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    WHAT'S INSIDE:
    Madison Square Garden 3/9/81
    Madison Square Garden 3/10/81
    Madison Square Garden 9/20/82
    Madison Square Garden 9/21/82
    Madison Square Garden 10/11/83
    Madison Square Garden 10/12/83
    Newly restored and speed-corrected audio by Plangent Processes
    Mastered by Jeffrey Norman
    Liners by award-winning music journalist David Fricke
    Artwork by Dave Van Patten
    Individually Numbered, Limited Edition Of 12,500

    “Welcome to the unique, enduring phenomenon of the Grateful Dead in New York City, a mutual devotion, forged in concert, that ran for nearly as long as the band itself—from June 1, 1967, a free show in Tompkins Square Park on the Lower East Side (ahead of the band’s official, local bow at the Cafe Au Go Go), to the Dead’s last Garden run, six nights in October 1994…the Dead’s affinity for New York City…was instant and arguably their most profound with any city aside from San Francisco.” - David Fricke

    They got on the bus to the Port Authority, rode in on the Long Island Railroad and the New Jersey Transit line. They traveled North, South, and West on the 1, 2, and 3 subway lines, their numbers growing as they descended upon Penn Station. Some rolled up in those iconic New York yellows. Some walked excitedly through the bright lights of Broadway and Times Square, meeting up with old friends on the way and picking up a few new ones too as they ascended The Garden's stairs. Maybe you were among them - lightly buzzed on the way in, fully aglow on the way home. New York City was in its prime and damn if the Grateful Dead wasn't going to rise up to meet it! If you were there, we call on you to join us as we recapture that MSG magic and if you weren't, we invite you along on the epic journey that is IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN: MADISON SQUARE GARDEN '81 '82 '83.

    Numbered and limited-edition to 12,500, this 17CD set celebrates the band’s rich history at “the world’s most famous arena,” introducing six previously unreleased shows recorded at MSG between 1981 and 1983. It offers a front-row seat to the Dead in the early 1980s, an overlooked and underestimated era of rebirth for the band. At the time of the recordings, the group featured Brent Mydland. Mydland’s vocal power and colorful keyboard palette energized the band, invigorating older material like “The Wheel,” “Truckin’” and “Eyes of The World.” He also gave the band more musical flexibility, which encouraged them to dust off rarely aired treasures like “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and “Crazy Fingers.”

    IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN touches on the three-year period after 1980’s GO TO HEAVEN was released, a time when the Dead were constantly on the road, playing more than 200 dates. While they were in no rush to return to the studio during this time, they continued to write new music. In 1982 and ’83, the band performed most of the songs that would appear on 1987’s IN THE DARK. The new collection includes performances of four songs from that album – “Touch Of Grey,” “Hell In A Bucket,” “Throwing Stones,” and “West L.A. Fadeaway” – plus the B-side, “My Brother Esau.”

    Due September 23rd, IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN comes in a custom box featuring new artwork by Dave Van Patten celebrating the band’s eclectic fanbase, with a cavalcade of illustrated Dead Heads. The collection also includes detailed liner notes by award-winning music journalist David Fricke, who explores the band’s connection to the Big Apple. It features newly restored and speed-corrected audio by Plangent Processes, mastered by Jeffrey Norman.

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  • Lovemygirl
    Joined:
    Dicks picks 33 Vinyl Boxset Available Now

    Real Gone Records
    Primo! 🙏❤️💀🌹

    *** LIMITED TO 3 PER CUSTOMER/HOUSEHOLD IF YOU PURCHASE MORE THAN 3 YOU WILL BE REFUNDED.

    GRATEFUL DEAD: Dick’s Picks Vol. 33—10/9 & 10/10/76, Oakland Coliseum Stadium, Oakland, CA (Limited, Hand-Numbered, 180-Gram 8-LP Set)

    Trying to decide which Grateful Dead concert to reissue on vinyl is kind of like ordering from the menu of a three-star restaurant: no matter what you pick, it’s not just going to be good, it’s also going to be unique and memorable. Faced with such an embarrassment of riches, and trying to remain true to our vision of hitting a different year with each release, we decided to do what any sensible Dead Head would do: go BIG. Hence, our 8-LP release of Dick’s Picks Vol. 33! Fresh from a year-and-a-half touring hiatus, and back to full, two-drummer strength, the Dead opened for The Who as part of Bill Graham’s historic Day on the Green concerts in 1976. This Pick captures both dates in their entirety, and features one of the most monumental medleys (and that’s sayin’ something!) in band history with a 60-minute, 10-song journey through “St. Stephen”/”Not Fade Away”/”St. Stephen”/”Help on the Way”/”Slipknot!”/”Drums”/”Samson and Delilah”/”Slipknot!”/”Franklin’s Tower”/”One More Saturday Night” on the first day. Day two offers excellent takes on two solo Garcia favorites, “Might as Well” and “The Wheel,” that were new to the concert repertoire and a particularly fine “Ramble on Rose” among other highlights. Bill Graham had honored the Dead by selecting them to close the year’s stellar series of Day on the Green concerts, and that—perhaps coupled with the presence of formidable co-headliners The Who—sparked some of the band’s finest performances of the period.

    But it’s not just the performances, or the fact that we hadn’t done a 1976 vinyl reissue, that drew us to this concert. This “Betty Board” is one of the cleanest recordings in the whole series, and with a fresh mastering for vinyl by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering, lacquer cutting by Clint Holley and Dave Polster at Well Made Music, and a pressing on 180-gram black vinyl by our friends at Gotta Groove Records, this is—dare we say it—the best-sounding Dead vinyl release we’ve done. Seriously…the test pressings (which were reviewed by Jeffrey Norman, Dead archivist David Lemieux and Real Gone’s Gordon Anderson) were just fantastic, so present and crisp. We’ve included a 4-page, full-color, LP-sized insert that captures all the extensive graphics that were on the CD release, too. It’s our biggest Grateful Dead album ever…limited to 6000 hand-numbered copies!

    Side A

    Promised Land

    Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo

    Cassidy

    Side B

    Tennessee Jed

    Looks Like Rain

    Side C

    They Love Each Other

    New Minglewood Blues

    Side D

    Scarlet Begonias

    Lazy Lightning

    Supplication

    Side E

    Sugaree

    Side F

    St. Stephen

    Not Fade Away

    St. Stephen

    Help On The Way

    Side G

    Slipknot!

    Drums

    Samson And Delilah

    Slipknot!

    Side H

    Franklin’s Tower

    One More Saturday Night

    U.S. Blues

    Side I

    Might As Well

    Mama Tried

    Ramble On Rose

    Cassidy

    Side J

    Deal

    El Paso

    Loser

    Promised Land

    Side K

    Friend Of The Devil

    Dancing In The Streets

    Side L

    Wharf Rat

    Dancing In The Streets

    Side M

    Samson and Delilah

    Brown-Eyed Women

    Playing In The Band

    Side N

    Drums

    The Wheel

    Space

    The Other One

    Side O

    Stella Blue

    Playing In The Band

    Side P

    Sugar Magnolia

  • allman
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    Joined:
    RELEASE DATE CHANGE?

    Did the release date change? It now has Sept 30. I thought it was Sept 23. Mandela Effect maybe???????????

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    Gotta say

    that I like the look of the box. A pleasant surprise, not on my radar to lay it out like that. No, it won't fit nicely on a standard shelf but that's not my primary concern. At this point it seems pretty clear that each artist has free range as to concept and design and that's how it should be I think. Each box in its entirety, music and design, is indeed it's own work of art. Not that the design is always "just exactly perfect(ly)" convenient - I find the musically spectacular Listen To The River box a tiny bit awkward to access a particular show. And then there's Wake Up To Find Out. But in the end, no big deal. Great music and very cool artwork. Looking forward to some smokin' early 80s MSG Dead hitting my PO Box soon.

    And, no question, I've got too much Dead!!

  • bluefindead17
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Box shape

    Artwork is cool but who thought this shape was a good idea? They should be fired. Seriously though, please listen to the people who buy these and come up with a uniform shape, like a square or rectangle and not something ridiculous like this new box, which won’t fit anywhere.

  • Cousins Of The…
    Joined:
    12 days...

    ...but I'm not counting

  • Charlie3
    Joined:
    Two Weeks...

    ... until the "Where's My Box?!" posts begin. Or perhaps this will be the time that our friends at Rhino-Deadnet-Warner Music have arranged for everyone to get their box exactly on the release date. Currently spinning Make the Road by Walking album by the Menahan Street Band, mellow instrumental 21st Century soul. Well worth a listen if you're into that kind of thing. Something cool to listen to while I ponder the end of time and bask in the glow of transitory consciousness.

  • stillwaters
    Joined:
    RE: Oh no I've got too much Grateful Dead!

    "Hey! That's crazy talk!"

    - From The Simpsons

    :D

  • KRIYAS
    Joined:
    Box Talk

    My initial impression (based on nothing)of the box size before it was revealed was that it was going to be more square...can't wait to see/hear this in front of my sky space light. Been digging some Dick's Picks V:13 5/6/81 and Dick's Picks V:6 10/14/1983 as a primer. Hey Dead.net these really should start shipping soon...?

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Thanks for the Jimi heads up

    Ordered cd/vinyl, also ordered the Neal Casal LP's.

    side note,,, got a note from my Steamboat Springs man after hooking him up with Phish shows. His opinion, best Dick's Sporting shows since 92. I think he's been to them all, so I took his word :-)

    They're in the queue.

  • Dennis
    Joined:
    Odd shaped box?

    Hey, Frank gave us a round sewer cover!

    I can live with a rectangle.

    The art is top shelf in my book, love the look.

    Anyone biting on Neal and Circles around?

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Member for

3 years 7 months

WHAT'S INSIDE:
Madison Square Garden 3/9/81
Madison Square Garden 3/10/81
Madison Square Garden 9/20/82
Madison Square Garden 9/21/82
Madison Square Garden 10/11/83
Madison Square Garden 10/12/83
Newly restored and speed-corrected audio by Plangent Processes
Mastered by Jeffrey Norman
Liners by award-winning music journalist David Fricke
Artwork by Dave Van Patten
Individually Numbered, Limited Edition Of 12,500

“Welcome to the unique, enduring phenomenon of the Grateful Dead in New York City, a mutual devotion, forged in concert, that ran for nearly as long as the band itself—from June 1, 1967, a free show in Tompkins Square Park on the Lower East Side (ahead of the band’s official, local bow at the Cafe Au Go Go), to the Dead’s last Garden run, six nights in October 1994…the Dead’s affinity for New York City…was instant and arguably their most profound with any city aside from San Francisco.” - David Fricke

They got on the bus to the Port Authority, rode in on the Long Island Railroad and the New Jersey Transit line. They traveled North, South, and West on the 1, 2, and 3 subway lines, their numbers growing as they descended upon Penn Station. Some rolled up in those iconic New York yellows. Some walked excitedly through the bright lights of Broadway and Times Square, meeting up with old friends on the way and picking up a few new ones too as they ascended The Garden's stairs. Maybe you were among them - lightly buzzed on the way in, fully aglow on the way home. New York City was in its prime and damn if the Grateful Dead wasn't going to rise up to meet it! If you were there, we call on you to join us as we recapture that MSG magic and if you weren't, we invite you along on the epic journey that is IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN: MADISON SQUARE GARDEN '81 '82 '83.

Numbered and limited-edition to 12,500, this 17CD set celebrates the band’s rich history at “the world’s most famous arena,” introducing six previously unreleased shows recorded at MSG between 1981 and 1983. It offers a front-row seat to the Dead in the early 1980s, an overlooked and underestimated era of rebirth for the band. At the time of the recordings, the group featured Brent Mydland. Mydland’s vocal power and colorful keyboard palette energized the band, invigorating older material like “The Wheel,” “Truckin’” and “Eyes of The World.” He also gave the band more musical flexibility, which encouraged them to dust off rarely aired treasures like “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and “Crazy Fingers.”

IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN touches on the three-year period after 1980’s GO TO HEAVEN was released, a time when the Dead were constantly on the road, playing more than 200 dates. While they were in no rush to return to the studio during this time, they continued to write new music. In 1982 and ’83, the band performed most of the songs that would appear on 1987’s IN THE DARK. The new collection includes performances of four songs from that album – “Touch Of Grey,” “Hell In A Bucket,” “Throwing Stones,” and “West L.A. Fadeaway” – plus the B-side, “My Brother Esau.”

Due September 23rd, IN AND OUT OF THE GARDEN comes in a custom box featuring new artwork by Dave Van Patten celebrating the band’s eclectic fanbase, with a cavalcade of illustrated Dead Heads. The collection also includes detailed liner notes by award-winning music journalist David Fricke, who explores the band’s connection to the Big Apple. It features newly restored and speed-corrected audio by Plangent Processes, mastered by Jeffrey Norman.

Hey August I've been spinning 9/20/82. The very beginning of Shakedown sounds like they're all tuning up and getting the mix, but then it settles in very nicely and the Shakedown has all players well balanced. Hot Shakedown>Mingle one-two. I just listened to the Scarlet>Fire last night and it is excellent also. I'm liking this box more and more.

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Member for

8 years 1 month

In reply to by nitecat

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Anyone still on the fence on this I would jump on this. If you like early 80's Dead, this will not disappoint. I love it. Such great variety and the sound quality to my ears is 5 dancing bears! Just fantastic. Revisited 3/9/81 and this show smokes. The first set Deep Elem Blues, Birdsong! So good. Second set China Rider and the Estimatesd UJB is what this band is all about. So glad they put this one out.
Only complaint, they didn't include the 79 MSG shows.

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12 years 1 month
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Just ordered the vinyl copy of 3/9/81 from Experience Vinyl (125 bucks).

I'm guessing the Dead never released this on vinyl,,,, I don't have a copy in stock.!?

I lost a chunk of emails,,,, this order (in cd's) would have been in that chunk. I would have thought if it was available on vinyl I would have bought when I ordered the cd's.

But I can find NOTHING to show this has ever been released on vinyl.

Am I nuts or did I just spend more of my wife's hard earned money!

user picture

Member for

5 years 8 months
Permalink

Spinning 9/20/82 today and it's really hitting the spot! So much magic in this MSG box. It's been in reagular rotation since the day I recieved it. I really like how they switch things up with the multi night, muti year run from a particular venue.

Also, if you've been hesitant about getting this because of reading post about sound quality, era, or performance quality, don't listen!!! If you like early 80's Dead, wait no more!

I get not liking an era but it seems a lot of posters (not all) come out in immediate protest of anything post 78.

Anyway, if you like this era, I promise this box won't disappoint! and no, I don't know DL or work for Rhino.

Rock on, gang!

user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

In the past few weeks I've given the '82 and '83 shows a relisten and with each I had the same thought, "Oh geez, I forgot how much fun this one is! I've got to get on dead net and spread the word......"

But I'm a bit biased with towards post 70s GD. The ritualistic approach they kept with from '79 onward simply works and one I'll never tire of. Although, does fall into the whole, 'for those that understand no explanation is needed; for those that don't, none is possible'. Seems the majority of the people that really dig 80s and 90s Grateful Dead are those that saw them in that period. Makes sense.

Of the four shows, I'd say 10/12/83 stood out the most for me this time around. Because of the Help>Slip>Franklins. Has to be one of the better post '77 versions out there. Certainly one of the longest Slipknots from the 80s and 90s. Which is the part that counts most ; -)

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Member for

8 years 1 month

In reply to by FiveBranch

Permalink

Listening to this box again today. So good. Just finishing up 3/10/81.

Love those Scarlet Fires Sailor Saint combos. I want more from this era.

Might have to keep it going with 9/20/82 next with that fabulous Shakedown opener.

product sku
081227884291
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/in-and-out-of-the-garden-madison-square-garden-81-82-83-dead-net-exclusive-17cd-1.html