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    heatherlew
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    RFK Stadium 1989 Box

    LESS THAN 5000 LEFT

    The Grateful Dead battled the elements in July 1989, enduring drenching rains and stifling humidity during back-to-back shows at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in the nation’s capital. In spite of the bleak weather, the band thrilled the massive crowds both nights with triumphant performances that rank among the very best of a busy year that included 74 shows and the release of the group’s final studio album, BUILT TO LAST.

    ROBERT F. KENNEDY STADIUM, WASHINGTON, D.C., JULY 12 & 13, 1989 includes two previously unreleased concerts taken from the band’s master 24-track analog recordings, which have been mixed by Jeffrey Norman at TRI Studios and mastered in HDCD by David Glasser. The collection’s colorful slip case features original artwork by Justin Helton and a perfect-bound book with in-depth liner notes written by Dean Budnick, editor-in-chief of Relix magazine. The set will also be available as a digital download in Apple Lossless and FLAC 192/24.

    When Jerry Garcia, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh, Brent Mydland, and Bob Weir rolled into D.C. in July 1989 for the Dead’s two-night stand at RFK, the band hit the stage running with a stellar rendition of “Touch Of Grey,” the group’s biggest hit from its only Top 10 album In The Dark, which was released in 1987. The following night, the band returned to its double-platinum commercial breakthrough when it opened the show with a fiery version of “Hell In A Bucket.”

    “RFK Stadium '89 fell right in the middle of one of the best tours of the last 15 years of Grateful Dead performances, with these shows being the sixth and seventh of an 11-show tour. This tour is widely considered the start of a nine month period of sustained excellence, which ran from Summer '89 through Spring '90. The RFK shows are as good as any of the more famous shows from this period, including July 4 in Buffalo, July 7 in Philadelphia, and the Alpine run,” says David Lemieux, Grateful Dead archivist and the set’s producer. “When Bob Weir has asked me to provide copies of Grateful Dead songs to give to his bandmates to learn and rehearse, he almost always requests Summer '89, and I've often drawn upon the RFK shows for this purpose. It's really that good!”

    Both shows feature standout moments, but the July 12 show is notable for a few reasons. Perhaps the biggest is that the first set featured at least one song sung by each of the band’s four lead singers – Garcia, Weir, Lesh and Mydland – something that rarely happened. Another surprise came when the band opened the second set with “Sugaree,” a song that almost always appeared during the first set.

    Pianist Bruce Hornsby — who briefly joined the band between 1990 and 1992 — is featured on both shows. He played accordion during “Sugaree” and “Man Smart (Woman Smarter),” with a touch of keyboard-tinkling, on July 12, and then played more accordion the following night for “Tennessee Jed” and “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again.”

    For fans of Mydland’s tenure with the Dead – which began in 1979 and ended in 1990 with the keyboardist’s tragic death – these stellar shows capture that incarnation in peak form. Among the long list of highlights are performances of live staples such as “Eyes Of The World,” “Wharf Rat” and “I Need A Miracle,” along with rarities like “To Lay Me Down,” which was played only a few times in 1989. The July 13 show also features the band road-testing “I Will Take You Home,” a track Mydland wrote with Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow that would appear later that fall on Built To Last.

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  • possiblyMaybeAnother
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    I was born in the 70s, raised on 80s bands
    I'm not ashamed to admit I love the 80s. Def Leppard pioneered the hard rock ballad. The Cars were doing cool stuff in the studio. Van Halen shredded. Judas Priest was doing its thing. The Police were groundbreaking. Rush consistently evolved their sound, and while some dislike their synth stuff, I really like what they did in the 80s. While I personally don't like Bon Jovi, I have to admit that he and his band came out with exceptional pop songs. Every few years I rediscover how great Yes 90125 is. Prince came out as a major force to be reckoned with (dare I say genius?). Billy Joel put out some nice tunes ("Pressure" is a personal favorite of mine, perfectly capturing the paranoid cold war zeitgeist). Men At Work. J. Geils Band. Golden Earring. The Eurythmics. Duran Duran. Michael Jackson. Every era had its crap. There have always been popular, dismal tunes topping the charts. Someone mentioned "We Built this City." Holy hell what an awful song. "Against All Odds" was like listening to a person's soul leaving the body and embodies everything I dislike about 80s music. Sure, Brent's synth sounds and the MIDI stuff sound dated today. But I won't pigeonhole the amazing musicianship and creativity that the Dead and many others brought to the table simply because they embraced new technology. It's part of growth. I listened to this set last night again and I still dig it. I'm happy I bought it. I hope more from this era gets released, because I will buy each and every show.
  • Guss West
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    80s music to grow up to
    1-99. Metallica. 100. Van Halen 101. Everything else.
  • direwulf
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    Dennis
    I tend to agree with Dennis on this front. Most people are definitely of the mindset, "if I don't know about it and if I didn't hear about it when it came out...well, then there's no good music from (fill in the blank with country, year, decade, etc.)." Deadheads are some of the most polarizing people and it's odd considering how many colors most of them have seen in their lives. There was A LOT of great music from bands that started in the 80's or produced music through the 80's. If you don't know any of it, start looking it's gonna be a long winter in the Northern Hemisphere. I'm not making a list because I've done the work by listening, now it's your turn to put in some work outside the comfort zone.
  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    Listening
    This is an interesting topic and I thoroughly enjoy all of the myriad takes on how people listen and to what. Over the past year or so we were gifted a Sonos system, and I've got to say, it has thoroughly grown on me. We have four of these speakers all over the house and once you pick a song/station it is played all through the system (it also has configurations so one speaker can play one thing, and the others can play something else...should there happen to be a conflict of [GASP] a household member preferring something other than GD). It's like satellite radio (I think, I've never actually used any such services) in that you can tap into pretty much any existing radio station, and then they have dedicated stations for whatever genre you want to hear. Of course I have several GD-related stations in the queue, a few of which run full shows back to back, a few of which do a sort of mix of GD and related bands (this is what the GD Pandora station does). In all honesty, I've actually picked up/heard some new stuff (to my ears anyway) doing it this way, songs and bands I otherwise never would have heard of. So in that respect, it definitely has opened up my eyes/ears and set some expectations that new stuff is always just around the corner, as Dennis alluded to. Sixtus
  • Dennis
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    80's Music,,,,, just music
    One of the first signs of old age is saying, "they don't make music like they used to". There is always good music happening. I think I'll disagree with Jim on the virtues of sat radio. They have serious fm at the store with a million channels, pick any channel, ANY CHANNEL, and just like the old AM days, the old FM days you will hear the same songs every day. I've tried the free versions of Pandora(?), choices that seems to work off the logic if you like this song, you should like this one. I start with Frank Sinatra and soon I'm listening to Rammstein???? Even if they don't make good music anymore, there is more music already available then one could ever listen to in one lifetime. Zamfir (Master of the Pan Flute) comes to mind. My limited experience has shown most people stop listening to music right after high school or college. When I go over most people houses I find they have just enough cd's to fill the piece of furniture they bought to hold cd's AND they stopped buying them after school. Most just seem to pick a radio station that plays songs they know, listen to talk radio (excuse me while I rinse the puke out of my mouth) or NPR.............sorry nodded off there for a minute. So don't think "good" music has disappeared, it's all around us. Oh well back to my Al Jolson listening,,, I'm Alabamy bound, There'll be no heebie-jeebies hangin' 'round Just gave the meanest man on earth, all I'm worth, just to put my tootsies in an upper berth
  • unkle sam
    Joined:
    80's music
    lots of good finds here, I forgot about the Police, saw them three times from 79 to 83, always a great show, I remember the ghost in the machine tour and I told one of my buddies it was as good as a dead show, he said "don't be sack-religious" Which made me laugh. Also caught Steve Ray in those days, great show but it was after he got busted and had to give us all a talk about the "evils of drugs", I can only imagine how good he was before, never forget the first time I heard his rendition of Voodoo Child, blew me away. Caught U2 also, but that was in 79. In my mind (don't go there) I didn't come out of the seventies until about 83, and I didn't like what I saw so I retreated back into my cave, so it all kinda runs together. I've heard of tumble weeds, but I never tried it, any good? Is it anything like crack weeds? (which are really hard to remove :). Hopefully the west will get some shows next year. Unless they don't tour due to slow ticket sales. Back to D & Co, was any of those shows sold out? I see on ticketmaster still plenty of tickets for most of the shows. Most of the upper level is unsold for the Orlando show. Any one got any thoughts on why this is? Besides the cost of tickets and it being a school nite?
  • icecrmcnkd
    Joined:
    80’s FM radio
    I was saved by an album-oriented rock (AOR) radio station that played 60/70’s bands during the 80’s. In the 90’s this was referred to as ‘Classic Rock’. Also, in the early years of MTV, before music labels prioritized making videos, MTV filled its time with videos from the 60/70’s, a lot of it live concert footage. I was a young teenager at the time and quickly learned that live recordings were better than studio, and that there was a lot of good music from the 60/70’s era. Thus, I was able to ignore the 80’s music scene. Fortunately, many of those older bands had a resurgence in the late-80’s/early-90’s and went on tour, so I got to see many of my favorites live.
  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    80's
    The biggest problem with the 80's was that radio sucked and corporatism / MTV had pretty much taken over. It isn't that the music sucked it was more that we were silently steered towards what to listen to by fat cats / industry heads and they steered us towards pre-packed but profitable, shrink wrapped pre-packaged crap. The distribution network sucked. It continued into the 90's, if you didn't like the new Indie stations and the new wave/indie bands that permeated through any of the non-conventional radio stations.. the music scene seemed bleak. For a couple years there I felt like a dinosaur.. reverting back to my 'oldies' (mostly GD). It wasn't until Sat Radio came out that I started to see there was a ton of new/great music out there, you just had to poke around. Now we have sat radio, Pandora, Spotify.. and the evolution of digitization. Not that I ever participated.. but how many flash/hard drives have floated around packed with more music than one might ever listen to. There was indeed good music to be had, but if you weren't plugged in, it was easy to miss. You guys keep this up and you might offend one of the more polite and beloved posters here, 80sfan. :D
  • daverock
    Joined:
    More 80s
    When I think about it, there were quite a few good bands and musicians around in the 1980s. I thought all Stevie Ray Vaughan's albums were amazing too. There was also a great "space rock" band that grew out of the free festival movement in Britain called Ozric Tentacles. What was missing, for me, was the culture that started in the 1960s, and gradually disappeared during the 1970s. In the early and mid 70s, I used to feel a part of something bigger than myself, following bands. My appearance and attitude-and habits all altered. It didn't last...I suppose during the punk era things changed. Maybe it was just the fact that I was in my teens during the 70s, so it was all new to me. I can remember thinking The Dead had split up during the 1980s. They did the two European tours in 1981, and then there was literally nothing about them in the music press for years. This seemed symptomatic of the times to me-everything I thought The Dead had stood for-including they themselves-seemed to have vanished. I only found out they were still going in 1987-and that was when I started collecting tapes.
  • daverock
    Joined:
    More 80s
    When I think about it, there were quite a few good bands and musicians around in the 1980s. I thought all Stevie Ray Vaughan's albums were amazing too. There was also a great "space rock" band that grew out of the free festival movement in Britain called Ozric Tentacles. What was missing, for me, was the culture that started in the 1960s, and gradually disappeared during the 1970s. In the early and mid 70s, I used to feel a part of something bigger than myself, following bands. My appearance and attitude-and habits all altered. It didn't last...I suppose during the punk era things changed. Maybe it was just the fact that I was in my teens during the 70s, so it was all new to me. I can remember thinking The Dead had split up during the 1980s. They did the two European tours in 1981, and then there was literally nothing about them in the music press for years. This seemed symptomatic of the times to me-everything I thought The Dead had stood for-including they themselves-seemed to have vanished. I only found out they were still going in 1987-and that was when I started collecting tapes.
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RFK Stadium 1989 Box

LESS THAN 5000 LEFT

The Grateful Dead battled the elements in July 1989, enduring drenching rains and stifling humidity during back-to-back shows at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in the nation’s capital. In spite of the bleak weather, the band thrilled the massive crowds both nights with triumphant performances that rank among the very best of a busy year that included 74 shows and the release of the group’s final studio album, BUILT TO LAST.

ROBERT F. KENNEDY STADIUM, WASHINGTON, D.C., JULY 12 & 13, 1989 includes two previously unreleased concerts taken from the band’s master 24-track analog recordings, which have been mixed by Jeffrey Norman at TRI Studios and mastered in HDCD by David Glasser. The collection’s colorful slip case features original artwork by Justin Helton and a perfect-bound book with in-depth liner notes written by Dean Budnick, editor-in-chief of Relix magazine. The set will also be available as a digital download in Apple Lossless and FLAC 192/24.

When Jerry Garcia, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh, Brent Mydland, and Bob Weir rolled into D.C. in July 1989 for the Dead’s two-night stand at RFK, the band hit the stage running with a stellar rendition of “Touch Of Grey,” the group’s biggest hit from its only Top 10 album In The Dark, which was released in 1987. The following night, the band returned to its double-platinum commercial breakthrough when it opened the show with a fiery version of “Hell In A Bucket.”

“RFK Stadium '89 fell right in the middle of one of the best tours of the last 15 years of Grateful Dead performances, with these shows being the sixth and seventh of an 11-show tour. This tour is widely considered the start of a nine month period of sustained excellence, which ran from Summer '89 through Spring '90. The RFK shows are as good as any of the more famous shows from this period, including July 4 in Buffalo, July 7 in Philadelphia, and the Alpine run,” says David Lemieux, Grateful Dead archivist and the set’s producer. “When Bob Weir has asked me to provide copies of Grateful Dead songs to give to his bandmates to learn and rehearse, he almost always requests Summer '89, and I've often drawn upon the RFK shows for this purpose. It's really that good!”

Both shows feature standout moments, but the July 12 show is notable for a few reasons. Perhaps the biggest is that the first set featured at least one song sung by each of the band’s four lead singers – Garcia, Weir, Lesh and Mydland – something that rarely happened. Another surprise came when the band opened the second set with “Sugaree,” a song that almost always appeared during the first set.

Pianist Bruce Hornsby — who briefly joined the band between 1990 and 1992 — is featured on both shows. He played accordion during “Sugaree” and “Man Smart (Woman Smarter),” with a touch of keyboard-tinkling, on July 12, and then played more accordion the following night for “Tennessee Jed” and “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again.”

For fans of Mydland’s tenure with the Dead – which began in 1979 and ended in 1990 with the keyboardist’s tragic death – these stellar shows capture that incarnation in peak form. Among the long list of highlights are performances of live staples such as “Eyes Of The World,” “Wharf Rat” and “I Need A Miracle,” along with rarities like “To Lay Me Down,” which was played only a few times in 1989. The July 13 show also features the band road-testing “I Will Take You Home,” a track Mydland wrote with Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow that would appear later that fall on Built To Last.

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Is Rhino going to get this release right? Bc we know creating CDs now counts as rocket science. I can't wait to see how they screw this one up.
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Not a mention of limited editions or other qualifiers this seems to be a real release for the masses. They should put in the DVDs too, you know they have them... Where's the Dave's seaside chat?
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I'm trying to order this from my phone but I can't as the "first name" field won't stay on the screen and I can't access it. I pull it down and it skips right back up.
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Did they forget about the 70's...geez, if they'd only release more shows from the 70's.
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17 years 4 months
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Love those multi-track mixes so keep 'em coming! Though with this release and the previous July 4 Buffalo release I'm starting to doubt I'll ever get my Alpine '89 Box:(
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I caught these.. I think I have just one listen since, years ago.. so this is a pleasant surprise. yea.. where are the DVDs? You're not holding out on us, are you Dave? :D
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Yes, where are the DVD's? Add the DVD's and charge more. Everyone will be happier!
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Also for Garcia's bday today, NPR's The Takeaway used all Dead for its interstitial music. I know I caught Peggy-O and Don't Ease Me In. Not sure what else they included.
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Awesome! "Why not 2 box releases per year, Spring and Fall?" I recently commented. And here we are. Balances out the '70's-centric Dave's picks series, so releasing stuff from all eras. If we plodded along at 1 box/yr it would take forever to release gems like Ark box '69, Winter/Spring '71 box, Feb 73 box, Spring or Summer '73 box, Summer '76 box, Fall '77 box, Jan '79 box, '83 '84 Greek boxes, '91 Boston box, etc.... I guess they figure this box won't eat into Dave's Picks subscription sales. Given the recent outcry about DaP selling out so fast, I'm guessing they're not worried about this cannibalizing DaP sales. Yes, interesting that they are only releasing the audio, not the pro-shot video. Still waiting for the optimal video format/delivery method I guess.
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This is fantastic and also caught me off guard. I love me some '89, '90, '91....damn all of it. But '89 had some interesting setlists and the bust out of the MIDI, which I thought helped to bring everyone to new directions. Very happy to see this. Sixtus
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Of all the 2 night runs this is what you go with? Still, nice to venture out of the 70s. Maybe these are better than I recall. From memory these nights weren't very remarkable. No matter, no holes in my collection, ordered. Shame about the lack of DVDs, that's almost criminal negligence right there.
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Yea.. they should offer the DVDs. I pushed Dave on why they don't release DVDs a few years back. I didn't get a direct answer, but I suspect if sales of prior DVDs were more robust, we would have gotten more DVDs released. Perhaps its a Rhino decision, not sure.. I can't help but think Dave would be all in.. I mean.. they already have the video for these shows. Perhaps a slow but steady drum beat would help? DVDs please.. DVDs yes.. :D On the bright side.. at least they remembered Jerry's birthday!!
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For $65 right? Isnt that steeper than usual for two shows? Im thinking the video will be included.
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Dave is all about the DVD's...so, if they aren't included, its above him. I'll still remain optimistic that we'll see another DVD release, of whatever show, eventually.
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It seems like a rush job on the page and lots of info left to be filled in later.Warlox 89 had the nice rolling tray and other schwag as part of the box and just recently sold out. The Buffalo and Philly 1989 Summer releases both have DVDs, the meet up at the movie tonight is one of these shows and probably a special announcement of the release will be part of the movie tonight. Maybe they just haven't told us about the DVDs yet, C'mon add some special surprise bonus DVDs Mr Pinkus. On the other hand with no preorder bonus this will probably be available in a lesser cover on Amazon like the Sunshine Daydream set with "exclusive" dead.net slipcover the only difference.
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You fixed it!!! Thanks!!!
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GOOSEBUMPS when i think about 7.13.89 "Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again" "To Lay Me Down" here is comments from Dave's Picks 22 page !!!!! KEEP EM COMING RHINOS, I COMPLAIN A LOT, BUT STILL APPRECIATE THE TIME IT TAKES TO MAKE THESE AVAILABLE May 30, 2017 - 6:50am #1082 mbarilla mbarilla's picture Online Joined: Aug 8 2013 Send PM "Go get one" ~ the Last 5 would love to hear these shows !! http://www.deadlists.com/posters/1960s/19680530.html last 5 ~ 11.22.68 ~ https://archive.org/details/gd68-11-22.aud.cotsman.10088.sbeok.shnf/gd68... ~ Ladies and Gentlemen April 1971 compilation ~ lots of graduation parties over the weekend and neighborhoods full of people. Perfect time to cruise around and blast this one !! HAHA one huge party had cars lined up the street for as long as the eye could see got treated to a special serving from the MAN himself ~ PIGPEN !!! "Uncle John's Band -> Turn On Your Lovelight" ~ 4.27.71 , served em up just as PIGPEN was staring his "Pocket Pool" rap on the recording. Really hope to see the May 1971 RSD (anniversary today) release on CD, that one never really gets mentioned. ~ 12.30.86 ~ start of 2nd set Grateful Dead Hour ~ WCBE 90.5 ~ 7.8.81 ~ Tapers Section from yesterday ~ 7.13.89 ~ Tapers Section from yesterday , sweet 1st set and this combo was a real treat for me, certainly not the best but i could only imagine for the newer audience at show , must have floored a lot of people ~ Skull Splitter stuff "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again ; To Lay Me Down" BRING ON THE 1980's RECORDINGS and RELEASES RHINO !!!!! ------------------------------------------------------------- *+*+* ~ TO LAY ME DOWN ~ *+*+* *+*+* ~ LET THE WORLD GO BY ~ *+*+* *+*+* ~ To wait beside you *+*+* ~ my love still sleeping *+*+* ~ to tell sweet lies *+*+* ~ one last time *+*+* ~ and say goodnight
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Haven't spent money for dead in a LONG time - we usually just stream shows. But this is part of my history - I think I need it!
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There must be something lurking under the surface. As it stands I'm definitely not going to get this one. I may be into The Dead-but its nice to at least try for a bit of discernment.
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Thanks; have ordered. How about a deluxe set of the '73 Dead/Allmans RFK shows. Include the openers Wet Willie and Doug Sahm too.
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Why aren't the DVDs being released? Especially since you know they already went through the trouble of syncing the audio to the video for at least the first show for the movie event. Please include the DVDs in this box set! It's been 7 years since Crimson White and Indigo and we would love to see another DVD release
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Trying to buy one of these. Added to cart, went to checkout, nothing in cart. Went back thinking maybe it didn't get added and did it again. Now have a "2" in the upper-right on dead net, but nothing shows up, "Cart is Empty" on gratefuldead.warnermusic com. Like dead net isn't comunicatin' with warnermusic. Anyone else having a problem ordering?
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It's becoming extremely difficult to find any new hardware that contains a DAC chip that decodes HDCD. This technology is at its end and is subject for debate if it was really any good to begin with. PLEASE STOP USING HDCD and START USING SACD. Regarding the release, this may be the first I don't order. I have a ton of 1989 and don't feel it's necessary for my collection. However, if the DVD's of both nights were included, would be a no-brainer. Miss you Jerry, always; but on your birthday especially. Cheers....
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Daves Picks 23 was made in Mexico. Rhino, really. For what we pay, it should be MADE IN THE USA!
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7 years 11 months
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You lucky people, I only had to pay $10 for P&P but suppose I'll get hit with customs at my end.
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LOVE that this is getting the 24 track mix treatment AND a 192/24 digital download option! EVERY SINGLE RELEASE SHOULD HAVE A DIGITAL DOWNLOAD OPTION, period! Looking forward to this!
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I don't want the dvd. It would add to the cost and I have no interests in sitting down and watching a video from 89. The Dead music yes but visual in 89 no.
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For some time now GD releases have been marked as HDCD but no HDCD encoding is actually used, not even peak-extend. The discs will trip the HDCD flag on a HDCD-equipped player (or ripping software like dBpoweramp with HDCD plug-in) but all that means is that a (now old but still very good) Pacific Microsonics Analog-to-Digital Converter was used in the mastering. (You can tell what features are active by playing the discs using foobar2000 with the HDCD plug-in and setting it to display HDCD status.) Playing them through a HDCD player will just reduce the volume by 6 dB. The undecoded files sound the same as decoded files that have been boosted 6 dB to get back the missing volume. It's misleading to advertise these as HDCD discs and that practice should stop but your're not missing anything by not having an HDCD player.
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9 years 9 months
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No mention of a DVD that I can see.? its a 6 cd box set.
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....I rarely have the time to sit down and watch a concert, so no skin off my back. I like this release. I like it a lot....
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All my main players decode HDCD. And you don't need special player to play one. SACD you do unless you have hybrid SACD which has two layers which I suppose most are now for compatibility. Why not HDCD and SACD dual layer disc to cover all modes. Does anyone even make SACDs anymore? I've missed the HDCD mastering on the last few Garcia Live CD releases. Not that the CDs don't sound quite fine played on an Oppo BDP-83SE I have dedicated to my old I guess vintage nowadays stereo system I play this stuff on. (Someone in another thread mentioned folks here probably in their 30s-40s... try 60s-70s!)
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This does not appear to be a limited edition numbered set. I'm not stressing about it, but just wonder why? Too much heat about the Cornell box? Thoughts?
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...easily ordered...low overseas shipping...hopefully no import charges!
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I thought this was like JFK '89, Crimson, white, indigo with video, but is it just audio? Not to bitch, but...65+shipping, tax for just 6 discs of audio? No, I don't think I'll go for this. If it was Giants, I would, since those were my first shows, but.....none of these big stadium ones are as hot as the first night at Alpine valley was which was one of the best of the year. Think RFK '90, the pre-drums which was released on the RFK '91 as filler is better than the two in '89 also.
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I do not see anything about this being limited. Does anyone know if this is a general release? This is a nice surprise from Dave L. who doesn't like the 80's (it is has been reported, but not proven).
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At least it's not limited edition, right? I can wait to decide for when I become the richer deadhead I always imagined myself to be?
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This is a great release. Summer '89-Spring '90 is the last truly fantastic period for the GD. Every show from Summer '89 is dynamite. Thanks to all involved for releasing these shows.
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Crimson white indigo is on Amazon now for under $29. For viddy and audio. Just saying. For the record, think this is great too, hate when deadheads bitch too much, as I am guilty of sometimes, and am glad it's coming out, especially in mixed multitrack excellence. (Just hope it doesn't mean Giants will never be released!) Maybe the DVD will be a bonus surprise in the package and then won't we all feel greedy.....
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9 years 8 months
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An easy purchase :) Great couple of shows here, and Normanized no less! Bummer there's no DVD, but I'm sure some stealth head will film tonight's meet up and post it like they did the Beat Club meet up. All in all a nice Tuesday surprise right before heading to the movies tonight.
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Member for

9 years 9 months
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I love '89 and attended many shows that year. But I think there's a typo on this page. Shouldn't the dates for the initial RFK box set be June 9 and 10, 1973?
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Member for

7 years 3 months
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If there is no DVD, how much is the digital download?
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Member for

13 years 4 months
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No Jack.. you have that confused with the box that gets announced on August 8th. :D
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17 years 5 months
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A lot of site traffic, but eventually got it ordered ...... another great release. Keep them coming' !!
product sku
081227934118
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/music/rfk-stadium-1989.html