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    clayv
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    During the mid-1970s, the Grateful Dead saga was unfolding like a Greek classic. The Sisyphean Wall Of Sound had nearly broken the band. From it spawned a Medusa head of countless side projects, all deliciously fruitful but woefully not the same as the whole. The chorus lay in wait, pondering the reemergence of their heroes, and wondering if "THE LAST ONE" had really been it...

    But in early 1976, Apollonian light and healing would shine upon our intrepid wanderers once again. No more epic battles for the people with cops and lines and tightness, the Dead would return triumphant in smallness, playing intimate theaters and renting equipment along the way. No more ticket scams and greedy promoters, they'd give back with first ever mail-order ticket program, one that had a few kinks to work out but eventually served the fans well.

    Musically, June 1976 signaled a Golden Age of harmony and prosperity for the Dead. It marked an Odysseusian-like return for Mickey Hart. Donna Jean was in lock-step with the sirens' call. Jerry and Bob delivered orphic delight with solo musings like "Mission In The Rain" (the only tour they ever played it on), "The Wheel," and "Cassidy," emboldened by group effort. There was fresh repertoire from Blues For Allah, breathing new life to the Dead's continually morphing sound - as Weir once said of the '76 tour, they wanted to play "a little bit of all of it." Old favorites were re-envisioned with cascading tempos and unique sequencing, making the crowd question if they'd ever heard these songs before. And there was comfort and joy in the familiarity of watching the band make it up as they went along. By all means, it was clear that the bacchanalia of live Dead would reign on.

    And now the revelry from this epoch, evidenced by the near-studio quality sound captured on two-track live recordings by Betty Cantor-Jackson, lives on, bolstered by Jeffrey Norman's HDCD mastering. It's housed for posterity in a handsome box featuring original art work by Justin Helton. It’s documented in liners by Jesse Jarnow and photos by Grant Gouldon. And it’s ready for a spot on your shelf. 

    As part of our pre-order for this Dead.net exclusive boxed set, we'll be delivering downloads of each listening party - one for each show included in JUNE 1976 - to purchasers from now until the March 20th release. Order at any time before release and you'll receive all the listening parties to date.

    Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 12,000

    What's Inside:

    • 5 Previously Unreleased Complete Shows On 15 Discs
    • Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA 6/10/76
    • Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA 6/11/76
    • Beacon Theatre, New York, NY 6/14/76
    • Beacon Theatre, New York, NY 6/15/76
    • Capitol Theatre, Passaic, NJ 6/19/76
    • Sourced from Two-Track Master Tapes, Recorded By Betty Cantor-Jackson
    • Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
    • Restoration and Speed Correction by Plangent Processes

     

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  • deadegad
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    Lot's of great ideas for box sets. . ..

    And I would buy all of them! Watkins Glen complete with the other bands and sound check would be, if, I had to pick only one, would be The One! Yet RFK 73 would be a runner up.

    I still daydream about Radio City/Warfield tapes being rediscovered.

  • Shadeyguy
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    Requests

    And since this seems to be request time, I'll throw my hat in the ring for san antonio 72. I think its 11-26? Fantastic dark star, playing, etc. Unfortunately the only version available sounds like hot garbage. Definitely needs an upgrade

  • Shadeyguy
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    Hello Deadland!

    Hope everyone is doing well, I'm just hanging out digging on this box. It's a bit of slow process when no one in the house but me "gets it". "Theres 5 versions of the same song in 5 shows?" Haha. Also listening to some anniversary shows, love me some 4/2/73. And just to switch it up I've been listening to the island tour. I was lucky enough to hit the first 2. If u want some deep outer space, I highly recommend the twist from 4/2, man that version takes me places! Stay safe, and keep washing those hands!!

  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Releases

    Just give me the remaining Dark Star shows Plangentized ASAP. Give it its own series. Or make a big box set. Or periodic mini box sets. The rest will take care of itself.

    I'm also on board with the Watkins Glen release that was mentioned. And the RFK '73 double dose. I'm also good with the April '71 box set idea - and make sure it's engineered to sound exactly like Ladies and Gentlemen. Might as well mention Port Chester '71 since the wish list is out.

    At the moment I'm listening to Dave's Picks 17, Selland July '74. Keith sounds so good on Weather Report Suite. I've been a big fan of this show since it arrived on my doorstep. I wish Bertha wasn't fucked up. If I had my old easy CD Creator software, I'd be able to patch it by overdubbing the opening chords. Anyway....It's been a few months since I put this one on. Now I'm wondering if I like it better than the 1974 shows in the Pacific Northwest box set. I may need to do a side-by-side comparison. I'm also experiencing some runner's high at the moment, and that never hurts a show. I know it's not a popular choice but it just catches me the right way. I wonder why they didn't call "Jam" "Spanish Jam". Blah blah, blah blah blah blah.....

    Ironically Carlo, it was a Sunshine Daydream sitting on a Barnes & Noble shelf that converted me from being a casual fan to holding a PhD in Europe '72. Ah yes, that fateful day in B & N. I've barely put another band on since April 2014. Something weird happened in January of this year and I started listening to the Best of INXS. But by February the spell had passed and I'm right back on the bus with Cowboy Neil at the wheel.

  • carlo13
    Joined:
    Oro

    I agree with you on what you are saying but general releases dont do well in brick and mortar stores. I have seen a sunshine daydream veneta at barnes and noble sit there for months with no buyers. Same with a few other that dont sell (Cornell and long strange trip vid.). Its weird.

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Greetings bob t, could you extrapolate on your remark?

    "I wish but i don't have confidence on the June 10, 1973 show getting release."

    I read way back that the GD and ABB had put together a box of the best from 6/9, 6/10, 7/27 and 7/28, but nixed it. Of course, it's harder to do those deals with two bands and sets of heirs. But why do you say this of 6/10?

    Just curious. Have you read something about the tape or other issue?

  • billy the kid
    Joined:
    Junior Brown / Party Lights

    Great tune, check it out!

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    The Futures here, we are it...

    Great points all, and though I agree on saturation and absorption issues, I think they could step up production if they wanted to. Yes the production team are truly wizards, but at the same time it’s not rocket science. If they have the tapes and know their good to use, the rest is doable.
    Personally, I think adding one or 2 more Dave’s a year, and doing say one “bigger” box i.e., June 76, and one smaller i.e., RFK 89 a year, if staggered properly, and marketed properly (like dont release 2 competing sets in a year?and price accordingly) could work.
    Maybe not 2 “boxes” every year, maybe years like this with 2 50th anniversary albums you don’t do 2, but say years that don’t have a 50th release get another release/box/from the vault? Whatever....but something above and beyond say a Dave’s or Dicks type release.
    Sure you might not be able to do 15 or 20K units, but you could make up for with the additional releases...
    I mean I agree with all you have said, except at current pace they could run out of hardcore absolute buyers so that by 20 years they can’t even sell out a 5K box run? Just a thought.....
    As far as the rest, I get what Jim’s saying about the quality and easy accessibility issues, but I think if they could figure out some kind of economy of scale to make it work, so that you could at least get out some of the later source shows, enough folks would want at least certain shows, say ones they were at, or those that were really stand outs.
    So if they could find a way to digitize and improve quality enough, with added packaging/marketing, to be enough of a step up above the online stuff, while of course turning at least a fair profit, it might work?
    I think there’s enough low tech geezers like me that would totally buy enough shows overall to do this. I’m not going to spend time I don’t have downloading tons of stuff via my horrible net service. But I would buy say a few dozen ala carte releases like a Road trips or even the download series quality, but on a disc. (I’m talking full or most of shows here, not chop jobs).
    With everything digitized, using a low budget universal packaging system you could do say pre-sale order only.
    Like “next month only, order your 7/13/84” ...you get your money up front, and you don’t have to guess about run numbers. You take your universal packaging, change the labeling slightly, and you sell however many so that at least it will pay for itself. Might not be huge money maker, but you repay the fans for 50 plus years of ridiculous spending, plus in some ways you keep those interested that aren’t hardcore, or all ready feel they have plenty of older shows.
    Just look at how well the response was for the Giants box? No ones going to argue that any of this would compare or replace say FW69 or E72 leval stuff, but I would argue that there is potentially enough interest for late generation folks who aren’t going to drop $200 for a 1970 Beatty box, but who would definetly buy the 3 or 4 ala carte shows they were at from later years. 4 or 5 $30 purchases, along with added shipping profits, by 10s of thousands of buyers overall, could equal or surpass the high production limited profits of said $200 box.
    Sorry, rambling, I guess I’m trying to say their ignoring a potentially large audience by only offering product they don’t want!
    Obviously it means doing this somehow affordably/profitably, and I also think you have to do it sooner than later because I agree with Kid that someday it will all be upgraded and availabilie via download, but will there still be a economically viable market by then? Who knows, hell, no way I thought 30 years ago the Dead would still be this relevant now....
    Anyway, just a thought, and interesting stuff for sure!

    Thanks and R.I.P. Eliis and the Great Bill Withers...
    May the four winds blow them safely home!

  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Black Mirror....

    ....some awesome stuff there. My favorite was the episode where everyone's life status was dependent on other peoples upvotes/down votes and that lady just gets wrecked.
    "Science Fiction?"
    edit. Found it. "Nosedive". Season 3. Ep 1. A must see imo.
    The USS Callister is also 👌. Season 4. Ep 1.

  • deadegad
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    Europe Autumn 1990 Box?

    Now I could go for that!

    Dear Dave an N.Y.C. September 1979 @ MSG would make a great mini box set!!! Think about, please kind Sir.

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During the mid-1970s, the Grateful Dead saga was unfolding like a Greek classic. The Sisyphean Wall Of Sound had nearly broken the band. From it spawned a Medusa head of countless side projects, all deliciously fruitful but woefully not the same as the whole. The chorus lay in wait, pondering the reemergence of their heroes, and wondering if "THE LAST ONE" had really been it...

But in early 1976, Apollonian light and healing would shine upon our intrepid wanderers once again. No more epic battles for the people with cops and lines and tightness, the Dead would return triumphant in smallness, playing intimate theaters and renting equipment along the way. No more ticket scams and greedy promoters, they'd give back with first ever mail-order ticket program, one that had a few kinks to work out but eventually served the fans well.

Musically, June 1976 signaled a Golden Age of harmony and prosperity for the Dead. It marked an Odysseusian-like return for Mickey Hart. Donna Jean was in lock-step with the sirens' call. Jerry and Bob delivered orphic delight with solo musings like "Mission In The Rain" (the only tour they ever played it on), "The Wheel," and "Cassidy," emboldened by group effort. There was fresh repertoire from Blues For Allah, breathing new life to the Dead's continually morphing sound - as Weir once said of the '76 tour, they wanted to play "a little bit of all of it." Old favorites were re-envisioned with cascading tempos and unique sequencing, making the crowd question if they'd ever heard these songs before. And there was comfort and joy in the familiarity of watching the band make it up as they went along. By all means, it was clear that the bacchanalia of live Dead would reign on.

And now the revelry from this epoch, evidenced by the near-studio quality sound captured on two-track live recordings by Betty Cantor-Jackson, lives on, bolstered by Jeffrey Norman's HDCD mastering. It's housed for posterity in a handsome box featuring original art work by Justin Helton. It’s documented in liners by Jesse Jarnow and photos by Grant Gouldon. And it’s ready for a spot on your shelf. 

As part of our pre-order for this Dead.net exclusive boxed set, we'll be delivering downloads of each listening party - one for each show included in JUNE 1976 - to purchasers from now until the March 20th release. Order at any time before release and you'll receive all the listening parties to date.

Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 12,000

What's Inside:

  • 5 Previously Unreleased Complete Shows On 15 Discs
  • Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA 6/10/76
  • Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA 6/11/76
  • Beacon Theatre, New York, NY 6/14/76
  • Beacon Theatre, New York, NY 6/15/76
  • Capitol Theatre, Passaic, NJ 6/19/76
  • Sourced from Two-Track Master Tapes, Recorded By Betty Cantor-Jackson
  • Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
  • Restoration and Speed Correction by Plangent Processes

 

Dogon, you are not alone, my tracking on the box terminated on the 28th March, and since then nothing. UPS says that the tracking number is incorrect even though it is tracked on their system until the 28th. I need to wait for 14 days before contacting Dead.net, it may well be buried under a mountain of post at Customs.
Daverock, I'm glad the guns have been packed away, scary stuff. '72 Europe, it's my intention to watch the Copenhagen concert today, I must confess that I have never watched the full show, although I did listen to the show yesterday from the Box, keep safe all.

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Last tracking information from UPS was that it arrived in the Netherlands on April 2. I guess it was passed to PostNL so I don't expect to see any further updates from UPS. Unless it arrives today nothing is going to happen for a few days, this being Easter weekend. It will have to be dealt with by customs before it can get any further but surely it must be getting close.

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So instead of repeating myself, I will content myself with a dig at Fogerty. The excellent Live at Woodstock album that finally came out last year took so long to see the light of day because (allegedly) Fogerty would not let it be released because he claimed the performance was poor. Its not. To then diss the Dead about their performance suggests that he is simply a serial whinger and nobody likes a moaner. Go suck another lemon, John.

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In reply to by Sydney Prentice

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Sydney Prentice,
same here, March 28 was the last UPS status saying box has arrived to Germany.
As far as I understand, box changes national to carrier Deutsche Post DHL.
DHL accepts same tracking number but says they expecting further data.
The delay probalbly has to do with the actual coronavirus situation.

(Jerry photo was taken Oct. 13, 1981, Ruesselsheim, Germany)

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On the UPS Tracking site, after entering the tracking number, you can then check "shipment progress" or "shipment details". Under shipment details there is an alternative tracking number. Entering this number in the PostNL tracking site results in a message saying that I can pick up my package from a PostNL agent that is only 150m from my house and that the package has been there since last tuesday. Additionally I have to pay €36.05. The million dollar question is why did they seemingly not try to deliver it to my house (I have been home all week) or put a note in my letter box? As soon as I've finished my coffee I'm off to the PostNL agent's shop. Fingers crossed.

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#4064 was indeed waiting for me at the shop round the corner. I guess the postman was either too busy or too scared to actually try and deliver it to my house. PostNL (and probably postal services everywhere) are really busy lately due to the massive increase in online purchases by people who don't dare to go to physical shops anymore.
Others should try the alternative tracking number on their postal service's site. Maybe you'll get a pleasant surprise like I just did.

Whatever. I got mine and it looks really nice.

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10 years 6 months
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It's amazing how hard it can sometimes be to talk these releases down out of the flux, but it's always damn well worth it. Onward!

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10 years 4 months

In reply to by simonrob

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I'm getting a bit wary of getting things delivered through the post these days. All sorts of advice knocking about as to how long the virus lives on paper/plastic.

Off the radar...5/5/77 playing as I write. I had overlooked this to the point of forgetting its existence-I was going to play 5/7/77 from the box - but this one popped out. Great first set Sugaree and Tennessee Jed. Its all good though.

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Been watching it this morning!!! On the It Hurts me Too... Quick work story from the past... We were out in Boston it was 1996... I was working on a desk... trying to make it out in the field.. I left the table to go to the bathroom. I left my Walkman, yes with the foam headphones at the table. I come back and the president of the company had my walkman on... Oh I just wanted to hear what you listen to, I didn't know you like the Blues.... It Hurts me Too , from this show!! He said who is this... I said Grateful Dead... he was shocked... not that I liked the Dead, he didn't know they did songs like that... Thanks for letting me tell a story.. bob t

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In reply to by simonrob

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Good news: 1976 on the stoop around the corner!!! Although the postage import taxes are exorbitant!

Enjoy the coffee and music.

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BTW (=VAT) was €23.05 and handling charge was €13.00 The first is just about acceptable, the second comes under the category of legal theft.

The description of the box set on the customs invoice was: other clothing of other textile materials. I want some of what he obviously took.

Edit: Just now I received a card informing me that my package can be collected from the agent's shop around the corner. Normally the postman puts this in your letter box if he cannot deliver the package. This card arrived by letter post suggesting that no attempt had ever been made to deliver it to my house. Strange solutions for strange times.

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So I'm over on the SH Forum on an Allmans thread about that band's new 5-CD career anthology. Very little rare material if you already have a solid ABB collection, but it does have a brief Mountain Jam with personnel listed as follows:

"Mountain Jam (July 28, 1973 Watkins Glen) - approx. 12 min and very good sound quality, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Robbie Robertson as guests."

That says to me -- the eternal optimist/naive fool -- that the ABB and the GD are not oil and water and this sort of cooperation could pave the way for more releases such as 6-10-73, when ABB members played on the Dead's last set or the best of Watkins Glen, guests or not.

Waiting for, say, 2023, for a 50th anniversary reason to release is crazy. I went to those shows that summer and I'll be 63 this year, 66 in 2023. And I don't foresee having the kind of "music money" in the future that I've had in the past.

Maybe if I stamp my whiny feet and cry loudly?

I still wonder why Dave hasn't honored Pigpen by getting his personal tapes out along with Pig tracks from the early, incomplete shows that might not otherwise see the light of day. There is some great stuff on Rare Cuts & Oddities and Birth of the Dead, to be sure.

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This concert footage on YouTube that everyone's talking about comes and goes, I guess because of copyright laws.

It's taken some repeat listens over the years, but I finally caught the vibe on these 1972 Other Ones. I always enjoyed The Other One theme and verses, but the Space and Meltdowns usually lost me. At first I could only fully tolerate the Deadbeat Club version. Then I caught on to Hundred Year Hall and Dave's Picks Berkeley. This year it's New Castle 4/11/72 (which BTW flows very nicely into Comes A Time). I totally get why Billy stated on The Long Strange Trip documentary that he often forgot what actual song they were playing once they got in the middle of one of those super jams - this Other One has Feelin' Groovey....but sometimes it's in Dark Star.....or in '73 it started appearing in China Cat. Of course he's not going to remember where things started, being all buzzed on weed with a head full of snow.

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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hendrixfreak - I've had the same thought, that the ABB release of the Watkins Glen jam w/ Jerry and Bob might reflect a reciprocal agreement has been reached between the 2 organizations that allows the Dead to release 6-10-73, whole enchilada, with Set III jam. Add in 6-9 and that would be a sweet small box, maybe a second box for this year. Posted a short comment on this a month ago or so. Love to see it - here's hoping.

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In reply to by bluecrow

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I too am an optimist that a Watkin's Glen Complete Box will happen. As we all know "We are not getting any younger."

Don't Wait. Now would be exactly perfect to get to work on this one.

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In reply to by simonrob

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@simonrob
you've got it. Good! I'm still waiting.
Happy Easter

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I'm on the Europe 72 bandwagon. I was just listening to Playing in the Band reprise section about as high as the car volume goes when all the sudden I heard some really really cool feedback from what I assumed was either Jerry's guitar. Then it morphed into the rest of Donna's scream. Gotta love her, truly, I am a Donna fan. Honestly I think she was just trying to sing like Janis. Somebody once said that the issue with her was not the scream itself but the volume of it, but they went on to say that the volume is only that way on the old recordings that didn't have a multi-track to turn her down in the final mix. I believe that because her voice sounds great even the screams on these Europe 72 shows. And supposedly that's the way it sounds in the concert hall through a real mixing board not a double track tape that was never intended to be released to the public. Anyways just wanted to share that funny story cuz I got a chuckle out of it when it happened and I do love Donna. Especially when she wasn't wearing a bra which was probably all the time :-)

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The joyous wail never bothers me; she's just expressing exactly how we all feel when the Playin' ship returns to Planet Earth after traveling to the far reaches of outer space . . .

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Hey, European deadheads,
do you experience the same?
Dark, clear blue skies, like never before? No condensation from Aircraft.
I've never seen Europe in these beautiful intense colours.
I was always fascinated by the colours and the light of the Western skies in the US.
Density of air traffic here in Europe/Gemany makes the sky usually hazy.
But now, we have surprisingly same true colours, due to aircraft shutdown.
Good for our planet and us deadheads
Keep On Trucking

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In reply to by gratefulgerd

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Yes, its beautiful here in Lowestoft on the East coast of England at the moment. Wonderful moon the other night, too. It seems very peaceful without all the traffic. In fact, I was thinking earlier on, if you could divorce the atmosphere outside from its reason for being the way it is, you could say that it is almost idyllic. The only sound outside now is that of the birds nesting. Which sounds very musical in its own right. The world is most probably benefitting from the reduction in human activity.

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is that I'm only about a month behind! Ah, but I'm catching up. Look in your rearview mirror!

As for Donna's PitB scream, I caught this in concert in '72 and '73 at large outdoor shows and in real time, it appeared to serve as a wake-up call and rouse and roil the crowd who'd mostly dosed and just put through the PitB "dream sequence." I mean, I've been to GD shows where the jamming was so intense that when it ended, there was virtually no applause. Just 10-20,000 seriously tripped out freaks wondering what had just happened. That could be PitB or another space vehicle like DS. Case in point, Jer's birthday, 8-1-73. Granted, we're all crispy from the Glen ~3 days prior and the show the night before. They play DS and segue into El Paso, I think. (This is NOT from memory, but from the setlists, though I clearly remember them breaking out some 'ordinary' song in the middle of a spacey jam.) They glide out of interstellar space into like West Texas and with the closing chord returned to intergalactic travel. With the music that loud and with its momentum, we were putty in their hands. I recall looking at my companions like "what just happened?" and then a series of doors slammed shut behind us and we had no opportunity to ponder. A great Prankster technique they adopted to simply obliterate any sense of sequential time. It almost sounds cheesy or contrived on paper, but man they pulled those moves off like great magicians.

Gotta love that band. I always thought that if Jer seriously objected to Donna's screams he'd have put the kibosh on 'em. He didn't. And she sang in one version of his own band, which I think included Kreutzman, Keith, Donna, John Kahn and someone on keys. Might have been spring '76. Terrific way to misspend my youth.

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who thinks that Jer's slow ballads on GD '76 box sound pretty freakin' close to the feel of his solo band at the time? (I.e., spring '76?)

Diggin' 6-15 right now.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I think that you are experiencing the intended effect of the June 76 Box.

Happened to listen to 6-15 myself earlier tonight.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Yeah, I was digging through a box of DVD-R’s tonight, so last 3

7-12-76 soundcheck (playing now)
8-30-70
10-9-89 disc 2 (tuning thru Drums)

So Dave, about this 7-12-76 soundcheck I’m watching. Is that in the vault? Got the whole show?

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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....thats the one with the St. Stephen -> NFA -> Stella Blue and the purple art correct? (checks box) Why yes. Yes it is. I think we accidentally decided Sunday's Listen Of The Day.

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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Mentioned on here recently. I haven't played that for a while, but I listened to Vancouver 6/29/66 the other day, which came out on cd with the remastered first album a few years ago, and as record store day release on vinyl a bit later. Its a great album. It sounds like a different band from the one in I had just been listening to in the Europe 72 box. With one salient difference- Pigpen ( to my ears) sounds exactly the same ! The highlight of this album, for me, though is the "Cream Puff War". Pity they dropped it so soon.

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Thanks for the heads up about 8/30/70. On the one hand I want to say I've never seen it; on the other hand, the red slider bar on YouTube indicates I watched the entire thing at some point. I love the Gibson SG Jerry used in this video. As far as I know it's all he used in '69 / '70 (and probably earlier). I have a feeling it was the guitar that brought us Beautiful Song on 2/18/71 as well. In Jerry's hands it had this distictive half blues / half rock / half baked tone that was.....well to me, invocative of Townshend's idealized "one note" (at least that's the way I envision the one note; this is a reference to Lifehouse's Pure and Easy, which among other things alluded to the search for a undiscovered note that is THE note of all creation, the note that all musicians subconsciously seek). But I'm getting sidetracked - the point is that the tone Jerry evoked from the Gibson SG shined brightly when he soloed in the upper registers: St. Stephen => The Eleven transition 1969; Dark Star 5/15/70 at the 15 minute mark; Dark Star 9/19/70 around the 13 minute mark; and I would bet somebody else's left nut it's still the SG on 2/18/71 during that Dark Star, Pt. 2 (aka "Beautiful Song"). Maybe that's the night he used it for the last time. Maybe after Mickey left he didn't need a loud guitar to cut through two tight snares.

Anyway Happy Easter. I left this morning's choice up to the power that be: I put the whole Dead library from 30 Trips '67 - Jan 10th, 1979 on shuffle play.
Some high-quality audio sound boards are included in this mix that I shuffled. The song was soundboard Bird Song 10/2/72 (aka Spaced Out in Springfield, complete with skeleton space suit moon landing cover art). And now it shuffled along to Dark Star 5/23/72, which is absolutely fantastic, transitions into a morning dew, and still somehow gets largely overlooked that's one of the upper echelon DS's.

Oh.... I think the Easter Bunny came......it appears he forgot his roach clip..... better tuck that away before the Easter egg hunt starts.

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The powers to be guided me this morning to 10/9/82!!! Favorite audience tape!!! I have to listen to it over the soundboard!! I have all the shouts and screams memorized especially from Set II.. Throwing Stones>Touch of Grey so cool..... bob t

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9/17/82 is also a great audience recording, with some song debuts and no Brent vocals because he did not have a microphone onstage for unknown reasons. Probably the best Dead show I attended.

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13 years 7 months
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I didn't like them at all - until I saw video from that TV studio on the E72 tour and I could SEE what she was doing. It suddenly made sense to me. Her wails were completely from the heart, and charming in that way. So I try to cut her a lot of slack these days.

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10 years 10 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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I kid you not, I was watching 8-30-70 yesterday as well, starting with my man on Easy Wind.

And I said to myself, "Man, they outta include this in a 50th box."

I'll skip the "strike me dead if I'm lyin'" part for obvious reasons, but it happened.

EDIT: Vguy, only made it to the end of the first disc. This show really grooves after the opening "Promised," in the way that 6-10 grooves. Embarking on the Saint Stephen tonight.

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14 years 11 months
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It's 34 degrees and snowing here in Saint Paul, Minnesota . . .

Listened to disc 3 of 4/8/72 (Wembley) last night for the first time (with Fuller's London Porter in hand), so that I could get to 4/11/72 (Newcastle) on its birthday (with Newcastle in hand). Ms. Brewer usually wants us to watch "the telly" after the boys are in bed, but last night she insisted that I go to the listening room and get caught up on the Europe tour. What a partner! I had explained my E72 plan to her a week back, and she's been checking in to see if I'm keeping up on my tour.

Bottom line--I HAD written in my notes that D2 from 4/7/72 (Truckin'-->Other One-->Wharf Rat) might be the best hour of Dead EVER, but then I wrote that same remark AGAIN for the Dark Star-->Sugar Mag-->Caution from 4/8/72! One of the things I love about 1972 is that they somehow find their inner 1968 again from time to time, all while deeply rocking the cornucopia of songs pouring forth.

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17 years 6 months
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February 18, 1971 was the last time I saw Jerry play his Gibson SG. The following nights he played one of his two Alembic experimental “peanut” guitars. Keith fan, very observant to pick that up by ear.

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15 years 3 months
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Hendrixfreak mentioned the JGB: Kreutzman, Keith, Donna, John Kahn
Made me think of this odd 1981 JGB gig in Fairfax, in a very small venue billed as Jerry's birthday; lotsa' pretty rowdy locals running around smashing pieces of cake in each other's face.
Also unusual, was Phil sitting in on bass instead of John Kahn, and John Cippolina manning the soundboard.

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6 years 6 months
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Hi. I received my June 1976 box here in Ticino, Switzerland, on 4/8/2020, three weeks after shipping date. Had to pay CHF 30 and waited 48 hours before opening it, but it was worth the waiting (and the additional payment)!

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13 years 11 months

In reply to by Deadheadbrewer

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I am glad that I am not in Minnesota. It sounds like being on "The Russian Front" even in May. Cold, cold, cold. Upper 50s might get to low 60s fahrenheit here in New York City. The sun was out this morning and the weather looked great but the clouds have rolled in.

Happy Easter and Passover to those who are observant of them.

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16 years 10 months

In reply to by daverock

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Yes, Daverock in south France too, big blue sky and black birds singing in the garden. The first big difference after one week quarantine as I went walking for bread, it smells differently, no oil in the air...in Marseille as the fishermen stop activties orcas go nearer to the coast and I saw a picture of North India where they can see again the Himalaya Mountains wich did not happen for 30 years!
Did you receive your box? I am still waiting, here it comes by mail service usually. I am afraid everything stay in storage somewhere. and this the right time to listen to June 76...Today barbequeue for two, when we usually are 10or 20 for Easter,
Stay safe home evererybody.

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17 years 6 months
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I also saw pictures of the Himalaya as seen from the plains of north India. I had also seen a photo in the online edition of the Kathmandu Post, taken from a hill above Kathmandu, where the mountains on the border with Tibet could be clearly seen. I could compare it to a photo I took from a similar hilltop location last november. In that picture one couldn't even see as far as the edge of the city, let alone the high Himalaya. The Kathmandu Post photo brought back memories because I had seen those mountains from Kathmandu in the 1980's but rarely since then. Kathmandu is now one of the most polluted cities in the world, or it was a month ago. Just goes to show how rapidly things improve if people are taken out of the equation.

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10 years 4 months

In reply to by sheik yerbones

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Sheik...I haven't ordered this box...as yet. I notice other people in Europe have received theirs though, so hopefully you won't have to wait much longer for yours.
Hope you enjoyed the barbecue-it sounds good where you live.

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7 years 8 months
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I think this song was a classic psychedelic tune that was in line with other songs like 'pigeon toed orange peel' and the moody blues 'legend of a mind'. I wonder why this tune faded away.

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16 years 11 months

In reply to by daverock

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Anyway what already came with june 76 is very good; Dave P28 Passaic, and Rtrips from Boston 6/9 wich is my favorite of the RT serie. I have a soundboard of Beacon 14/6, It seems like Jerry vs Keith, one channel each, like the two drummers, and Bobby between both! The piano seems a bit high in this mix but Keith is so good. At this time Jerry plays more swing than "mean" guitar. Sure many people in Europe received their box so I am not really in hurry now. I just listen to other box like 78, and I am not sure there is a show in the new box that will shadow Red Rock 7/8 in term of energy.
Yes it is a nice place to live here, temperature up to 80 Farenheit yesterday.
stay safe reading & listening good old gd.

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13 years 6 months

In reply to by carlo13

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..and The Golden Road for that matter. Agree. The strength of the guitar work in that song, wow.. it does stand on it's own.

I think I read or perhaps listened to a Garcia interview at some point where they talk about those songs why they don't play them anymore and Jerry said something to the effect that those songs don't work anymore, that they fit the time they were played but things are different. ...something to that effect.

Too bad.. I got to see it with Further and I think once with Phil.. Widespread Panic has played it the most. All these later incarnations are bittersweet, would have liked to see the Good Ole Grateful Dead play it a few times too.

A tip of the glass to Bear I guess.. we owe a lot in that era to him.

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13 years 3 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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Not getting played. I think the band is kind of embarassed by those songs.

Golden Road, IIRC, is a song they threw together quickly after the record company told them they did not hear a strong single from the songs on the debut album.

I remember hearing Jerry describe himself as a "jive" lyricist once. I think he viewed his lyrics as such and thus did not to play those tunes much/ever.

I can also remember Weir saying something along the lines of it taking him a bit to realize words/lyrics could be more than merely a handle with which to carry a tune.

Anyway, it just seems to me the band felt those early non-Hunter lyrics (Golden Road, Cream Puff, Born Cross-Eyed, etc) were pretty thin/nada and stopped playing that stuff pretty quickly.

Other than Caution and Cryptical/Other One, I cannot think of one Garcia/Weir original lyrics that lasted much more than a year: Mindbender, Only Time is Now, Can't Come Down, Cardboard Cowboy, Standing on the Corner, Tastebud, You Don't Have to Ask, Cream Puff, Golden Road, Born Cross-Eyed).

New Potato lasted a couple years, but that was a Peterson tune (like Unbroken Chain).

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17 years 6 months
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Man, this box is great. I just started a new workweek here in the man-cave. I am so lucky to be able to work from home. And jam the dead at above office-level volumes. Set I of 6-11-76 is playing right now and it sounds so good. I just get the feeling that they're happy to be back with fewer constraints - no longer lugging around the WoS and having a year to recharge and get away from everyone and everything. It just sounds like they're really relaxed and taking their time, and this spirit really comes through in the jams.

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14 years 11 months
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I love that tune
as well as Mindbender
and Can't Come Down
and Cream Puff War
and Early Morning Rain

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