers. Appears Unplayed.
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Home, Home On The Road
New - Vinyl - PC 32870
Sealed 1974 Original Produced By Jerry Garcia.
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Lyceum ‘72 (Drop-ship)
New - Vinyl - OVLP-499
Sealed 2023 3LP RSD release.
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New Riders
New - Vinyl - 2196
Sealed 1976 Original.
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New Riders Of The Purple Sage
Used - Vinyl - 64657
1971 UK Orange Label Original With Embossed Cover.
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New Riders Of The Purple Sage
Used - Vinyl - C 30888
1971 Original In Textured, Embossed Cover With Red Demonstration Stamp On Back Cover. Jerry Garcia, Spencer Dryden, Mickey Hart And Commander Cody All Make An Appearance.
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Oh, What A Mighty Time
Used - Vinyl - PC 33688
1975 White Label Promo With Timing Strip On Front Jacket. Cut Corner. Appears Unplayed. Features Jerry Garcia On Several Tracks.
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Powerglide
New - Vinyl - KC 31284
Sealed 1972 Original (KC Prefix) With Large Custom Sticker/Insert And Promo Sticker. Their Definitive Second Album. Crisp Corners, No Cut-Out Holes. “The Group's Second Album Is Pretty Much Definitive. Joe Maphis' "Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud, Loud Music)" Is A Great Opener, A Honky Tonk-Style Number Featuring David Nelson's Lead Vocals And Nicky Hopkins' Piano Sharing The Spotlight With Nelson's And John Dawson's Axes. The Guitars On Dawson's "Rainbow" Are Nearly Pretty Enough To Be A Flying Burrito Brothers Or Poco Number. Most Of What Follows Is As Good Or Better, Especially Dave Torbert's "California Day" And "Contract," And Dawson's "Sweet Lovin' One." The One Letdown Is Their Cover Of "Hello Mary Lou," A Flat, Dullish Rendition That Could Be Any Bad Country-Rock Bar Band, And Which Isn't Going To Make Anyone Forget The Numerous Versions Before And Since — They Do Somewhat Better With Johnny Otis' "Willie And The Hand Jive." Powerglide Is A Fun Record And Offers One Virtue That The Dead, In Particular, Sometimes Forgot — They Know How To End A Song. Jerry Garcia Is Present On Banjo ("Sweet Lovin' One," "Duncan And Brady") And Piano ("Lochinvar") — Bill Kreutzmann And Nicky Hopkins Also Turn Up — But The Best Lead Guitar Work Here Comes Courtesy Of David Nelson And Buddy Cage, Who Plays The Pedal Steel.” – Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Powerslide
Used - Vinyl - KC 31284
Beautiful 1972 Original With Custom Insert. “The Group's Second Album Is Pretty Much Definitive. Joe Maphis' "Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud, Loud Music)" Is A Great Opener, A Honky Tonk-Style Number Featuring David Nelson's Lead Vocals And Nicky Hopkins' Piano Sharing The Spotlight With Nelson's And John Dawson's Axes. The Guitars On Dawson's "Rainbow" Are Nearly Pretty Enough To Be A Flying Burrito Brothers Or Poco Number. Most Of What Follows Is As Good Or Better, Especially Dave Torbert's "California Day" And "Contract," And Dawson's "Sweet Lovin' One." The One Letdown Is Their Cover Of "Hello Mary Lou," A Flat, Dullish Rendition That Could Be Any Bad Country-Rock Bar Band, And Which Isn't Going To Make Anyone Forget The Numerous Versions Before And Since — They Do Somewhat Better With Johnny Otis' "Willie And The Hand Jive." Powerglide Is A Fun Record And Offers One Virtue That The Dead, In Particular, Sometimes Forgot — They Know How To End A Song. Jerry Garcia Is Present On Banjo ("Sweet Lovin' One," "Duncan And Brady") And Piano ("Lochinvar") — Bill Kreutzmann And Nicky Hopkins Also Turn Up — But The Best Lead Guitar Work Here Comes Courtesy Of David Nelson And Buddy Cage, Who Plays The Pedal Steel.” – Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Powerslide
Used - Vinyl - KC 31284
1972 US original Santa Maria press with Columbia company inner sleeve. Hole punch. Top-loading style sleeve with artwork running vertically. “The Group's Second Album Is Pretty Much Definitive. Joe Maphis' "Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud, Loud Music)" Is A Great Opener, A Honky Tonk-Style Number Featuring David Nelson's Lead Vocals And Nicky Hopkins' Piano Sharing The Spotlight With Nelson's And John Dawson's Axes. The Guitars On Dawson's "Rainbow" Are Nearly Pretty Enough To Be A Flying Burrito Brothers Or Poco Number. Most Of What Follows Is As Good Or Better, Especially Dave Torbert's "California Day" And "Contract," And Dawson's "Sweet Lovin' One." The One Letdown Is Their Cover Of "Hello Mary Lou," A Flat, Dullish Rendition That Could Be Any Bad Country-Rock Bar Band, And Which Isn't Going To Make Anyone Forget The Numerous Versions Before And Since — They Do Somewhat Better With Johnny Otis' "Willie And The Hand Jive." Powerglide Is A Fun Record And Offers One Virtue That The Dead, In Particular, Sometimes Forgot — They Know How To End A Song. Jerry Garcia Is Present On Banjo ("Sweet Lovin' One," "Duncan And Brady") And Piano ("Lochinvar") — Bill Kreutzmann And Nicky Hopkins Also Turn Up — But The Best Lead Guitar Work Here Comes Courtesy Of David Nelson And Buddy Cage, Who Plays The Pedal Steel.” All Music Guide – Bruce Eder
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The Adventures Of Panama Red
Used - Vinyl - KC 32450
1973 US original Santa Maria gatefold pressing with original inner sleeve. "One has to wonder if 1973 was the year of drug references in songs...never mind. In any case, The Adventures of Panama Red established the New Riders of the Purple Sage as something more than a Jerry Garcia side project -- which they never were. John Dawson, Spencer Dryden, David Nelson, and Dave Torbert along with pedal steel ace Buddy Cage -- replacing Garcia -- and producer and multi-instrumentalist Norbert Putnam crafted a smoking, hard country-rock and bluegrass hippie record. Also along for the ride were guest vocalists Donna Jean Godchaux from the Grateful Dead and no less than Buffy Sainte-Marie and the Memphis Horns. Trad country it ain't, and dated it is; but nonetheless, Panama Red has considerable charm as a relic from the era. Nelson, Torbert, and Dawson were decent songwriters and enthusiastic performers, and Columbia knew a good thing when they saw one and got behind the album -- which was a minor hit. The title track and "Lonesome L.A. Cowboy," with Cage's whinnying steel, carry a lot of the band's weight and separate them from virtually every other West Coast outfit trying the same thing. The Flying Burrito Brothers were more country and Commander Cody's Lost Planet Airmen swung harder, but one thing the New Riders were more of than anyone was stoned, and these songs with titles like "Important Exportin Man" and "Kick in the Head" and lyrics like "I've been smokin' dope, snortin' coke/Tryin' to write a song/Forgettin' everything I know until the next line comes along" only underline this. The freakiest thing is that the record segues together so beautifully and the songs are so tight with nothing extra between, it feels like it's a lot longer than the mere 29 minutes it is. The listener feels satisfied that after 11 songs it's all been said and done in a delightful way. This endures despite its obvious lyrical stupidity. Musically it can do a lot to teach modern-day alt-country cookie-cutters something about knowing the rules before trying to break them." All Music Guide – Thom Jurek
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Vintage NRPS
New - Vinyl - RRLP 2025
Sealed 1971 Live Recording, Released For The First Time In 1986. Features Jerry Garcia.
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Vintage NRPS
Used - Vinyl - RRLP 2025
Rare 1986 Original. Recorded In 1971 At The Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, New York And Featuring Jerry Garcia On Pedal Steel Guitar. In The Early 1970's NRPS Opened For The Grateful Dead On Concert Tours.
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