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    WHAT'S INSIDE:
    · 4 Complete Shows On Vinyl For The First Time Ever
    Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/23/72)
    Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/24/72)
    Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/25/72)
    Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/26/72)
    · New artwork by Brian Blomerth and classic designs from EUROPE ’72: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS by Scott McDougall
    · 52-page book featuring an essay by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether
    · Sourced from recordings by Betty Cantor, Janet Furman, Bob Matthews, Rosie & Wizard
    Mixed by Jeffrey Norman
    · Mastered by GRAMMY® Award-winning engineer David Glasser
    · Restoration and Speed Correction by Plangent Processes
    · Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 4,000

    "What fans heard in these four {Lyceum} shows was both a history of the Dead and a survey of their unique vision of American music, from folk to rock, with blues and R&B and country-and-western and Bakersfield all included, all melded together by the improvisational spirit of American jazz in a small-group format that owed much to European classical music.

    The repertoire made a statement: this is who we are. And while that honored their roots and surveyed their history and evolution, the overwhelming focus was on the present. At the Lyceum, showgoers heard a tapestry of music that knit together the disparate strands of the ’60s psychedelic baroque of AOXOMOXOA and LIVE/DEAD with the Americana turn epitomized by WORKINGMAN’S DEAD and AMERICAN BEAUTY, which in many ways both continued and culminated in Skull and Roses. English fans were especially delighted to hear the new songs — for fans accustomed to bands using concerts to promote their records, that kind of generosity was striking. Those songs showed a band that was consolidating and deepening its distinctive approach to American vernacular music while still expanding the range of what that could include. Pigpen’s two originals added a distinctive flourish, but the new tunes also made it clear that Weir had emerged in his own right as a singer and songwriter, as well as showing that the wellsprings that fed Garcia and Hunter’s music were drawing on ever deeper aquifers." - Nicholas Meriwether

    Imagine, if you will, being amongst the first to witness the merry band of misfits that had taken over the good ol' U.S. of A. conquer foreign lands. When the Grateful Dead first unleashed their magic on the cautiously optimistic patrons of Wembley of 4/7/72 and 4/8/72, it was with the idea they would have just these two nights to impress a traditionally reserved London crowd. It turned out to be a smashing success, and they set about locking in four dates at one of London’s most storied venues, the Lyceum Theatre, to wrap up what some consider one of the greatest tours in rock history.

    On these four nights, we find the band hell-bent on telling 'em "how it's gonna be," and boy, did they ever. Powered by what Jerry called "peak optimism," they delivered a steady dose of "primal Dead," - sometimes searing, sometimes soulful, sometimes serious, but always unwavering in focus. This willful determination moved them through transitive takes on "Dark Star," to majestic heights with "The Other One," through marathon runs of "Playing," another minute, another mile. It found Phil, philosophizing on how to "put our music into a place," Bob and Jerry masterfully dueling as two of the top songwriters of their time, Bill elegantly ferrying songs to new lengths, and new members Keith and Donna Jean Godchaux adding organic warmth. And Pigpen? Well, he dotted his beloved classics - "Good Lovin'," "Mr. Charlie," "Lovelight," "Two Souls In Communion" - through set after set, conjuring up more clarity and charisma than anyone would have expected for his final few shows.

    Due July 29th, LYCEUM 1972: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS marks the Dead’s largest vinyl boxed set of all time, a 24-LP collection featuring these storied final four nights in their entirety on 180-gram vinyl for the first time ever. Limited to just 4,000 copies, the individually-numbered set comes in a colorful slipcase with new artwork by Brian Blomerth. The four shows are organized in individual clamshell boxes, each one featuring the cover art that Scott McDougall created for each concert in EUROPE ’72: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS. The accompanying book includes a new in-depth look at the Lyceum shows by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether. And that all-important question of sound? Jeffrey Norman's luscious mixes are finally being heard in their full analog beauty. It all makes for a jolly good time, indeed!

    Due to the size ( 17 ¼” x 15 ¾” x 7 3/8”)  and weight (28lbs) of this boxed set, shipping fees for this item will vary.

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  • Gruuvey With a Piic
    Joined:
    I’m about to own a piece of HISTORY!

    I’m in on this (finally)!

    It took a lot of back and forth debating, not for the cost but for its immense size. (It will only take 1 faulty lp to ruin this box set.)
    But after weeks of thinking on it, I decided I’d be much happier with this than without it in the long run. So as of 5/26 there is one less for sale ;)
    And (technically speaking) this is actually 23 Lps worth of music if you subtract the etchings on 2 sides. But the book that’s included balances out those lost sides (for me).

    For those asking if this will sell out? The answer is a resounding YES!! I’m guessing the pre-order won’t sell out but after it goes to retail it will eventually be gone. If this turns out to be a flawless release the price on the resale market will be sky high.
    4000 isn’t a huge pressing, However, it is a massive production that dwarfs all limited GD releases (96k records pressed for 4000). I also think the RSD wembly release (10,000) along with the other 50th anniversary releases is jamming a lot of people up.

    Too much good Dead at once!!!
    But keep it comin’!! ♥️

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Piracy - JOJO

    That's interesting, I hadn't considered that. 3/1/69, an RSD release from last year, seems to get less expensive on amazonUK every time I look.
    But yes, I got my copy of both that and the Wembley show from an independent record store.

  • jojo_bobaloo
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    Joined:
    RSD releases on Discogs, elsewhere

    @DaveRock I'm pretty certain those sub-retail priced sets for sale on Discogs, Amazon, and eBay are pirated copies. If you look, you'll see that the cheap ones mostly come from sellers in Eastern Europe and Germany. Ones at retail price are often from record stores. If you search online, there are a bunch of articles about a big seizure of pirated records in Germany in 2016.

    Anyway, feel good about your purchase, knowing that what's driving prices down is piracy. And feel bad about the piracy. Arrr.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    RSD - it's a tough day

    It's never easy, knowing what to do about RSD. I bought the Wembley 1972 set on the day - online- at face value, and now it's dropped in price substantially on AmazonUK. I decided to wait to see if Gong Live in the 70's would drop in price - and it almost immediately increased, and became minimally available. Apart from in the States, where people possibly don't know who the flip Gong are.

  • JeffSmith
    Joined:
    Holding out. . .

    . . . for a 78 RPM Shellac edition or maybe a Wax Cylinder release. Nothing else compares.

  • Colin Gould
    Joined:
    Cassettes

    I think the deluxe cassette E72 box is pencilled in for the 60th anniversary.

  • muffin
    Joined:
    I started going to the first…

    I started going to the first RSD years ago and managed to attend everyone until I got sick in 2015… I managed to attend one prior to COVID, but I’ve missed out on all the double ones they had during COVID.
    I rarely get the really good stuff as the years went one because the only record store near here at first didn’t have a limit, so they’d buy all five copies of all the dead and phish stuff and selling them online. So frustrating.
    Then they started the limit, and more people started coming and even at 7am, there’d be a line and the first group was always a group of deadhead buddies who must live near the town because the first row of ten were all tyedyed and had chairs and hanging out, so they’d get everything.

    So I can’t imagine how it is now with multi year releases.

    I’d find scraps or sometimes an overlooked gem, but yeah I almost feel like it’s not worth the effort and wait until they come down on eBay. I’ll see the ones from the area for sale before the store opens. Sadly my store gets five at the most of the good stuff.

    Now I just wait and buy them once the frenzy dies downs after a while, but that Weebly release is still expensive.

    I did manage to get the multi colors vinyl and some of the other vinyl releases this pst two years. Some I’ll wait until the 750 or 500 left for the bigger more expensive set, but dang the prices even on the site are so high.

    Yes a some of the boxes they’re been shipped in are even cool, like the Giants stadium cd set, even the shipping box had cool designs and customs made of it.
    But some of these prices are just insane from the source. I know vinyls gotten expensive and materials are expensive, heck they’ve even had a few represses that took so long, I totally forgot I’d ordered them. It’s a nice surprise, like drunk Amazon shopping. You never know what drunk you bought for sober you. One day I had a unicorn swimming raft arrive one day. I haven’t been swimming in maybe 15 years!

    Anyway I am done venting. Just aggravating as the prices for these huge sets are so much, we should have a payment process, like for festival tickets.

    Anyway, I’m looking forward to this. I make copies of everything and keep the original at home to keep them safe. Some are just cool to look at, like the Egypt cd set with the fold out pyramids. I love those cool things, but I love the larger art work and book, or gatefolds in the vinyl. I didn’t realize how much I missed it until years ago when my dad gave me his vinyl collection. It wasn’t cool then and easy to find great records at yard sales until more record store finally began reopening aside from a few in NYC or SF. I’m glad it’s back. I’m making copies anyway to protect them no matter what it’s on, just vinyl takes a little more work to burn to cd.

  • zerofan7
    Joined:
    Your kidding, right? I love…

    Your kidding, right? I love cassettes too but um, no chance.

  • zerofan7
    Joined:
    Collectors Item

    Do you think this will sell out? I am not big on live vinyl but I may buy this as an investment and keep it sealed.

  • Sydney Prentice
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    Joined:
    Garbage? What the "Donald…

    Garbage? What the "Donald Duck" One of the greatest tours in the history of modern music, Maybe Deadnet could have offered us a One Step Reel to Reel Tape Ltd edition,sadly out of my price range but come on, really,this has been available on CD,and on the mighty Europe '72 Steamer Trunk Ltd edition,as well as past Vinyl incarnations including a Vol2. I rest my case/boxset,me lord!

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3 years 8 months

WHAT'S INSIDE:
· 4 Complete Shows On Vinyl For The First Time Ever
Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/23/72)
Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/24/72)
Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/25/72)
Lyceum Theatre, London, England (5/26/72)
· New artwork by Brian Blomerth and classic designs from EUROPE ’72: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS by Scott McDougall
· 52-page book featuring an essay by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether
· Sourced from recordings by Betty Cantor, Janet Furman, Bob Matthews, Rosie & Wizard
Mixed by Jeffrey Norman
· Mastered by GRAMMY® Award-winning engineer David Glasser
· Restoration and Speed Correction by Plangent Processes
· Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 4,000

"What fans heard in these four {Lyceum} shows was both a history of the Dead and a survey of their unique vision of American music, from folk to rock, with blues and R&B and country-and-western and Bakersfield all included, all melded together by the improvisational spirit of American jazz in a small-group format that owed much to European classical music.

The repertoire made a statement: this is who we are. And while that honored their roots and surveyed their history and evolution, the overwhelming focus was on the present. At the Lyceum, showgoers heard a tapestry of music that knit together the disparate strands of the ’60s psychedelic baroque of AOXOMOXOA and LIVE/DEAD with the Americana turn epitomized by WORKINGMAN’S DEAD and AMERICAN BEAUTY, which in many ways both continued and culminated in Skull and Roses. English fans were especially delighted to hear the new songs — for fans accustomed to bands using concerts to promote their records, that kind of generosity was striking. Those songs showed a band that was consolidating and deepening its distinctive approach to American vernacular music while still expanding the range of what that could include. Pigpen’s two originals added a distinctive flourish, but the new tunes also made it clear that Weir had emerged in his own right as a singer and songwriter, as well as showing that the wellsprings that fed Garcia and Hunter’s music were drawing on ever deeper aquifers." - Nicholas Meriwether

Imagine, if you will, being amongst the first to witness the merry band of misfits that had taken over the good ol' U.S. of A. conquer foreign lands. When the Grateful Dead first unleashed their magic on the cautiously optimistic patrons of Wembley of 4/7/72 and 4/8/72, it was with the idea they would have just these two nights to impress a traditionally reserved London crowd. It turned out to be a smashing success, and they set about locking in four dates at one of London’s most storied venues, the Lyceum Theatre, to wrap up what some consider one of the greatest tours in rock history.

On these four nights, we find the band hell-bent on telling 'em "how it's gonna be," and boy, did they ever. Powered by what Jerry called "peak optimism," they delivered a steady dose of "primal Dead," - sometimes searing, sometimes soulful, sometimes serious, but always unwavering in focus. This willful determination moved them through transitive takes on "Dark Star," to majestic heights with "The Other One," through marathon runs of "Playing," another minute, another mile. It found Phil, philosophizing on how to "put our music into a place," Bob and Jerry masterfully dueling as two of the top songwriters of their time, Bill elegantly ferrying songs to new lengths, and new members Keith and Donna Jean Godchaux adding organic warmth. And Pigpen? Well, he dotted his beloved classics - "Good Lovin'," "Mr. Charlie," "Lovelight," "Two Souls In Communion" - through set after set, conjuring up more clarity and charisma than anyone would have expected for his final few shows.

Due July 29th, LYCEUM 1972: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS marks the Dead’s largest vinyl boxed set of all time, a 24-LP collection featuring these storied final four nights in their entirety on 180-gram vinyl for the first time ever. Limited to just 4,000 copies, the individually-numbered set comes in a colorful slipcase with new artwork by Brian Blomerth. The four shows are organized in individual clamshell boxes, each one featuring the cover art that Scott McDougall created for each concert in EUROPE ’72: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS. The accompanying book includes a new in-depth look at the Lyceum shows by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether. And that all-important question of sound? Jeffrey Norman's luscious mixes are finally being heard in their full analog beauty. It all makes for a jolly good time, indeed!

Due to the size ( 17 ¼” x 15 ¾” x 7 3/8”)  and weight (28lbs) of this boxed set, shipping fees for this item will vary.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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What bonus?

Back in the 70's I didn't care much for Europe 72 either. It sounded a bit underpowered to me. Apart from the last two sides I didn't rate it that highly. I changed my views in the late 80' early 90's listening to tapes of shows and bootlegs, and now the Europe 72 box is probably my favourite box.
All the vinyl releases, especially this one, have also been excellent. I would but them all on vinyl if they released them.

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9 years 2 months

In reply to by egeffy

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I was responding to a bot.

I recently listened to all the E72 vinyl releases. Sounded grate.

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12 years 2 months

In reply to by egeffy

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The bonus is you got one :-)

That box was a big gulp, but if you want all the E72 on LP, well......

Like the old 4 seasons song, working my way to all of E72 babe, just need more money...

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9 years 2 months

In reply to by Dennis

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Getting it on sale is a score.

My general rule is that $20/LP is about right, maybe $25 considering inflation. So I often pass on releases that are overpriced and wait for them to go on sale. DP1 yesterday was something I had to grab because the resale prices of previous copies were ridiculous.

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