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    heatherlew
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    May 1977: Get Shown The Light (All Music Edition)

    WHAT'S INSIDE:
    Four Complete Shows on 11 discs
    Four folios housed in a slipcase
    5/5/77 Veterans Memorial Coliseum: New Haven, CT
    5/7/77 Boston Garden: Boston, MA
    5/8/77 Barton Hall, Cornell University: Ithaca, NY
    5/9/77 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium: Buffalo, NY
    50-page book of liners and photographs
    Sourced from the Betty Cantor-Jackson soundboard recordings, transferred by Plangent Processes
    Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
    Artwork by Grammy-winning graphic artist Masaki Koike
    Release Date: May 5, 2017

    WHAT DEAD HEADS HAVE BEEN SAYING ABOUT...

    NEW HAVEN 5/5/77
    "Here is a prime example of the saying ‘the whole is greater than the sum of the parts’ … It’s called synergy and the Dead wrote the book on it.”

    BOSTON 5/7/77
    “The music they laid down brought me places I had not been before.”

    CORNELL 5/8/77
    “...the single best rock performance anywhere, anytime, by anyone.”

    “There was just some kind of magical connection this night between the band members and the band and the audience - some texture, or some type of cosmic or celestial force is in the room.”

    "This show is, was, and always will be Mecca.”

    BUFFALO 5/9/77
    "...an awesome display of the Dead’s captivating power"

    If you've been following this site for quite some time, then you will know we are often flush with hyperbole when it comes to our releases. We can't help it, really - for we, like you, are Grateful Dead fans above all else. Just like you, we've spent countless hours debating the merits of show over show, year over year. We've kept a watchful eye on your wish-lists and carefully considered how to make - excuse the cliché - your dreams come true. And once we've made our commitments, we are steadfast in our determination to conjure up those dreams fully-formed and nearly perfect. Sometimes these heights cannot be reached without physical and cosmic elements aligning, and that, dear friends, is why it has taken so long for us to bring you THE ONE and the epic shows that surrounded it. No need for even the slightest embellishment here, 5/8/77 Barton Hall, Cornell University: Ithaca, NY, has for decades, been THE resounding favorite; you've said it yourselves - the "holy grail" of Grateful Dead shows. Thanks to the passion and perseverance of Dead Heads like you, we are beyond pleased to finally be able to present this show and its brethren, the fabled four of Spring '77, in sonically pristine condition.

    MAY 1977: GET SHOWN THE LIGHT is a collection of what is unanimously believed to be the most sought-after previously unreleased complete shows the Grateful Dead ever played. Collected, traded, and debated for decades, "the beloved Golden Trinity" of Boston, Ithaca, and Buffalo, along with their New Haven prelude, have inspired fans to "get on the bus," converted critics, and even garnered national attention (Cornell was added to the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry). But until now, you've never really heard them quite like this!

    The Dead is in the details... how serendipitous is it that the notorious Betty Cantor-Jackson soundboard recordings were returned to the archive just in time for the 40th anniversaries of these shows? Lovingly sourced from these well-reputed recordings, we invite you to experience four utopian shows just like they happened, to "be inside the music" as engineer Betty Cantor-Jackson intended. Whether you listen to each night on its own or imbibe the whole lot at once, we suspect you'll hear why every note mattered. Much like we were, you will be hard-pressed to determine which of these fine documents - will it be the understated but nuanced New Haven, Boston's festive fantasy vibes, the monumental catharsis of Ithaca, or Buffalo’s dreamy exuberance - is truly "the best." Does it really matter? We think not.

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  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    Dark Stars of Europe '72
    It's THAT time of year again as we all get the Europe '72 bug so I thought I would share this little post (ha ha, sarcasm) from-the-past regarding my takes on the Dark Stars from this superb tour. Since the first time I've shared this, I've updated with some 'second pass' notes. The whole reason I did this a few years back was to determine which Dark Star had the best 'Feelin Groovy jam', but what I actually got out of this exercise was a front-row-seat in Dark Star-ology. 4/8/1972 - Wembly Empire Pool, London - 32 mins; intense/fast paced first leg up til about 10 mins then returns to DS theme for 1st verse; spacey post-verse til ~17 min, then pace picks up for a few minutes, followed by a brief meltdown; additional spaciness around 24 mins followed by another full meltdown; interesting groove established around 28 min that has hints of Sugar Mag (into which it segues, flawlessly). No second verse. Second Pass Notes: Description above regarding the first leg is right on. Intense at spots; but not lost. Coherent, rapid jamming. Dominant energy. This one moves. Becomes introspective. Probing. But still dialed-in, all the way to the reemergence of the theme. Dark Star crashes. Maintains a serious, captivating groove, exemplifying their ‘leanness’. BTW, Phil is always playing lead. At 21:40, Phil brings an introspective groove; it’s brief. Intensity backs off; aforementioned spaciness sets in. At 28:10, MAGIC! Out it comes. Happy. Intent. Around 29:40 Bobby descends into Sugar Mag territory and off it goes into an inspired jam. Cueing in. Seamless transition > Sugar Magnolia. 4/14/1972 - Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, DK - 29 mins; loose first 10 mins not overly spacey; gets spacey around 11 mins; interesting groove establishes around 16 min to head into first verse w/interesting beat; heads off into intense nearly 7-minute jam inclusive of a very tight and fast Feelin Groovy jam; final 3 minutes are a meltdown. No second verse. 4/17/1972 - Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, DK - 31 mins; spacey opening to about 7:30 when first DS theme emerges leading to 1st verse at 9:45. Spacey post-2nd verse tries to take off but melts further around 19 min; returns to a partial groove around 24:30 and closes out with spaceyness in the last 2 mins. No second verse. 4/24/1972 - Rheinhalle, Dusseldorf, Germany - Split by Me & My Uncle; 26 mins 1st half, 14:30 second half. Spacey opening until about 8:45 where it coalesces and falls into first DS theme around 10:15 followed shortly by 1st verse with slow, sparse notes. Spacey feedback following verse until 15:45 and then picks up into an intense, fast paced jam for just under 2 minutes before it becomes dissonant again leading to major meltdown which eventually heads into Me & My Uncle with ease. Second half: spacey reintroduction persists until about 7 mins, where Keith leads-in with some piano phrasing and then the band follows into a tight fast paced jam where Jerry plays some lines back and forth as if in conversation with himself and then maintains an intense level effortlessly segueing into Wharf Rat. No second verse. Second Pass Notes: Keith seems eager, early. Loose on the Dark Star theme, but obedient. Until 3:40. Challenges emerge. Chaos results; morphs into our main character. Intensity billows and flows. Textures of a familiar theme emerge then drop into the theme proper for the verse. 15:45 is then where it’s at. Overdrive. Visiting that same, intense space and place. Melody hints, but never grasps. Keith is POUNDING! 17:37....dissonance. Then on to Me & My Uncle. Zero effort in the transition. Out of which comes spacey, tangentially melodic hints. Keith spills over the edge. Probing further. At 6:55, a Cautious Phil erupts into intense and inspiring jamming. The tone is there, the urgency. It SOARS! Then tumbles. Then rolls. Then lands upright into Wharf Rat. The transition into Wharf Rat is sooo buttery it melts. 4/29/1972 - Musikhalle, Hamburg, Denmark - 30 mins; spacey opening for ~5 mins, then enters a groove and Phil hints at the Feeling Groovy jam until it finally is joined by Jerry a minute later until about 8:00, then the floor drops out into space. DS theme appears at 14 min which leads to first verse. Spacey post-verse noodling leads to major meltdown, settling in at 22 mins with a fat, fast-paced Keith-led groove. Final 4 mins are spacey & lead to major melt #2, dropping into Sugar Mag as DS finally melts away. No second verse. 5/4/1972 - Olympia Theatre, Paris - Split by drums; 19 mins 1st half; 17:34 2nd half. Spacey opening til about 6 mins when fast paced jam kicks in until 11:20, slowing down then resurrecting the DS theme into the first verse. 4 mins of space leads into drums. Second half post-drums is very spacey until 7 mins, then kicks into overdrive with a very high energy jam leading to a phenomenal Feelin Groovy Jam for several minutes before settling into the second verse. DS dissipates into the Sugar Mag from E'72. 5/7/1972 - Bickershaw Festival, Wigan, UK - 19:49 mins; decent, coherent jamming for the first several minutes that congeals nicely around 8 minutes. Bottom falls out around 10 mins and leads to some light noodling, cymbal fills and space. DS theme emerges at 14:23 and heads into 1st verse. Space fills the air through the remainder of the song until it totally breaks down into drums. No second verse. 5/11/1972 - Rotterdam Civic Hall, Netherlands - Split by drums; 13:45 mins 1st half; 30:34 mins 2nd half; Opens with a light, airy jam that persists to congeal into a decent groove as it treads in and out of spacey phrasing. This settles into a mysterious sounding jam that grows with intensity without a return to the DS theme before dissolving into drums. Emerging from drums, Phil and Billy duel for 2 minutes before Jerry joins back in with some complimentary thoughts; the DS theme appears around 5 min followed by 1st verse. A few moments of spacey feedback give way to spacey noodling that devolves into a full blow chaotic meltdown, only to emerge around 19:30 into a very nice, fast paced groove that hints at Caution and PITB jams. This eventually dissolves and a light, sparse outro ends the song as it heads off into Sugar Mag. No second verse. Second Pass Notes: Following notes above, around 7:25 an introspective jam begins, slow-to-medium tempo, highlights of a tinkling piano accompany. 10:00, the interesting groove begins with Jerry repeating a run up and down, Bobby and Phil filling in behind him with Billy driving. This rolls until about 12:30 and then becomes dissonant preparing for a jaunt into drums. Following Drums.....Phil and Billy feel their way together before Jerry joins in around the 2 minute mark with some delicate lines. As it matures, it straddles the line of melodically jammy and somewhat introspective. Dark Star theme around 5:00 immediately followed by first verse. Space and total and utter devolvement ensue. Exploratory riff by Jerry right around 10:10 and eventually trails off....off into space....then, RIGHT ON!! 19:30! This sucker erupts into a full blown romp. It’s melodic, or at least semi-. Fast. Locked-in. Phil, Jerry, both leading. Keith, Bobby, Billy, even Pig, painting. Glorious, happy, awe. Almost Familiar. These are the best times, the chugging along into that almost identifiable territory but just out of affirmatory grasp. The hints at Caution; the hints at Playin’. Then Holy Intensity, 26:20, as Keith joins in to the tempo ablaze. No Caution. You, instead, melt; despite the Truckin’ intro references. And Phil teases the Bird Song bass line in there a few times before the end.... 5/18/1972 - Kongressaal, Muenchen, Denmark - 28:20 mins; almost 2 mins of noodling before opening notes from Phil; a loose jam ensues around the DS theme for the next several minutes and then decays. At ~9 min an interesting jam emerges, which eventually settles back into the DS theme and 1st verse around 14:30. The remainder of this DS is borderline chaos as it treads in and out of varying degrees of a meltdown until it settles into Morning Dew. No second verse. 5/23/1972 - The Strand Lyceum, London - 30 mins; Spacey opening minutes lead to tight fast paced jam commencing around 3:30 for two minutes and then it settles into another spacey jam digressing to almost…nothing. Billy and Phil then have a small duel until ~13:30 when the rest of the band fills back into a delicate groove which grows to into a jam reminiscent of the post-Truckin' foray from E'72 until about 17 mins, when they drop into the DS theme and 1st verse. Ensuing is additional delicate spaciness that transgresses into a frenzied meltdown madness, and eventually settles into Morning Dew. No second verse. Second Pass Notes: Open, airy, hinting DS theme but exploratory. Then it takes off, just before 3:00. We’ve arrived again. That groove. Familiar, but different. Still driving forward, with purpose. It chugs along the precipice until it aerates and flutters up and away around 6:12. Around 12:30, Phil and Billy are dooking it out and 60 seconds later Jerry joins in the fray. The mystery builds as we find that familiar glue. Meshing of instruments. The purpose, the groove. Phil hints at the Feeling Groovy jam, but no one bites. Then, the Dark Star Theme....light into ashes. 5/25/1972 - The Strand Lyceum, London - 34 mins, out of Wharf Rat. Strong opening with a groove almost from the beginning, no noodling around here in the first 7 minutes. Then turns very spacey until 15 mins when DS theme appears, and heads off into 1st verse. Post-verse finds a Billy, Phil, and Keith duel for several minutes. At 21 mins, Phil institutes a mellow Feeling Groovy jam, soon joined by the rest of the band until ~25 mins. Final minutes are dominated by space and then a monumental meltdown before heading off into Sugar Mag. No second verse. Second Pass Notes: Light, airy start; non-committal. But, probing. Building. At ~2:45, off we go once more. That chug. That place. We’re all going there, yet it’s as familiar as it is different. But it grooves! There’s that Truckin’ jam reference. The seed. This is THE SEED for the next nights’ magic; you can hear it being birthed on this night. Themes from the 5/26 post-Truckin are poking through the music tonight. Around 15 minutes....Dark Star theme.... ...mellow....crashes.....what follows is a three-way duel: Phil, Billy, Keith; HEAVEN. And fun. Then there it is...Feelin Groovy, All in. Melodic but on the fringe and exciting. Back to that familiar place, but this is a much looser and longer Feelin Groovy theme which then effortlessly morphs back into our familiar jammy space. Happy Monday All! Sixtus
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Fox is Dead 4/10/78
    39 year anniversary of a great show at the Fox Theatre. One of the all time best Franklin's Towers (coming out of Drums of all things). There's a great sounding board circulating. Keith is nice and high in the mix for this show. If there are any questions about his contributions in '78, this show will dispel the rumors (catch his act on Brown-Eyed Women). I think that head-to-head, if DaP 7 & 15 had not been released, an April 1978 box set would have been better than July '78. Then Red Rocks could have been released as a Dave's Picks with Bonus Disc, to get 7/8 out there + hilights of 7/7. But the timing of the Betty Board recovery prohibited something like this. They could still put together a five show box from April, but with July 78 out there, it would take a few years. Which shows? I'm glad you asked: 4/8/78 "Last Train to Jacksonville with the Grateful Dead" 4/10/78 "Fox is Dead" 4/12/78 "Mad U.S. Blues" 4/16/78 "Ship of Fools" 4/19/78 "High Ohio" These shows are like 77 only they feature a lot of development within certain songs, as their live performances over time were an ever opening flower. The Wolf wails and sings and steamrolls as needed, so the entire rockabilly of the shows is a leg up on most of 1978, as they still maintain the tightness of '77. Enjoy April 1978: The Partial Recordings....
  • guit30
    Joined:
    Barton Hall Usborne Matrix
    Well, there are 21 Barton Hall mixes In the archives and lots of good ones. However, I believe this could be the best. By Mr.Usborne ,1 sbd, plus 2 auds, Jerry Moore and Jeff Stephensen. Please forgive any misspellings, etc. https://archive.org/details/gd1977-05-08.137570.mtx.dusborne.flac16/gd7…
  • guit30
    Joined:
    Saw the Cornell 77 book today
    I was at Barnes and Noble this afternoon. Walking by their Dead Shelf, I saw 2 Cornell 77 books, I had to check one out, they were selling hard cover, 21 bucks. Lots of nice pics, most stuff I knew already, you probably would too but it is a great read. There is a chapter on Betty boards and how she had to sell them to keep from going bankrupt. The booktalks a lot about vids and how they related to songs. This book will answer a lot of questions and ask some too. Well let me put on my helmet on and go back to the mines!!! I will be back with a great new version of Barton Hall.BTW, I noticed 20 Betty Boards were taken from archives. See ya, Jim
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Lost In San Antonio....
    ... I've been in that predicament too. What I do, is invite someone to a show, with one stipulation, if they don't enjoy the show, they don't pay for the ticket. If they do, they pay. To this day, I've never been left holding the bag. What can I say? Guess I have good taste....
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    direwolf / OMSN
    The one on DaP 18 is pretty darn good.
  • Lost in San Antonio
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    Joined:
    Bob Weir
    Im not sure what to do, I bought two tickets for both shows in Austin next week, the person who was going with me bailed out, and my cousin who lives in Austin has no interest. Not sure if I am up to driving to Austin and back to San Antonio every night
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    Jerusalem....
    ....just past half way through (no spoilers please). Reading Moore requires focused attention. I also switch hit between love and hate while plowing through this tome. Early on, I realized taking small bites helps digesting the pages. Mad genius? Couldn't have said it better myself....
  • muleskinner_blues
    Joined:
    Vguy
    Mr. V - Was curious if you ever finished Jerusalem by Alan Moore? I wasn't familiar with him, but noted it when you mentioned his novel here a few months ago. Ended up grabbing it when I was looking for something different..I'm about 85% done and something different is an understatement. Guy must be a mad genius or something, to even think of this stuff. I alternate between loving it and hating it, with a good current of WTF the whole time. Anyways, just curious what you thought. Hope everyone has a good Sunday. Got done mowing and was listening to the Rare Cuts & Oddities 1966 release randomly. I grabbed that when I was first getting into them and it was not at all what I was expecting. It's more interesting to me now, after being more up to speed and hearing the first album, etc. Speaking of 1966, this is pretty wacko too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJTGimyf0r8
  • Born Cross Eye…
    Joined:
    Re: 35 years ago today
    4/9/82 Rochester War Memorial, Rochester, N.Y.I agree with you, rgergelis. No, I was not there. The people I know who used to go with to shows always had a extra ticket or so, and they'd call me to see if I wanted to go to the GD show, so I didn't have to rely on the kyndness of strangers or (gulp) con-men/women. Plan, plan, plan ahead. Plant a head?
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May 1977: Get Shown The Light (All Music Edition)

WHAT'S INSIDE:
Four Complete Shows on 11 discs
Four folios housed in a slipcase
5/5/77 Veterans Memorial Coliseum: New Haven, CT
5/7/77 Boston Garden: Boston, MA
5/8/77 Barton Hall, Cornell University: Ithaca, NY
5/9/77 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium: Buffalo, NY
50-page book of liners and photographs
Sourced from the Betty Cantor-Jackson soundboard recordings, transferred by Plangent Processes
Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
Artwork by Grammy-winning graphic artist Masaki Koike
Release Date: May 5, 2017

WHAT DEAD HEADS HAVE BEEN SAYING ABOUT...

NEW HAVEN 5/5/77
"Here is a prime example of the saying ‘the whole is greater than the sum of the parts’ … It’s called synergy and the Dead wrote the book on it.”

BOSTON 5/7/77
“The music they laid down brought me places I had not been before.”

CORNELL 5/8/77
“...the single best rock performance anywhere, anytime, by anyone.”

“There was just some kind of magical connection this night between the band members and the band and the audience - some texture, or some type of cosmic or celestial force is in the room.”

"This show is, was, and always will be Mecca.”

BUFFALO 5/9/77
"...an awesome display of the Dead’s captivating power"

If you've been following this site for quite some time, then you will know we are often flush with hyperbole when it comes to our releases. We can't help it, really - for we, like you, are Grateful Dead fans above all else. Just like you, we've spent countless hours debating the merits of show over show, year over year. We've kept a watchful eye on your wish-lists and carefully considered how to make - excuse the cliché - your dreams come true. And once we've made our commitments, we are steadfast in our determination to conjure up those dreams fully-formed and nearly perfect. Sometimes these heights cannot be reached without physical and cosmic elements aligning, and that, dear friends, is why it has taken so long for us to bring you THE ONE and the epic shows that surrounded it. No need for even the slightest embellishment here, 5/8/77 Barton Hall, Cornell University: Ithaca, NY, has for decades, been THE resounding favorite; you've said it yourselves - the "holy grail" of Grateful Dead shows. Thanks to the passion and perseverance of Dead Heads like you, we are beyond pleased to finally be able to present this show and its brethren, the fabled four of Spring '77, in sonically pristine condition.

MAY 1977: GET SHOWN THE LIGHT is a collection of what is unanimously believed to be the most sought-after previously unreleased complete shows the Grateful Dead ever played. Collected, traded, and debated for decades, "the beloved Golden Trinity" of Boston, Ithaca, and Buffalo, along with their New Haven prelude, have inspired fans to "get on the bus," converted critics, and even garnered national attention (Cornell was added to the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry). But until now, you've never really heard them quite like this!

The Dead is in the details... how serendipitous is it that the notorious Betty Cantor-Jackson soundboard recordings were returned to the archive just in time for the 40th anniversaries of these shows? Lovingly sourced from these well-reputed recordings, we invite you to experience four utopian shows just like they happened, to "be inside the music" as engineer Betty Cantor-Jackson intended. Whether you listen to each night on its own or imbibe the whole lot at once, we suspect you'll hear why every note mattered. Much like we were, you will be hard-pressed to determine which of these fine documents - will it be the understated but nuanced New Haven, Boston's festive fantasy vibes, the monumental catharsis of Ithaca, or Buffalo’s dreamy exuberance - is truly "the best." Does it really matter? We think not.

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i've seen two of your posts in one weekcomplaining about someone's negative comments-guess what, when someone has an opinion that is not aligned with your thoughts,even if it's about someone setting a price for something they selling or the band is slop before pigpen.its gonna be negative.it's their prerogative to say it's not worth it or no thanks.i think it's your emotional immaturity to anything negative or something you don't agree with.you could have left it to-"that's your opinion and i don't agree."instead you feel it's necessary to put someone down.earth without rain is a desert.
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Hi all, A technical issue I'm hoping to resolve: Recently ordered this set, promptly downloaded the CDs to my iTunes collection. Getting 1-2 second pauses between most of the tracks which disturbs the flow of the music. Does anyone know what might be causing this, and how to fix it? Gareth
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It’s most likely caused by a setting in iTunes. Go into the iTunes preferences and see what is listed for import settings, as well as for playback settings.If you still can’t fix it then google it, there should be instructions somewhere.
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To icecrmcnkd, Thank you for your reply, much appreciated! If I may, I'd like to followup with a second question: it was only a year ago that I first discovered the Grateful Dead, and I'd love to hear recommendations from older fans about which live albums to listen to next? Thanks again, Gareth
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You know, Gareth, it really comes down to what you like about the Dead... When I put in the Dead, I rarely want to listen to songs, so to speak. I tend to go for the long, inspired jams. For this, I would suggest the Winterland 1973 boxed set as No. 1, so far... though in general, shows from the 1973-1974 will be your best bet for this... That said, there are gems of shows throughout the years, though I've never personally been impressed by anything later than 1977. May 1977: Get Shown the Light (All Music Edition) is a great collection from this year. I also really love One from the Vault, Sunshine Daydream, & Dick's Picks, Vol. 14... The Grateful Dead Movie Soundtrack is an all-too-looked-over gem, too. Finally, if you can afford it, I'd recommend getting a copy of the Pacific NW '73-'74 boxed set while it's still available on this site. When these sell out on dead.net, they price-inflate like crazy to 2x their original cost or more.
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Get Shown the Light, the box with the book, was limited to 15,000 copies, I read somewhere.But I can’t find anything on the All Music Edition that’s still available. Can somebody tell me how many of those were printed?
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So, I'm totally showing my newbie-ness, but when the formats are digital, which is the best to download? I'm thinking about uploading to iphone for maximum bluetoothing. Also, is the first selection a CD collection of the four shows? I didn't see it listed behind the All Music Edition, so I figured it must be sold out.

16/44.1 is CD format, so you could convert to WAV or AIFF on a computer and burn CDs if you wanted to, as well as have the digital file on a music player.

The higher resolution files are for a computer or music player. If you wanted to burn CDs from those files you would lose the higher resolution that you paid more for.

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First time I've ever seen R.I.P. included in the name of a firm pushing you to go on holiday ! Maybe its a plug for euthanasia.

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they thought they were going for dead people as a marketing niche. Dead heads, dead people, I'm so confused... Anyway, they're gone for the moment.
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Hi there,

I downloaded the ALAC of this digital download but when I import into iTunes it is not recognizing the artist or songs and not creating an album. For the same ALAC download for Pacific Northwest ’73-’74: The Complete Recordings Boxed Set it worked perfectly in iTunes. Why does this download now import correctly? Thanks if anyone knows or can help.

You should ask on the Dave's Picks 30 thread…there's more people on there and very few if any on here…hope it helps.

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Since they sold out of the regular box set with all the bells and whistles, and had a huge demand, Dead.Net is selling an All Music Edition that "...only includes the 11 CDs in four folios and a booklet of liners, housed in a simple slipcase."

So, still the four shows, just without the special packaging and the unpublished book. This time, the order went through. Nothing on the website about this also being a limited release -- it's not numbered, but they don't specify if it's another set amount.

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Hello,
I've purchased the fantastic Lyceum LPs more than a month ago and still nothing arrived.
I've searched for the tracking number done by the GD store on the DHL site but nothing appears.
I've yet written to the customer helpdesk, but I'm curious if somebody encountered my same problem.
Thanks a lot,
Fabianope

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Fabian, send me a PM and I'll see if the Doc can shed some light here.

Just to state the obvious, they are indeed fantastic records. I am half way through 5/25/72 at the moment - one that no-one really mentions. Probably because of the night after, which is a shame as it's a great show in it's own right. Curious "Good Lovin" - 14min 53 seconds, and no Pigpen rap - he just sings the opening the verses and the closing ones some 12 minutes later. In between we have spot on r'n'b jamming like no-one else.

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