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    July 1978: The Complete Recordings

    What's Inside:

    • Five Complete Shows on 12 discs
    • 7/1/78 Arrowhead Stadium: Kansas City, MO
    • 7/3/78 St. Paul Civic Center Arena: St. Paul, MN
    • 7/5/78 Omaha Civic Auditorium: Omaha, NE
    • 7/7/78 Red Rocks Amphitheatre: Morrison, CO
    • 7/8/78 Red Rocks Amphitheatre: Morrison, CO
    Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
    Artwork by esteemed cartoonist Paul Pope
    Intro and show-by-show liner notes by Nicholas Meriwether
    Producer's Note by David Lemieux
    Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 15,000
    Release Date: May 13, 2016

    Announcing July 1978: The Complete Recordings

    We’re pleased to announce JULY 1978: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS, five incredible unreleased shows and the first official release from the long-lost tapes, recently returned to the Grateful Dead’s vault. Follow the Dead on a sonic journey through a superb selection of settings, an often epic adventure that finds them winning over Willie and Waylon fans in Kansas City, conjuring charisma in Omaha, and elevating the Red Rocks beyond their already spiritual planes. With five distinct performances painting the masterpiece of 1978, Betty Cantor-Jackson's always-pristine soundboard recordings, and the "hall-of-fame pedigree" of the Dead's first-ever shows at the legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre, this is one release that far exceeds excellence in music, sound quality, and rarity.

    Limited to 15,000 individually numbered copies, JULY 1978: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS includes Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, MO (7/1/78), St. Paul Civic Center, St. Paul, MN (7/3/78), Omaha Civic Auditorium, Omaha, NE (7/5/78), and Red Rocks Amphitheater, Morrison CO (7/7/78 and 7/8/78) - all of the performances in this collection are drawn from the band’s master soundboard recordings, each newly mastered by Jeffrey Norman. The set also features original artwork by esteemed cartoonist Paul Pope (D.C. and Marvel comics) and in-depth liner notes written by Nick Meriwether (Grateful Dead Archives at the University of California, Santa Cruz), as well as a producer’s note from producer David Lemieux.

    Due May 13th, we anticipate that this extraordinary box will sell out. Your best bet is to pre-order it now, then sit back, relax, and enjoy all the exclusive content we'll be rolling out over the next few weeks right here.

    Looking for something a little more byte-sized? The collection will also be available for HD digital download in FLAC and ALAC, exclusively at dead.net, on release day.

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  • SPACEBROTHER
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    E'72 is a great example
    Decided to give the Strand lyceum 5/23/72 show a spin and Donna's contributions are just about perfect in contrast to her ad libs in July '78. Wow, what a great show... Oddly enough, I've almost completely neglected the 4 Strand Lyceum '72 shows since getting the steamer trunk box when it first came out. This is like a brand new show to me. I'll come right out and say that my personal favorite versions of "Good Lovin'" are from this tour. So many winners from E'72, that whenever I think I have a favorite show narrowed down, another one jumps out at me. Like the 30 Trips box, E'72 is the box that keeps on giving.
  • SPACEBROTHER
    Joined:
    Quick thoughts on the box, Bob's slide and Donna
    Without going into "show by show" and "song by song" critical analysis mode, this is a very strong run of shows for '78. I like that Phil is up in the mix for much of the first show. The Dead were just starting to tap into the higher energy approach and musical muscle that they would perfect in the '80s, especially the period when Jerry briefly became sober. I acquired the board recording of 7/8 many years ago, and that was good quality. This version surpasses that one. I don't mind Bob's slide playing most of the time, even though he would occasionally go overboard with it. For me, it doesn't detract from the rest of what's going on in the music. I can't say the same for the bulk of Donna's contributions here though. There are moments where she reigns it in decently enough like she did in '76 and '77, but all too often, she over-sings and ruins what are otherwise awesome moments. In hindsight, I really wish Jerry or Phil would have stepped-up into band leader mode and made her listen back to her performances after the shows. All too often, to my ears, her voice distracts from the awesomeness going on around her. It reminds me of an episode of Family Guy where Peter and Lois Griffin find Brian's bag of weed and decide to put their folk duo back together. In their stoned minds they thought what they were doing sounded awesome, then they show the audiences perspective and all they were doing is falling all over each other while moaning and drooling. Donna's voice can be like fingernails on a chalkboard at times for me, yet beautiful when she stays disciplined like the Spring and May '77 run. End of Donna bashing tirade... Otherwise, I think this is a very cool set with some inspired performances. The artwork and package design is another winner.
  • KeithFan2112
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    Vocal Dial Turned Up to 11
    Agree with Spacebro about one aspect of Donna's vocals in these shows. I love Donna, but there are three distinct elements to her vocal performances in these shows that creep up and detract from time to time: 1) She is over-utilized. I prefer when she did not sing on every track. Back in the early days, she used to come out for certain songs, and then retire for large parts of the show. Back in the Europe '72 days, she had her spots: Playing in the Band; Greatest Story Ever Told; Sing Me Back Home; Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad; later on in '73 / '74, she would come out for Weather Report Suite. You get the picture - she was utilized selectively. There was a truckload of songs she did not sing on, even though she was present at the show: Sugar Magnolia, Ramble On Rose, Deal, Uncle John's Band, Not Fade Away, and many many more. In contrast, by 1978, she was on-stage full time, singing on every track. All of the songs I mentioned above, I personally prefer the non-Donna versions from the early 70s. But this is only part of the story with her vocals, and this is where observation #2 comes in. 2) She is TOO HIGH IN THE MIX! There are performances in this box set, Cassidy for example, where she normally sounds very good, but is so high in the mix on these July '78 versions that it doesn't sound great. You take April 24 in Normal (just a couple months earlier) and we have a mix where she is balanced with Bobby, and they sound great. Same goes for her lead vocal in The Music Never Stops - these were performances I was anticipating enthusiastically, because she blew the door off the hinges in previous '77 / '78 versions. Too much volume, though, detracts from the performance. I also hear the typically smooth balance of Donna / Bobby and Donna / Jerry lacking on a lot of these songs, where it was intact in other releases from roughly the same period. It is important to note that this may not have even been an issue onstage at the show. Depending on how loud their stage monitors were, it may well HAVE sounded good to them. You'll notice she always sounds best on recordings derived from 16-reel Multi-track, because she has her own track that Norman can adjust volume on and mix properly into the final version we hear. And you can't really hold Betty accountable, because, while it is she who mixes them at the board (and subsequently the tape), the only thing that matters at the time of the show is how they sound to each other through the stage monitors, and how they sound over the PA to the audience. Volume was a very difficult thing to manage in the old analog days, and I think in this case, it's illustrated for us the limitations of two-track recording. 3) As Spacebro mentioned, she's a little bit too aggressive with the screams and oooh/aaaahs and other vocalization noises. I guess they all did this a bit more in '78, and that's one of the distinctions in this year of "loose more rockin' Dead". I think all of these things could have been worked out without (and some were), but it seems in the end there was some insurmountable conflict in the band as a whole, sooo.....circle the wagons boys.... I should also note - none of this makes or breaks a show for me personally, or even a song - it's more like a "well, if I had the fine tuning knob of history at my finger tips, what would I do" Cousins - LOL - funny comment about tone-deaf Bobby.
  • Cousins Of The…
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    @Space - Donna - Slide
    I feel the exact opposite: I don't mind Donna oversinging, because she does not sing over Jerry's solos(with the possible exception of Scarlet). On the other hand, Bob plays(out of tune) over Jerry's leads and while he's doing that, he's not holding the rhythm.Examples abound: Going Down the Road from the '78 30 Trips box, or even worse Sugaree from 12/28/79...Jerry's playing his heart out, while Bobby's ruining the whole feel of the jam. For a while I though he was tone-deaf, how could he not hear how off-key he played??
  • estimating prof
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    Grateful
    Happy to see that everyone is enjoying this box as much as I am! The sound quality here is just amazing in my view. I have been having fun listening to these at home and in the car. I went right for 7/7 the other night - really nice. Spent a couple of days on 7/1, which I really enjoyed. Yesterday, I went for 7/3. To my ears, the band sounds on during the second set. In general its seems the band is really "on" during all of these shows. There are a lot of nice little unique nuances and riffs in the version of many of these tunes. Last night I was able to get a nice listening state of mind and put on the headphones - post drums 7/3. Wow! What a Stella. That whole post drums set really rocked me. Show sounds so good on the headphones - true ear candy. I'm psyched to dive into these shows this summer. 7/8/78 was THE tape for me back in the 90s that really drew me into the Dead's music. I'm saving that one and can't wait. Thank you to everyone who brought us this music.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Out for delivery....
    ....Day of the Dead 5 disc set. Did anyone else order one of those?....
  • Slow Dog Noodle
    Joined:
    So Far So Good
    I made it through a couple of listens to 7-1 over the weekend. I agree with the general sentiment; very energetic despite some vocal miscues. The sound is fantastic, especially at LOUD volumes, but i did notice that bit of vocal distortion at high volume too. Is that distortion something the house heard? Or was it due to Betty's mix? Is it possible to tell? It doesn't diminish the quality or enjoyability of the show, I was just wondering. I plan to spin 7-3 tonight for a first go. Slow and steady wins the race for me. On the 30 trips front I've listened to everything except '95. Just can't bring myself to for some reason. It'll happen eventually. I was positively surprised by '92 - '94 though. I don't listen to that era much, but there were some great moments. Between 30 trips, July '78, and the Dave's picks there's a lot to digest right now. But i'm having a great time trying.
  • MinasMorgul
    Joined:
    Nice List
    Stoltzfus I like your list, those are some of my goto shows. No coincidence that a lot of them are multi-tracks (while two track is technically multi-track, Producers coloquially use the term multi-track in reference to 4+ tracks). But my point is, I tend to put the better sounding shows higher on my list, and multi-tracks inevitably sound better. That being said, your pick I REALLY like is 3/28/73. I thought this DaP 16 show was really really hot, but my recollection is that a lot of folks just found it to be average.
  • stoltzfus
    Joined:
    top releases that I have purchased
    8/27/7212/31/76 5/2/70 July 78 12/31/78 Winterland 74 Rockin' the Rhein Stepping out with the GD Fillmore East 71 3/28/73 I love everything else, of course; these stand out to me as truly special.
  • MinasMorgul
    Joined:
    @OneMan / Other Bobby Musings
    Yes, also love Bobby in China Cat, at I think the same spot you're talking about. Also love his slide playing on Stagger Lee, Closing Of Winterland - he got it right on that one! His guitar sounds very different in the late 70s, not sure what accounts for it. Sounds like some kind of mild flange effect, with high midrange, low distortion. Just guessing. Would love to know how he achieves it.
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July 1978: The Complete Recordings

What's Inside:

• Five Complete Shows on 12 discs
• 7/1/78 Arrowhead Stadium: Kansas City, MO
• 7/3/78 St. Paul Civic Center Arena: St. Paul, MN
• 7/5/78 Omaha Civic Auditorium: Omaha, NE
• 7/7/78 Red Rocks Amphitheatre: Morrison, CO
• 7/8/78 Red Rocks Amphitheatre: Morrison, CO
Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
Artwork by esteemed cartoonist Paul Pope
Intro and show-by-show liner notes by Nicholas Meriwether
Producer's Note by David Lemieux
Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 15,000
Release Date: May 13, 2016

Announcing July 1978: The Complete Recordings

We’re pleased to announce JULY 1978: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS, five incredible unreleased shows and the first official release from the long-lost tapes, recently returned to the Grateful Dead’s vault. Follow the Dead on a sonic journey through a superb selection of settings, an often epic adventure that finds them winning over Willie and Waylon fans in Kansas City, conjuring charisma in Omaha, and elevating the Red Rocks beyond their already spiritual planes. With five distinct performances painting the masterpiece of 1978, Betty Cantor-Jackson's always-pristine soundboard recordings, and the "hall-of-fame pedigree" of the Dead's first-ever shows at the legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre, this is one release that far exceeds excellence in music, sound quality, and rarity.

Limited to 15,000 individually numbered copies, JULY 1978: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS includes Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, MO (7/1/78), St. Paul Civic Center, St. Paul, MN (7/3/78), Omaha Civic Auditorium, Omaha, NE (7/5/78), and Red Rocks Amphitheater, Morrison CO (7/7/78 and 7/8/78) - all of the performances in this collection are drawn from the band’s master soundboard recordings, each newly mastered by Jeffrey Norman. The set also features original artwork by esteemed cartoonist Paul Pope (D.C. and Marvel comics) and in-depth liner notes written by Nick Meriwether (Grateful Dead Archives at the University of California, Santa Cruz), as well as a producer’s note from producer David Lemieux.

Due May 13th, we anticipate that this extraordinary box will sell out. Your best bet is to pre-order it now, then sit back, relax, and enjoy all the exclusive content we'll be rolling out over the next few weeks right here.

Looking for something a little more byte-sized? The collection will also be available for HD digital download in FLAC and ALAC, exclusively at dead.net, on release day.

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Rbmunkin, while in some respects 1977 WAS the last great year for the Dead- chiefly in the reliability of their musicianship, according to what I've heard from later years- it certainly wasn't their last great year for many listeners in terms of many, many great later performances. To put my bias in context, my favorite Dead years are 1969 and 1972-'74, so I'm not an '80's deadhead, though I attended the bulk of my shows during the earlier part of that decade and love many of the shows from its first half.I have both the May 1977 box set and the July '78 one, and to my ears the 1978 one is substantially better. I say that because while the 1977 performances in that box are all reasonably strong, they're not always particularly exciting to me. The band, and Jerry in particular, strike me as being in a more predictable, professional mode at the shows in this earlier '77 box release (though I expect the new '77 box to be substantially better performances, based upon the bits I've heard). I find the improvisation more raw, energetic, and dynamic in the 1978 box, and to me that's what makes shows stand out. Also, the song selection is a bit more varied, which I appreciate. While 1978 may be weaker overall as a year (and I haven't heard most of either year), I find these performances to be better than much of what I've heard from '77. Similarly, according to what a listener likes, great boxes (if not great recordings) could be put together of performances from the early 80's or even the Spring/Summer 1985 tour, I believe. One slight drawback of the 1978 box is that the recordings have a bit less depth to the sound, but that goes with the territory of later 2-track soundboards. If you like the '78 sound, definitely get this box while it's still around! I think that they're all (and not just the Red Rocks shows) excellent performances and better ones than the Dave's Picks releases from '78 so far.
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?
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Yup, 0ver 80% of the run sold in about a year; at this rate, the rest will probably sell in the next two to three years. Based upon what I've seen buying modern cd and lp releases, it's not unusual for a run to take a few years (and sometimes up to twice that time) to sell out, even for many popular releases. In that respect, wadeocu, yes, Rhino knows its customer base quite well. Nearly every other Dead limited edition/limited release has sold out relatively quickly (from a few days to several months), and even the slower ones, like the second Spring '90 box and the May '77 one, sold out within a few years or less. Believe it or not, Rhino's goal is probably not to make sure that these sell out in a heartbeat, but to sell the greatest number without multiple production runs or endless inventory. I for one am glad that people don't always have to rush to immediately buy one or have to otherwise search for it on ebay at inflated prices. Recently Rhino sold over $2 million dollars worth of the new box set (before the all-music release that followed) within three days, even with the first marked by technical difficulties- by any standard, that's pretty impressive nowadays for physical media.As a follow-up to my recent post below, finally got a chance to hear my Winterland 1977 box again (I have a huge listening backlog) and came away much more impressed by it than by the first May 1977 box, with the exception of the latter's 5/13 show, which is excellent and the best of them. I still do think, though, that overall the Summer 1978 box outranks the May '77 box in quality of shows.
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I agree Dschian on each of your points. I think it is noteworthy, however that this one is dragging on with 17% of the inventory still left after a year. I think they planned on this one moving faster and I don't blame them. I would have thought that 3 totally uncirculated betty boards and two classics with one only circulating in mono would have generated more buzz. I suspect Rhino and Co. thought the same and thus the 15k. It seems like each release gets core customer sales in the 10k range. That number represents those of us who are so pathetically obsessed that we buy everything no matter what. Then the remaining 5k in sales are the "investors" and occasional buyers. I think that dependable 10k in sales per release is pretty clearly indicated by the numbers set for the FW69 box, early DaPs etc. I think the DaP numbers have gone up only because of the demand created by the second hand market. I do find the hue and cry over limited editions a bit exasperating as I think I understand the considerations being made here and the need to limit stock on hand and warehousing. Really, if we would dependably buy 100k per release they would gladly print it; I'm sure of it. We cant blame the manufacturer for trying to avoid inventory warehousing expenses. This release is a clear indication to me that they have the number set just about right to accomplish their goal of printing and moving releases on a continual release schedule.
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You all have good guesses, as good as mine, which is. The real reason this is still available is the meltdown of Music Today shortly after the release, the website going to comments only mode for months until the Dave's subscription was announced, when NOTHING was available for purchase, and the still cryptic hint above that at some point it will be available digitally "on release day". Its very likely there are 2000 people that would have bought the box if it was the only option, but waited for the digital version instead. Add to that some short term memory loss and short attention spans and you have over 2000 copies left of this box set which I like much better than the Spring 77 box. I love this artwork and would have spent lots of dead presidents on T shirts, posters, and other schwag if offered. I also feel many people pay attention to their browsers and for months this site has been unsafe and I have to click through 2 browser warnings just to log in that say the site is bad for my internet security. NO where else on the internet do i have to click the 2nd "Are you Sure?" dialog box. What's up with that, someone saving IT money by waiting for a new interface, maybe ROAR as the core in the fall? Meanwhile the site limps along on, unsecured until the next explosion when Dave's 22 goes on sale shortly before May 77 part 1 ships and people find out if they got a limited edition or music only version. I bet that will be fun times on the board ;)
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Why has this not sold out, its fantastic. Yes.. music today and the constant Russian Hackers is a big part of the reason, the other part is beyond an initial rollout strategy, they have no involvement. For the longest time this thread faded was not even prevalent from the home page of dead.net. I'm not complaining, I have mine and love it.. I just come to this thread from time to time and think wtf?
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This page for a while was filled with hackers posting away. when i translated some of it through google before it was cleaned up, it was polish slang for "i like this place" and "these people are funny". This set rocks BIGLY, you should consider yourselves lucky its still available for cost and still numbered editions. If you don't have it yet, it's worth the money and the artwork is fantastic, in the style of a graphic novel. Compared to other recent boxes that feature Normanized versions of Betty's that have been in circulation for 30 years, This July 78 box has 4 unreleased Betty's, well 3 and a Stereo upgrade from the mono that circulated. This should make Rhino happy, the release of widely circulated Betty shows does better than the Betty's that never circulated. Maybe all those years of circulation gave people a taste of what they are willing to pay for now and the stuff that stayed hidden is too unknown to buy? In any event if you haven't got it yet, you really should grab this box before it sells out and it becomes speculative on ebay, if just for the box and artwork.
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"This should make Rhino happy, the release of widely circulated Betty shows does better than the Betty's that never circulated.Maybe all those years of circulation gave people a taste of what they are willing to pay for now and the stuff that stayed hidden is too unknown to buy?" This is very insightful indeed. I can see no other explanation for the disparity.
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I can only answer for myself, and it's very simple; DiP 18 and, if i felt I needed any more than that, Red Rocks is available separately. on a separate note; does anyone know, is Betty getting her dues; I and several others have asked, and I haven't seen any kind of response at all. If not, surely a Pledge page would be good; or is there already one up? Anyone know?
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Here's the show before the box for some added motivation for giving the box a 2nd thought while it's still available. Listen to Jerry's FAT tone on the Estimated Eyes and Ken Babbs adds some Prankster Wierdness. Grateful Dead Live at Autzen Stadium, U. of Oregon on 1978-06-25 Promised Land, They Love Each Other, Me & My Uncle, Big River, Candyman, Passenger, Peggy-O, Minglewood Blues Samson & Delilah, Friend Of The Devil, Estimated Prophet-> Eyes Of The World-> Drums*-> Not Fade Away-> Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad-> Around & Around, E: U.S. Blues *W Ken Babbs https://archive.org/details/gd1978-06-25.sbd.130649.MrBill.flac16
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Hmmm something GD related... One of the few 1977 shows that doesn't circulate as a SBD and might be one of the few still missing SBDs from the Vault. Grateful Dead Live at Robertson Gym, UC Santa Barbara on 1977-02-27 Minglewood Blues, Loser, El Paso, Ramble On Rose, Estimated Prophet, Peggy-O, Good Lovin', Mississippi Half Step, The Music Never Stopped, Scarlet Begonias Samson & Delilah, Saint Stephen-> Not Fade Away-> Drums-> Terrapin Station-> Morning Dew, Sugar Magnolia, E: Johnny B. Goode https://archive.org/details/gd77-02-27.bertrando.vernon.10378.sbeok.shnf Taped by Rob Bertrando, who if we made people Saints in the hobby would be one.
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Looking for the stuff some record shops got for the Red Rocks release 7.8.78 Rhino and Warner Bros had the same stuff. I got the wristband from local record shop when it came out , but he didn't have the shirt and water bottle available Help Rhino / Warner Bros !!! Heck I will even pay for it and the shipping cost ! Add on tax and let's call it a deal Also missed out on the grab bag my local record shop had for Cornell release party on Cinco de Mayo. There was about 12 grab bags and around 20 people even though about half were toddlers Lol with parents that won. I wanted to buy Cornell LP to get free print like marketing sign said but apparently Rhino kept the vinyl stock , so it wasn't even possible. I bought the big box set , so I didn't really need the cd version of Stand Alone Cornell show. How do I get a print ?
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I'm confused as to why this box hasn't sold out at the increasingly rapid rate of comparable releases here. It's an amazing set. I love the song lists, the packaging and artwork are through the roof awesome. Anyway, this is a fantastic set and the box, book and slip covers are treasures. As I live in Denver and bask in the luxury of downing stellar margs at the Morrison Inn prior to annual Red Rocks invitations, I am over the moon with this. Thank you.
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A few reasons this didn't sell out: 1) Even the original May 1977 took 8 months, and 1978 does not have the reputation of 1977. Definitely a factor. 2) The 7/8 standalone release, I think, KILLED sales for this. There is a percentage of casual fans out there, and they reached for the rumored best show of the lot, for much less money 3) The songs are repeats. There are oodles of versions of these songs from roughly the same period, so appeal is limited somewhat to the hardcore fans.
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Finally picked up this set on eBay for 125.00 brand new. I have been on the fence on this set for a while. Now I'm really looking forward to it. Kind of glad I skipped the new release though. Sounds like a disaster, and faulty product.
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Hey this is that new cryptolock that's taking the world by storm.don't click on the links. Beware of the MALWARE.
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Good guesses from KeithFan2112 on why not sold out. I'll add a couple in having purchased the box set: 1) I think Rhino is amassing a reputation for poor quality control. Like others, I have a disc that skipped. I followed the instructions on how to return it. About 6 weeks later, haven't heard a word on replacing it. 2) Perhaps by 1970's standards, recording quality is great. However, against today's standards for live CDs, it's not all that great. 3) Donna's vocals are grating for most of the materials she sings on. Would have been preferable to limit her singing to material that works for her limited range.
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No questions about it; this set put the "everybody already has it" issue for sales potential to rest! Of course the power that is already new that a long time ago. Eskimos will always want their ice and the rest of the world outside of that hardcore 10,000 or so folks will just get the highlights/legends. Remember the Fillmore 69 release? There was a reason it was limited to 10,000. They just didn't account for the fact that those shows have legendary appeal!
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...after a lot of chatter on these boards about this one still being available, and after seeing how gorgeous the GSTL box set is, I decided to pull the trigger before this one went the way of the dodo, (or Fillmore 69.) I suppose I hesitated for the same reasons KF and HaGizMo mentioned. Also, I feel like 78 often leaves a lot to be desired. The two DaP from 78 are both in my personal bottom five, (though I recently ordered DiP 18, and I have heard nothing but good things about that release.) All of that being said, this box is GORGEOUS! and unlike the GSTL, it is very sturdy. As many have mentioned, this is simply some of the best artwork the band has put out in a long time! The book has some good pictures, though the essay doesn't really have a lot to say (It seems N. Meriweather had to come to grips with his own ambivalent feelings towards 78 to write it...) But this artwork!.... I am on disc 2 of the Arrowhead show, and aside from a brief skip in Bertha (on the opening song of the box! C'mon!!!) this is sounding really great. I have known 7/8 for some time now, but I am excited to get through the rest of these shows and check out the upgraded sound. (I'll just be sure to skip a couple Werewolves... ouch!) Happy Weekend, DeadLand! Peace
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I understand about 1978 but I'm not of the opinion that nothing good came out of 1978. I see it as a gateway year. Having missed out on the May 1977 Box, this one is actually the first physical box I purchased and I was really pleased when it arrived. The design is beautiful, and the sound....a lot more refined than what I had been listening to for the past umpteen years. I don't think it's a mistake at all to own it. While some people love the Red Rocks, I really enjoy the St. Paul show. It sparkles in my opinion, and the Stella Blue speaks to me deeply. Happy listening.
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I just logged on to say how wonderful this box set is, and you already did it for me :) I didn't intend to say that nothing good came out of 78... this box is a perfect example, and it is A BEAUTIFUL BOX SET!!!! Probably the most impressive looking I have seen! Peace, and 78 LOVE all around :) (Still hate Bobby's slide practice, on-stage...)
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... THIS is what kills 78 for me. He is terrible at slide guitar. Sugaree? EDIT: He got better, but I usually don't like his slide playing... he's such a good guitar player, it hurts to hear him F' it up with that damn slide...
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Blame it on Lowell George.The thing about Bob's slide playing that always got me was after all that practice every show for 17 years, he never seemed to get any better at it ;) Bob's new toy aside, this is still a great box set, great artwork, and the band seems to be having a great time. Listen to the growls in Werewolves and try not to laugh along with Donna as Bobby goes out of his way to bait her. These are fun shows of a band in transition while they were recording Shakedown St. and getting ready for the trip to Egypt.
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Otis I wasn't insinuating it was you saying nothing good came out of 78, but I do hear a lot of flak about 78 shows around the 'hood. The Dead were peaks and valleys throughout their 30 years which is to be expected by such creative human beings. Not every show can be 5/25/77 or 8/27/72, which makes me love and respect the band even more. There is so much joy in the experimentation and just the act of being in the moment which makes them so freaking appealing. Listen deeply, listen freely, listen often. I'm looking forward to the documentary film release on Thursday. I'm going to be at the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville.
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7 years 9 months
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I love how Bob "practiced" playing slide live on stage. In standard tuning... slide is hard as hell. Not everyone can be Joe Walsh or Duane Allman. John Mayer has said that Bob is fearless, and I admire it. He gives it a good shot, but when he misses the mark or flubs a lyric or two it just rolls like water off a duck's back. We should all be so stoic in failure. Love, love the 1978 set. The artwork is the best ever. Only critique drums and bass a bit woofy/boomy but everything can't be just exactly perfect all the time.
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8 years 1 month
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This is a great show that is mixing quite well with the mood I have going right now. These shows have wonderful energy. Nothing is ever going to come close to the feeling of outdoor Dead at Red Rocks. Cool breezes under the stars in a pristine-sounding natural amphitheater. The sound bounces off those rocks in a way to make the music surround you. All captured beautifully on this recording and production.I was lucky to have made a few pilgrimages to this special place during the 80s. Many of the details are fuzzy, or invented, or altered somehow. But there are a number of clear ones that stand out, the first being Chief Hosa campground, hitching a ride there from the show with a motorcycle dude for the rush of it, and drinking from a jug of electric kool-aid (or something that resembled kool-aid). I also listened to Springfield 5/11/78 last night. I might venture to say one of the greatest Fire on the Mountains I've heard, or at least in a while. And that goofy Dancin' in the Street..... Also 1978 brought us Egypt stories and Hamza El-Din, new rhythms, and Jerry pig tails.
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13 years 6 months
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"Not every show can be 5/25/77 or 8/27/72, which makes me love and respect the band even more." Very well said, and I totally agree. (Also, I love that you name drop 5/25 in that comment :) I also agree with LedDead's point that slide is hard as hell, and that Bobby deserves respect for being so fearless. I will always have MAD respect for Bobby - - but KayakGuy also has a good point that he never really got any better at it, and 78 seems to suffer the most from it. That slide work on Sugaree just makes my soul sad... I am steadily working my way through July 78 and mixing it up with DaP 22 and GSTL - - It's a fun mix of different era Dead. (Oh, I've been throwing some of the 82 Greek shows in for good measure - Lordy, there is some tremendous playing there too!) So far, my favorite 78 discs are Arrowhead disc 2, St. Paul disc 1, and disc 2 of the second Red Rocks show. All of them are worthy shows, and I am very happy to have this set. Hope everyone has a grand week! Just found out my wife was offered a job as a principal of a K-8 school here in the city! Down side, I will be seeing a lot less of her :( Up side, I usually have to turn off the music when she gets home, so more listening for me :) Peace
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7 years 6 months
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Was this show ever offered up digitally or do they have to sell out the boxset first? anybody know? Thx
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15 years 1 month
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2296 left
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16 years 7 months
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11 years 10 months
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This 78 set is just a step over the wild edge from 77 and its a much better mix - Jerry's guitar isn't hidden underneath drums, bass and piano. The Peggy-Os are all great too. Downside is all those Rhythm Devils tracks.
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14 years
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I agree, get it now if you still can. This is one of the best boxes ever. I'm in my second round of listening to the box, half way through. I call this the Muscular dead. Jerry is playing with a little louder and a little tougher. The rest of the band is top notch. You can hear Kieth really well. Perhaps the drums are a little loud. I like this better than 77 boxes, although they are a good listen too. I just like the raw energy of this 78 box.
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8 years 1 month
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Love this box set. Can only imagine why it has not sold out. The sound is so good and the shows are great. Set list with the exception of 7-8 2nd set are not all that unusual and the set is one of the best from '78. 7-8 1st set is fairly average and really a bit uneventful. Jerry breaks a string apparently on the 7-7 FOTM, preventing that version from being incredible. Overall still a great release. The overall packaging is far superior to the most previous May '77. I love the '78 sound it is loud and robust and my Klipsch speakers are just made for this stuff. Anyone looking to upgrade your amps? Consider Odyssey custom Khartago extreme plus. These mono blocks are relatively affordable and are crystal clear balanced power houses.
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17 years 5 months
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If you're on the fence about whether to get this one let me help you out a bit. This box is smoking. On fire rock and roll from the good ol Gratefule Dead. 7-1-78, 7-7-78 and 7-8-78 are on fire. Omaha is a great show that hasn't been heard before this box. St. Paul has its moments. Get it!
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10 years 10 months
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If you're on the fence, pick this one up. As mentioned, the artwork is fantastic, and probably the best artwork for a release, especially a box. Get Shown the Light is a little overwrought, and flimsy for something that you would reach for a lot. This set, on the other hand, is nicely housed and sits on my shelf proudly displayed, where GSTL sits in its shipping box closed up, and 30 Trips sits in my closet in its box (perhaps I need a better organized display in the music room). The thematic covers are top notch artwork. I'm not a comic book guy, liked them some when I was a pubescent, but the comic stylings married to the Dead themes and venues is fantastic. The best part may be the booklet cover being a nod to the rained out Summerfest show. The music is really good, too. Like many have said, '78 isn't really my year, but I still ordered fairly close to the day it went onsale, thinking it would be a madhouse, which I did for May '77 as well, where I was likewise shocked at it taking over a year to sell out. Not sure Bob's slide is the killer for me for '78, but it doesn't help. The setlists are fairly varied, and my biggest problem with '69-74 is no Terrapin, no Scarlet> Fire, etc. Conversely, '77-78 lack Dark Star, 20 min Playings, and Other Ones that extend past the 10-15 min mark. But what is played in this set is very good stuff. Not as tight as May '77, not as exploratory as '72-74, '78 is a beast of its own, with fiery guitar work being the primary sonic signature. The Jack Straws, Music Never Stopped, and Wharf Rats have a great intensity. 7/1 is the revelation of the box to me. I prefer it to the legendary 7/8. 7/8 is the show I've listened to least in the box, less than 7/3. Hard to believe more fans haven't snagged these, especially given they were the first fruits of the return of the Bettys, and brought out 3 UNCIRCULATED tapes. 130 bucks plus shipping is a really good deal, and it has the best packaging and artwork of any box set I own (I don't have the Steam Trunk) as well as some really good Dead.
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17 years 4 months
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My brain can't understand why this box hasn't sold out when others vanish in hours. This is really god sh*t. I need to consume it by the gram, it's that potent.
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15 years 1 month
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Get 'em while they're hot.
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8 years 1 month
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icecrmcnkd, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. Or in this case, you can lead a Head to the Promised Land, but...you get the picture.
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9 years
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Does not compute.....
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15 years 1 month
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1984What you waiting for? Time to get it now Time to let it in your life. (apologies to Randy California)
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